On LPS Reform, Fears and Hopes May Be Overstated

In my previous post, I asked whether involuntary treatment actually helps people, and concluded that the evidence in general is mixed and for long-term conservatorship basically inexistent (both for its harms and its benefits, in fairness). Here, I’m considering a question closer to my own research, which is not whether involuntary treatment “works” but whether… Continue reading On LPS Reform, Fears and Hopes May Be Overstated

How many psychiatric beds does(n’t) California have?

If there’s one thing that’s treated as certain in debates over California’s mental health system, it’s that the state doesn’t have enough psychiatric beds. The state de-institutionalized people living in (or, perhaps, abandoned into) state hospitals more rapidly—and from a lower baseline—than the national average: Today, California has fewer psychiatric beds per capita than the… Continue reading How many psychiatric beds does(n’t) California have?

Free Britney? Better to Reform Conservatorship for Everyone.

Thanks to a wave of recent publicity, the “Free Britney Spears” movement is creating momentum to free some of the 1.3 million Americans under legal guardianship. Guardianships—or “conservatorships” in California—allow a court to designate a third party to control someone’s finances, make medical decisions on their behalf, and decide where they live; the ACLU calls the “greatest deprivation of… Continue reading Free Britney? Better to Reform Conservatorship for Everyone.