Arizona’s public behavioral health care system, which serves some 150,000 mentally ill and vulnerable state residents, is wrestling with a number of urgent challenges. In addition to budget cuts resulting from the current economic crisis, and the demands of a 28-year-old class-action lawsuit, the system has been repeatedly criticized in several areas, including for inadequate staff, data, housing support, and crisis services. On July 22, a panel of professionals who play key roles in the system discussed these and other issues before some 300 behavioral health providers, supervisors, and policymakers at the annual Summer Institute hosted by Arizona State University’s Center for Applied Behavioral Health Policy. This paper provides an abbreviated report of that discussion, which was partially designed and moderated by ASU’s Morrison Institute for Public Policy.
Details
- Arizona's Public Behavioral Health Care System: Critical Issues in Critical Times
- Shafer, Michael S. (Author)
- Arizona State University. Center for Applied Behavioral Health Policy (Sponsor)
- Morrison Institute for Public Policy (Publisher)
- Identifier ValueASU 12.2:B 34
- A joint publication of Center for Applied Behavioral Health Policy and Morrison Institute for Public Policy.