Sarah Ford | October 28, 2014

SPLC urges investigation of Louisiana program failing at-risk children

The SPLC urged federal officials today to investigate Louisiana鈥檚 Coordinated System of Care program, which is failing to prevent young people with severe behavioral health needs from being unnecessarily funneled into detention centers and hospitals.

In a听听to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the SPLC and the Advocacy Center describe how the program is plagued with long wait lists and major gaps in services.

The program was created to provide mental health and other services to young people in an effort to keep them in their homes and communities rather than in institutions. Without these services, youth end up in hospitals and jails in order to receive mental health treatment.

鈥淭his program, if implemented properly, could greatly improve the lives of children with severe emotional and behavioral needs in Louisiana,鈥 said Sara Godchaux, SPLC staff attorney. 鈥淏ut these children and their families cannot access the full benefits of the program if the state does not provide the services they need.鈥澨

Louisiana鈥檚 program was established in 2012 with a Medicaid waiver that allows the state to use Medicaid funds to pay for services delivered in a young person鈥檚 community or home. It offers five specialized services: crisis stabilization, short-term respite care, parent support and training, youth support and training, and independent living/skills building. The program is expected to be expanded statewide by mid-November.听

But many young people are not receiving the services they need. The letter describes how there are no crisis stabilization providers in the state, leaving families without appropriate support in crisis situations and causing them to rely on the very institutions the service is designed to avoid.

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