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48: Cops, Clinicians, or Both? Collaborative Approaches to Responding to Behavioral Health Emergencies

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Manage episode 317187039 series 2528117
Content provided by American Psychiatric Association Publishing and Psychiatric Services. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by American Psychiatric Association Publishing and Psychiatric Services or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Margaret E. Balfour, M.D., Ph.D., and Jason Winsky, B.A., join Dr. Dixon and Dr. Berezin to discuss their special article published in Psychiatric Services, “Cops, Clinicians, or Both? Collaborative Approaches to Responding to Behavioral Health Emergencies,” looking at collaborations between police and clinicians in the treatment of mental health and behavioral health emergencies. Dr. Balfour is Chief of Quality & Clinical Innovation at Connections Health Solutions in Tucson, Arizona, and Sgt. Winsky is a police officer and supervisor of the Mental Health Investigative Support Team with the Tucson Police Department.

  • Balfour and Winsky interview [00:32]
  • How did you get started in this work? [01:22]
  • Police department mental health team [02:44]
  • Crisis Response Center [03:04]
  • Why Arizona? [03:58]
  • Arnold vs Sarn [04:54]
  • Twenty-three hour observation model [05:35]
  • Funding [06:20]
  • How the crisis system works in Tucson [07:44]
  • Easy access for law enforcement [10:11]
  • Crisis management from the law enforcement perspective [10:39]
  • Police training in dealing with mental health crisis [12:41]
  • Who the police bring to the crisis center [14:59]
  • Challenges in providing mental health services for intoxicated and violent patients [16:21]
  • Keeping patients out of the justice system when possible [17:31]
  • “No Wrong Door” policy [18:47]
  • How this works in practice: the lady with the car [21:05]
  • Creating the opportunity for creative solutions to removing barriers to mental health care [23:56]
  • “There can’t be a rule for everything in crisis” [24:44]
  • Social justice framing of the paper [26:49]
  • The Technical Assistance Coalition working papers series [29:24]
  • What would you add to enhance the program? Housing, housing, housing [30:07]
  • Collaboration between siloed systems [32:01]
  • Working with stakeholders [32:59]
  • The impact of mental health crisis on people of color [34:41]
  • Other places doing great work [37:13]

Subscribe to the podcast here.

Check out Editor's Choice, a set of curated collections from the rich resource of articles published in the journal. Sign up to receive notification of new Editor's Choice collections.

Browse other articles on our website.

Be sure to let your colleagues know about the podcast, and please rate and review it wherever you listen to it.

Listen to other podcasts produced by the American Psychiatric Association.

Follow the journal on Twitter. E-mail us at psjournal@psych.org

  continue reading

67 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 317187039 series 2528117
Content provided by American Psychiatric Association Publishing and Psychiatric Services. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by American Psychiatric Association Publishing and Psychiatric Services or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Margaret E. Balfour, M.D., Ph.D., and Jason Winsky, B.A., join Dr. Dixon and Dr. Berezin to discuss their special article published in Psychiatric Services, “Cops, Clinicians, or Both? Collaborative Approaches to Responding to Behavioral Health Emergencies,” looking at collaborations between police and clinicians in the treatment of mental health and behavioral health emergencies. Dr. Balfour is Chief of Quality & Clinical Innovation at Connections Health Solutions in Tucson, Arizona, and Sgt. Winsky is a police officer and supervisor of the Mental Health Investigative Support Team with the Tucson Police Department.

  • Balfour and Winsky interview [00:32]
  • How did you get started in this work? [01:22]
  • Police department mental health team [02:44]
  • Crisis Response Center [03:04]
  • Why Arizona? [03:58]
  • Arnold vs Sarn [04:54]
  • Twenty-three hour observation model [05:35]
  • Funding [06:20]
  • How the crisis system works in Tucson [07:44]
  • Easy access for law enforcement [10:11]
  • Crisis management from the law enforcement perspective [10:39]
  • Police training in dealing with mental health crisis [12:41]
  • Who the police bring to the crisis center [14:59]
  • Challenges in providing mental health services for intoxicated and violent patients [16:21]
  • Keeping patients out of the justice system when possible [17:31]
  • “No Wrong Door” policy [18:47]
  • How this works in practice: the lady with the car [21:05]
  • Creating the opportunity for creative solutions to removing barriers to mental health care [23:56]
  • “There can’t be a rule for everything in crisis” [24:44]
  • Social justice framing of the paper [26:49]
  • The Technical Assistance Coalition working papers series [29:24]
  • What would you add to enhance the program? Housing, housing, housing [30:07]
  • Collaboration between siloed systems [32:01]
  • Working with stakeholders [32:59]
  • The impact of mental health crisis on people of color [34:41]
  • Other places doing great work [37:13]

Subscribe to the podcast here.

Check out Editor's Choice, a set of curated collections from the rich resource of articles published in the journal. Sign up to receive notification of new Editor's Choice collections.

Browse other articles on our website.

Be sure to let your colleagues know about the podcast, and please rate and review it wherever you listen to it.

Listen to other podcasts produced by the American Psychiatric Association.

Follow the journal on Twitter. E-mail us at psjournal@psych.org

  continue reading

67 episodes

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