Mental-health care access by county. ABC News map; click the image to enlarge it or click here for the interactive version. |
Saul Levin, CEO and medical director for the American Psychiatric Association, told ABC that local mental-health services can forestall the need for more intensive treatment, which is often more expensive. Laurie Gill, Cabinet secretary for the South Dakota Department of Social Services, "acknowledged that sometimes a lack of options at the local level has sometimes led to people in the state needing more intensive, inpatient psychiatric care, but said her department has been doing a gap analysis to identify needs in the mental healthcare system and fill them," ABC reports.
One critical demographic that needs better mental-health care access is children and teens, especially in rural areas. As a recent New York Times series shows, the pandemic has exacerbated a growing mental-health crisis among American youth. About 70% of U.S. counties lack a psychiatrist who specializes in children or teens, and it can take months to get an appointment even in counties that do have specialists.
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