Neo-Institutionalization: The Overregulation of Community Mental Health

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I want to dispense a new term to conceptualize the poison wreaking so much havoc on community mental health. The word: Neo-Institutionalization. Neo-institutionalization must be stopped at all costs! Neo-institutionalization is the hazardously complex systematic formula or medical value justifying a patient’s ‘need’ in mental health treatment. Stated, under the community mental health model, clinicians explain the need for a person’s treatment every day to enroll them into therapy or mental health service. This formula, or medical value, is inputted into some form for insurance reimbursement or into an application for government services.  

 

Neo-institutionalization evolved and came into being out of the clumsy rollout of de-institutionalization policies in the 1970 and 1980s. The very moment de-institutionalization stalled is the moment the shadows of neo-institutionalization passed over the mental health community and has been looming over our heads ever since. The crisis is only now realized because clinicians are finally asking: why aren’t some folks recovering? And why do some people keep falling out of the system? 

 

The status of community mental health treatment continues to lose ground. The number of questions is rising around poor patient outcomes. At the root of it, the vision that changemakers had when community mental health came into being is tired, and the frame is masking the issues within is breaking if not already broken. The term community mental health evolved from the vacuum[wake left from de-institutionalization. But, like most vacuums, impurities and filth crept into the works, mucking up what could have been a new era for mental health. Instead, these impurities continue to stifle long term progress.

 

Since I’ve been a victim of the mental health system’s broken aspects and began practicing as a social worker, I have been thinking about reform: how, and to what end? When people’s lives and their health are at stake, we need to not only reform but overhaul the system and create a new Gold Standard in Mental Health Treatment. 

 

However, turning the old system on its head and supplanting it with a functioning replacement seems rather slippery, precarious, and possibly dangerous if something goes wrong. That doesn’t even articulate the issues required to revolutionize the system to replace it, so I can only imagine the enormity of the task ahead. 

 

To make this shift a reality, demystifying Neo-Institutionalization to the public needs to be the priority of the day. People already had mixed feelings about discharging or being released from long-term settings and the system moving to a community mental health model depending on their beliefs about recovery. The new turn community mental health signaled seemingly more person-centered care in modern mental health treatment, but hidden and covert aspects persisted without pushback. 

 

The local community mental health commission must increase pathways to access to services and engendered so that consumers can gain access to the many lines of care already provided by the systems of care in New York State and by all regulatory bodies with a vested interest mental health treatment. Neo-institutionalisation is complex and insidious, and it must end. The plan I suggest is threefold. 

 

The first phase of operations targets the state psychiatric centers based on a global assessment of outlying communities and the express needs of the consumers being discharged. The second phase targets the overhaul of treatment silos and installations in the community that needs more integrated access for consumers. Without questions, the resources already exist in the community, and this document proposes how to reconfigure existing structures that provide mental health treatment to serve patients. 

 

The success of Phase II depends on the elimination of freestanding treatment silos. Treatment programs that discriminate and choose to serve only subgroups or ‘high functioning’ patients openly will be given a mandate by the Office of Mental Health to broaden their scope of services or be subject to a loss of licensing and funding. An example of a program that only serves a small niche of ‘qualified’ patients includes outpatient settings that refuse to accept state-sponsored insurance for disabled and reliant patients on Medicaid and other service dollars. Conversely, treatment centers that offer services to all patients or are cited for restructuring and successfully reconfigure their clinics, group practices, and day treatment centers will be awarded funding to commit to on-site projects and community outreach projects to extend services community further. 

 

The next and final phase of this plan is an ongoing community mental health surveillance and hygiene study, which will continue throughout reintegration and the patient discharge to the community. Upon the final release of patients from extended care units, and all existing treatment plans up for review have expired, the final discharge from the locale’s state psychiatric center will have walked out of the gates of the hospital. Under the assumption that the influx of thousands of newly discharged chronic patients will test the limits of the community’s local emergency rooms and the community hospitals’ abilities to provide services and will primarily increase the census of mental health treatment at health centers, surveillance and hygiene study will bridge the existing gaps in each community during the critical phase of mass-organized discharges from state psychiatric centers. 

 

The study will be monitored and fed into a state-wide planning commission for full community access to and integrate mental health care. Next, a broader approach, including at the global level, can be implemented and used as a model for other state regulatory bodies interested in eliminating the dated care level and the deferred recovery of patients. 

 

I am suggesting that we turn the system on its head without further delay. We first need to re-establish the consumer’s voice in treatment. The system is still very much run by so-called experts and autocratic practitioners who left behind the noble helping profession for commercial benefit. These clinician-crats now dominate the system and make up the ruling or decision-making elite in community mental health and local government. The only exception to this dominating stakeholder is the peer professional and prosumers. 

 

Unfortunately, to do business with these clinician-crats, the peer profession has been commodified and reduced to dollars and cents on the state budget plan. To truly reform the system, we need to restructure the system to match consumers’ needs with programs and services genuinely reflective of the community and the values we want to invest in the new mental health structure. I am suggesting that this can only mean full access & integration of mental health care into the community. No gaps, no service delays, or deferral. No disparities and no new adjectives to describe the same treatment used for decades. Integration includes research and clinical trials at the community level to move the discourse further through on-site access to the latest modalities available.

 

Full Access and Integration is the freedom once realized by the first reformers in the mental health movement of the 1970s & 1980s. Access and integration translate into ramping up entry points into local community health networks, connecting mental health treatment to all goods and services targeting healing and health-related issues and total wellness. The rise of the Modern Health Home and the fall of the silos gestures to the system’s attempt at integrating care, but, like most new turns in treatment, the outcomes reflect the care management philosophy and regulations’ clumsy practices.

 

Instead of a one service shop or agency, we have several services intersecting with health and wellness. However, like most products assembled hastily, the quality of care reflects a level of degradation in skills and care. The concept worked, but the fine-tuning in hiring practices and over billing overshadows the assembly of worthwhile and more beneficial programs.

 

Ultimately, hospitals need to stay open and operate under the highest level of professional scrutiny. Long-term outpatient ‘ongoing’ programs still exist and are even more abundant than ever before. I suggest we remove the “level” from our care systems, which defer recovery and long-term independence goals. The end of top-down forms of treatment in which patients are only granted access to freedoms based on their treatment success. Years ago, the level of care philosophy made sense, but does it still make sense today when installing choice and nuanced person-centered care into the framework?

 

We must pave the way to end long-term in-patient treatment & funnel consumers back into the community for the long-span in their roads to recovery. Treatment and services must genuinely be centered on the patient’s needs and exist to engrain the guise of neo-institutionalization and pass it off as a reform and a functioning mental health system. 

Author Info:

Max E. Guttman
Mindful Living LCSW | 914 400 7566 | maxwellguttman@gmail.com | Website |  + posts

Max E. Guttman is the owner of Mindful Living LCSW, PLLC, a private mental health practice in Yonkers, New York.

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Empowering Recovery: Mental HEALTH AFFAIRS BLOG

In a world filled with noise, where discussions on mental health are often either stigmatised or oversimplified, one blog has managed to carve out a space for authentic, in-depth conversations: Mental Health Affairs. Founded by Max E. Guttman, LCSW, the blog has become a sanctuary for those seeking understanding, clarity, and real talk about the complexities of mental health—both in personal experiences and in larger societal contexts.

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