Pubdate: Tue, 24 Aug 2004 Source: Register-Herald, The (Beckley, WV) Copyright: 2004 The Register-Herald Contact: http://www.register-herald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1441 Author: Mannix Porterfield DRUNKS, DRUG ABUSERS CROWDING OUT 'ACUTE PSYCHIATRIC' PATIENTS Chronic drunks and drug abusers are crowding West Virginia's only two state-run psychiatric hospitals, prompting Health and Human Resources Secretary Paul Nusbaum to call Tuesday for immediate action. Nusbaum warned the Joint Committee on Government and Finance at Glade Springs Resort the matter cannot be put off until the 2005 legislative session. At the root of the matter was a change in state law excising the phrase "harmful to themselves and others," opening the door to send abusers to state hospitals, he said. Under the old system, he explained afterward, the mental hygiene commissioner had to make a finding before involuntarily committing such people. In short, it meant the drunk or druggie had to pose "harm to themselves and others." "Once that was removed, someone shows up at the mental hygiene commissioner on Friday night, 2 o'clock in the morning, drunk, and they don't want to keep them in jail," he said. Instead, the abuser is shipped off to either Bateman Hospital in Huntington or Sharpe Hospital in Weston to dry out a few days. "And it's costing us a fortune," he said. Sen. William Sharpe, D-Weston, for whom one hospital was named, suggested the panel start the ball rolling for remedial legislation. Nusbaum told reporters hygiene commissioners are weary of seeing the same drunk or drug abuser, "and they think this is the best source of treatment." Additionally, the county is relieved of keeping such people in jails and the expense is dumped on the state, he said. Perhaps, the secretary said, psychiatric treatment is warranted in some cases. "But we only have a finite number of beds," he said. "We just can't continue to handle the load because what we're doing, for the acute psychiatric patient who truly needs in-patient setting, we may not have a bed available. Now, we've got problems." Nusbaum said the two state hospitals have been at capacity for several months, forcing DHHR to contract with private psychiatrist entities. Within the past three months, he said, his agency has witnessed "an unbelievable increase" in drug and alcohol cases arriving at the two state hospitals. If this trend continues, he said, it means an additional expense to the state of $5 million to $6 million a year. "Patients could be treated within the community," the secretary said. "That's our problem. We don't have enough out-patient community treatment services. We need to be developing those. It's something we've neglected for years and years. We're in the process of trying to address that." Senate President Earl Ray Tomblin, D-Logan, agreed a problem exists and suggested Nusbaum work with legislators to produce a proposal within 30 days. "We can't just slam the door on these people," Tomblin said. Nusbaum unveiled another problem -- a snafu in a "state-of-the-art" billing system that results in health care providers collecting less than what they're entitled to for Medicaid services. "It's not that they're not getting paid," he said. "They're not getting the proper amount." These cover a wide gamut of providers -- doctors, dentists and the like. House Speaker Bob Kiss, D-Raleigh, said his vision of state-of-the-art is a system that doesn't delay full payment. "We need to correct it," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin