If you or someone you know may be experiencing a mental health crisis, contact the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline by dialing or texting 鈥988.”
Overcome by worries, Lynette Isbell dialed a mental health hotline in April 2022. She wanted to talk to someone about her midlife troubles: divorce, an empty nest, and the demands of caring for aging parents with dementia.
鈥淚 did not want to keep burdening my family and friends with my problems,鈥 Isbell said.
But she didn鈥檛 find the sympathetic ear she was hoping for on the other end. Frustrated, she hung up. Little did she know ending that call would set off events she would regret.
Police arrived at her home in Terre Haute, Indiana, handcuffed her, and had her committed to a hospital, records show, resulting in more than $12,000 in hospital charges.
鈥淭he whole thing was an absolute, utter, traumatic nightmare,鈥 she said.
Isbell鈥檚 call for help represented the need for a new approach to crisis calls just as the nation was readying to flip the switch to a revamped response system for mental health. Using just three digits 鈥 988 鈥 people could call or text for help from anywhere at any time starting in July 2022. Federal officials viewed the launch of 988 鈥溾 to reenvision the mental health crisis system. The idea was to reduce the reliance on police and the burden on emergency rooms, while eliminating the stigma of seeking help.
But recent federal funding and staffing cuts undermine the future of the 988 program and threaten to erase progress made in Indiana and elsewhere, mental health advocates said.
The Trump administration cut staffing at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, the federal office that oversees 988, in recent weeks. It also ended $1 billion of its grants that a number of states relied on this year to help fund their 988 systems, said Stephanie Pasternak, state affairs director of the . While a judge for 23 states that contested them, the trims to other states 鈥 including Indiana 鈥 have moved forward.
Between the SAMHSA cuts and potential reductions to Medicaid, another crucial funding stream for these services, Pasternak and others are concerned about what this means for 988鈥檚 future.
Any disruption to federal funding streams is 鈥済ravely impactful,鈥 said Zoe Frantz, CEO of the . 鈥淲e have put a lot of time, talent, and treasure 鈥 from the state to providers 鈥 in trying to build the system,鈥 Frantz said. 鈥淲e can’t go back.鈥
After Isbell hung up her call, a member of the Suicide Prevention Hotline, the crisis line formerly available, phoned the Vigo County Sheriff鈥檚 Office and told a dispatcher Isbell was 鈥渢hinking of committing suicide,鈥 according to the sheriff鈥檚 report obtained by 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News.
Years later, Isbell maintains she never said this. 鈥淚鈥檝e never been actively suicidal.鈥
But two officers drove to Isbell鈥檚 home.
When they arrived, Isbell was sitting on her back porch on a sunny day with trees just starting to bud. The officer鈥檚 report alleged she admitted to thinking about driving her car into a tree, wanting doctor-assisted suicide, and fantasizing about a semitruck hitting her.
She contends active suicidal ideation with a plan is different than the overwhelmed feelings she had that day.
鈥淚t was like a childhood game of telephone, only not at all funny,鈥 she said. What she said became distorted and left her no recourse.
The officers walked her to a squad car, where they handcuffed her before transporting her to Terre Haute Regional Hospital, according to dashcam video obtained from a public records request. Neighbors watched as she was taken away.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know why I needed to be handcuffed,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was demoralizing.鈥
The Vigo County Sheriff鈥檚 Office did not respond to requests for comment about Isbell鈥檚 case.

Isbell said being hospitalized against her wishes humiliated her and forced her to battle confusing medical bills for months. An itemized bill shows the hospital charged $12,772 for her overnight stay. After insurance, Isbell was on the hook for roughly $2,800. By comparison, a one-night stay in the presidential suite at the new Terre Haute Casino Resort is $2,471. Terre Haute Regional Hospital spokesperson Ann Marie Foote said Isbell鈥檚 bill was 鈥渄iscounted down鈥 to $1,400.
鈥淥ur highest priority is always the safety and well-being of patients,鈥 Foote said.
According to Isbell鈥檚 medical records, doctors there said 鈥渟he was very stressed鈥 and 鈥渏ust wanted to speak to someone鈥 and reiterated 鈥渟he was not suicidal.鈥 They said her anxiety 鈥渋s increased and made worse by being in here.鈥
She had 鈥渁nxiety鈥 and a 鈥渄epressed mood,鈥 and, according to medical records signed by a psychiatrist there, 鈥渟he does not meet current criteria for involuntary hospitalization.鈥 She was discharged the next day.
Upset by how she was treated, she contacted 988, the sheriff鈥檚 office, and the hospital.
In response to 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News鈥 questions about Isbell鈥檚 experience, Michele Holtkamp, a spokesperson at the time for Indiana鈥檚 Family and Social Services Administration, said that before the launch of 988, 鈥渢he state did not have oversight of individual crisis lines and how they responded.鈥
After 988 began, Isbell received a follow-up email from an executive with Mental Health America, introducing her to the director of Indiana鈥檚 988 hotline, Kara Biro.
鈥淚 shared your story with her and we agree that we would love to get you to help with a training video,鈥 wrote Brandi Christiansen, CEO of . She explained it would provide workers an opportunity to understand the real-life implications an 鈥渙utcall can have on a human being.鈥 The video has yet to happen, Isbell said.
The sheriff鈥檚 department also asked for her input to improve the process, she said.
Isbell saw those as signs of a turnaround. For mental health leaders in Indiana, 988 represented a 鈥溾 a new response system, according to a 2022 Indiana Behavioral Health Commission report. Too often, the report said, Indiana鈥檚 鈥渋neffective and inefficient鈥 system had relied heavily on police and emergency rooms.
Before 988, the state hotline also relied almost entirely on volunteers, complicating efforts to standardize responses, said Jay Chaudhary, a former director of Indiana鈥檚 Division of Mental Health and Addiction, who led the state鈥檚 transition to 988.
鈥淲hen somebody makes the really brave step to seek help with mental health care, that system better be ready to catch them,鈥 he said.
Today, Indiana ranks among the 10 states with the highest 988 answer rates, a sign it can handle the demand, said , chief advocacy and policy officer with the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.
In Indiana, behavioral health professionals now lead the response via mobile crisis teams, not law enforcement, such as the officers who handcuffed Isbell.
As of July, mobile crisis teams were available to 4.8 million people living in 65 of Indiana鈥檚 92 counties, reaching roughly 71% of residents, according to a from the behavioral health commission. In the first half of last year, mobile crisis teams were dispatched 3,080 times for help. Law enforcement officers were involved in about 1% of those cases and roughly 10% resulted in a trip to the emergency room, according to the report.
Similar efforts have occurred nationwide since the 2022 launch. The 988 hotline received 4.8 million calls, texts, and chats during its first year, which is roughly , according to Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration data.
But the federal government has terminated numerous grants earmarked for Indiana and other states to tackle mental health and substance use issues. Still, SAMHSA spokesperson Danielle Bennett said the 988 hotline is a 鈥渃ritical function鈥 and that the federal government 鈥渨ill never compromise鈥 protecting people experiencing a crisis. The hotline, Bennett said, 鈥渃ontinues daily, life-saving work.鈥
The Indiana agency tasked with overseeing 988 had more than $98 million in SAMHSA grants but received 73% of that as of March 24, when the grants were terminated, according to . That leaves Indiana $26 million short.
Some federal grants were passed through to local organizations, including one group that received grant money for 鈥渕obile crisis units,鈥 according to . In a statement, Indiana Family and Social Services Administration spokesperson James Vaughn confirmed it received notice of the terminated SAMHSA grants but declined to provide details other than to say it is 鈥渨orking to minimize the impact to Hoosiers.鈥
Isbell hopes the 988 option doesn鈥檛 disappear for those who need a hand, not handcuffs.
She dealt with the fallout of that fateful call for a long time. After more than a year, she said, she paid the $1,400 bill to put the ordeal behind her.