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The Water Cooler
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Dealing with Mental Health
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<blockquote data-quote="donner" data-source="post: 4055485" data-attributes="member: 277"><p>He later said that an 'ER doc' was involved. And that it went to a judge. Both contradicted his earlier statement regarding it being the act of 'activist sheriff'. Sounds like a medical professional was involved somewhere in the mix, albeit unclear exactly where/when or what the outcome was. </p><p></p><p>If judges are too quick to sign warrants or commitment orders then perhaps that is the discussion to have. There will never be a perfect system for dealing with this kind of thing, but that shouldn't stop us from recognizing what things work and what could be improved. It will always be a balance and in this case it sounds like multiple people, professionals in their fields, said this person should have been committed for evaluation (where i'm guessing more professionals were involved).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="donner, post: 4055485, member: 277"] He later said that an 'ER doc' was involved. And that it went to a judge. Both contradicted his earlier statement regarding it being the act of 'activist sheriff'. Sounds like a medical professional was involved somewhere in the mix, albeit unclear exactly where/when or what the outcome was. If judges are too quick to sign warrants or commitment orders then perhaps that is the discussion to have. There will never be a perfect system for dealing with this kind of thing, but that shouldn't stop us from recognizing what things work and what could be improved. It will always be a balance and in this case it sounds like multiple people, professionals in their fields, said this person should have been committed for evaluation (where i'm guessing more professionals were involved). [/QUOTE]
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