Gov. Jay Inslee, left, walks through a hallway inside Western State Hospital with Cheryl Strange, center, CEO of Western State Hospital, and David Westbrook, right, the Governor’s Director of Outreach, on Friday following a meeting with the hospital’s executive team in Lakewood. (Ted S. Warren/The Associated Press)

Gov. Jay Inslee, left, walks through a hallway inside Western State Hospital with Cheryl Strange, center, CEO of Western State Hospital, and David Westbrook, right, the Governor’s Director of Outreach, on Friday following a meeting with the hospital’s executive team in Lakewood. (Ted S. Warren/The Associated Press)

Inslee announces newest push to improve mental-health system

  • The Associated Press
  • Monday, May 14, 2018 2:08pm
  • News

The Associated Press

LAKEWOOD — Gov. Jay Inslee has announced the latest push to improve Washington’s mental-health system by reducing the number of patients in the state’s two large psychiatric hospitals.

The Seattle Times reported that Friday’s announcement comes as Washington has struggled to comply with court orders requiring the state to better provide for psychiatric patients.

Inslee’s plan — which would need legislative approval — would seek to end placement of involuntarily committed patients at both Western State Hospital and Eastern State Hospital, a smaller facility in Spokane County, by 2023.

Patients who have been referred to the hospitals by civil courts or regional mental-health systems would be moved into smaller, state-run facilities and private community hospitals.

The two state hospitals would still hold patients ordered into the system by criminal courts, as well as some hard-to-place patients who have been civilly committed into care.

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