How The U.S. Healthcare System Is Failing Mental Health Patients

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 27 ต.ค. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 12

  • @randallgregerson4761
    @randallgregerson4761 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    We really don't have adequate infrastructure in this country. I have a friend who is a counselor, and she has over three hundred patients. Think about that. It is also cost prohibitive for millions of people without the financial resources to get help. Between forty five and fifty million people unalive themselves every year in the U.S. and there is absolutely no plan to change those numbers.

  • @mattalley4330
    @mattalley4330 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I know a fellow who I grew up with in the same tiny town in Oregon with serious mental health problems and he seems to get little to no support. Serious problems as in I saw him walking down a sidewalk a few months ago having an intense shouted argument with someone who wasn’t there. Every so often he goes off and ends up in either a jail or mental hospital for awhile, is given meds every day, and presumably improves enough that he gets sent home but then he either doesn’t get or forgets to take his meds and something else happens. He is actually a pretty good guy when he regularly is taking his meds and he and I have always got on fairly well. However, just a few weeks ago he saw my family and I and started cussing us out at the top of his lungs, spitting f-bombs the way a welders torch spits sparks. I called the police non-emergency number but they did nothing. I feel it’s only a matter of time before he hurts himself or others, and nobody will step in and do anything.

  • @Samuraistar92
    @Samuraistar92 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I have treatment resistant depression took traditional psychiatric drugs for years. Suffered liver damage and was taken off them permanently and those meds didn’t even help anyways. Then was referred to ketamine therapy for my depression. Suffered permanent damage to my bladder and wasn’t told until it was too late. Now psychiatrists here in the USA deem me untreatable and a hopeless case. Hospitals will deny me care for psychiatric emergencies because they see me as a liability because they don’t want to be responsible for making me take medication and causing further damage to my organs so I get sent home. Hospitals are more concerned about me filing a malpractice case against them due the laws saying medication can be forced for emergencies when I can go into organ failure.I am forced to move to another country to get help:

  • @paulwolinsky1538
    @paulwolinsky1538 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    While Dr. Wentz clearly mentions insurance companies'influence as being part of the problem, I think she doesn't pay enough attention to the whole question of how health and mental health are dealt with under conditions of capitalist austerity politics and policies.
    Mental health is first and foremost a business in the US. Business models have changed pretty drastically within the last forty years or so.

  • @kenmeyers382
    @kenmeyers382 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Dr. Wertz talks about how the First Primary Care model improves mental health access. But FPS does not have psychiatrists or psychologists.

  • @shamsunnahar1135
    @shamsunnahar1135 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

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  • @Vitalocaa
    @Vitalocaa 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I’m waiting months to see a psychiatrist.. MONTHS!

  • @avocatious6402
    @avocatious6402 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video. Thank you for your insight :)