It is the
intent of the legislature to establish a community mental health
program which shall help people experiencing mental illness to
retain a respected and productive position in the community.
This will be accomplished through programs that focus on
resilience and recovery, and practices that are evidence-based,
research-based, consensus-based, or, where these do not exist,
promising or emerging best practices, which provide for:
(1) Access to mental health services for adults of the state
who are acutely mentally ill, chronically mentally ill, or seriously disturbed and children of the state
who are acutely mentally ill, severely emotionally disturbed, or seriously
disturbed, which services recognize the special needs of
underserved populations, including minorities, children, the
elderly, disabled, and low-income persons. Access to mental health
services shall not be limited by a person's history of
confinement in a state, federal, or local correctional facility.
It is also the purpose of this chapter to promote the early
identification of mentally ill children and to ensure that they receive the mental
health care and treatment which is appropriate to their
developmental level. This care should improve home, school, and
community functioning, maintain children in a safe and nurturing
home environment, and should enable treatment decisions to be
made in response to clinical needs in accordance with sound
professional judgment while also recognizing parents' rights to
participate in treatment decisions for their children;
(2) The involvement of persons with mental illness, their
family members, and advocates in designing and implementing
mental health services that reduce unnecessary hospitalization
and incarceration and promote the recovery and employment of
persons with mental illness. To improve the quality of services
available and promote the rehabilitation, recovery, and
reintegration of persons with mental illness, consumer and
advocate participation in mental health services is an integral
part of the community mental health system and shall be
supported;
(3) Accountability of efficient and effective services
through state of the art outcome and performance measures and
statewide standards for monitoring client and system outcomes,
performance, and reporting of client and system outcome
information. These processes shall be designed so as to maximize
the use of available resources for direct care of people with a
mental illness and to assure uniform data collection across the
state;
(4) Minimum service delivery standards;
(5) Priorities for the use of available resources for the
care of the mentally ill consistent with the priorities defined in the
statute;
(6) Coordination of services within the department,
including those divisions within the department that provide
services to children, between the department and the office of
the superintendent of public instruction, and among state mental
hospitals, county authorities, regional support networks,
community mental health services, and other support services,
which shall to the maximum extent feasible also include the
families of the mentally ill, and other service providers; and
(7) Coordination of services aimed at reducing duplication
in service delivery and promoting complementary services among
all entities that provide mental health services to adults and
children.
It is the policy of the state to encourage the provision of
a full range of treatment and rehabilitation services in the
state for mental disorders including services operated by
consumers and advocates. The legislature intends to encourage
the development of regional mental health services with adequate
local flexibility to assure eligible people in need of care
access to the least-restrictive treatment alternative appropriate
to their needs, and the availability of treatment components to
assure continuity of care. To this end, counties are encouraged
to enter into joint operating agreements with other counties to
form regional systems of care. Regional systems of care, whether
operated by a county, group of counties, or another entity shall
integrate planning, administration, and service delivery duties
under chapters 71.05 and 71.24 RCW to consolidate administration,
reduce administrative layering, and reduce administrative costs.
The legislature hereby finds and declares that sound fiscal
management requires vigilance to ensure that funds appropriated
by the legislature for the provision of needed community mental
health programs and services are ultimately expended solely for
the purpose for which they were appropriated, and not for any
other purpose.
It is further the intent of the legislature to integrate the
provision of services to provide continuity of care through all
phases of treatment. To this end the legislature intends to
promote active engagement with mentally ill persons and collaboration between families and
service providers.
[2005 c 503 § 1. Prior: 2001 c 334 § 6; 2001 c 323 § 1; 1999 c 214 § 7; 1991 c 306 § 1; 1989 c 205 § 1; 1986 c 274 § 1; 1982 c 204 § 2.]
NOTES:
Correction of references--2005 c 503: "The code reviser shall replace all references to "county designated mental health professional" with "designated mental health professional" in the Revised Code of Washington." [2005 c 503 § 16.]
Savings--2005 c 503: "This act does not affect any existing right acquired or liability or obligation incurred under the sections amended or repealed in this act or under any rule or order adopted under those sections, nor does it affect any proceeding instituted under those sections." [2005 c 503 § 17.]
Severability -- 2005 c 503: "If any provision of this act or its application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the remainder of the act or the application of the provision to other persons or circumstances is not affected." [2005 c 503 § 18.]
Effective date -- 2001 c 334: See note following RCW 71.24.805.
Intent -- Effective date -- 1999 c 214: See notes following RCW 72.09.370.
Conflict with federal requirements -- 1991 c 306: "If any
part of this act is found to be in conflict with federal
requirements that are a prescribed condition to the allocation of
federal funds to the state, the conflicting part of this act is
inoperative solely to the extent of the conflict and with respect
to the agencies directly affected, and this finding does not
affect the operation of the remainder of this act in its
application to the agencies concerned. The rules under this act
shall meet federal requirements that are a necessary condition to
the receipt of federal funds by the state.
However, if any part of this act conflicts with such federal
requirements, the state appropriation for mental health services
provided to children whose mental disorders are discovered under
screening through the federal Title XIX early and periodic
screening, diagnosis, and treatment program shall be provided
through the division of medical assistance and no state funds
appropriated to the division of mental health shall be expended
or transferred for this purpose." [1991 c 306 § 7.]
Effective date -- 1986 c 274 §§ 1, 2, 3, 5, and 9: "Sections 1, 2, 3, 5, and 9 of this act shall take effect on July 1, 1987." [1986 c 274 § 11.]