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Recommendations for Implementation
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a.
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Stabilize the scene using deescalation techniques appropriate for people with mental illness.
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Officers should approach and interact with people who may
have mental illness with a calm, non-threatening manner, while also protecting
the safety of all involved. Several de-escalation techniques (see Table 1) have
been shown to assist in calming a person who is not rational or who is
experiencing an emotional crisis.
Most people with mental illness are not violent, but for
their own safety and the safety of others officers should be aware that some
people with mental illness who are agitated and possibly deluded or paranoid
may act erratically, sometimes violently. If the person is acting erratically,
but not directly threatening any other person or him-or herself, such an
individual should be given time to calm down.
Violent outbursts are usually of short duration. It is better that the officer spend 15 or 20
minutes waiting and talking than to spend five minutes struggling to subdue the
person.
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b.
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Recognize signs or symptoms that may indicate that mental illness is a factor in the
incident.
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The officer responding to the scene is not expected to
diagnose any specific mental illness but is expected to recognize symptoms that
may indicate that mental illness is a factor in the incident. Symptoms of
different mental illnesses include, but are not limited to, those listed in
Table 2. Many of these symptoms represent internal, emotional states that are
not readily observable from outward appearances, though they may become
noticeable in conversation with the individual.
In addition to the symptoms outlined in Table 2, some
specific types of behavior may also be signs of mental illness. These behaviors can include severe changes
in behavior, unusual or bizarre mannerisms, hostility or distrust, one-sided
conversations, confused or nonsensical verbal communication. Officers may also notice inappropriate
behavior, such as wearing layers of clothing in the summer. It should be noted
that these behaviors can also be associated with cultural and personality
differences, other medical conditions, drug or alcohol abuse, or reactions to
very stressful situations. As such, the presence of these behaviors
should not be treated as conclusive proof of mental illness. They are
provided only as a framework to aid those police officers who must understand
what questions to ask and to decide what services, resources, or support are
needed to resolve the cause of the incident.
Officers should obtain additional information at the scene from family,
friends, or health professionals who are familiar with the individual's
behavior.
Officers should be aware that substance abuse disorders
can mimic many mental disorders; substance use can mask many mental disorders; and some somatic disorders, such as
diabetes or Parkinson's, may seem to be mental and/or substance abuse
disorders. To complicate matters, the
co-occurrence of mental illness and substance abuse is also quite common (see
Policy Statement 37: Co-occurring disorders). Due to the complexity of this diagnostic task,it will often be impossible for law enforcement
officers to distinguish mental illness from substance abuse disorders. The
officer who has observed unusual or erratic behavior should bring the
individual to an assessment site that is capable of making an accurate
determination of its cause.
Studies have shown that the potential for violence
increases considerably when people with mental illnesses use alcohol or drugs. For this reason, officers should be
observant and note any signs (e.g., bottles, drug paraphernalia) of substance
or alcohol use. At the same time, maintenance of a calm demeanor and use of
de-escalation techniques can help to prevent violent behavior.
Officers will need to attend to the medication needs of
some individuals with mental illness.
If the encounter lasts for some time, or a person is being detained,
people with mental illnesses may need access to their medication. Officers must
follow departmental rules for verifying that any pills or capsules the person
is carrying are prescribed, or to obtain the needed medication, so that they
may authorize the individual to continue the prescribed treatment.
Police officers should be aware that some medications that
treat mental illnesses have side effects that may also require attention. For example, medications may cause tremors,
nausea, extreme lethargy, confusion, dry mouth, constipation, or diarrhea. Police officers should attend to needs for
water, food, and access to toilet facilities.
It is important not to mistake these side effects as evidence of alcohol
or drug use.
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c.
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Determine whether a serious crime has been committed.
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No individual should be arrested for behavioral manifestations
of mental illness that are not criminal in nature. Arrest is generally appropriate when a felony has been committed
or when the person has outstanding warrants. Arrest is also appropriate in
cases in which the officer would normally make an arrest if the person did not
have a mental illness, and if the current signs of mental illness are minor or
not related to the violation.
In cases where the person with a mental illness has come
to the attention of the police because of behaviors that result from the mental
illness or nuisance violations, officers should engage referral mechanisms to
mental health services and supports to address the mental illness in lieu of
arresting the individual and engaging the criminal justice system. (See Policy Statement 4: On-Scene Response,
for more on referral mechanisms.)
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d.
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Consult personnel with expertise in mental illness to enhance successful incident
management.
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On-scene expertise in mental illnesses and their
manifestations is critical to effective incident management. This expertise can be provided by primary or
secondary on-scene responders who are specially trained police officers or
mental health professionals.
The following examples highlight the ways that departments
around the country have chosen to include this type of expertise. As described previously, these include
Crisis Intervention Teams (CITs), the comprehensive advanced approach, mental
health professionals who corespond, and Mobile Crisis Teams (MCTs). The basic
difference in these models is whether expertise is provided by police officers
who are trained extensively in mental health issues, or by mental health
professionals who either co-respond with law enforcement or respond after the scene
has been secured. While mental health
professionals are likely more knowledgeable than patrol officers about
involuntary commitment laws and bring additional, perhaps confidential, data to
the scene, they are not always available. (See Policy Statement 25: Sharing Information for more on agreements between mental health and criminal justice
agencies.)
Examples of approaches that use specially trained police
officers to supply on-scene expertise - either as a special team or as the
whole department - follow:
Crisis Intervention Team
Example:
Memphis (TN) Police Department
In a Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) approach
found in the Memphis Police Department, uniformed officers, specially trained
in mental health issues, act as primary or secondary responders to every call
involving people with mental illnesses. CIT officers are available on every
shift and are also available to mental health clients (consumers) and their
families. The Albuquerque, New Mexico, Police Department, The Roanoke,
Virginia, Police Department and the Houston, Texas, Police Department are among
numerous agencies across the country that have also adopted the CIT
approach.
Comprehensive Advanced Approach
Example:
Athens-Clarke County (GA) Police Department
In a comprehensive response, the Athens-Clarke
County Police Department decided that its small size precluded the formation of
a specialized team to respond to calls for service involving people with mental
illness. Accordingly, the department decided that every officer would attend
the advanced 40-hour crisis intervention training and thus be able to respond
appropriately to these calls.
Mental health professionals who co-respond
Example:
Birmingham (AL) Police Department
The Birmingham Police Department uses a Community
Service Officer (CSO) Unit, which is attached to the Patrol Division. The unit
is composed of social workers who respond directly to an incident location when
requested by an officer. They serve a
variety of populations, including people with mental illness. The CSOs are also
certified law enforcement academy trainers and work closely with community
groups and other components of the criminal justice system.
Example:
Long Beach (CA) Mental Evaluation Team
In this program, a patrol officer from Long Beach
Police Department is accompanied by a clinician to respond ten hours a day,
seven days a week, to calls for service involving people with mental
illness. The clinician provides
on-scene assessment of the individual's mental health needs and ensures
admission into a mental health facility, if necessary. This approach prevents unnecessary
incarceration of people with mental illnesses.
Example:
San Diego County (CA) Sheriff's Office
The Psychiatric Emergency Response Team (PERT)
approach used by the San Diego County Sheriff's Office pairs a licensed mental
health clinician with an officer or deputy in a marked car to respond to
situations determined by the dispatcher or another officer to involve a person
suspected of having a mental illness that is a factor in the incident. These teams conduct mental health
assessments and process referrals to county providers if appropriate.
Mobile Crisis Team
Example:
Anne Arundel County (MD) Police Department
The Anne Arundel County Police Department has
arranged for access to a team of crisis workers from a local mental health
center that works seven days a week. The responding officer must determine if a
Mobile Crisis Team is warranted at the scene and will call accordingly.
There are several important differences between the
approaches that involve mental health professionals. One main difference is how
the mental health professional is paid and supervised, usually either through
the police department or through the county mental health agency. For example,
in Birmingham the social worker is located in the police department and is
under the direct supervision of the chief, while in Anne Arundel County,
Maryland, the mobile crisis team members are paid by a mental health
organization. Another difference is whether the mental health agent works in a
team with the officer, or responds as a separate unit. An additional
distinction is whether the civilian workers respond to a variety of calls for
service beyond those involving people with mental illnesses, such as domestic
violence. Yet, in all models, the mental health professional is responsible for
understanding community resources and finding services within the community.
Successful incident management is often dependent on
information about the person's current and past behavior. If it is not possible to obtain this
information from the person with mental illness or a responding professional,
sometimes it can be obtained at the scene from those who are close to the
person, and who are familiar with the situation and with the person's history.
In those rare events when a person's life or the life of a
bystander is in jeopardy, in addition to following standard crisis procedures,
law enforcement should also formally call on specially trained mental health
professionals for assistance in resolving the critical incident. (See Policy
Statement 4: On-Scene Response, for more information on handling critical
incidents.) Law enforcement personnel should protect the confidentiality of
medical or mental health information to avoid disclosures (see Policy Statement
25: Sharing Information) and should follow protocols for written documentation
provided in Policy Statement 5: Incident Documentation.
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e.
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Determine, when warranted, whether the person may meet the state criteria for
emergency evaluation.
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The criteria for emergency evaluation are similar from
state to state, although there is some variation in how they are
interpreted. It is not the role of the police officer to make the sole determination
that a person should be committed.
However, being familiar with the criteria will help officers decide
whether to detain the person and transport him or her for an emergency mental
evaluation. This is not an arrest. Officers should be alert to the behaviors, actions, and speech of the person so that they can
determine whether specific indicators of the criteria apply. Officers should also familiarize themselves
with state law concerning emergency evaluation.
Most patients who receive inpatient or outpatient services
for mental illness do so voluntarily. That is, when presented with their
options - including the possibility of involuntary commitment - they choose to
enter a hospital or to follow a course of outpatient treatment suggested by
treatment professionals. In fact, in some states you cannot commit someone who
is willing to admit him- or herself voluntarily. For a significant minority,
however, there are times when involuntary commitment becomes the only available
avenue to services and the surest way to ensure the safety of the person involved.
Involuntary commitment involves deprivation of personal freedom and can be an
indignity to the person being committed. In addition, it requires the
participation of numerous professionals (including the certifying doctor,
attorneys representing both the accepting facility and the patient, and a
judge). For these reasons and the
simple reality that commitment takes considerable time, in the majority of
cases most clinicians will seek to offer voluntary admission to services before
considering involuntary commitment.
Every state has a law that provides a clear path for those
cases in which a person must be involuntarily committed to treatment. While the
laws vary to some degree, they all attempt to define circumstances under which
a person's unsupervised presence in the community poses a risk by reason of his
or her mental illness. In almost all cases, it is the likelihood of a person's
dangerousness to self or to others that is the primary trigger for involuntary
commitment. In several states, the mental health law also includes language
defining what is broadly known as the "gravely disabled" criterion,
which is meant to cover instances in which a person's well-being is threatened
by inattention to personal safety, failure to eat, exposure to extreme or
dangerous conditions, or other evidence that he or she is in imminent danger if
left untreated. Some state statutes also note a "need for treatment"
or likelihood that a person will benefit from treatment as one of many criteria
for commitment. Additionally, the laws covering involuntary commitment are
subject to interpretation and, it should be noted, continued debate within the
mental health community.
Traditionally, the treatment to which a person is
involuntarily committed is provided in a secure inpatient facility. State law
generally charges the department of mental health or its equivalent with
regulating facilities to which involuntary commitment is possible. Not all
hospitals are licensed to receive involuntary patients (although this does not
always restrict their ability to conduct emergency evaluations). In addition,
reimbursement issues may limit admission to some hospitals. It is important for law enforcement officers
and others who might become involved in involuntary commitment proceedings to
know which facilities are able to admit involuntary patients.
In some states, involuntary commitment to outpatient
services is also possible under the law. As with involuntary inpatient
commitment, there is considerable controversy within the mental health
community with regard to the acceptable purposes and uses of this option. There
is also considerable variability in the manner in which outpatient commitment
is utilized. Not only do states have different standards in the law, but judges
and doctors can and do differ widely in their understanding and use of
discretion regarding the appropriateness of invoking outpatient commitment
provisions.
To avoid the adversarial dynamics of involuntary
commitment, in some instances crisis teams may consider the use of alternative
dispute resolution (ADR). Crisis teams should consider including personnel
trained in ADR techniques who can attempt to resolve conflicts short of
involuntary intervention.
Many people with mental illness today have some broad
understanding of involuntary commitment laws and of the rights they have under
those laws. More broadly, many who have been in treatment have learned to
understand their illness, to monitor their symptoms, and, ideally, to manage
their condition. Patient education is a significant component of treatment in
some mental health agencies. Some consumers have arranged to provide
information to emergency responders (e.g., through wallet cards) on whom to
contact in the event of a crisis. Officers should be aware that someone with a
mental illness who is expressing a preference for particular actions,
medications, or modes of treatment may be speaking from experience. The
person's requests should be relayed to any treatment professional called to the
scene or consulted in follow-up to an incident.
"Advance directives" are legal mechanisms by
which a patient's preference for particular medications or treatment
alternatives can be expressed prior to a crisis, much as many in the general
population execute "living wills" or other legal documents outlining
their wishes should medical crises leave them unable to express themselves in
this way. Officers should be familiar with this mechanism and should be aware
of the possibility that a person with mental illness may wish to follow the
steps outlined in his or her advance directive. In cases where the advance
directive is followed, the person with mental illness may more readily agree to
become engaged in services, thereby eliminating the need for involuntary
commitment.
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