Opinion Trump seeks to make it easier for people with mental illnesses to be involuntarily committed - Critics say the approach, aimed at ending homelessness, lacks sufficient evidence

by: O. Rose Broderick

President Trump wants to make it easier to involuntarily treat people with serious mental illnesses as part of a bid to end homelessness across the United States, according to a new order signed Thursday.

The administration wants to expand involuntary commitments by reversing judicial policies that restrict the use of the controversial approach and by providing grants, legal advice, and other assistance to local and state governments. The order also directs several agencies, including the Department of Health and Human Services, to audit grant recipients to ensure no money flows to organizations that promote policies that clash with the administration’s stated values.

While some studies have found that involuntary commitments are already increasing, the practice would grow dramatically if the changes laid out in the order come to pass. The effort is the latest push by the administration to move unhoused people off the street and into private psychiatric hospitals and facilities. Critics say the campaign is aimed at moving unhouse people outside of the public eye.

“By removing vagrant criminals from our streets and redirecting resources toward substance abuse programs, the Trump Administration will ensure that Americans feel safe in their own communities and that individuals suffering from addiction or mental health struggles are able to get the help they need,” said White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt.

Many public health professionals believe that involuntary commitment should be used as a last resort, if it is used at all. They suggested that involuntary treatment lacks sufficient evidence for its expansion and would only dissuade individuals from seeking care.

“Simply locking people up is not a solution,” said Jennifer Mathis, deputy director for the Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law. “The order’s directive to agencies to seek opportunities to overturn basic protections against arbitrary commitment is shocking. At a time when the federal government is making historic cuts to Medicaid and housing, it is particularly absurd to invest resources warehousing people in institutions.”

While it is unclear precisely how the White House plans to enact these actions, it instructs federal agencies to crack down on public drug use, urban camping, and loitering. It also directs Attorney General Pam Bondi to potentially pursue legal action against organizations that run supervised drug consumption sites. Harm reduction programs will also be deprioritized.

One of the biggest changes would be a shift away from a “housing first” approach to homelessness pursued by the Biden administration. These policies have shown remarkable success over treatment-first models in helping unhoused populations stay off the street and reduce the level of care they require. The Department of Housing and Urban Development would also be required to force organizations to collect federal health information from unhoused people who receive services and share such data with law enforcement officials.

Some experts suggest these initiatives were not developed in consultation with other federal officials, including public health professionals at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, the agency that has traditionally overseen relevant policy recommendations and grantmaking.

Under the order, to get people off the street, local and state officials are supposed to prioritize involuntary outpatient treatments, even though a recent Government Accountability Office report found that involuntary outpatient treatments were not necessarily as effective as proponents claimed.

“Trump’s actions to expand involuntary treatment and long-term institutionalization set us back decades to the days of warehousing people in back hospital wards instead of providing care back home,” said Paolo del Vecchio, a former SAMHSA executive officer.

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Trump’s actions to expand involuntary treatment and long-term institutionalization set us back decades to the days of warehousing people in back hospital wards instead of providing care back home,” said Paolo del Vecchio, a former SAMHSA executive officer.
Yeah well who's fault is that, retard?

I genuinely don't care what happens to worthless vagrants. Lock them up in a padded room forever. Turn them into dog food. Whatever. I don't care. I just want them gone so we can move one click closer to a safer society, some deadbeat druggie shooting up in a community park isn't someone I care about in the slightest. They are more trash than human.
 
Care back home = often families burdened with having to sacrifice everything because there's nowhere to put the truly ill. We're apparently happy to just ruin everything around someone so they can continue to rave in the streets about alien abductions and how the obama raped them last week.

BRought to you by the same thought leaders who let rapists and violent criminals back out the same day they're charged because muh disparity
 
The sad thing is, we had asylums to house crazies who were fundamentally incapable of taking care of themselves. Then we shut down the asylums bc the conditions were unfit for dogs let alone humans, and then the creation of "community based care" was voted down bc too expensive. So now we have streets lined with tents where the crazies live, and they self-medicate with whatever the local street corner Honduran has got in his fanny pack atm. Don't tell me that this shitshow is better than an asylum.
 
So much winning. Trump's only 6 months into his Presidency.
I genuinely don't care what happens to worthless vagrants
People who don't despise the street homeless generally haven't had much experience with them.

The sympathetic, working homeless aren't the ones vandalizing everything, shooting up on sidewalks and shitting in front of restaurants. They live quietly and stay hidden for the most part. Never believe the argument that the horrid bums you see are just in need of low income housing.
 
"lacks evidence"

So, we're all just imagining those homeless crazy hobo jungles under all our freeway overpasses? That weren't there in the 80's? When you could lock up crazies?

Care back home = often families burdened with having to sacrifice everything because there's nowhere to put the truly ill. We're apparently happy to just ruin everything around someone so they can continue to rave in the streets about alien abductions and how the obama raped them last week.

BRought to you by the same thought leaders who let rapists and violent criminals back out the same day they're charged because muh disparity
The fact they got tossed out of all their family accommodations for being violent and insane is the primary reason they're homeless now. They already had a shot at community care, the community didn't want them. Making the community/family the provider of last resort, without any material support except emotional blackmail, was always gonna end with roaming crazies in the streets.

You are not given any resources to help these people, but are expected to be freelance social workers, somehow.
 
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I agree with this, but I think we first need a reform for everything related to mental care otherwise they're gonna put people there for transphobia instead of the ones who want to chop their dicks off.

Care back home = often families burdened with having to sacrifice everything because there's nowhere to put the truly ill. We're apparently happy to just ruin everything around someone so they can continue to rave in the streets about alien abductions and how the obama raped them last week.
I've seen how much is a burden for people to treat mentally ill relatives, specially those who won't take their meds. They end up running away and the family has to abandon everything to find them and then spend more resource to watch them when they're back. Some just give up. They just don't deserve it, specially when the illness comes from bad decisions such as drugs or alcohol frying your brain.
 
If you are a druggie homeless and live in the woods and don't bother anyone this policy isn't going to effect you. So this mysterious schizophrenic homeless drug addict that isn't harming society the author wants to pretend exists won't be impacted.

The reality is people who are chronically living on the streets are not a simple job and roof away from being productive members of society. Most will never be able to function in society on their own. Those who have the capacity to will not get to that point living free on the streets.

For the infinitesimally small percent of people chronically living rough who may one day able to function in society on their own, they are only getting to that point with significant addiction treatment and imposed structure to get them started.
 
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