What if 911 dispatched mental health responders

[Music]

call me weird but i love a good

ride-along

like love them i’ve been on ride-alongs

across the world

in amsterdam and canada and boston and

even right here in denver

and what i’ve learned is that people

call the cops for a number of reasons

anything from a lost cat to a neighbor

they just want to know more about

to maybe a loved one or a stranger

having a mental health crisis

but really at the heart of it people

call 9-1-1

because they just don’t know what else

to do

what i’ve learned though is that

sometimes when you call 9-1-1

it can make a bad situation even worse

maybe a loved one is arrested or they’re

placed on a 72-hour hold

there are fines and fees and criminal

charges

and sometimes calling 9-1-1 can be the

beginning

of the end of someone’s life now

you might think i’m here to talk about

abolishing the police

not exactly actually here to talk about

a different solution

a solution that takes care of a person

keeps our communities safe and helps the

police

to focus on what they do best enforcing

the laws

for me it all started with a visit to

eugene oregon

you see i had just passed a ballot

measure here in denver called caring for

denver

to provide more mental health and

substance use services

for people in crisis right here in

denver

when a friend tipped me off to a program

in eugene

normally when you call 9-1-1 you get a

firefighter

a police officer or a paramedic but in

eugene

there’s a fourth option a mental health

professional

and an emt who ride along in a van and

respond

to mental health calls the program is

called cahoots

studies show that nearly 50 percent of

victims of police brutality

have a disability predominantly a mental

health disability

we have a huge problem with mental

health in this country

the fact of the matter is police simply

don’t have the tools

to respond to a mental health crisis

and we’ve seen that when we don’t

adequately fund

mental health and substance use services

and use our jails in our prisons

as de facto mental health clinics we

actually end up

in much worse situations and people’s

mental health

is no better for it so i went along to

eugene to learn more

i went through a training and yay

finally another ride-along

i got in the van and went with the

cahoots team

about 20 minutes into our call we were

called to respond to a man in a mental

health crisis

immediately i was shocked at how nice

the neighborhood was

middle-income neighborhood kids out

playing

there was even a young boy on a tricycle

in the driveway

it was just a normal day we met up with

a woman who was the wife

and we asked her what was going on she

informed us that her husband

was locked in the bathroom and he was

talking about

ending his life he had box cutters we

went inside to talk to him

and he explained to us through a closed

door that

he simply couldn’t do it anymore he was

erratic he said he wasn’t going to put

his family through these burdens

anymore and he just wanted to end

we talked him through that closed door

for nearly an hour

and in the end he just wouldn’t come out

so we left about 30 minutes after

leaving we were called to come back on

scene

you see the police had been called he

had box cutters

a weapon but they knew we had been there

first

so the police they waited for us

we got there and the police were able to

convince the man

to turn over his box cutters he got

dressed

and he came out of the bathroom and then

something magical happened you see the

police started to retreat down the

stairs

the cahoots team they stepped up

they’d got the man to sit on the couch

and talk to them and then

they knelt down to his eye level because

he wasn’t a threat

and neither were they we sat there

and we talked for about three hours

now i was back a little bit and i could

see

on a desk that they had in the hallway

piles and piles of papers

unpaid medical bills i knew what he was

going through

the cahoots team talked him about his

financial burdens they talked to him

about resources

and they eventually made a plan to get

him to help the next day

he even ate a sandwich and they took his

vitals the entire time

when we left he was a different person

and so was i

sadly the situation is all too familiar

for me

you see my sister has been in and out of

the criminal justice system

for about 30 years you know

we thought she was just an addict later

we found out that she had

untreated trauma from a sexual assault

we didn’t know what to do we didn’t know

how to help her

so when i flew back to denver i thought

about my sister

i thought about this man and i knew we

could do better

in denver you see what intrigued me so

much about eugene

is that the police and the mental health

crisis team they work together

in cahoots an elite team of specialists

trained to respond

to people having a mental health or

substance use crisis

see it was the police that convinced the

man to surrender the box cutters

but it was the cahoots team that stepped

up connected the mandar resources

and listened you see i have been

fighting for criminal justice reform

my entire career and sometimes

it can seem so daunting there are 7 000

prisons and jails across the united

states

2.3 million inmates

for millions of americans judges

attorneys correctional officers cops

mass incarceration is a livelihood to

fix the criminal justice system

we must look critically at every piece

of the puzzle

find out what’s working and fix what’s

not

if there is one thing that’s clearly not

working

it’s the one size fits all approach

outside of eugene oregon that man would

have been placed on a 72-hour hold he

could have been incarcerated

he might even have died he would have

been under

more financial stress and burden

and his mental health would have been no

better

two million people are booked into jails

and prisons

every year and the national alliance for

mental health

they’ve reported that 83 of these folks

don’t have access to mental health care

a well-functioning criminal justice

system uses the

right tool at the right time why are we

asking our police in our prisons

to fix our mental health crisis that’s

not what they do

eugene uses a standard system of triage

what’s happening

right now and what does a person need

right now

but then they have the tools to back it

up

a team of trained professionals who have

the time

resources and energy to get the person

to the services they

need denver launched our co-response

model in 2016.

we launched star baby cahoots in june

today we have 22 co-responders mental

health professionals

who ride along with law enforcement

officers we have 11 caseworkers

in addition we dispatch the star team a

paramedic

and a mental health professional in a

mobile crisis unit

who are trained to deal with someone in

a mental health emergency

they stabilize them they de-escalate the

situation

and they connect someone with the

resources that they need

ongoing care

so far the results have been nothing

short of miraculous

star has had a thousand calls since june

they have had to call the police for

backup zero

times additionally the co-responder

model

has led to a less than two percent rate

of tickets or citations

and the best part the cops love it in

fact the thing i hear the most

is why don’t we have star in my precinct

yet

cops are even working alongside of

co-responders

to deal with their own mental health

traumas they’re talking through their

issues with people that they actually

trust

and we found this not only makes law

enforcement officers safer

but it keeps the profession safer as a

whole

we call the foundation caring for denver

because caring is at the heart of it

we care about the people we listen to

their concerns

and we connect folks with the resources

that they need

it’s a kind approach to criminal justice

yes

but it’s also a logical one not every

problem can be solved by the police

and not everyone should go to jail when

we talk about criminal justice

what we’re really talking about is

people people are at the heart of it

we deserve a better approach one

with empathy and humanity so let’s be

smart about criminal justice

and use the right tool at the right time

thank you

[音乐]

说我很奇怪,但我喜欢很好的

骑行,

就像爱他们

一样 警察出于多种原因,

从丢失的猫到邻居,

他们只是想了解更多

关于可能是亲人或陌生人

的心理健康危机,

但实际上人们

拨打 9-1-1

是因为 他们只是不知道

还能做

什么 我学到的是,

有时当您拨打 9-1-1

时,情况可能会变得更糟,

也许亲人被捕或他们被

安置在 72- 小时等待

有罚款和费用和刑事

指控

,有时拨打 9-1-1 可能是

某人生命结束的开始现在

你可能认为我在这里谈论

废除警察

并不是真的在这里谈论

一个 不同的

解决方案照顾一个人的解决方案

使我们的社区保持安全和h 帮助

警察专注于他们最擅长

为我执法的事情这一切都始于访问

尤金俄勒冈州

你看我刚刚

在丹佛通过了一项名为关心丹佛的投票措施,

以提供更多的心理健康和

药物使用

服务 人们在丹佛陷入危机,

当朋友向我介绍尤金的一个项目

时,

通常当你拨打 9-1-1 时,你会得到一名

消防员、警察或护理人员,但在

尤金,

还有第四个选择是心理健康

专家

和 乘坐面包车并

响应心理健康呼叫的紧急救援人员 该计划被

称为 cahoots

研究表明,近 50%

的警察暴行受害者

患有残疾,主要是心理

健康残疾

我们在这个国家的心理健康方面存在巨大问题

事实上 问题是警察

根本没有

应对心理健康危机的工具

,我们已经看到,当我们没有

心理健康和药物使用提供足够的资金时 服务

并将我们监狱中的监狱

用作事实上的心理健康诊所我们

实际上最终

处于更糟糕的境地,人们的

心理健康

并没有因此而变得更好,所以我去了

尤金了解更多

我接受了培训,

终于又一次骑行了 -

我上了面包车,在

接到电话约 20 分钟后,我们

被叫去回应一名精神

健康危机

中的男子 甚至是一个在车道上骑着三轮车的小男孩

这只是一个普通的一天,我们遇到了

一位妻子

,我们问她发生了什么事,她

告诉我们她的丈夫

被锁在浴室里,他正在

说话 关于

结束他的生命他有盒子刀我们

走进去

和他交谈他通过一扇紧闭的门向我们解释

他根本无法再这样做他

反复无常他说他不会让

他的家人经历 这些负担

不再了,他只是想结束

我们在那扇紧闭的门里跟他说

了将近一个小时

,最后他就是不出来

所以我们离开后大约30分钟就

离开了,我们被叫回来现场

你看 警察被叫了,他

有开箱刀

是一种武器,但他们知道我们

先到了,

所以他们等我们

的警察我们到了那里,警察

说服了那个人

交出他的开箱刀,他

穿好衣服,

然后他出来了 浴室然后

发生了一些神奇的事情 你看到

警察开始从楼梯上撤退

他们加强了他们的阴谋团队

他们让那个人坐在沙发上

和他们说话 然后

他们跪在他的视线水平因为

他 不是威胁

,他们也没有

要去

通过 cahoots 团队与他讨论了他的

经济负担,他们与他

讨论了资源

,他们最终制定了一个计划让

他帮忙,第二天

他甚至吃了一个三明治,当我们离开时,他们一直在检查他的

生命体征,

他是一个不同的人 人

,我也是,

可悲的是,这种情况对我来说太熟悉了

你看我姐姐已经

进出刑事司法

系统大约 30 年了,你知道

我们以为她只是个瘾君子,后来

我们发现她有

未经治疗的创伤 遭受性侵犯后,

我们不知道该怎么办,我们不知道

如何帮助她,

所以当我飞回丹佛时,我想到

了我的姐姐,

我想到了这个男人,我知道我们

可以

在丹佛做得更好,你知道吗 尤金让我非常感兴趣的

是,警察和

他们一起工作的心理健康危机小组组成

了一个精英专家团队,他们

训练有素,可以

应对患有心理健康或

药物滥用危机的人,

看到是警察 说服该

男子交出剪纸机,

但正是同谋团队加强

了连接 mandar 资源

并听取了您的意见

在美国

230 万囚犯

为数百万美国人 法官

律师 惩教人员 警察

大规模监禁是

修复刑事司法系统的生计

我们必须批判性地审视每一个难题

找出有效的方法并解决

无效的方法 这显然是行不通的

这是在

尤金俄勒冈州以外的一刀切的方法 男人

会被关押 72 小时 他

可能会被监禁

他甚至可能已经死亡 他会

承受

更多的经济压力和负担

以及他的精神 健康状况

再好不过

了,每年有 200 万人被关进监狱

,全国所有人

他们报告说,这些人中有 83 人

无法获得心理健康

护理 运作良好的刑事司法

系统

在正确的时间使用正确的工具 为什么

我们要求监狱中的警察

修复我们的心理问题 健康危机

不是他们所做的,

尤金使用标准的分类系统来分类

现在正在发生的事情

以及一个人现在需要什么,

但是他们有工具来支持它,他们有

一个训练有素的专业团队,他们

有时间

和精力去获得

他们需要的服务的人

丹佛在 2016 年推出了我们的共同响应

模式。

我们在 6 月推出了 Star baby cahoots

今天我们有 22 名共同响应者 心理

健康专业人员

与执法人员一起骑行

我们有 11 名个案工作者

此外我们派遣 明星团队 流动危机部门

的一名护理人员和一名心理健康专家,

他们接受过与

心理健康紧急情况下的人打交道的培训,

他们稳定他们,他们降级 在

这种情况下

,他们将某人与

他们需要

持续护理的资源联系起来

到目前为止,结果

简直是奇迹般的

明星自 6 月以来已经接到了一千个电话,

他们不得不报警

求助零

次,另外还有共同响应者

模型

导致了不到 2%

的罚单或引用率,

而警察最喜欢它的部分

实际上是我听到最多的事情

是为什么我们的辖区内没有明星,

警察甚至与

共同响应者一起工作

处理他们自己的心理健康

创伤,他们正在

与他们真正信任的人讨论他们的问题

,我们发现这不仅使

执法人员更安全,

而且使整个职业更安全,

我们称之为基金会关爱丹佛,

因为关爱 是它的核心

我们关心人们 我们倾听

他们的

担忧 我们将人们与他们需要的资源联系起来

这是一种刑事司法方法

是的

但这也是合乎逻辑的,不是每个

问题都可以由警察解决

,也不是每个人都应该入狱当

我们谈论刑事司法时

,我们真正在谈论的是

人,人是它的核心,

我们应该有更好的方法

有同理心和人性,所以让我们

对刑事司法保持聪明,

并在正确的时间使用正确的工具,

谢谢