Guest MINDSETTER™ Nunnelly: Crisis Intervention Teams - Saving Lives & Decreasing Stigma

Guest MINDSETTER™ Alex Nunnelly

Guest MINDSETTER™ Nunnelly: Crisis Intervention Teams - Saving Lives & Decreasing Stigma

Photo courtesy of purplemattfish/flickr
When Rhode Island is listed in a group with Alabama, Arkansas and West Virginia, you know something is wrong. That’s where the Ocean State stands when it comes to mental health crisis intervention programs.  Law enforcement officers are frequently the first responders to mental health crises and need not only the right training, but assistance from others.  Without adequate training and support our services are lacking.  The solution?  Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) programs.

People with mental illnesses are not criminals. However, police are often called to defuse a situation involving people with mental illnesses.  People undergoing mental crises respond differently than others in frightening circumstances and without proper training and support responders are put at risk. Crisis Intervention Teams are teams of law enforcement and community members trained in mental health crisis strategies to understand what to do in these unique situations.  Crisis Intervention Teams started in Tennessee and are now incorporated in most states across the country, but not Rhode Island.  These teams, proven to save the lives of citizens and police officers, need to be implemented in Rhode Island as well.  The safety of all citizens, not only those with mental illnesses but also their families, neighbors and our police officers depend on the implementation of Crisis Intervention Teams.

The key difference between CIT programs and current RI programs in place is an emphasis on community. With CIT programs, police work closely with community members and mental health care providers.  While this sounds costly, it has actually proven to save money in the states and cities relying on such programs. How?  Because police respond to fewer calls. Crisis Intervention Team programs rely on mental health care providers and volunteers when police are not needed. These less costly alternatives end up saving officers time as well.

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Now, I do not want to knock Rhode Island law enforcement.  The current program offers hours of mental health training from professionals with additional optional training. This Certified Crisis Response Training offered through the RI Council of Community Mental Health Organizations is a great first step.  Rhode Island has made many improvements in regards to mental health crises resulting in fewer arrests and fewer deaths.  While stigma is decreasing and crises are being handled better, we can do more.  One issue with the program currently in place is that it is not standard across the state.  When it comes to mental health, we need to ensure a standard minimum level; the services offered in Central Falls should not vary from those in Bristol for example.

Crisis Intervention Programs keep both our police force safe and our communities.  Without the proper programing, people with mental illness often end up in jail. Estimates show that over a million Americans in the prison system live with mental illness (justice.gov). These are often people who had one bad day or who could have simply missed their medication.  This includes many who are better off receiving care and treatment rather than imprisonment. Should we not do everything we can to protect some of the most vulnerable among our society and those who serve to keep us safe?

In the wake of the shooting in San Bernardino, the 355th shooting across the country this year alone, police need to have the training to properly intervene. CIT programs do not only help in defusing a shooting, but can prevent shootings and can prevent other severe situations. With mental health facilities closing across RI from OASIS Wellness & Recovery Center in Providence to South Shore Mental Health in Wakefield, more crises could be in our future.  How these crises unfold depends on having the proper training and programs in place.  Crisis Intervention Team programs should be a part of every city and town across the state.  The law enforcement are taking on a task that should be split amongst the community. Time and again, community based approaches have proven to be the most successful and best ways to intervene in crisis situations because they save money, time and lives.  It is time Rhode Island steps up to the same level of care as the majority of this country.

Alex Nunnelly is a senior at Providence College and is studying political science and mental health in Rhode Island.


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