Root Causes
Charles Brault
c_brault at yahoo.com
Wed Apr 18 06:18:00 BST 2007
We are ment to be men of science
The availability of arms is not the common denominator of violent societe
But a mere sign
The common links are (probably)
- A society without or with a weak SOCIAL conscience/appartenance
- A society that relies more and put more trust in the individual than it's goverment
... not surpirsing that the Solutions may be INDIVIDUAL (as relying on one's own justice)
Obviously
As life is never balck and white
Similar crimes occur in ALL societies
But what we need to focus on is the level of occurence
Awaiting the science
Charles
----- Original Message ----
From: MSD <listasmsd at gmail.com>
To: "Trauma & Critical Care mailing list" <trauma-list at trauma.org>
Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2007 5:31:04 AM
Subject: Re: Root Causes
United States Bill of Rights
"ARTICLE THE FOURTH
[Amendment II]
"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free
state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be
infringed"
Until the American People modify this article there is nothing as
foriners we can comment. It is their Constitution and is their Right v& duty
to follow their Constitution. Let it be.
Regards
Manuel Sotelo
Dear Ken
Sorry but I did try to restrain myself from commenting.
While I agree that there is need for more mental health facilities
worldwide, I doubt if it would have helped the disturbed young man in
Virginia ( according to reports here he was a loner and wrote worrying
plays
in creative writing classes about killing fellow students and a
professor).
Anyway, the point is that he was able to purchase 2 semi-automatic hand
guns
and kill 32 young people whatever the state of his mind.
USA has 4% of the world's population and 50% of the firearms- surely
injury
prevention measures ( and common sense) should be applied as in any
other
trauma situation.
As I said previously when we had a similar incident here in Australia
with
35 killed in Tasmania over 10 years ago, our Prime Minister to his
credit
changed the gun laws overnight with the cooperation of our States making
it
much more difficult to buy guns and virtually impossible to buy an
handgun
as a private citizen.
If this group can't change the culture and the constitution in your
country,
who can?
Regards
Tony Joseph
Sydney
On 18/4/07 6:48 AM, "KMATTOX at aol.com" <KMATTOX at aol.com> wrote:
> Although I should use my allocated bandwidth time to talk about trauma
and
> to compliment those who have done a good job in Virginia's trauma
response, I
> want to talk about a totally different subject which has consumed
increasingly
> more and more of my administrative time.
>
> The subject is Mental & Behavoral Health.
>
> Since the closure of state mental health and psychiatric hospitals,
there
> has been an increasing effort to push the responsibility for
identification
> and
> treatment more to the local level. That is perhaps as it should be,
but
> funding has been sparse to negligible. Hardly a family, and many of
our
> colleagues are affected by depression, and other mental health
diagnoses.
> Treatment is sporadic and expensive.
>
> Add a mental health problem as a co morbid factor to diabetes, heart
attack,
> pneumonia, trauma, etc, and we have a really big problem.
>
> Houston is the 4th largest city in the US. It has a fast growth
rate.
> In 2000, 3000 inpatient psychiatry beds existed. In 2007 there are
700,
> despite an almost doubling of the population in those 7 years. One
public
> psychiatric hospital (HCPC) has more than 300 built beds, but less
than 90
> are
> staffed and there are no iv fluids, no syringes, no IM medications in
this
> hospital. ANY , ANY co morbid condition results in an attempted
transfer out
> instantaneously to BTGH were there is tight overcrowding of mental
health
> conditions. Up to 37% of the admissions to medicine and surgery,
including
> trauma,
> have a mental health component.
>
> We have 20 in hospital mental health beds, 12 Emergency Center closed
beds,
> and up to 12 close observation sites in the emergency center proper.
We
> have at any time more than 20-40 inpatients on the surgery or medical
wards
> who
> have both medical and mental health problems, often the mental health
> problems are severe. If we tripled the number of in-hospital
mental
> health
> beds, they would be filled in 12 hours.
>
> Now back to the subject that prompted this post. I suspect that
much of
> the violence, wild use of firearms, and other human/social outbursts
may have
> a
> mental health overtone, an untreated or undertreated condition.
>
> Finally:
>
> IF THE MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS IN HOUSTON, IN TEXAS, IN THE UNITED STATES
IS
> NOT ADDRESSED SYSTEMATICALLY, MORE HUMAN OUTBURSTS ARE GOING TO
HAPPEN. IN
> MY
> VIEW WHAT WE ARE SEEING IN VIOLENCE IN OUR SOCIETY HAS AS ONE ROOT
CAUSE,
> OUR BROKEN MENTAL HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE.
>
> Kenneth L. Mattox, MD
> Houston
>
>
>
> ************************************** See what's free at
http://www.aol.com.
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