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The Untapped Power of Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT) Laws

The Untapped Power of Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT) Laws. National College of Probate Judges 2018 Spring Conference San Diego, CA May 3, 2018 By: Brian Stettin Policy Director Treatment Advocacy Center treatmentadvocacycenter.org.

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The Untapped Power of Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT) Laws

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  1. The Untapped Power ofAssisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT) Laws National College of Probate Judges 2018 Spring Conference San Diego, CA May 3, 2018 By: Brian Stettin Policy Director Treatment Advocacy Center treatmentadvocacycenter.org

  2. Public Mental Health:Many Needs, No Single “Cure-All” • More investment in community-based care (mobile crisis teams, crisis respite, et. al.) • Inpatient psychiatric beds • Recruit mental health professionals to underserved regions • New law-enforcement / diversion strategies • Address treatment non-engagement

  3. Treatment Non-Engagement Too many with SMI caught in the “revolving doors” of the mental health and criminal justice systems

  4. Many reasons for non-engagement • Inadequate community-based support • Health insurance gaps • Distance to provider / lack of transportation • Substance abuse • Side effects of medications • Challenges with executive functioning • Mistrust of doctors • Anosognosia / lack of insight

  5. A most challengingcause of non-engagement: a symptom of brain dysfunction known as … ANOSOGNOSIA

  6. Anosognosia • Lack of insight into one’s own illness. (inability to recognize illness in self) • NOT denial • Brain-based. Out of the individual’s control • Makes non-adherence logical

  7. Linking Anosognosiaand Non-Adherence Psych. Services 2/06: • Of 300 patients with non-adherence tracked, 32% found to lack insight. • Those 32% had significantly longer non-adherent episodes, more likely to completely cease meds, have severe symptoms, be hospitalized

  8. Bottom Line on Anosognosia • If you build it … … SOME still won’t come!

  9. AOT is … • A strategy to address non-adherence • A form of civil commitment • A means of leveraging the power of courts to influence behavior

  10. Why Does the Court Order Matter? • As court orders go, AOT order is uniquely toothless: • No contempt of court • No forcibly administered meds • Fair to ask: what’s the point?

  11. Point #1:“The Black Robe Effect” • Judges naturally command respect as symbols of authority in our civic culture. • The AOT judge must embrace the role of primary motivator. • The black robe effect works on the treatment system too.

  12. Point #2:Rapid Response to Non-Adherence Lack of punishment for non-adherence doesn’t mean lack of consequence

  13. AOT “Program”?Where’s that in the law? • Answer: nowhere • Establishing a “program” means using the authority granted in the law to seek AOT, in a manner not contemplated by (but clearly consistent with) the law.

  14. AOT is notMental Health Court • Court’s authority is not predicated on the commission of crime. • Must be heard in court with jurisdiction over civil commitments. (In many states, that’s Probate Court.) • No “sanctions” for violating the order. • Should not require the individual’s voluntary choice to participate.

  15. AOT is not just for thosepresently refusing treatment • Legal criteria allow programs to choose patients based on history and fragility of condition, not immediate state of mind. • Most natural point to start AOT is upon hospital discharge of a stabilized patient • Starting AOT with positive outlook is optimal. • “Voluntary” settlement agreements are fine, but …

  16. Judicial involvement in every case • Any settlement agreement should require court approval. • Lack of need for a contested hearing is no reason to deny patient the benefits of interacting with the judge.

  17. Periodic Status Conferences • The best AOT judges check in regularly with the parties. Convene all around a table. • Stresses that AOT is a reciprocal commitment, not one-sided. • Regularly reinforces the “black robe effect” upon both sides.

  18. [video break #1]

  19. Recovery Model vs. Medical Model • AOT is not an outright rejection of the Recovery Model; it is a rejection of Recovery Model extremism. • The goal is to maximize self-direction while acknowledging that SOME patients, at CERTAIN TIMES, have a limited capacity for it.

  20. [video break #2]

  21. “How’s that workin’ for ya?” • 8 months in living hell (hunger, cold, filth) • 8 months of potentially irreversible damage to brain • 8 months daily exposure to life-threatening hazards (OD, violence) • God-knows-what done to raise survival money (violent crime, prostitution)

  22. He could die. Well, that’s alright, that’s his choice. NO, IT ISN’T “CHOICE.”

  23. We have to give people not only choices, but also time to make those choices. NO, WE DON’T HAVE THE LUXURY OF “TIME”

  24. We Have the Data! Final Report on the Status of Asssted Outpatient Treatment New York State George E. Pataki, Governor Office of Mental Health Sharon E. Carpinello, R.N., Ph.D., Commissioner March 2005

  25. 2009 NY Study:AOT Works 2009 NY study results (Duke et. al.): • Likelihood of hospital admission over 6-month period cut in half (74% to 36%) • “Substantial reductions” in hosp days • Likelihood of arrest over 1-month period cut in half (3.7% to 1.9%) • AOT group 4x less likely to commit serious violence than non-eligible control group, despite more violent histories

  26. 2009 NY Study:Fears Unfounded • AOT recipients no more likely to feel coerced by mental health system • AOT recipients report no greater sense of stigma • Impact on quality of voluntary services was POSITIVE

  27. 2013 NY Study:AOT Saves Money! In NYC, net treatment costs declined 43% Y1, another 13% in Y2.

  28. TAC is Here to Help Brian Stettin Policy Director 703-294-6007 stettinb@treatmentadvocacycenter.org

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