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City Scrambles to Find Mental Health Beds At Risk From LSU Cuts

LSU is planning $15 million in cutbacks for mental health services provided at the interim hospital in New Orleans.
LSU is planning $15 million in cutbacks for mental health services provided at the interim hospital in New Orleans.

A proposal to cut mental services at the Interim LSU hospital system in New Orleans has officials scrambling to find space to treat the mentally ill. Officials say the cuts are not only a health issue, but also a matter of public safety.

Health Commissioner Karen DeSalvo says she’s been meeting with several groups to find ways of accommodating the mentally ill. She says the cuts would eliminate about one-quarter of the city’s in-patient psychiatric beds, and the hardest hit will be low-income residents and the uninsured.

“It means that emergency rooms are going to get backed up, and there is a real concern that patients who might be better served at the interim LSU Hospital are going to end up in other emergency rooms. They don’t have the infrastructure at all to take care of those patients. So I am genuinely concerned.”  

DeSalvo has been meeting with LSU, the state Department of Health and Hospitals, social service agencies and doctors to find what’s available in the area and how resources can be put to the most efficient use. She says that in those meetings, she discovered five new crisis beds coming into the system next week that could be used to help transition psychiatric patients out of hospital care.

“When I say we’re looking for options and trying to educate and get the facts on the table that is a perfect example. There will be a new resource. People need to be educated about it and use it properly, right, so it doesn’t go unused. And make sure that it becomes integrated into what is right now really a poorly coordinated system.”  

DeSalvo says the city is also pushing LSU to delay or redistribute the cuts away from mental health services.

 

Eileen is a news reporter and producer for WWNO. She researches, reports and produces the local daily news items. Eileen relocated to New Orleans in 2008 after working as a writer and producer with the Associated Press in Washington, D.C. for seven years.

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