By Eric Whitney
Colorado Public Radio in conjunction with Kaiser Health News
Originally published May 31, 2012
Last fall Kathy Partridge got a phone call from a local emergency room, telling her that her daughter, Jessie Glasscock, was there -- and was OK. Glasscock had gone missing overnight. She was away at college, and had a history of manic episodes. Police had found her in a dumpster and brought her to the ER for her own safety. It was a huge relief for her mother – but she was completely surprised by what happened next.
"It sort of seemed like, well, they'll stabilize her, help her get back on her meds and she'll pick up her pieces. Instead, I went down to this emergency room and just found her by herself, basically locked in a closet," Partridge said.
The "closet" was actually an exam room, but Partridge explains it was small, windowless, and the only furniture was a stainless steel bed. Her daughter waited there, wearing nothing but a hospital gown, without treatment or a decent meal for 24 hours. Partridge was shocked to learn there was no place for her daughter to get treatment. "There was not a single psychiatric bed to release her in in the entire state of Colorado," she says.
The entire story is here.