Mental health

2,344 calls, 9 arrests. The role of Indy’s MCAT in mental health response

Since the beginning of the year, more than 2,000 mental health emergency response calls in Marion County have been answered by Eskenazi Health’s Mobile Crisis Assistance Team (MCAT) in conjunction with the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department.

Sgt. Lance Dardeen, with the police department, said about half of the people contacted during those calls had problems and were hospitalized.

“We can’t buy our way out of this problem,” Dardeen said. “It needs to change the culture and have officers who understand and dig a little deeper into their running. Sometimes an arrest may be appropriate, but often we can divert these people to prisons.”

The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department and MCAT held a town hall Tuesday to provide new information about the complex challenges facing mental health calls and how MCAT and Clinician Led Community Response teams ( CLCR) how they work together to solve them.

Last month:A family member says the man who was shot by an Indianapolis officer has schizophrenia

How the MCAT scores work

IMPD Sgt. Lance Dardeen, who heads the Indianapolis Police Mobile Crisis Assistant Teams, poses for a photo Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2022, at IMPD East District headquarters in Indianapolis.

The groups use face-to-face intervention techniques with the vulnerable person. This includes someone with suicidal thoughts, mental health emergencies, emotional or psychological stress and substance abuse concerns.

People in crisis can be taken to hospital by the police for emergency detention for up to 48 hours. This allows the hospital to carry out an assessment. Families can also ask the court to hold someone for 14 days if they are dealing with a long-term mental health crisis.

#calls #arrests #role #Indys #MCAT #mental #health #response

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *