First a rule: no gun talk in this thread. This one is about how to prevent such incidents by intervention when people are known to be "disturbed".
As noted in the original thread about 10-15% of the adult population have serious mental disturbances, some treated and many not. Obviously Cho was largely in the "not" column, at least recently.
In this case all the signs were there; setting fires, stalking others and extremely troubled writings. It went so far that one of his processors notified the administration and the police, resulting in Cho being referred to counseling in 2005. After that the usual bureaucratic inertia set in until Monday.
Previous to the 1970's the state of the commitment laws was such that if the police, family etc. felt a person was a potential danger to themselves or others they could be easily involuntarily committed for diagnosis and treatment.
Then came some exposes of poorly managed institutions and the movie "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest". After this the "reform machine" started to dismantle virtually the whole inpatient psychiatric hospital system and most of the commitment laws; basically throwing out the baby with the bath water in my opinion.
Now it's almost impossible to act preemptively in cases such as Cho. Even if some judge agrees (most won't) it's only for 3 days, and that's not enough time to do much in the way of evaluation, especially with an uncooperative patient.
What should we do? Reinstate a more aggressive involuntary commitment law? Keep on protecting individual rights in extremis then repeat the discussion?
Your turn....
As noted in the original thread about 10-15% of the adult population have serious mental disturbances, some treated and many not. Obviously Cho was largely in the "not" column, at least recently.
In this case all the signs were there; setting fires, stalking others and extremely troubled writings. It went so far that one of his processors notified the administration and the police, resulting in Cho being referred to counseling in 2005. After that the usual bureaucratic inertia set in until Monday.
Previous to the 1970's the state of the commitment laws was such that if the police, family etc. felt a person was a potential danger to themselves or others they could be easily involuntarily committed for diagnosis and treatment.
Then came some exposes of poorly managed institutions and the movie "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest". After this the "reform machine" started to dismantle virtually the whole inpatient psychiatric hospital system and most of the commitment laws; basically throwing out the baby with the bath water in my opinion.
Now it's almost impossible to act preemptively in cases such as Cho. Even if some judge agrees (most won't) it's only for 3 days, and that's not enough time to do much in the way of evaluation, especially with an uncooperative patient.
What should we do? Reinstate a more aggressive involuntary commitment law? Keep on protecting individual rights in extremis then repeat the discussion?
Your turn....
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