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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Feb 28 2023

Full Issue

Federal Judge Rules Against ER Boarding For NH Mental Health Patients

New Hampshire's use of hospital emergency departments for beds for mental health patients amounts to "illegal seizure" of hospital property, New Hampshire Public Radio reports. Meanwhile, North Carolina Health News covers impacts of mental health worker shortages.

New Hampshire鈥檚 practice of temporarily boarding mental health patients in hospital emergency departments is an illegal seizure of the hospitals鈥 property that disrupts care for other patients in need, a federal judge has ruled. (Cuno-Booth, 2/27)

Mental health patients in need of admission to state-run psychiatric hospitals across North Carolina might spend hours, days or even weeks in an emergency department, waiting for an open bed in a facility that is better staffed and equipped for their needs. The state Department of Health and Human Services created a monitoring system over the past year that provides a quick report about the location of open mental health care beds available across the state. What it shows can be disturbing. (Hoban, 2/28)

In other news about mental health care 鈥

The Legislature passed Newsom鈥檚 bill, and now San Francisco is among the first batch of counties tasked with launching the program by Oct. 1. Dubbed CARE (Community Assistance, Recovery, and Empowerment) Court, the program could refer hundreds of people in San Francisco to court-ordered care plans, offering hope to families who鈥檝e long struggled to get their loved ones into care, but drawing opposition from disability and civil rights advocates. (Moench, 2/27)

As the demand for youth mental health services skyrockets, state leaders are trying to expand the program into every Texas school district whose administrators are interested. That is an ambitious task made challenging by the national shortage of mental health professionals, said Dr. Laurel Williams, a Baylor College of Medicine professor who oversees the program. 聽"Every state is struggling with this 鈥 Texas isn鈥檛 unique in that way 鈥 but there are not enough qualified providers in the state,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 our biggest road block.鈥澛(Bauman, 2/27)

The man was adamant. He did not, he insisted, have any family. But while cleaning out his apartment, Mary Kate Egan stumbled on paperwork that clearly showed he had been married and had children. Egan, a case manager at Public Guardian Services, was starting to manage health care decisions for the man, who had been living alone but was no longer capable of handling his own affairs and was moving into a nursing home. (Lazar, 2/27)

Cerebral Inc. is cutting 15% of its workforce, the latest round of layoffs at the telehealth startup. The layoffs are part of Cerebral鈥檚 yearlong plan to reorganize the company and focus on the services patients want, a spokesman for the company said Monday. The spokesman didn鈥檛 say how many jobs would be cut, or what areas would be affected.聽The layoffs were earlier reported by Business Insider. (Pisani, 2/27)

Mental-health company Headway is expected to be valued at more than $1 billion in a new funding round, according to people familiar with the matter. The New York-based therapy-referral business is in talks to raise about $100 million from Spark Capital, Thrive Capital, Andreessen Horowitz and Accel, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the information is private. (Roof, 2/28)

On the gun violence epidemic 鈥

Lawyers for a man charged with killing 10 people at a Colorado supermarket in 2021 confirm he has schizophrenia, with one expert finding he was 鈥渁pproaching catatonia鈥 before being moved to the state mental hospital for treatment. The defense information, contained in a court filing earlier this month, provides the clearest picture to date of 23-year-old Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa鈥檚 mental health. District Attorney Michael Dougherty had mentioned last month that Alissa had been showing symptoms of schizophrenia, a mental disorder which causes people to have trouble understanding reality, but would not elaborate. (Slevin, 2/28)

Also 鈥

Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) remains hospitalized nearly two weeks after he checked himself into Walter Reed National Military Medical Center to receive treatment for clinical depression, his office said Monday. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have a lot to update folks with since there鈥檚 no real news to report except that John is doing well, working with the wonderful doctors, and remains on a path to recovery,鈥 Fetterman spokesman Joe Calvello said in a statement. 鈥淗e is visiting with staff and family daily, and his staff are keeping him updated on Senate business and news.鈥 (Wang and Itkowitz, 2/27)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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