Report: Mental health treatment lacking at Kewanee health center

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

At IYC-Warrenville, in DuPage County, everyone gets an hour of individual mental health therapy each week, plus the chance to participate in group therapy. Group therapy was only available at Kewanee in September to only 18 of the 195 residents who have both mental illness and a substance-abuse problem.

Until the situation changes, the report says, residents should be moved elsewhere and court referrals to Kewanee ended.

“This is a situation that the state has created and enabled,” said John Maki, John Howard executive director. “They either need to find the ability to fully staff the facility and provide treatment that they’re constitutionally obligated to provide or find another way of doing this.”

The association said its previous visits and the foundation-funded studies which Griffin co-wrote have shown staffing problems since at least 2010. A review that year found 24 mental health professionals on staff including three psychologists and 13 therapists with master’s degrees, compared with eight this fall.

||2|Next Page

Comments

Blogs

» Out Here
Out Here

Wise saw collapse in support

Last week, Sterling Alderwoman Amy Viering attended her last meeting as a city official. She gave the usual praise one hears at such departures. But one compliment stuck out. At the end of her speech, she turned to City Administrator Scott Shumard and said, "You're awesome."
» Out Here
Out Here

On pensions, Bivins and GOP far apart

Sen. Tim Bivins, R-Dixon, joined with many of his fellow Senate Republicans this week to reject a pension bill sponsored by Democratic Senate President John Cullerton of Chicago. The measure passed 40-16. Bivins had a different reason for his no vote.

Reader Poll

How concerned are you that the IRS targeted conservative political groups for additional and often burdensome scrutiny?

Very concerned
Somewhat concerned
Not very concerned
Not concerned at all