I saw this tweeted out from ABC's Jake Tapper, and it is pretty powerful to read in light of what has happened. It's long, but it really is worth reading.
My thoughts below the fold (so to speak).
http://anarchistsoccermom.blogspot.com/2012/12/thinking-unthinkable.html?m=1
How do we start to address the woeful options for mental health treatment in this country?
It is usually one of hte first things cut from city and state budgets, and private insurance considers it nothing more than a red headed step-child as far as benefits they willingly pay out for it vs. other more tangible illnesses/medical conditions. Medicaid benefits for it are largely terrible as well.
Fact is that effective treatment is usually really costly because the visits to doctors are frequent, and the medicines usually really expensive.
Many people have very limited options in effectively dealing with a mental illness given the way the system works unless they happen to be independently wealthy or have access to Cadillac level health plans.
In many ways it dovetails into the larger conversation about access to healthcare in general in this country, but what do we do to increase people who need its access to treatment so that they can become contributing members of society as opposed to dangers to it.
To me this whole sad ordeal is almost less about guns and more about how a woeful healthcare system that continues to let these people slip through the cracks without proper treatment.
We need to be educating parents and kids about the fact that mental illness is a real thing, and something to be taken seriously. It can happen to anyone, and just the same it needs to be treated as seriously as if you had cancer, or any other real tangible disease.
IggyPride00
Senior Member
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IggyPride00
Senior Member
6,482
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Sat, Dec 15, 2012 11:55 PM
Dec 15, 2012 11:55 PM
Dec 15, 2012 11:55pm