Mental Health Care: A Costly Misstep and a Fight for Better Options
The state’s mental‑health system is not just a public health issue—it’s an economic emergency.
Every year the United States loses $343 billion because people with serious mental illnesses are sent to jails or emergency rooms instead of receiving proper psychiatric care. In South Carolina, for every patient admitted to a mental hospital, thirteen end up behind bars. This stark statistic reveals that the state’s default response to severe mental illness is punishment, not healing.
Stigma Is Not the Whole Story
The problem isn’t simply stigma. It’s a policy that treats brain disease as if it were a choice, ignoring the medical reality. Families often wait until a crisis—sometimes violence or self‑harm—occurs before help is offered. The result: many patients suffer unnecessarily while the system pays a huge “neglect tax” in the form of incarceration costs and lost productivity.
H. 4641: A Threat to Pain Relief
A new bill, H. 4641, threatens to cut off a useful pain‑relief option for people who cannot tolerate prescription drugs. The legislation targets synthetic 7‑hydroxymitragynine, a term that blurs the line between naturally derived compounds and lab‑made substances. As a result, people who use plant‑based products to manage chronic pain could lose access to an effective remedy. The bill’s lack of clear definitions risks banning legitimate treatments under the guise of curbing dangerous chemicals.
Advocates Call for Clinical Accountability
Advocates argue that clinical accountability and a national standard of care are needed. They say the state should provide medical treatment for those who cannot recognize their illness, rather than relying on punitive measures. The goal is to honor the right to health and reduce the financial burden that comes from treating untreated mental illness in prisons.
Law, Health, and Rights
The broader message is that law and health must work together. Celebrating Law Day reminds us that the Constitution protects fundamental rights, including the right to receive proper medical care. When laws fail to distinguish between harmful substances and life‑saving treatments, they undermine both public safety and individual well‑being.