This is already in place. physicians need to report risk of suicide or violence against others if the patient reports it. If they are medically adjudicated then it is supposed to be in the NICS. Some states, like Wyoming, dont update NICS with this information (there are only 4 records on mental health from wyoming in NICS. So the current background check system is broke.
As we know from Hawaii, most mental health professionals are not going to weigh in on if someone can have a gun. otherwise I would not have people thinking about spending a bunch of money to see me to get a clearance letter.
As the constitution says, we dont take a right away based on wheat a medical professional says. If you want that, change the constitution.
In a hypothetical government, this would be fine. In the real world police lie, destroy firearms and otherwise make it difficult to impossible to get a firearm back. You should not have any trust that the police would follow a rule like this.
we already have this. NICS. As I said above it is broken. citizens cant get access to it.
This is fine. fix NICS. chances of it happening? very low.
this should be the case for any reason to take a right away
good luck with that. mental health care is not a very high profit business. Hospitals remove inpatient mental health wards and replace them with more profitable wards like for cancer treatment. There is a huge lack of mental health professionals as well. More money does not necessarily mean better care
sorry. Regan got rid of the vast majority of state mental health facilities and hospitals. There is no profit in it so plan a huge tax hike to bring them back.
Sorry, too, but where do you get that from?
Reagan was Governor of California, and in 1967, he saw a decline in the number of patients in mental institutions. Therefore, he cut funding to help balance the budget there. After 2 years, he saw the problem with mentally ill not receiving treatment rising again, so in 1969 he reversed his cuts and provided a record funding increase of $28 million to the Department of Mental Hygiene.
The mental healthcare responsibility had always rested with the states throughout the decline in mental hospitals in the 50s and 60s.
Then President Kennedy signed the Mental Health Community Act. This pushes the responsibility of mentally ill patients from the state toward the federal government. JFK wanted to create a network of community mental health centers where mentally ill people could live in the community while receiving care. JFK could have been inspired to act because his younger sister, Rosemary, was mentally disabled, received a lobotomy and spent her life hidden away.
Less than a month after signing the new legislation, JFK is assassinated. He doesn’t see the plan through. The community mental health centers never receive stable funding, and even 15 years later less than half the promised centers are built.
In 1965, the U.S. Congress establishes Medicaid and Medicare. Mentally disabled people living in the community are eligible for benefits but those in psychiatric hospitals are excluded.
By encouraging patients to be discharged, state legislators could shift the cost of care for mentally ill patients to the federal government.
Then, in 1980, Jimmy Carter signed the Mental Health Systems Act to improve on JFK's plan. Interesting it was so close to the end of his term, as if it was something he did as he walked out the door for Reagan to deal with, or he was using it as a carrot to buy votes. Either way, it was Reagan's baby to decide what to do with.
1981 President Reagan repeals Carter’s legislation with the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act. This pushes the responsibility of mentally ill patients back to the states. The legislation creates block grants for the states, but federal spending on mental illness declines.
So, your characterization that "Regan [sic] got rid of the vast majority of state mental health facilities and hospitals." isn't accurate. That process started 2 decades before he was President. By JFK and Carter trying to make mental healthcare a federal responsibility, the states are the ones who took that opportunity to withdraw previous funding. That's what caused the centers to close. Had the States gone back to funding what they previously did before JFK and Carter overstepped their boundaries (IMO, since healthcare is always managed by the states regardless of the funding source), you wouldn't have seen so many closures in the Reagan years.
As I highlighted in red, it was 1965 when the states started pushing the responsibility onto the feds under Medicaid and Medicare funding. To blame Reagan 20 years later for state's playing hot potato with mental healthcare seems inaccurate. Remember, Reagan was taking responsibility as California's Governor during 1967-1969 by correcting his budget cuts. That's what the other states should have done for THEIR citizens and not relied on the federal government to foot the bill.