Brewster v Dukakis: developing community services through use of a consent decree
Abstract
Filed against the state of Massachusetts in 1977, Brewster v Dukakis involved the claim that psychiatric patients living in state hospitals or at risk of being hospitalized in these facilities have a right to treatment in community settings. The decree that emanated from the suit resulted over a 5-year period in a tenfold increase in state expenditures for community mental health services, a 48% decline in the state hospital census, and a 15% drop in the state hospital admission rate in the region of the state targeted by the suit. Factors that facilitated this outcome are described, as well as the dangers and limitations of exclusive reliance on the judicial process to promote the development of community services.
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