To the Congress of the United States:
It is my intention to send shortly
to the Congress a message pertaining to this Nation's most urgent needs
in the area of health improvement. But two health problems - because they
are of such critical size and tragic impact, and because their susceptibility
to public action is so much greater than the attention they have received
- are deserving of a wholly new national approach and a separate message
to the Congress. These twin problems are mental illness and mental retardation.
From the earliest days
of the Public Health Service to the latest research of the National Institutes
of Health, the Federal Government has recognized its responsibilities to
assist, stimulate and channel public energies in attacking health problems.
Infectious epidemics are now largely under control. Most of the major diseases
of the body are beginning to give ground in man's increasing struggle to
find their cause and cure. But the public understanding, treatment and
prevention of mental disabilities have not made comparable progress since
the earliest days of modern history.
Yet mental illness and mental
retardation are among our most critical health problems. They occur more
frequently, affect more people, require more prolonged treatment, cause
more suffering by the families of the afflicted, waste more of our human
resources, and constitute more financial drain upon both the public treasury
and the personal finances of the individual families than any other single
condition.
There are now about 800,000
such patients in this Nation's institutions - 600,000 for mental illness
and over 200,000 for mental retardation. Every year nearly 1,500,000 people
receive treatment in institutions for the mentally ill and mentally retarded.
Most of them are confined and compressed within an antiquated, vastly overcrowded,
chain of custodial State institutions. The average amount expended on their
care is only $4 a day - too little to do much good for the individual,
but too much if measured in terms of efficient use of our mental health
dollars. In some States the average is less than $2 a day.
The total cost to the taxpayers
is over $2.4 billion a year in direct public outlays for services - about
$1.8 billion for mental illness and $600 million for mental retardation.
Indirect public outlays - in welfare costs and in the waste of human resources
- are even higher. But the anguish suffered both by those afflicted and
by their families transcends financial statistics - particularly in view
of the fact that both mental illness and mental retardation strike so often
in childhood, leading in most cases to a lifetime of disablement for the
patient and a lifetime of hardship for his family.
This situation has been tolerated
far too long. It has troubled our national conscience - but only as a problem
unpleasant to mention, easy to postpone, and despairing of solution. The
Federal Government, despite the nation - wide impact of the problem, has
largely left the solutions up to the States. The States have depended on
custodial hospitals and homes. Many such hospitals and homes have been
shamefully understaffed, overcrowded, unpleasant institutions from which
death too often provided the only firm hope of release.
The time has come for a bold
new approach. New medical, scientific, and social tools and insights are
now available. A series of comprehensive studies initiated by the Congress,
the Executive Branch and interested private groups have been completed
and all point in the same direction.
Governments at every level -
Federal, State, and local - private foundations and individual citizens
must all face up to their responsibilities in this area. Our attack must
be focused on three major objectives:
First, we must seek out the
causes of mental illness and of mental retardation and eradicate them.
Here, more than in any other area, "an ounce of prevention is worth more
than a pound of cure." For prevention is far more desirable for all
concerned. It is far more economical and it is far more likely to be successful.
Prevention will require both selected specific programs directed especially
at known causes, and the general strengthening of our fundamental community,
social welfare, and educational programs which can do much to eliminate
or correct the harsh environmental conditions which often are associated
with mental retardation and mental illness. The proposals contained in
my earlier Message to the Congress on Education and those which will be
contained in a later message I will send on the Nation's Health will also
help achieve this objective.
Second, we must strengthen the
underlying resources of knowledge and, above all, of skilled manpower which
are necessary to mount and sustain our attack on mental disability for
many years to come. Personnel from many of the same professions serve both
the mentally ill and the mentally retarded. We must increase our existing
training programs and launch new ones; for our efforts cannot succeed unless
we increase by several-fold in the next decade the number of professional
and subprofessional personnel who work in these fields. My proposals on
the Health Professions and Aid for Higher Education are essential to this
goal; and both the proposed Youth Employment program and a national service
corps can be of immense help. We must also expand our research efforts,
if we are to learn more about how to prevent and treat the crippling or
malfunction of the mind.
Third, we must strengthen and
improve the programs and facilities serving the mentally ill and the mentally
retarded. The emphasis should be upon timely and intensive diagnosis, treatment,
training, and rehabilitation so that the mentally afflicted can be cured
or their functions restored to the extent possible. Services to both the
mentally ill and to the mentally retarded must be community based and provide
a range of services to meet community needs.
It is with these objectives
in mind that I am proposing a new approach to mental illness and to mental
retardation. This approach is designed, in large measure, to use Federal
resources to stimulate State, local and private action. When carried out,
reliance on the cold mercy of custodial isolation will be supplanted by
the open warmth of community concern and capability. Emphasis on prevention,
treatment and rehabilitation will be substituted for a desultory interest
in confining patients in an institution to wither away.
In an effort to hold domestic
expenditures down in a period of tax reduction, I have postponed new programs
and reduced added expenditures in all areas when that could be done. But
we cannot afford to postpone any longer a reversal in our approach to mental
affliction. For too long the shabby treatment of the many millions of the
mentally disabled in custodial institutions and many millions more now
in communities needing help has been justified on grounds of inadequate
funds, further studies and future promises. We can procrastinate no more.
The national mental health program and the national program to combat mental
retardation herein proposed warrant prompt Congressional attention.
I. A NATIONAL PROGRAM FOR MENTAL HEALTH
I propose a national mental health
program to assist in the inauguration of a wholly new emphasis and approach
to care for the mentally ill. This approach relies primarily upon the new
knowledge and new drugs acquired and developed in recent years which make
it possible for most of the mentally ill to be successfully and quickly
treated in their own communities and returned to a useful place in society.
These breakthroughs have rendered
obsolete the traditional methods of treatment which imposed upon the mentally
ill a social quarantine, a prolonged or permanent confinement in huge,
unhappy mental hospitals where they were out of sight and forgotten. I
am not unappreciative of the efforts undertaken by many States to improve
conditions in these hospitals, or the dedicated work of many hospital staff
members. But their task has been staggering and the results too often dismal,
as the comprehensive study by the Joint Commission on Mental Illness and
Health pointed out in 1961. Some States have at times been forced to crowd
five, ten or even fifteen thousand people into one, large understaffed
institution. Imposed largely for reasons of economy, such practices were
costly in human terms, as well as in a real economic sense. The following
statistics are illustrative:
- Nearly 1/5 of the 279 State mental institutions
are fire and health hazards; 3/4 of them were opened prior to World War
I.
- Nearly half of the 530 thousand patients in our
State mental hospitals are in institutions with over 3,000 patients, where
individual care and consideration are almost impossible.
- Many of these institutions have less than half
the professional staff required - with less than one psychiatrist for every
360 patients.
- Forty-five percent of their inmates have been
hospitalized continuously for 10 years or more.
But there are hopeful signs.
In recent years the increasing trend toward higher and higher concentrations
in these institutions has been reversed - by the use of new drugs, by the
increasing public awareness of the nature of mental illness, and by a trend
toward the provision of community facilities, including psychiatric beds
in general hospitals, day care centers and outpatient psychiatric clinics.
Community general hospitals in 1961 treated and discharged as cured more
than 200,000 psychiatric patients.
I am convinced that, if we apply
our medical knowledge and social insights fully, all but a small portion
of the mentally ill can eventually achieve a wholesome and constructive
social adjustment. It has been demonstrated that 2 out of 3 schizophrenics
- our largest category of mentally ill - can be treated and released within
6 months, but under the conditions that prevail today the average stay
for schizophrenia is 11 years. In 11 States, by the use of modern techniques,
seven out of every ten schizophrenia patients admitted were discharged
within 9 months. In one instance, where a State hospital deliberately sought
an alternative to hospitalization in those patients about to be admitted,
it was able to treat successfully in the community fifty percent of them.
It is clear that a concerted national attack on mental disorders is now
both possible and practical.
If we launch a broad new mental
health program now, it will be possible within a decade or two to reduce
the number of patients now under custodial care by 50% or more. Many more
mentally ill can be helped to remain in their own homes without hardship
to themselves or their families. Those who are hospitalized can be helped
to return to their own communities. All but a small proportion can be restored
to useful life. We can spare them and their families much of the misery
which mental illness now entails. We can save public funds and we can conserve
our manpower resources.
1. Comprehensive Community Mental Health Centers
Central to a new mental health
program is comprehensive community care. Merely pouring Federal funds into
a continuation of the outmoded type of institutional care which now prevails
would make little difference. We need a new type of health facility, one
which will return mental health care to the main stream of American medicine,
and at the same time upgrade mental health services. I recommend, therefore,
that the Congress (1) authorize grants to the States for the construction
of comprehensive community mental health centers, beginning in fiscal year
1965, with the Federal Government providing 45 to 75 percent of the project
cost; (2) authorize short-term project grants for the initial staffing
costs of comprehensive community mental health centers, with the Federal
Government providing up to 75 percent of the cost in the early months,
on a gradually declining basis, terminating such support for a project
within slightly over four years; and (3), to facilitate the preparation
of community plans for these new facilities as a necessary preliminary
to any construction or staffing assistance, appropriate $4.2 million for
planning grants under the National Institute of Mental Health. These planning
funds, which would be in addition to a similar amount appropriated for
fiscal year 1963, have been included in my proposed 1964 budget.
While the essential concept
of the comprehensive community mental health center is new, the separate
elements which would be combined in it are presently found in many communities:
diagnostic and evaluation services, emergency psychiatric units, outpatient
services, inpatient services, day and night care, foster home care, rehabilitation,
consultative services to other community agencies, and mental health information
and education.
These centers will focus community
resources and provide better community facilities for all aspects of mental
health care. Prevention as well as treatment will be a major activity.
Located in the patient's own environment and community, the center would
make possible a better understanding of his needs, a more cordial atmosphere
for his recovery and a continuum of treatment. As his needs change, the
patient could move without delay or difficulty to different services -
from diagnosis, to cure, to rehabilitation - without need to transfer to
different institutions located in different communities.
A comprehensive community mental
health center in receipt of Federal aid may be sponsored through a variety
of local organizational arrangements. Construction can follow the successful
Hill-Burton pattern, under which the Federal Government matches public
or voluntary nonprofit funds. Ideally, the center could be located at an
appropriate community general hospital, many of which already have psychiatric
units. In such instances, additional services and facilities could be added
- either all at once or in several stages - to fill out the comprehensive
program. In some instances, an existing outpatient psychiatric clinic might
form the nucleus of such a center, its work expanded and integrated with
other services in the community. Centers could also function effectively
under a variety of other auspices: as affiliates of State mental hospitals,
under State or local governments, or under voluntary nonprofit sponsorship.
Private physicians, including
general practitioners, psychiatrists, and other medical specialists, would
all be able to participate directly and cooperatively in the work of the
center. For the first time, a large proportion of our private practitioners
will have the opportunity to treat their patients in a mental health facility
served by an auxiliary professional staff that is directly and quickly
available for outpatient and inpatient care.
While these centers will be
primarily designed to serve the mental health needs of the community, the
mentally retarded should not be excluded from these centers if emotional
problems exist. They should also offer the services of special therapists
and consultation services to parents, school systems, health departments,
and other public and private agencies concerned with mental retardation.
The services provided by these
centers should be financed in the same way as other medical and hospital
costs. At one time, this was not feasible in the case of mental illness,
where prognosis almost invariably called for long and often permanent courses
of treatment. But tranquilizers and new therapeutic methods now permit
mental illness to be treated successfully in a very high proportion of
cases within relatively short periods of time - weeks or months, rather
than years.
Consequently, individual fees
for services, individual and group insurance, other third party payments,
voluntary and private contributions, and State and local aid can now better
bear the continuing burden of these costs to the individual patient after
these services are established. Long-range Federal subsidies for
operating costs are neither necessary nor desirable. Nevertheless, because
this is a new and expensive undertaking for most communities, temporary
Federal aid to help them meet the initial burden of establishing and placing
centers in operation is desirable. Such assistance would be stimulatory
in purpose, granted on a declining basis and terminated in a few years.
The success of this pattern
of local and private financing will depend in large part upon the development
of appropriate arrangements for health insurance, particularly in the private
sector of our economy. Recent studies have indicated that mental health
care - particularly the cost of diagnosis and short-term therapy, which
would be major components of service in the new centers - is insurable
at a moderate cost.
I have directed the Secretary
of Health, Education, and Welfare to explore steps for encouraging and
stimulating the expansion of private voluntary health insurance to include
mental health care. I have also initiated a review of existing Federal
programs, such as the health benefits program for Federal personnel, to
determine whether further measures may be necessary and desirable to increase
their provisions for mental health care.
These comprehensive community
mental health centers should become operational at the earliest feasible
date. I recommend that we make a major demonstration effort in the early
years of the program to be expanded to all major communities as the necessary
manpower and facilities become available.
It is to be hoped that within
a few years the combination of increased mental health insurance coverage,
added State and local support, and the redirection of State resources from
State
mental institutions will help achieve our goal of having community-centered
mental health services readily accessible to all.
2. Improved Care in State Mental Institutions
Until the community mental health
center program develops fully, it is imperative that the quality of care
in existing State mental institutions be improved. By strengthening their
therapeutic services, by becoming open institutions serving their local
communities, many such institutions can perform a valuable transitional
role. The Federal Government can assist materially by encouraging State
mental institutions to undertake intensive demonstration and pilot projects,
to improve the quality of care, and to provide in-service training for
personnel manning these institutions.
This should be done through
special grants for demonstration projects for inpatient care and in-service
training. I recommend that $10 million be appropriated for such purposes.
3. Research and Manpower
Although we embark on a major
national action program for mental health, there is still much more we
need to know. We must not relax our effort to push back the frontiers of
knowledge in basic and applied research into the mental processes, in therapy,
and in other phases of research with a bearing upon mental illness. More
needs to be done also to translate research findings into improved practices.
I recommend an expansion of clinical, laboratory, and field research in
mental illness and mental health.
Availability of trained manpower
is a major factor in the determination of how fast we can expand our research
and expand our new action program in the mental health field. At present
manpower shortages exist in virtually all of the key professional and auxiliary
personnel categories - psychiatrists, clinical psychologists, social workers,
and psychiatric nurses. To achieve success, the current supply of professional
manpower in these fields must be sharply increased - from about 45,000
in 1960 to approximately 85,000 by 1970. To help move toward this goal
I recommend the appropriation of $66 million for training of personnel,
an increase of $17 million over the current fiscal year.
I have, in addition, directed
that the Manpower Development and Training Act be used to assist in the
training of psychiatric aides and other auxiliary personnel for employment
in mental institutions and community centers.
Success of these specialized
training programs, however, requires that they be undergirded by basic
training programs. It is essential to the success of our new national mental
health program that Congress enact legislation authorizing aid to train
more physicians and related health personnel. I will discuss this measure
at greater length in the message on Health which I will send to the Congress
shortly.
II. A NATIONAL PROGRAM TO COMBAT MENTAL RETARDATION
Mental retardation stems from
many causes. It can result from mongolism, birth injury or infection, or
any of a host of conditions that cause a faulty or arrested development
of intelligence to such an extent that the individual's ability to learn
and to adapt to the demands of society is impaired. Once the damage is
done, lifetime incapacity is likely. With early detection, suitable care
and training, however, a significant improvement in social ability and
in personal adjustment and achievement can be achieved.
The care and treatment of mental
retardation, and research into its causes and cure, have - as in the case
of mental illness - been too long neglected. Mental retardation ranks as
a major national health, social and economic problem. It strikes our most
precious asset - our children. It disables ten times as many people as
diabetes, twenty times as many as tuberculosis, twenty-five times as many
as muscular dystrophy, and six hundred times as many as infantile paralysis.
About 400,000 children are so retarded they require constant care or supervision;
more than 200,000 of these are in residential institutions. There are between
5 and 6 million mentally retarded children and adults - an estimated 3
percent of the population. Yet, despite these grim statistics, and despite
an admirable effort by private voluntary associations, until a decade ago
not a single State health department offered any special community services
for the mentally retarded or their families.
States and local communities
spend $300 million a year for residential treatment of the mentally retarded,
and another $250 million for special education, welfare, rehabilitation,
and other benefits and services. The Federal Government will this year
obligate $37 million for research, training and special services for the
retarded and about three times as much for their income maintenance. But
these efforts are fragmented and inadequate.
Mental retardation strikes children
without regard for class, creed, or economic level. Each year sees an estimated
126 thousand new cases. But it hits more often - and harder - at the underprivileged
and the poor; and most often of all - and most severely in city tenements
and rural slums where there are heavy concentrations of families with poor
education and low income.
There are very significant variations
in the impact of the incidence of mental retardation. Draft rejections
for mental deficiency during World War II were 14 times as heavy in States
with low incomes as in others. In some slum areas 10 to 30 percent of the
school-age children are mentally retarded, while in the very same cities
more prosperous neighborhoods have only 1 or 2 percent retarded.
There is every reason to believe
that we stand on the threshold of major advances in this field. Medical
knowledge can now identify precise causes of retardation in 15 to 25 percent
of the cases. This itself is a major advance. Those identified are usually
cases in which there are severe organic injuries or gross brain damage
from disease. Severe cases of mental retardation of this type are naturally
more evenly spread throughout the population than mild retardation - but
even here poor families suffer disproportionately. In most of the mild
cases, although specific physical and neurological defects are usually
not diagnosable with present biomedical techniques, research is rapidly
adding to our knowledge of specific causes: German measles during the first
three months of pregnancy, Rh blood factor incompatibility in newborn infants,
lead poisoning of infants, faulty body chemistry in such diseases as phenylketonuria
and galactosemia, and many others.
Many of the specific causes
of mental retardation are still obscure. Socioeconomic and medical evidence
gathered by a Panel which I appointed in 1961, however, shows a major causative
role for adverse social, economic, and cultural factors. Families who are
deprived of the basic necessities of life, opportunity and motivation
have a high proportion of the Nation's retarded children. Unfavorable health
factors clearly play a major role. Lack of prenatal and postnatal health
care, in particular, leads to the birth of brain-damaged children or to
an inadequate physical and neurological development. Areas of high infant
mortality are often the same areas with a high incidence of mental retardation.
Studies have shown that women lacking prenatal care have a much higher
likelihood of having mentally retarded children. Deprivation of a child's
opportunities for learning slows development in slum and distressed areas.
Genetic, hereditary, and other biomedical factors also play a major part
in the causes of mental retardation.
The American people, acting
through their government where necessary, have an obligation to prevent
mental retardation, whenever possible, and to ameliorate it when it is
present. I am, therefore, recommending action on a comprehensive program
to attack this affliction. The only feasible program with a hope for success
must not only aim at the specific causes and the control of mental retardation
but seek solutions to the broader problems of our society with which mental
retardation is so intimately related.
The Panel which I appointed
reported that, with present knowledge, at least half and hopefully more
than half, of all mental retardation cases can be prevented through this
kind of "broad spectrum" attackaimed at both the specific causes which
medical science has identified, and at the broader adverse social, economic,
and cultural conditions with which incidence of mental retardation is so
heavily correlated. At the same time research must go ahead in all these
categories, calling upon the best efforts of many types of scientists,
from the geneticist to the sociologist.
The fact that mental retardation
ordinarily exists from birth or early childhood, the highly specialized
medical, psychological, and educational evaluations which are required,
and the complex and unique social, educational and vocational lifetime
needs of the retarded individual, all require that there be developed a
comprehensive approach to this specific problem.
1. Prevention
Prevention should be given the
highest priority in this effort. Our general health, education, welfare
and urban renewal programs will make a major contribution in overcoming
adverse social and economic conditions. More adequate medical care, nutrition,
housing and educational opportunities can reduce mental retardation to
the low incidence which has been achieved in some other nations. The recommendations
for strengthening American education which I have made to the Congress
in my message on education will contribute toward this objective as will
the proposals contained in my forthcoming Health message.
New programs for comprehensive
maternity and infant care and for the improvement of our educational services
are also needed. Particular attention should be directed toward the development
of such services for slum and distressed areas. Among expectant mothers
who do not receive prenatal care, more than 20 percent of all births are
premature - 2 or 3 times the rate of prematurity among those who do receive
adequate care. Premature infants have 2 or 3 times as many physical defects
and 50 percent more illnesses than full-term infants. The smallest premature
babies are 10 times more likely to be mentally retarded.
All of these statistics point
to the direct relationship between lack of prenatal care and mental retardation.
Poverty and medical indigency are at the root of most of this problem.
An estimated 35 percent of the mothers in cities over 100,000 population
are medically indigent. In 138 large cities of the country an estimated
455,000 women each year lack resources to pay for adequate health care
during pregnancy and following birth. Between 20 and 60 percent of the
mothers receiving care in public hospitals in some large cities receive
inadequate or no prenatal care - and mental retardation is more prevalent
in these areas.
Our existing State and Federal
child health programs, though playing a useful and necessary role, do not
provide the needed comprehensive care for this high-risk group. To enable
the States and localities to move ahead more rapidly in combating mental
retardation and other childhood disabilities through the new therapeutic
measures being developed by medical science, I am recommending:
- (a) a new 5-year program of
project grants to stimulate State and local health departments to plan,
initiate and develop comprehensive maternity and child health care service
programs - helping primarily families in this high-risk group who are otherwise
unable to pay for needed medical care. These grants would be used to provide
medical care, hospital care, and additional nursing services, and to expand
the number of prenatal clinics. Prenatal and postpartum care would be more
accessible to mothers. I recommend that the initial appropriation for this
purpose be $5 million, allocated on a project basis, rising to an annual
appropriation of $30 million by the third year.
- (b) doubling the existing
$25 million annual authorization for Federal grants for maternal and child
health, a significant portion of which will be used for the mentally retarded.
- (c) doubling over a period
of 7 years the present $25 million annual authorization for Federal grants
for crippled children's services.
Cultural and educational deprivation
resulting in mental retardation can also be prevented. Studies have demonstrated
that large numbers of children in urban and rural slums, including preschool
children, lack the stimulus necessary for proper development of their intelligence.
Even when there is no organic impairment, prolonged neglect, and a lack
of stimulus and opportunity for learning, can result in the failure of
young minds to develop. Other studies have shown that, if proper opportunities
for learning are provided early enough, many of these deprived children
can and will learn and achieve as much as children from more favored neighborhoods.
This self-perpetuating intellectual blight should not be allowed to continue.
In my recent Message on Education,
I recommended that at least 10 percent of the proposed aid for elementary
and secondary education be committed by the States to special project grants
designed to stimulate and make possible the improvement of educational
opportunities particularly in slum and distressed areas, both urban and
rural. I again urge special consideration by the Congress for this proposal.
It will not only help improve educational quality and provide equal opportunity
in areas which need assistance; it will also serve humanity by helping
prevent mental retardation among the children in such culturally-deprived
areas.
2. Community Services
As in the case of mental illnesses,
there is also a desperate need for community facilities and services for
the mentally retarded. We must move from the outmoded use of distant custodial
institutions to the concept of community-centered agencies that will provide
a coordinated range of timely diagnostic, health, educational, training,
rehabilitation, employment, welfare, and legal protection services. For
those retarded children or adults who cannot be maintained at home by their
own families, a new pattern of institutional services is needed.
The key to the development of
this comprehensive new approach toward services for the mentally retarded
is two-fold. First, there must be public understanding and community planning
to meet all problems. Second, there must be made available a continuum
of services covering the entire range of needs. States and communities
need to appraise their needs and resources, review current programs, and
undertake preliminary actions leading to comprehensive State and community
approaches to these objectives. To stimulate public awareness and the development
of comprehensive plans, I recommend legislation to establish a program
of special project grants to the States for financing State reviews of
needs and programs in the field of mental retardation.
A total of a million dollars
is recommended for this purpose. Grants will be awarded on a selective
basis to State agencies presenting acceptable proposals for this broad
interdisciplinary planning activity. The purpose of these grants is to
provide for every State an opportunity to begin to develop a comprehensive,
integrated program to meet all the needs of the retarded. Additional support
for planning health-related facilities and services will be available from
the expanding planning grant program for the Public Health Service which
I will recommend in my forthcoming message on health.
To assist the States and local
communities to construct the facilities which these surveys justify and
plan, I recommend that the Congress authorize matching grants for the construction
of public and other non-profit facilities, including centers for the comprehensive
treatment, training and care of the mentally retarded. Every community
should be encouraged to include provision for meeting the health requirements
of retarded individuals in planning its broader health services and facilities.
Because care of the mentally
retarded has traditionally been isolated from centers of medical and nursing
education, it is particularly important to develop facilities which will
increase the role of highly qualified universities in the improvement and
provision of services and the training of specialized personnel. Among
the various types of facilities for which grants would be authorized, the
legislation I am proposing will permit grants of Federal funds for the
construction of facilities for (1) inpatient clinical units as an integral
part of university-associated hospitals in which specialists on mental
retardation would serve, (2) outpatient diagnostic, evaluation and treatment
clinics associated with such hospitals, including facilities for special
training, and (3) satellite-clinics in outlying cities and counties for
provision of services to the retarded through existing State and local
community programs, including those financed by the Children's Bureau,
in which universities will participate. Grants of $5 million a year will
be provided for these purposes within the total authorizations for facilities
in 1965 and this will be increased to $10 million in subsequent years.
Such clinical and teaching facilities
will provide superior care for the retarded and will also augment teaching
and training facilities for specialists in mental retardation, including
physicians, nurses, psychologists, social workers, speech and other therapists.
Funds for operation of such facilities would come from State, local and
private sources. Other existing or proposed programs of the Children's
Bureau, of the Public Health Service, of the Office of Education, and of
the Department of Labor can provide additional resources for demonstration
purposes and for training personnel.
A full-scale attack on mental
retardation also requires an expansion of special education, training and
rehabilitation services. Largely due to the lack of qualified teachers,
college instructors, directors, and supervisors, only about one-fourth
of the 1,250,000 retarded children of school age now have access to special
education. During the past 4 years, with Federal support, there has been
some improvement in the training of leadership personnel. However, teachers
of handicapped children, including the mentally retarded, are still woefully
insufficient in number and training. As I pointed out in the message on
Education, legislation is needed to increase the output of college instructors
and classroom teachers for handicapped children.
I am asking the Office of Education
to place a new emphasis on research in the learning process, expedite the
application of research findings to teaching methods for the mentally retarded,
support studies on improvement of curricula, develop teaching aids, and
stimulate the training of special teachers.
Vocational training, youth employment,
and vocational rehabilitation programs can all help release the untapped
potentialities of mentally retarded individuals. This requires expansion
and improvement of our vocational education programs, as already recommended;
and, in a subsequent message, I will present proposals for needed youth
employment programs.
Currently rehabilitation services
can only be provided to disabled individuals for whom, at the outset, a
vocational potential can be definitely established. This requirement frequently
excludes the mentally retarded from the vocational rehabilitation program.
I recommend legislation to permit rehabilitation services to be provided
to a mentally retarded person for up to 18 months, to determine whether
he has sufficient potential to be rehabilitated vocationally. I also recommend
legislation establishing a new program to help public and private nonprofit
organizations to construct, equip, and staff rehabilitation facilities
and workshops, making particular provision for the mentally retarded.
State institutions for the mentally
retarded are badly underfinanced, understaffed and overcrowded. The standard
of care is in most instances so grossly deficient as to shock the conscience
of all who see them.
I recommend the appropriation
under existing law of project grants to State institutions for the mentally
retarded, with an initial appropriation of $5 million to be increased in
subsequent years to a level of at least $10 million. Such grants would
be awarded, upon presentation of a plan meeting criteria established by
the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, to State institutions
undertaking to upgrade the quality of residential services through demonstration,
research and pilot projects designed to improve the quality of care in
such institutions and to provide impetus to inservice training and the
education of professional personnel.
3. Research
Our single greatest challenge
in this area is still the discovery of the causes and treatment of mental
retardation. To do this we must expand our resources for the pursuit and
application of scientific knowledge related to this problem. This will
require the training of medical, behavioral and other professional specialists
to staff a growing effort. The new National Institute of Child Health and
Human Development which was authorized by the 87th Congress is already
embarked on this task.
To provide an additional focus
for research into the complex mysteries of mental retardation, I recommend
legislation to authorize the establishment of centers for research in human
development, including the training of scientific personnel. Funds for
3 such centers are included in the 1964 budget; ultimately 10 centers for
clinical, laboratory, behavioral and social science research should be
established. The importance of these problems justifies the talents of
our best minds. No single discipline or science holds the answer. These
centers must, therefore, be established on an interdisciplinary basis.
Similarly, in order to foster
the further development of new techniques for the improvement of child
health, I am also recommending new research authority to the Children's
Bureau for research in maternal and child health and crippled children's
services.
But, once again, the shortage
of professional manpower seriously compromises both research and service
efforts. The insufficient numbers of medical and nursing training centers
now available too often lack a clinical focus on the problems of mental
retardation comparable to the psychiatric teaching services relating to
care of the mentally ill.
We as a Nation have long neglected
the mentally ill and the mentally retarded. This neglect must end, if our
nation is to live up to its own standards of compassion and dignity and
achieve the maximum use of its manpower.
This tradition of neglect must
be replaced by forceful and far-reaching programs carried out at all levels
of government, by private individuals and by State and local agencies in
every part of the Union.
We must act
- to bestow the full benefits
of our society on those who suffer from mental disabilities;
- to prevent the occurrence
of mental illness and mental retardation wherever and whenever possible;
- to provide for early diagnosis
and continuous and comprehensive care, in the community, of those suffering
from these disorders;
- to stimulate improvements
in the level of care given the mentally disabled in our State and private
institutions, and to reorient those programs to a community-centered approach;
- to reduce, over a number of
years, and by hundreds of thousands, the persons confined to these institutions;
- to retain in and return to
the community the mentally ill and mentally retarded, and there to restore
and revitalize their lives through better health programs and strengthened
educational and rehabilitation services; and
- to reinforce the will and
capacity of our communities to meet these problems, in order that the communities,
in turn, can reinforce the will and capacity of individuals and individual
families.
We must promote - to the best
of our ability and by all possible and appropriate means - the mental and
physical health of all our citizens.
To achieve these important ends,
I urge that the Congress favorably act upon the foregoing recommendations.