Mental Illness
- Share via
Rhonda Seaton misses the point in her Aug. 6 letter regarding the Mitchell suit. She assumes that Richard Mitchell “allowed his mother to become victim to the streets.” As the daughter of a paranoid schizophrenic mother, I can personally attest to the difficulties in getting someone help when he or she doesn’t want it.
Many parties are complicit in this: state mental health laws, which have made it harder to hold people for evaluation and treatment; the courts that have been hamstrung by such laws; psychiatrists sometimes retained by the mentally ill person, who report findings of a lesser mental condition to the court to keep their clients from an institution which may help them; and the mentally ill person who does not see the need for medication.
After running such a formidable gauntlet of obstacles to getting their loved one help, many families just give up. Not out of lack of love but from sheer exhaustion.
KATHY HARRIS-ZMUDKA
Moreno Valley
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.