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Part 1 All too often, California’s default mental institutions are now jails and prisons -
Part 2 For families across California, a desperate struggle to get mental health care -
Part 3 Overlooked mental health “catastrophe:” Vanishing board-and-care-homes leave residents with few options -
Part 4 Californians aren’t getting the mental health care they’re legally guaranteed. Why not? -
Part 5 Mental health care outcry targets Kaiser — and state regulators -
Part 6 “We’ve lost our compass.” For California’s most visible mentally ill, is a return to forced treatment a solution — or a false promise? -
Part 7 ‘Go on Medi-Cal to get that’: Why Californians with mental illness are dropping private insurance to get taxpayer-funded treatment -
Part 8 Breakdown: California’s mental health system, explained
“If these were cardiac catheterization services that were not functioning, if a health plan was screwing those up, (the state) would jump on that and require those to be fixed right away. Meanwhile they’re just sitting on their hands. “
“This is not an issue or an area that we can solve overnight,” she said. “We can’t just throw more money at it. We can’t throw more effort at it. We’re doing the things that we feel are the most important.”
Breakdown: Mental health in California
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Part 1 All too often, California’s default mental institutions are now jails and prisons In the past five years, the number of people in California deemed incompetent to stand trial and referred by a judge to state hospitals for treatment has soared—but there are nowhere near enough psychiatric beds to accommodate them. -
Part 2 For families across California, a desperate struggle to get mental health care Californians with mental illness—and their family members—describe pleading with insurance providers for the treatment they need. -
Part 3 Overlooked mental health “catastrophe:” Vanishing board-and-care-homes leave residents with few options Housing costs have forced many board-and-care homes to shutter. Mental health advocates say the closures will exacerbate the homeless crisis in California. -
Part 4 Californians aren’t getting the mental health care they’re legally guaranteed. Why not? Laws require health plans to provide patients equal treatment for mental and physical needs. But "parity" is often elusive — and critics say the Legislature and health officials have failed to fix the problem. -
Part 5 Mental health care outcry targets Kaiser — and state regulators Striking clinicians — spotlighting complaints that patients with serious mental illness face long waits and inadequate care — lay blame at the doorstep of the state Department of Managed Health Care. -
Next: Part 6 “We’ve lost our compass.” For California’s most visible mentally ill, is a return to forced treatment a solution — or a false promise? California inches toward making it easier to compel treatment for mental illness, but serious questions remain. Among them: Do treatment options even exist? -
Part 7 ‘Go on Medi-Cal to get that’: Why Californians with mental illness are dropping private insurance to get taxpayer-funded treatment It may be an agonizing decision — but the only way to get care their insurance won't cover. -
Part 8 Breakdown: California’s mental health system, explained