Friday, March 7, 2008

An abusive place now become a caring place - hopefully

One of the nation's most notorious psychiatric hospitals - where abuse and carelessness were once considered the norm, and where a famous patient, folk singer Woodie Guthrie, met Bob Dylan - has reopened.

New Jersey officials recently showed off the new Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital during an afternoon ceremony. Governor Corzine called the new $200 million facility symbolic of how the state's mental health system has evolved.

The 450-bed facility will replace aging buildings long plagued by shoddy conditions. Here are some other age-old problems with the facility, as reported by The New York Times:

- It's been long criticized as substandard and plagued by a rash of escapes and assaults on patients.

- Built in 1876, the hospital has been criticized over the last quarter-century by state judges and lawmakers as offering less than ideal care to its mentally ill patients.

- Its environment, in the physical and psychological sense, was once said to ''strain the meaning of humane.''

- During unannounced visits, committee investigators found some patients sitting idle in day rooms without lamps, reading materials or games. Others slept on floors.

- Some had no access to soap or toilet paper, and 44 more had to share four toilets because other toilets were broken.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

When the new Greystone Hospital opens, we can only be certain that there is a new Greystone building. Many believe that the new building will be transformative. It will engender a new culture, a new standard of care and superior outcomes. This is likely wishful thinking given that the same staff will be employed. Can anyone point to a case where a new state psychiatric hospital alone yielded systemic change?