Last month, New York City Mayor Eric Adams announced a new mental health policy that lowers the threshold for involuntary commitments for psychiatric care. While the Adams administration argues this shift is a solution for growing crime and homelessness numbers, critics argue it’s a step in the wrong direction. What’s the history behind involuntary holds, and what does it say about mental health policy in America?
References:
988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline
SAMHSA
Introducing the "Designed to Fail" series | Mental Health America
America's Long-Suffering Mental Health System
Hosts:
Jonquilyn Hill (@jonquilynhill)
Credits:
Sofi LaLonde, producer
Cristian Ayala, engineer
Libby Nelson, editorial adviser
A.M. Hall, editorial director of talk podcasts
Want to support The Weeds? Please consider making a donation to Vox: bit.ly/givepodcasts
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Biden wants YOU (to go to therapy)
A new era for birth control
Who broke student loans?
Expecting: Weed and Pregnancy
It's an HOA world; you're just living in it
The Republican plot to defund public libraries
A conversation with Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield
We need to rethink discipline in schools
The kids suing their state for climate change
The fate of affirmative action
Why is child labor making a comeback?
The Weeds, Live – Anti-trans legislation, explained
Policymaking on the high seas
How Secretary Buttigieg wants to make America’s roads safer
Mifepristone and the FDA’s exhaustive approval process, explained
How corporations got all your data
Do assault weapons bans work?
Medicaid’s “Great Unwinding”
Why Illinois wants to end cash bail
The debt ceiling drama
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Tiny Desk Concerts - Video
60 Minutes
Left, Right & Center
The Axe Files with David Axelrod
Kickass News