or years, state officials have tolerated squalid conditions
in the privately run "adult homes" that house thousands of mentally
ill patients in New York State. In theory, these homes were supposed
to provide a humane refuge for the mentally ill after the state
began to close its huge mental hospitals decades ago and transfer
the patients to settings in the community. But in practice, as
documented in a yearlong investigation by the Times reporter
Clifford Levy, many homes are a threat to the health and safety of
their patients. The lax oversight exercised by a succession of
governors and legislatures reflects at best a callous indifference
and at worst a knowing and cynical effort to keep state health costs
low at the expense of a population with no clout to demand better
treatment.
The conditions described by Mr. Levy in a three-part series that
ends today are appalling. Dead patients have been left in their
rooms for days until the stench became impossible to ignore.
Patients have died from ailments they might have survived with
proper care. Suicidal patients have thrown themselves from windows
lacking safety guards. A violent inmate was allowed to carry a knife
that he used to kill his roommate.
The care provided is often rudimentary or nonexistent. Poorly
paid, even illiterate workers dispense complex medicines. Operators
and doctors have taken patients to medical mills for unneeded
treatment or even surgery to earn Medicaid and Medicare billings. To
fool inspectors, at one home, workers were ordered to forge
psychiatric evaluations and invent treatment programs for patients
who never got treatment.
This is not what was intended when the state began to empty its
mental hospitals. Many of these homes are worse than the hospitals
they replaced. The state has saved a bundle of money by closing its
mental hospitals and shifting the burden of paying for mental health
care to federal programs. The least it can do is assure that the
privately run homes are properly managed.
There is plenty of blame to go around. The State Department of
Health, which regulates these institutions, has been slow to
investigate problems or respond to its own inspection reports. The
State Office of Mental Health, which supervises the mental health
care provided but not the homes themselves, might better monitor the
institutions as well. The homes clearly need more and better
qualified staff, capable of dealing with mental illness. Gov. George
Pataki and the legislative oversight committees need to step in and
find a way to resuscitate these failing
institutions.