RAND Analysis Finds Mental Health Services Act Brings Life- Changing Benefits To Tens Of Thousands In L.A. County
County of Los Angeles, California sent this bulletin at 03/13/2018 01:33 PM PDT
For Immediate ReleaseMarch 13, 2018
Contacts: Mimi Martinez McKay, (213) 905-9606, mmmckay@dmh.lacounty.gov Kathleen Piché, (213) 738-3700, kpiche@dmh.lacounty.gov |
RAND ANALYSIS FINDS MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES ACT BRINGS LIFE-CHANGING BENEFITS TO TENS OF THOUSANDS IN L.A. COUNTYTens of thousands of Los Angeles County residents have experienced significant improvements in mental health and wellbeing—including measurable reductions in homelessness and gains in employment—as a direct result of California’s Mental Health Services Act, according to a new RAND Corporation study. The report, commissioned by Los Angeles County, is the first extensive, independent analysis of the impacts of the Mental Health Services Act, or Proposition 63, since its passage by California voters in 2004. Dubbed the millionaire’s tax, it generates more than $2 billion annually for mental health care in California for programs ranging from early intervention and prevention to full-service care for people with serious brain illnesses. The RAND report focuses exclusively on Los Angeles County, the nation’s largest public provider of mental health services. Given L.A. County’s size and share of Mental Health Services Act revenue, the findings serve as a major statement on the importance of the act as the County addresses a broad statewide effort to ensure the timely expenditure of the funds. “This is exactly the kind of analysis needed to help us hone and grow our services across populations,” said Dr. Jonathan E. Sherin, Director of the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health. “But for us, it’s only the beginning of how we can use data and outcomes to help point the way forward. We know these services are effective and are laser focused on expanding programs that work by taking them to the streets, neighborhoods, libraries, schools and parks where we can more robustly reach people in need.” Among the key findings of the Santa Monica-based non-profit institution:
Taken as a whole, the report underscores the remarkable benefits of early intervention efforts both in terms of the human toll and as a cost-effective public investment. The other core services measured in the RAND analysis involved full service partnership programs that offer intensive services to people who suffer from serious mental illness that have progressed to the point of severe dysfunction. Most of these individuals are homeless, making them harder to engage and treat with any regularity. To access the full report, click here. ### |