Awareness Rally

 

Up

 

Mental health group to rally for more awareness

By TAMARIA L. LIDDELL
The Eagle-Gazette Staff

LANCASTER -- The availability of some local mental health services has deteriorated in the past couple of years. Funding has been cut across the board to local agencies and more reductions are expected later on this month.

So mental health officials are gathering Friday to get the word out about issues facing the mental health system in Fairfield County.

"Mental illness affects people's lives in one way or another. It's a good idea to know what resources are available, because a lot of people with mental illnesses don't seek help or the resources they need," said Rick Branscome, community education coordinator for Fairfield Mental Health Consumer Group.

Branscome also is president of the Lancaster Area National Alliance for Mental Illness, another sponsor of the event.

The event is being held as part of National Mental Health Month.

"The goal is to make sure that everyone in our community has a sensitivity that there are a substantial number of people in our community that struggle with mental illnesses," said Orman Hall, executive director of the Fairfield County Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services Board.

"The first step to recovery is an awareness that there's something that needs to be recovered from," Hall said.

Out of the state's 50 mental health systems, Lancaster ranks in the bottom 10 in financial support, said Terry Russell, executive director of National Alliance for the Mentally Ill of Ohio.

"We have a lot of good people working over there (in Lancaster), but they can't meet the need," said Russell, who will serve as the main speaker on Friday.

The county could face disaster if this trend continues, Russell said.

"You can't provide care unless you have the resources to bring people in to provide treatment," he said. "What's so sad about that is treatment outcomes for mental illness are much greater than other illnesses. We have an 80 percent success rate in treatment of major depression, and a 60 percent success rate in treating bipolar illness and schizophrenia."

Russell said treatment for cancer is 55 percent successful and heart ailments is in the 40 percentile range.

When people go untreated, the costs will add up.

"If a person isn't treated and ends up in one of the state hospitals, it will cost $452 per day, when you can treat a person in the community for less that $30 a day," Russell said.

Educating the public on the mental health system is critical, because many people have misconceptions about mental illness, said Russell.

"These are biological brain disorders," he said. "They're no different from cancer or heart ailments. It just happens to invade the brain and because our symptoms are so out in the public, people get a misrepresentation of what the illnesses are."

Originally published Thursday, May 6, 2004