Stephen W. Mayberg, Ph.D.
Without question, the role of the state hospital in the public mental health system has undergone a considerable metamorphosis in the past two or three decades. Many states have downsized their facilities, while other states have developed new facilities. However, as better treatment options have become available in the community, almost every state has begun to look systematically at what kinds of individuals are most appropriately served in the state hospital and what kinds of treatment programs work best for them.
It is clear that determining the role of the state hospital is a complex issue driven not only by treatment considerations but also by economics, politics, and history as well as by new delivery systems, new technologies, and changing knowledge about mental illness. Understanding the forces that shape change while also paying attention to history is essential in developing any conceptions about the future role of the state hospital.
In this book William Spaulding, professor of psychology at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and a clinical psychologist in the community transition program at the Lincoln Regional Center, presents a series of papers analyzing the issues confronting state hospitals. The book is divided into two parts. The first part, on policy, uses, as the editor notes, a top-down approach, beginning with broader perspectives. Leona Bachrach's lead essay, "The State of the State Mental Health Hospital at the Turn of the Century," clearly frames the history and variability of programs and opinions nationwide and several of the overarching, critical questions. Bachrach's long experience in analyzing services for chronically mentally ill patients provides a credible platform for discussion of many of the issues related to deinstitutionalization.
Richard Hunter follows with "Public Policy and State Psychiatric Hospitals," a concise history of the interaction of politics and the state hospital movement. The next two papers are case studies of state-hospital-based rehabilitation programs.
In the second part, on the new technologies, Mario Scalora's opening chapter, "No Place Else to Go: The Changing Role of State Hospitals and Forensic Mental Health Services," discusses the ever-increasing importance of forensic populations. Other contributors cover three areas that currently have a strong impact on state hospitals: the concept of therapeutic jurisprudence, community-based technologies such as various kinds of intensive case management, and information management technology. Spaulding ends with a formulation of the future roles and functions of state hospitals, drawing on the contributors' chapters.
Although Spaulding's organizational approach from macro to micro issues is laudable, one needs to remain aware of the dramatic differences in state hospital utilization among states. The chapters that deal with the bigger picture tend to be more relevant and helpful as a context for discussions about the future of the state hospital. It is critical to remember that every state mental health system is unique and that state-to-state variability is huge.
For instance, among the states, community alternatives have been developed with varying degrees of application and success. We have all learned from previous cycles of deinstitutionalization that the absence of a strong community system to receive persons discharged from the state hospital guarantees failure.
Unfortunately most of the micro-level articles about policy and technologies have been written by individuals who teach or work in a single system, the Nebraska mental health system. Although in context the articles illustrate their points, their applicability to other states is not always as readily apparent. That said, however, the issues addressed here are important for anyone working in a state hospital system to understand. State hospitals are no longer islands unto themselves, and failure by hospital administrators and staff to pay attention to the external forces that shape change will have serious ramifications for the hospital's future.
Clearly this book cannot be seen as a definitive treatise on the future role of the state hospital, nor as a cookbook for understanding state hospital issues. However, the issues identified and the solutions offered by the authors of each chapter are worth considering in attempting to understand the problems that affect the evolution of the state hospital system. Failure to take into account the myriad forces for change as well as the forces that reinforce the status quo has had negative consequences for some hospitals and states.
We must remember that asylums and state hospitals were originally sited away from urban areas to avoid the stresses of urban life. Many of these institutions were designed to be self-sufficient, with their own farms and dairies. They developed their own culture and identity as well as a certain degree of isolation. This insular approach is not helpful now, and Spaulding's book critically emphasizes the need to be aware of the past and to look to and embrace the future and the changes it inevitably brings.