Laura's Law
AB 1421 was signed into state law in 2002 and became effective January 1, 2003. Known as Laura's Law, this statute allows court-ordered, intensive outpatient treatment for a small population of individuals who revolve in and out of jails, hospitals and homelessness. Typically, these individuals are too paranoid, too disabled, too sick or too insight-impaired to realize they are sick and engage in treatment. Laura's Law is named after a 19-year-old woman working at a Nevada County mental health clinic who was shot to death by a delusional patient who was not receiving the help he needed because he resisted treatment.
The treatment, called Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT), provides a tool that ensures continuity of care for some of the most difficult-to-treat people, who are traditionally neglected in favor of consumers who want treatment. This neglect is seen as a form of discrimination against people with the most severe illnesses. AOT allows intervention before an individual commits a crime that triggers an involuntary hospitalization or arrest, providing an alternative to hospitalization and incarceration.
The current law governing commitment, called the Lanterman-Petris-Short (LPS) Act, provides only for inpatient commitment and stipulates that individuals can be involuntarily hospitalized only if they pose an immediate danger to themselves or others or are judged by the court to be "gravely disabled," a legal term meaning they do not have the ability to care for themselves. The law gives physicians a 72-hour hold period to evaluate them in a locked facility and begin treatment. But this often results in a revolving door of recovery and relapse as no continued care is provided. In Sacramento County, 75% of the people with mental illness in our county jail have been in the County Mental Health Treatment Center before.
Laura's Law is patterned after New York's Kendra's Law, which showed impressive results after five years. AOT significantly reduced the severest consequences for participants who formerly had rejected treatment.
74% fewer people experienced homelessness
77% fewer experienced psychiatric hospitalization
83% fewer experienced arrest
87% fewer experienced incarceration
55% fewer attempted suicide or self-harm
49% fewer abused alcohol
48% fewer abused drugs
47% fewer physicall harmed others
43% fewer threatened other with physical harm
46% fewer damaged or destroyed property
The state law does not mandate California counties to adopt Laura's Law, so each county can elect whether or not to adopt it. This decision will be made by the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors by early December. There is an urgent need for advocates to contact the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors.
For more information about Laura's Law, see the Treatment Advocacy Center.
http://www.namisacramento.org/advocacy/lauras_law.html
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