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Easiest path to mental health funding may be Medicaid expansion

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Aside from increased spending, some states are looking to make changes in laws pertaining to mentally ill people whose behavior is so extreme that they could be considered a risk to others. These measures would make it easier to have those people placed under civil commitment in psychiatric wards and to restrict their ability to purchase guns.

New York was first in line with these measures. Last week, along with its stringent new gun laws, the legislature passed a law that requires health care professionals to report to law enforcement agencies on mentally ill patients whom they consider dangerous. Maryland will also consider laws to reduce the chance that some severely mentally ill people will purchase guns. And Colorado’s General Assembly will take up bills that would make it easier to have those considered dangerous as a result of mental illness civilly committed and prevented from buying guns.

As states take up this legislation, mental health advocates and some state officials express wariness about aggravating the uneasiness many people already feel toward those with mental illness. “People begin to equate mental illness with violence or evil,” says NAMI’s Fitzpatrick, “but there are very few people with mental illness who become violent.”

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