Skip to main content

President Kennedy's Unrealized Promise

Exactly a half century ago, in October, 1963, President John F. Kennedy signed the Community Mental Health Centers Act into law.  It affected two very different classes of people - people with mental illness and people with developmental disabilities.

In many ways, it was a civil rights act, promising to replace large, segregated institutions with integrated, community-based services.


It made a huge difference for people with developmental disabilities. 

But for people with mental illnesses, its promise is unfulfilled and the dream sometimes feels like it is dying.

When President Kennedy signed the Mental Retardation Facilities and Community Mental Health Centers Construction Act on October 31st, he did so with optimism. The law specified that the new community mental health centers would offer four services – prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation or recovery – to people with mental illness.  And the result would be that all people, no matter what their disability, would live freely and comfortably in their home communities.

Had he lived to today – into his late 90s – President Kennedy would be appalled at what became of this vision.

He would have witnessed in 1981 the replacement of direct federal funding for community mental health services with an inadequately-funded mental health block grant to the states.  And he would have seen the result.  Chronic homelessness grew, and jails and prisons became the new warehouses for adults with mental illness.  Here is a statistic that would have stunned President Kennedy – women in prison today are twice as likely to have serious mental illnesses as are men.

President Kennedy would also be dismayed that his vision for community-based special education for children with emotional disturbances became so clouded, and with such tragic consequences.  The Act provided for demonstration grants to improve special education services.  He never could have imagined that fifty years later, only 389,000 children would be receiving special education services because of emotional disturbances.  And if one in five school-aged children actually has a mental disorder, then this means that we are identifying only one in every 28 for special education services.

And, notwithstanding the promise of the Affordable Care Act, President Kennedy would also be far from satisfied with some recent federal foot-dragging.  In 2008, the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act passed with the help of his brother and nephew.  It guaranteed equitable insurance coverage for mental health and health conditions.  But it has taken five years for a final rule to implement that law (a rule now promised within days or weeks).  And at the same time funding for SAMHSA – through which federal block grant dollars flow – has declined.

He would have seen states do no better.

I was in the Connecticut State Legislature when we received our first block grants in the early 1980s.  There was zero interest in using state funds to continue building the community mental health center program. 

That was long ago.  So let’s look at today. 

In the five years between 2008 and 2013, states cut $4.6 billion from mental health services, often citing an unwillingness to burden state taxpayers with these services. 

But even when states were offered a free ride, many still refused to authorize additional spending on mental health services.  This year, twenty-two states refused to expand their Medicaid programs, even though the federal government agreed to pay 100 percent of the cost for three years and told states that they could contract the programs again as the federal share went down.  No surprise – many of the 5 million left behind will be people with mental illnesses.

If we wanted to realize the vision of President Kennedy, it would not be hard.

We could offer all children mental health screening as part of well-child exams, and admit more children with mental illnesses to special education services.

We could provide insurance coverage to more people with mental illness, and appropriate more funding to community mental health services. 

And we could opt not to send adults with mental illness to prison, at least until we have guaranteed them access to care and worked with them to develop a meaningful recovery plan that might help them avoid hospitalizations, homelessness, and imprisonment in the future.

If we did these five things, we could give vigor to the dream and honor the promise President Kennedy made when he signed the Community Mental Health Centers Act into law:


“It was said in an earlier age that the mind of a man is a far country which can neither be approached nor explored.  But today… it will be possible for a nation as rich in human and material resources as ours to make the remote regions of the mind accessible.  [People with mental illness]… need no longer be alien to our affections nor beyond the help of our communities.”   

Paul Gionfriddo via email: gionfriddopaul@gmail.com.  Twitter: @pgionfriddo.  Facebook: www.facebook.com/paul.gionfriddo.  LinkedIn:  www.linkedin.com/in/paulgionfriddo/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Veterans and Mental Illness

On a sultry June morning in our national’s capital last Friday, I visited the Vietnam Veterans Memorial .   Scores of people moved silently along the Wall, viewing the names of the men and women who died in that war.   Some stopped and took pictures.   One group of men about my age surrounded one name for a photo.   Two young women posed in front of another, perhaps a grandfather or great uncle they never got to meet. It is always an incredibly moving experience to visit the Wall.   It treats each of the people it memorializes with respect. There is no rank among those honored.   Officer or enlisted, rich or poor, each is given equal space and weight. It is a form of acknowledgement and respect for which many veterans still fight. Brave Vietnam veterans returned from Southeast Asia to educate our nation about the effects of war and violence. I didn’t know anything about Post Traumatic Stress Disorder when I entered the Connecticut Legislature in the late 1970s.   I had only vag

Scapegoats and Concepts of a Plan: How Trump Fails Us

When a politician says he has “concepts of a plan” instead of a plan, there is no plan. And yet, that’s where we are with Donald Trump, nine years after he first launched a political campaign promising to replace Obamacare with something cheaper and better, nearly four years after he had four years to try to do just that. And fail. Doubling down during Tuesday’s debate, he claimed he had “concepts of a plan” to replace Obamacare. Really? He’s got nothing. In fact, he sounds just like Nixon sounded in 1968, when he claimed he had a “secret” plan to get us out of Vietnam. That turned out to be no plan at all (remember “Vietnamization?”) and cost us seven more years there and tens of thousands of lives. The Affordable Care Act, about which I wrote plenty in this blog a decade or more ago, wasn’t perfect. But it was a whole lot better than what we had before it – and anything (save a public option) that has been proposed since. Back then, insurers could deny coverage because of pre-exi

Anxiety and the Presidential Election

Wow. Could the mainstream media do anything more to raise our anxiety levels about the 2024 election? And diminish or negate all the recent accomplishments in our country? Over the past three-and-a-half years, our nation’s economy has been the strongest in the world. Unemployment is at record lows, and the stock market is at record highs. NATO – which last came together to defend the United States in the aftermath of 9/11 – is stronger than ever. Border crossings are down. Massive infrastructure improvements are underway in every state. Prescription drug costs are lower. We finally got out of Afghanistan – evacuating more than 100,000 U.S. citizens and supporters – with just a handful of deaths. Inflation – which rose precipitously in the aftermath of the pandemic – has come back down, and prices in many areas have even begun to decline. And yet, all the media commentators can talk about these days – and they are not “reporters” when they are clearly offering opinions to frame the