Monday, March 11, 2013

Mentally ill patients face spartan conditions, long delays in New Hampshire


Joshua Knight was alone, had been for hours. He curled up on the mattress on the floor, shut his eyes and tried to block out his memories of the day.
 
Knight, 33, had been handcuffed and dragged out of his basement apartment in Chichester that September day last year. His mother, Carla Northrup, had been crying so hard the police told her she had to leave because she was upsetting him even more.
 
She hadn’t been to see him at Concord Hospital where the police had brought him, not yet. So Knight was alone.
 
He had a mattress, bolted to the floor. A plastic cube served as a hard, backless chair. A television glowed behind a plastic window. At least the staff was kind enough to leave him the remote, he remembered four months after his three-day stay in what is known as Yellow Pod, a handful of rooms at the hospital staffed by Riverbend Community Mental Health.
 
For the first two days of his stay at Yellow Pod, Northrup called the hospital to check on her son. Hearing it could be several days more before a bed was available at New Hampshire Hospital, the state psychiatric facility in Concord, she visited to drop off clean clothes and magazines.

The room smelled of urine; Knight was unresponsive, curled up on the mattress so tightly his wrists hurt for weeks after from being tucked into his chest.
 
Doctors would come and go, assuring him they were working on getting him to the state hospital. He didn’t believe them. He couldn’t go outside for three days, until he was transferred to the state facility.
 
“It’s really frightening,” he said. “I was locked up in this little room, this tiny cell. I was treated like somebody who couldn’t take care of themself. Like an animal.”

Full Article & Source:
Mentally ill patients face spartan conditions, long delays in New Hampshire

4 comments:

Thelma said...

Animals may get kinder care at an SPCA.

Rachel said...

You're right, Thelma. I have noticed more press about the plight of the mentally ill. I hope they have a real champion organization to advocate for them.

Scott said...

The mentally ill are the forgotten...

Ryan said...

Scott's right, the mentally ill are even more forgotten than the elderly. It's so sad that society has beome all about sports and celebrities. Helping people is a rare occurance.