Earlier than we tally up the profitable rehab-related laws this session — and mourn the kneecapping of payments that may have made a distinction — we’d prefer to remind you why this issues.
Behold the brand new pile of wrongful loss of life, harm and abandonment lawsuits on my desk.
There’s the mom of 4 who was recruited to a La Jolla dependancy therapy heart. She suffered from extreme psychological well being and recurring substance use problems — with a historical past of self-harm — however nobody paid a lot consideration as she started appearing erratically, descended into psychosis and bought maintain of a knife. Witnesses mentioned the power spent not less than 4 hours cleansing up the mess earlier than calling 911, “in an try and cover-up their negligence and neglect in failing to stop her tragic and preventable loss of life,” the swimsuit mentioned.
There’s the addict who repeatedly managed to make use of at an Anaheim facility “the place drug and alcohol consumption was a each day incidence.” An worker gave the person narcotics, and the person then overdosed in a toilet earlier than being pronounced useless at a hospital, in line with the swimsuit.
Then there’s the younger lady with psychiatric and substance use problems who entered a “twin prognosis” heart in Chatsworth run by males with an alleged historical past of violent crime, the swimsuit mentioned. A kind of males started a sexual relationship with their affected person, and gave her alcohol at the same time as her psychological well being spiraled. She had two drug relapses however wasn’t examined by a health care provider or despatched to a detox facility, suffered a concussion and was finally “curbed,” which means she was ejected from the power earlier than winding up homeless for a time. Particular person psychological well being classes have been “nearly nonexistent” at the same time as her insurance coverage was billed $200,000.

We’ll get into extra element in coming tales, however the level is that this: Dependancy therapy is usually life-or-death well being care. But California permits it to be supplied in tract properties and industrial parks, overseen by folks whose essential credential is that they have been as soon as addicts themselves, with nary a health care provider in sight. Greater than half of California’s therapy services don’t even require a license (as a result of they’re outpatient) and well being insurers pay for all of it, though they know its dismal success price (some 10%) and that it breeds fraud, abuse and loss of life. They hold paying, consultants say, as a result of it makes them cash.
We salute the lawmakers making an attempt to alter issues, whereas acknowledging that the method is like making an attempt to steer the Titanic.
“We’re making progress,” mentioned Caroline Grinder of the League of California Cities, which sponsored two of the payments that grew to become legislation this yr. “They’re smaller modifications, however we’re persevering with to have the dialog within the Legislature and are extra assured that lawmakers are understanding the problem, particularly these outdoors Southern California.”

(Courtesy of Pat Micone)
Each little bit helps, proper?
New legal guidelines signed by the Gov
Assemblymember Diane Dixon, R-Newport Seaside, scored when Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Meeting Invoice 1356, “John’s Legislation.” It’ll require state well being officers to comply with up promptly after a loss of life at a rehab facility, together with circling again inside 30 days with any new, related data that involves mild.
John’s Legislation is called in honor of John Jacob McLister, who had an especially excessive blood alcohol degree when he checked into Asana Restoration the morning of April 3, 2021. He was exhibiting signs of acute withdrawal, however Asana did not correctly assess his situation and understand he required the next degree of care; failed to offer remedy to ease the signs of acute alcohol withdrawal; and did not adequately monitor him, in line with a lawsuit. He was useless some seven hours after arriving. (The ability has denied any wrongdoing.)

“John walked into Asana Restoration with one easy purpose — to get via withdrawals safely,” mentioned girlfriend Breana Zweben in a ready assertion. “The system failed him, and AB 1356 would assist stop such failures from claiming extra lives.”]
One other step towards the sunshine comes from the League of California Cities and Assemblymember Laurie Davies, R-Laguna Niguel, through AB 424. It seeks to deal with the maddening black gap that swallows complaints made to the state’s rehab regulator, the Division of Well being Care Providers. It’ll require the division to speak higher with individuals who lodge complaints, acknowledge receipt inside 10 days, then inform them when an investigation is finished and if violations are found. It’s a step towards extra transparency in an especially opaque system.

The League of California Cities additionally sponsored AB 492 by Assemblymember Avelino Valencia, D-Anaheim. It’ll require — get this — communication between the state and the cities and counties the place licensed dependancy therapy facilities arrange store. The state must inform them when a license is issued inside their boundaries and furnish the license holder’s title and mailing tackle, in addition to the power’s location. That’ll make it simpler to attach sufferers to different group companies and help if and after they depart these packages, the League’s Grinder mentioned.
Sen. Tom Umberg, D-Santa Ana, has been swinging at this for years, and strikes one other blow for transparency with Senate Invoice 83. It requires the state to really share details about packages in its regulatory crosshairs with us pleebs — data that’s very important however notoriously exhausting to get. The state must publish summaries of every violation issued to licensed and/or licensed dependancy therapy services on its web page, thus giving shoppers not less than a clue to allow them to make extra knowledgeable choices.

Caught within the sausage grinder
Right here we discover payments that might have made a really massive distinction, however didn’t make it via. Why? Inertia, and a really robust resistance to alter.
We mourn, most grievously, Davies’ AB 425 and Umberg’s SB 35.
Davies’ 425 sought to boost the bar on “licensed” outpatient packages, requiring them to have the identical American Society of Dependancy Medication high quality requirements as licensed services. It was held in committee in Could. That is smart! Reject ASAM’s high quality requirements! What do these dependancy docs know anyway? (We’ll be aware right here that Newsom vetoed a invoice requiring licensure for outpatient therapy in 2019. We stay flummoxed.)
Umberg’s 35 would have required well timed criticism investigations from the state and, if regulators couldn’t do the work on time, empower county behavioral well being officers to choose up the slack. It bought caught in committee in August. Why would an overburdened state division — that has taken greater than a yr to research some complaints and has analysts in Sacramento quite than out within the subject the place issues are occurring — need assist from boots on the bottom?
Dixon’s AB 3 aimed toward overconcentration. Therapy services wouldn’t be thought of “residential makes use of of property” in the event that they have been inside 300 toes of one other such facility; each shared the identical proprietor, director, packages or facilities; and the entire variety of residents in each services was larger than six. It was re-referred to the well being committee in March, however shall be again within the new yr. Why search to cease the institutionalization of neighborhoods?
Dixon’s AB 877 would have mentioned the unspeakable out loud —explicitly notifying medical health insurance corporations that residential therapy in California is usually non-medical and must be billed that means. The invoice was re-referred to the well being committee in April, however shall be again subsequent yr. Sacre bleu! Let’s keep on with ‘He Who Shall Not Be Named” as an alternative of “Voldemort,” lets?
Davies’ AB 1090 would have launched a pilot program placing a state analyst devoted to investigating rehab complaints in Orange County, to be paid for by Orange County. It was re-referred to the well being committee in March.

Davies’ AB 423 would have required business-operated restoration residences to register their location with officers. It was re-referred to the well being committee in April.
SB 329 by Sens. Catherine Blakespear, D-Encinitas, and Umberg (and co-authored by Assemblymembers Davies and Dixon) would have had the temerity to require extra well timed investigations from state regulators, however solely by adhering to their very own inside tips. It hit a wall within the Meeting, however shall be again within the new yr.
Newsom vetoed AB 25 by Assemblymember Matt Haney, D-San Francisco. It could have allowed state funding to be spent on sober properties that require folks to be, effectively, sober, with the intention to reside there. California’s ‘housing first” strategy rejects such limitations to shelter, and state funding can already be used for this kind of factor, Newsom mentioned.
That’s a dozen rehab-related payments this session. 1 / 4 of them grew to become legislation. Maybe lawmakers actually are realizing that calls for for reform aren’t grounded in NIMBY-ism, however in an earnest need for extra, and higher, for exceptionally weak people who find themselves far too usually seen as little greater than greenback indicators on legs.
“After we shaped the Sober Residing Activity Drive and began to construct a coalition for change, nobody was underneath the impression we might remedy these issues rapidly or with one-off laws,” mentioned Wendy Bucknum, Mission Viejo’s mayor professional tem and process power founder, in a ready assertion. “This can be a two steps ahead, one step backward course of, however we’re in it for the lengthy haul as a result of folks’s lives are at stake — and yearly, the momentum for reform grows.”
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