Challenges of Caring
for Mentally Ill
Carrie Jackson, 65, has twice faced the
torment of a child's mental illness.
She used Ohio's court system to declare both
of her adult sons mentally incompetent to care for themselves. She is their
legal guardian and is responsible for everything in their lives - their
shelter, their food, their hygiene. Neither is capable of dealing with the
simplest responsibility of modern life.
Car or health insurance? Forget it. Cable
repairman? No way.
Her sons are mentally ill. Both have been
diagnosed as
schizophrenic.
Both have to take
powerful antipsychotic
drugs to get closer to a normal life. Jackson hopes she will always be able
to persuade them to use the medications, but experience tells her she cannot
completely trust that will happen.
Her heart goes out to several families involved
in a slaying last month in Lakewood. The victim. The accused assailant. The
families.
William Houston, 29, who told his family he had
stopped taking medications
for schizophrenia, strangled his friend and neighbor, Mussa Banna, 55, in
the hallway of a Cove Avenue apartment building, police said. Houston is in
jail on $500,000 bond, charged with murder. Houston's family said he believed
his grandmother, who lived in the apartment building, was about to be sexually
assaulted or had been. Houston was living with his grandmother but had no
guardian.
Jackson understands such
delusions. Her son,
Tommie Anderson, 49, has been hospitalized four times as a mental patient. He
once disappeared for 18 months, and she learned of his whereabouts only because
Allentown, Pa., police told her his abandoned car would be junked unless it was
claimed. Jackson gained guardianship over Tommie in Probate Court in Cleveland
in 1992.
Last November, after Tommie had secretly
stopped taking his medications, voices he hears told him to walk from their
home on East 105th Street and Superior Avenue. Police found him on the grass
along the East Shoreway at East 55th Street, a few feet from afternoon
rush-hour traffic. The voices had told him to sit down and rest.
Tommie's 40-year-old brother, Anthony, has been
hospitalized twice. Like Tommie, he had become a danger to himself and others.
He repeatedly threatened his mother and his wife, sat in the dark in the
bathroom for hours and hid in a closet, court documents show. Jackson gained
guardianship over Anthony in 1997.
Interviews with Jackson, other families with
schizophrenic children and medical and mental-health professionals show a
similar pattern. Parents and friends are reluctant to take a loved one to
probate court to have them declared incompetent.
"Families are afraid to do that,"
said Nancy Fitch of Chester Township. She said her 30-year-old son, Brandon, is
schizophrenic and takes antipsychotic medication. He lives at home. Fitch has
seen no need to seek guardianship.
Families don't want to upset the trust and bond
created in therapy, she said. They believe medicated patients will be best
cared for at home, she added. "And they don't want to make them
angry."
Schizophrenia is a brain disease that will
attack 1 percent of the world's population. Although it usually hits people in
their late teens or early 20s, it can strike anyone at any time. All races, all
economic or social classes of people are affected. In America, about 2 million
people have schizophrenia each year.
Patients frequently have a combination of
symptoms, including suffering
delusions and
hallucinations, hearing voices and seeing things. They are paranoid. They
are severely unable to plan events in their lives. Their families sometimes
think they're lazy.
Dr. Cristinel M. Coconcea, an assistant
professor at Case Western Reserve University and director of the Schizophrenia
and Psychotic Disorders Program at University Hospitals Health System, said
research is contradictory on whether
people with schizophrenia are
prone to commit violent acts. He does not believe they are more violent
than other mental patients.
"Schizophrenics are easy to deal with if
they get to know you," said Coconcea, who has treated incarcerated
patients. Part of the regimen is to build trust with the patient, which is
difficult for a family that has taken the drastic step of seeking guardianship
in probate court.
Coconcea, who has not treated William Houston,
said people with schizophrenia have their
own perceptions of reality. Of Houston, he said, "He must have been
terrified to think that his grandmother was about to be raped or had been
raped."
Under Ohio law, patients cannot be forced to
take medications by family or friends. They can be medicated by force while
under a court order in a hospital.
The court order ends at the hospital door,
Coconcea said. He added that in his practice as a psychiatrist and professor,
he sees only two or three cases a year in which court-ordered medication is
delivered because the person is in immediate danger of harming himself or
others.
Houston was being treated at a branch of
Bridgeway Inc., a publicly funded agency that sees about 3,000 clients each
year in Cuyahoga County. The Cuyahoga County Mental Health Board is conducting
a routine investigation of Houston's care at Bridgeway.
Ralph Fee, Bridgeway executive director,
declined to discuss Houston as a client, citing patient confidentiality.
However, he said, treatment is a combination
of drugs, therapies and family support. "It's one of the four or five most
devastating illnesses in the world.
"We're not sure what causes it," Fee
said. "But with the advances in mental health care, we do much better now
than we did five or 10 years ago."
Jackson wants Ohio law to be changed to allow
mental health patients to be forced to take medication. Schizophrenic patients
cannot make good decisions, families and medical experts say. That condition is
a symptom of the disease.
"They say they have rights,"
declares Jackson. "Don't families have rights?"
Jackson has touched on an age-old debate among
mental health professionals, patients and families.
"Nobody should be forced to take
medications - or walk down the street straight or wear a red shirt," said
Blair Young, of the Ohio chapter of the National Alliance for the Mentally
Ill.
(Source: Cleveland Plain Dealer Newspaper -
2/9/03)
top ~ articles table of
contents
home
~ overview ~ comprehensive
info
meds ~
news stories ~
articles ~
bulletin board
|