Jocelyn Wiener is a projects reporter with a focus on mental health 和 卫生保健 who explores the intersection between government policies and people’s lives. Her work has won numerous regional and national awards.
Her reporting about the breakdown of the state’s mental health system for CalMatters was honored with a National Headliner Award. She has written investigations in recent years about the experiences of people with mental illness in the criminal justice system, documenting the case of a man who died by suicide after he was moved 39 times within the state prison system, and another of a man with developmental disabilities and mental illness who was jailed almost nine years without ever having a trial.
She works hard to earn and keep the trust of her sources, and puts a premium on journalistic ethics. She has worked as a reporter in her native California for more than two decades. After graduating from Stanford University, she received a Fulbright Scholarship to do research in El Salvador. She spent the next year and a half working with children and teenagers on the Salvadoran streets, which inspired her decision to pursue a career in journalism.
She earned a master’s degree at Columbia University’s School of Journalism and spent several years as a staff writer covering poverty for The Sacramento Bee.
Her work has appeared in The Atlantic, The Washington Post, the Christian Science Monitor, Kaiser Health News and other regional and national publications.
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.
In California, geography creates significant barriers for people seeking early psychosis intervention and other treatment, because its 58 counties have 58 different public mental health programs, each with its own set of covered services. That's by design. Yet it creates troubling inequities.
With fresh political attention on mental health, advocates are hoping California embraces humane and effective ways of averting some problems and solving others.
Housing costs have forced many board-and-care homes to shutter. Mental health advocates say the closures will exacerbate the homeless crisis in California.
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.
The Legislature's struggle this year to pass even one partial solution to untreated mental illness illustrates the complex philosophical, legal and ethical questions that surround conservatorship in California.
Jocelyn Wiener is a projects reporter with a focus on mental health and health care who explores the intersection between government policies and people’s lives. Her work has won numerous regional and national awards.
加州事务
加利福尼亚州,解释
乔斯琳·维纳
Jocelyn Wiener is a projects reporter with a focus on mental health and health care who explores the intersection between government policies and people’s lives. Her work has won numerous regional and national awards. Her reporting about the breakdown of the state’s mental health system for CalMatters was honored with a National Headliner Award. She has worked as a reporter in her native California for more than two decades. After graduating from Stanford University, she received a Fulbright Scholarship to do research in El Salvador. She spent the next year and a half working with children and teenagers on the Salvadoran streets, which inspired her decision to pursue a career in journalism. She earned a master’s degree at Columbia University’s School of Journalism and spent several years as a staff writer covering poverty for The Sacramento Bee. Her work has appeared in The Atlantic, The Washington Post, the Christian Science Monitor, Kaiser Health News and other regional and national publications. Other languages spoken: Spanish (conversational)