
Who funds the Treatment Advocacy Center?
The Treatment Advocacy Center is funded by a host of individual donors, foundations and grants. The Treatment Advocacy Center does not accept funding from companies or entities involved in the sale, marketing or distribution of pharmaceutical products. This stance is unusual in the mental health advocacy field.
Is the Treatment Advocacy Center credibility?
This charity's score is 79.46, earning it a 2-Star rating.
What is AOT assisted outpatient treatment?
Assisted outpatient treatment (AOT), also known as outpatient commitment (OPC), is a civil legal procedure whereby a judge can order an individual with a serious mental illness to follow a court-ordered treatment plan in the community.
How many states have AOT laws?
Community-Based Civil Commitment AOT in some form is authorized by statute in 47 states and the District of Columbia but is unevenly practiced and not available everywhere it is allowed. (In 2019, the states without AOT statutes were Connecticut, Maryland and Massachusetts).
What does mental health advocate do?
What is a mental health advocate? Mental health advocates are heroes — individuals who do not wear capes, but who work tirelessly every day to share their stories and help those who are struggling. They take risks and show their vulnerability by telling their truth in hopes of encouraging someone else.
What causes anosognosia?
What Causes It? Experts think anosognosia results from damage to an area of the brain involved in self-reflection. Everyone, regardless of their health status, is constantly updating their mental image of themselves.
Who qualifies for AOT?
Be eighteen years of age or older; Have a qualifying mental illness; Ne unlikely to survive safely in the community without supervision; Have a condition that is substantially deteriorating; and.
Who is eligible for AOT?
Who is Eligible for AOT? Have a history of lack of compliance with treatment for mental illness which has led to: Two hospitalizations for mental illness in the preceding three years or.
How do I get an AOT?
A person may be ordered to obtain AOT if the court finds that he or she is at least 18 years of age and suffers from a mental illness; and is unlikely to survive in the community without supervision, based on clinical determination; and has a history of non-compliance with treatment for mental illness which has led to ...
What state has no AOT?
The three states that do not have AOT are Connecticut, Maryland and Massachusetts.
What is the black robe effect?
The theory behind the black-robe effect is that a judicial process and a judge's imprimatur increase the likelihood that the patient will take to heart the need to adhere to prescribed treatment.
What is AOT removal?
The statute permits the temporary removal of an individual subject to an AOT order, if the individual is non-compliant with treatment, efforts to solicit compliance have failed, and a physician determines that as a result the individual may be in need of inpatient care and treatment.
What is TAC's opinion?
Education of policymakers and judges regarding TAC's viewpoint on serious mental illness; TAC's opinion is that more legally mandated treatment and increases in hospital beds will improve care.
What is a TAC?
The Treatment Advocacy Center ( TAC) is a U.S. nonprofit organization based in Arlington, Virginia, US. The organization, originally announced as the NAMI Treatment Action Center in 1997, was subsequently directed by psychiatrist E. Fuller Torrey, identifies its mission as "dedicated to eliminating barriers to the timely and effective treatment ...
What is AOT in medical terms?
The organization is most well-known for proposed laws, policies, and practices in the areas of legally compelled outpatient services or outpatient commitment for people diagnosed with mental illness (also known as assisted outpatient treatment, AOT ).
What are the issues of TAC?
The organization identifies its other key issues as "anosognosia, consequences of non-treatment, criminalization of mental illness, psychiatric bed shortages, public service costs, violence and mental illness". TAC has been subject to criticism by mental health advocates to be promoting coercion and forced treatment.
Mission
The Treatment Advocacy Center (TAC) is a national nonprofit organization dedicated to eliminating legal and clinical barriers to timely and humane treatment for millions of Americans with severe brain disorders who are not receiving appropriate medical care.
Programs and results
The Treatment Advocacy Center is a national nonprofit organization dedicated to eliminating barriers to the timely and effective treatment of severe mental illness. The organization promotes laws, policies and practices for ...
Operations
The people, governance practices, and partners that make the organization tick.

Overview
The Treatment Advocacy Center (TAC) is a U.S. non-profit organization based in Arlington, Virginia, US. The organization, originally announced as the NAMI Treatment Action Centre in 1997, was subsequently directed by psychiatrist E. Fuller Torrey, identifies its mission as "dedicated to eliminating barriers to the timely and effective treatment of severe mental illness". The organization is most well-known for proposed laws, policies, and practices in the areas of legall…
History
Although according to the TAC website, E. Fuller Torrey founded the Treatment Advocacy Center in 1998 as an offshoot of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), other sources indicate that the original name was the NAMI Treatment Action Center. Laurie Flynn, the NAMI director at the time, stated in a press release, "It's a national disgrace that, in this age of remarkable progress in brain research and treatment, so many individuals are left out in the cold". TAC received initial fi…
Areas of Focus
The Treatment Advocacy Center activities and projects include:
• Developed a template law for legally mandated outpatient mental health treatment. Released in 2000, the draft text is meant as a legal framework for authorizing court-ordered treatment of individuals diagnosed with mental illness who are determined by the court to meet certain legal criteria around dangerousness to self or others or inability to care for oneself due to a mental ill…
Controversy
TAC's major focus on legally mandated treatment is opposed by other advocacy groups. The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law in a statement on forced treatment states "[n]ot only is forced treatment a serious rights violation, it is counterproductive. Fear of being deprived of autonomy discourages people from seeking care. Coercion undermines therapeutic relationships and long-term treatment." Daniel Fischer, founder of National Coalition for Mental Health Recove…
See also
• Deinstitutionalization
• Kendra's Law
• Laura's Law
• Outpatient commitment
• Psychiatric hospital
External links
• Treatment Advocacy Center Online
• TACReports.org [1]