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April 26, 2014 Newswires
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Drop-in groups are ‘Havens’ for mentally ill

Frank Lee, St. Cloud Times, Minn.
By Frank Lee, St. Cloud Times, Minn.
McClatchy-Tribune Information Services

April 26--They have experienced mental illness -- along with shame and disappointment -- but that hasn't stopped them from trying to help others like themselves.

Richard Schulzetenberg and Betty Mrozek were diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder, and major depression and anxiety, respectively, and were dismayed at the lack of local resources for people like them in rural Stearns County.

"We are not counselors. We do not provide therapy. We are not doctors. We are peer support for those who suffer from a mental illness," said Schulzetenberg, a 61-year-old resident of Sauk Centre.

They started drop-in centers or "Havens," as they call them -- in Albany, Melrose and Sauk Centre -- to informally support mentally ill people in remote areas where resources are scarce.

"We feel it meets a unique need in the rural Stearns County area to support those who suffer from mental illness," Schulzetenberg said at the Albany Haven, in the basement of The Village Bean coffee shop.

The centers provide a place to hang out and find reprieve from stress at home, to have a cup of coffee or a snack, to play games or watch TV, to interact with others, discuss problems and find support.</p>

"There is no financial involvement. We are only too happy to serve and be served by those who suffer," said Schulzetenberg, a husband and father with a degree from Yale Divinity School.

Mrozek said of establishing drop-in centers in rural areas, "We kind of jumped in by the seat of our pants, going, 'We need something here. Let's get something going.' "

Drop-in centers

The drop-in centers attract between five and 10 people at a time, but Schulzetenberg hopes more will attend as the word spreads; the Albany center opened in November and the others only recently.

"Visitors are welcome, but the centers are specifically for the mentally ill," said Schulzetenberg, who has been hospitalized several times.

"Persons who suffer from a mental illness are scared and shy and don't usually want to venture out publicly from their safe places, but a safe place is just what the Haven in Albany, Melrose and Sauk Centre wants to be."

The number of mental and behavioral health ambulance trips has been growing, with patients and their families having to travel farther from underserved communities, according to the state's Office of Rural Health & Primary Care.

According to data collected through the Minnesota State Ambulance Reporting system, the number of behavioral disorder ambulance runs increased 23 percent from 2005 to 2006, highlighting the need for drop-in centers.

Rates of depression among women in rural areas were as high as 40 percent, while only 13-20 percent of their counterparts in more urban areas were depressed, according to a 2005 report by the Minnesota Department of Health.

The Health Resources and Services Administration estimates that 1.46 million of state residents do not receive adequate mental health services; for example, they cannot receive the medication, treatment or support to get better.

Medications gradually stabilized Mrozek, a 58-year-old wife and mother of four from Albany who works as an office assistant.

"I can gain a lot of support from my husband; he has been my rock, but there comes a point, however, where he doesn't know what I'm going through, but with a support group, they know what I'm going through," she said.

"We asked, 'What do consumers -- people who use the mental health services -- like?' and they wanted drop-in centers."

Mental illness

Mental illness is also associated with chronic conditions such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes and obesity, and the economic burden of mental illness in America was about $300 billion in 2002, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

Rates for homicide and suicide are 2-6 times higher among people with a mental illness than in the population overall.

"The stigma, the negative things about being mentally ill is so difficult, and I think it's even worse in rural areas," Schulzetenberg said. "There's a lot of this feeling of 'I should pull myself up by my bootstraps and just get over it.' "

About 25 percent of all U.S. adults have a mental illness and nearly 50 percent of adults in America will develop at least one mental illness during their lifetime, according to the CDC.

"We want to put a positive spin on mental health. Ninety-nine percent of the people are not violent; we go about our lives trying to help each other, not trying to injure anybody," Mrozek said.

Kyle Darnall is a psychologist at HealthPartners Central Minnesota Clinics in Sartell who said the support groups are beneficial but cautioned they should not be a replacement for professional care.

"There's not enough supply (of professional services) to meed the demand," Darnall said of the consensus of professional associations such as the American Psychiatric Association and the American Psychological Association.

"It's always easier to think the grass is greener on the other side of the fence," Darnall said of the idyllic views of agrarian communities. "But mental health disorders don't discriminate."

Mrozek said attendees from nine rural communities were represented at the Albany Haven in the past few weeks, "from Sauk Centre to St. Martin to Grey Eagle to Avon and everywhere in between."

"We're grass roots; we're the common man, helping the common man," she said. "And if we can do that by support, if we help one person who walks out of here and goes, 'You know what? I feel better,' then I think we've done something."

'The Havens'

--The Albany mental health drop-in center is open from noon-4 p.m. Wednesdays in the basement of The Village Bean coffee shop at 401 Railroad Ave.

--The Melrose mental health drop-in center is open from 1-3 p.m. Tuesdays in the upstairs of the Rose View Manor assisted-living facility at 16 First St. SE.

--The Sauk Centre mental health drop-in center is open 2-4 p.m. Fridays at Main Street Coffee Co., 604 Main St. S.

The challenges

Rural areas present unique challenges to providing quality mental health care, such as:

--Mental health providers are in short supply.

--Existing mental health clinics are located farther from residents.

--Seeking care from a mental health provider may carry a greater stigma.

--Financial barriers exist due to inadequacies in health insurance coverage and/or large numbers of residents below the poverty level.

Source: University of Minnesota, Center for Rural Mental Health Studies

Daily Poll

Have you ever had trouble trying to access mental health care? Place your vote here. See results on Sunday's Opinion page. The Daily Poll is nonscientific.

Follow Frank Lee on Twitter @fclgannett.

___

(c)2014 the St. Cloud Times (St. Cloud, Minn.)

Visit the St. Cloud Times (St. Cloud, Minn.) at www.sctimes.com

Distributed by MCT Information Services

Wordcount:  1118

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