RI Reaches Agreement With Feds Over Care for Kids in Psychiatric Wards

The U.S. Attorney for the state of Rhode Island announced an agreement with the state over the alleged hundreds of children who have been sequestered in psychiatric wards without a valid medical reason

U.S. Attorney Zachary Cunha announces a proposed settlement to a lawsuit alleging the ‘warehousing’ of kids in psychiatric care.
U.S. Attorney Zachary Cunha announces a proposed settlement to a lawsuit alleging the ‘warehousing’ of kids in psychiatric care.
Olivia Ebertz / The Public’s Radio
Share
U.S. Attorney Zachary Cunha announces a proposed settlement to a lawsuit alleging the ‘warehousing’ of kids in psychiatric care.
U.S. Attorney Zachary Cunha announces a proposed settlement to a lawsuit alleging the ‘warehousing’ of kids in psychiatric care.
Olivia Ebertz / The Public’s Radio
RI Reaches Agreement With Feds Over Care for Kids in Psychiatric Wards
Copy

The state of Rhode Island and the U.S. Department of Justice have reached an agreement on how to ensure that children in state care without a medical need to be in psychiatric wards will be able to go home and receive care integrated into their daily lives.

Hundreds of young teenagers and adolescent kids were unfairly isolated in psychiatric wards in Bradley Hospital over the last several years because of the failure of a Rhode Island state agency, according to U.S. Attorney Zachary Cunha.

“That failure concerned a repeated, persistent pattern of behavior in which these children were unnecessarily and illegally confined in an acute care psychiatric institution,” Cunha said at a press conference on Thursday. “Often for weeks or months longer than their conditions required.”

The proposed plan comes in the form of a consent decree, which was filed in District Court on Thursday and must be accepted by a judge in order to become official.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Falling concrete from Route 10 connector shuts down rail traffic; officials say seven similar structures exist across Rhode Island
Tree canopy gaps mirror income divides in Newport, as conservationists race to restore native trees and lost federal funding threatens efforts to expand “tree equity” in the city’s North End
The closure of Spectrum-India after 59 years adds to the steady loss of small businesses in Providence neighborhood
The incident brought America’s commonplace gun violence just feet away from a room full of lawmakers, top officials, and journalists. It also may add to a string of troubling political violence in the U.S. that includes two assassination attempts on President Trump.
President Trump and the first lady are uninjured after a shooting incident at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday in Washington, D.C.
Three polls offer a warning sign for Gov. McKee