| > places like CA attract homeless people from other places, because they have good services. California's winter weather is more survivable than most parts of the country. > Part of the problem is that the US doesnt have a good plan for what to do with crazy people. We had a lot of problems with long-term institutions, but when we shut them down, we didn't actually start a new solution. We just left them on the streets. Institutions were replaced with drugs. In 'Anatomy of an Epidemic' [1], Robert Whitaker says that before the drugs were available, many people were able to recover enough to get out of the institutions. The book makes the case that commonly-used psychotropic drugs take an episodic illness and make it chronic. [1] https://www.madinamerica.com/anatomy-of-an-epidemic/ This HN submission was from 2 days ago:
Psychiatrists Must Face Possibility That Medications Hurt More Than They Help (scientificamerican.com) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13186201 This has been my observation of the system... My friend was doing well until they got hold of her. |
The points are salient: I personally know a man in care who's been seemingly "kept stupid" with drugs while in an assisted living facility receiving treatment, and yes you can sleep outdoors most winter nights in CA, not comfortably but it's doable.