Racism and Redlining in the History of Psychiatric Policy and Practice in Atlanta: Implications for Nursing

Recently, the Georgia state House of Representatives passed House Bill 1013, also called . The bill sought to address access to and insurance coverage for mental health services, first identified in a report in 2020. The budget for mental health services was reduced by $8 m in 2020, despite an all-t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Policy, politics & nursing practice politics & nursing practice, 2024-11, p.15271544241290707
Hauptverfasser: Wofsy, Avi, Smith, Kylie M
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recently, the Georgia state House of Representatives passed House Bill 1013, also called . The bill sought to address access to and insurance coverage for mental health services, first identified in a report in 2020. The budget for mental health services was reduced by $8 m in 2020, despite an all-time high demand due to the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic. There is an increasing inability to secure mental health care in the state. Georgia is ranked 37 in the country for access to quality mental health care (Reinert, Fritze, and Nguyen, 2022) and half the counties in the state have no psychiatrist; the projected mental health workforce will be able to meet only 12% of consumer demand by 2025. Problems with mental health care in Georgia have a long history which intersects with the history of racism, geographical segregation, and policing. HB1013 does not consider any of this history in its recommendations, which barely include nursing. At the same time, policy and practice in Georgia continues to entangle nurses and other professionals with a carceral and punitive system which not only threatens the safety of patients, but also nurses themselves. Nurses need to understand this history if they hope to develop policy that will intervene in the mental health care crisis.
ISSN:1527-1544
1552-7468
1552-7468
DOI:10.1177/15271544241290707