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Interstate Compact on Mental Health

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Title: Interstate Compact on Mental Health


1
Interstate Compact onMental Health
  • Bonnie Lee
  • Legal Issues Coordinator
  • State Operated Services
  • Scottsdale, Arizona

2
HISTORY
  • Residency determined treatment and financial
    responsibility.
  • Residency strictly defined by court decisions and
    statutory provisions.

3
HISTORY
  • Persons often ineligible for treatment if not a
    resident or citizen.
  • Families often separated during treatment and
    aftercare.

4
HISTORY
  • Persons immediately transferred to state of
    residency, even if no ongoing connections to
    state of origin.
  • Improved patients unable to be discharged to
    states where family lived.

5
HISTORY
  • 1955-The start of change.
  • Governors Conference recommended further
    meetings to discuss treatment of persons with
    mental illness.
  • Representatives from New York, New Jersey,
    Connecticut, Pennsylvania met in April, 1955.

6
HISTORY
  • Meeting Intent Each state would agree to accept
    transfer of any residents hospitalized in another
    state.
  • Legal Difficulties immediately identified.

7
HISTORY
  • No common denominator of residence and settlement
    among the four states which governed hospital
    admissions.
  • CT. delegation suggested the emphasis on
    residency inconsistent with modern health care of
    the day.

8
New Approach
  • Focus on clinical needs of the patient.
  • Focus on interstate cooperation.
  • Require minimum dependency on legal definitions
    of residency.

9
Recommendation
  • Recommendations made to the NE State Government
    Conference on Mental Health held in Wilmington,
    Delaware.
  • Pursue development of Interstate Compact.

10
Council of State Government
  • Several drafts and two meetings later language
    approved.
  • A resolution adopted and Council of State
    Government asked to establish a ten state
    committee to draft a compact.

11
Resulting Recommendation
  • September,1955, at a meeting in Burlington,
    Vermont, compact language approved by NE State
    Government Conference on Mental Health.
  • Strong resolution urging early consideration and
    action in the NE and other parts of the country.

12
Ratification
  • Iowa 1970
  • Kansas 1967
  • Kentucky 1958
  • Louisiana 1958
  • Maine 1957
  • Maryland 1962
  • Massachusetts 1956
  • Michigan 1974
  • Minnesota 1957
  • Missouri 1959
  • Montana 1971
  • Nebraska 1969
  • New Hampshire 1957
  • Alabama 1975
  • Alaska 1957
  • Arkansas 1959
  • Colorado 1965
  • Connecticut 1955
  • Delaware 1962
  • District of Columbia
  • Florida 1971
  • Georgia 1973
  • Hawaii 1967
  • Idaho 1961
  • Illinois 1965
  • Indiana 1959

13
Ratification
  • New Jersey 1956
  • New Mexico 1969
  • New York 1956
  • North Carolina 1959
  • North Dakota 1963
  • Ohio 1959
  • Oklahoma 1959
  • Oregon 1957
  • Pennsylvania 1961
  • Rhode Island 1957
  • South Carolina 1959
  • South Dakota 1959
  • Tennessee 1971
  • Texas 1969
  • Utah 1989
  • Vermont 1959
  • Washington 1965
  • West Virginia 1957
  • Wisconsin 1966
  • Wyoming 1969

14
Membership
  • By 1968, 36 states were members.
  • Today, 45 States and the District of Columbia are
    members.

15
NON MEMBER STATES
  • Arizona
  • California
  • Nevada
  • Mississippi
  • Virginia

16
Provisions of the Compact
  • Consists of 14 Articles.
  • A person who is physically present in a party
    state is eligible for treatment, regardless of
    residency or citizenship.
  • Treatment benefits patients, families, and
    society.

17
COMPACT ARTICLES
  • Controlling factors are community safety and
    availability of services.
  • Defines key phrases used within the compact.

18
Provisions of the Compact
  • Criteria for transfer. Is the care and treatment
    of the patient facilitated or improved.
  • Assessment of clinical needs.
  • Location of the patients family.
  • Character and duration of the illness.
  • Other factors as deemed appropriate.

19
Provisions of the Compact
  • Transfer requires approval of the receiving
    state.
  • A member state is not obligated to accept a
    patient for transfer.

20
Provisions of the Compact
  • Transferred patients have the same rights in the
    receiving state as local patients.
  • Order of admission
  • Financial
  • Social Service

21
Provisions of the Compact
  • Provides for aftercare when it is in the best
    interest of the patient and public safety will
    not be jeopardized.
  • Referral and evaluation process is the same.

22
Provisions of the Compact
  • Provides authority for member states to transport
    patients across state lines when transfer occurs
    in accordance with compact provisions.
  • Sending state pays cost of transfer, unless other
    arrangements are made.

23
Provisions of the Compact
  • A person may be considered a patient at only one
    facility. Current practice is to obtain a new
    commitment order.
  • Provides for the return of committed patients on
    an unauthorized absence.

24
Provisions of the Compact
  • The compact is not intended to affect duties and
    responsibilities of a guardian in any way.
  • Requires appointment of a compact administrator.

25
Exemptions
  • Does not apply to criminally insane.
  • Does not apply to persons subject to a criminal
    charge.
  • Does not apply to persons with chemical
    dependency as a primary diagnosis.

26
Issues
  • The language of the compact was drafted in 1955.
  • Generally agreed that to amend and update the
    language and have states repeal existing language
    and pass new language not realistic.

27
ISSUES
  • Amending requires rewrite of original compact.
  • Need consensus on what needs to be amended.
  • Financial considerations.

28
Where does this leave us?
  • The compact was a voluntary effort to solve a
    serious problem of providing services to persons
    with mental illness or mental retardation at a
    time when there were fewer concerns and laws
    about patient rights.
  • The compact established a cooperative process
    among states to provide care and treatment to the
    benefit of patients and their families.

29
Why it works
  • Annual conference.
  • Adoption of uniform procedures and forms by the
    ICC members.
  • Regular review, training, networking, and
    communication.
  • Establish best practice guidelines.

30
Challenges
  • No appeal process.
  • Cultural competency.
  • Limited English proficiency.
  • Registered Predatory Offenders.

31
Challenges
  • Status of patients civilly committed as a sex
    offender.
  • Returning committed patients on an unauthorized
    absence. Including committed sex offenders.

32
And More !
  • Patients with special medical needs.
  • Impact of shorter length of stays.
  • Impact of decreasing state operated beds and
    movement to community based programs.

33
And Finally
  • What makes the compact work is the dedication of
    the staff who find creative ways to work
    cooperatively, and who share a common desire to
    ensure that the best interest of the client is
    served.
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