Politics & Government

After Deeds Stabbing, Spotlight Again on Mental Health: What's the Fix in Virginia?

A high-profile tragedy brings back questions in the struggle to provide access and care.

By Greg Hambrick

Gus Deeds took his own life Tuesday after stabbing his father, state Sen. Creigh Deeds, according to Virginia State Police. It leaves the commonwealth, once again, struggling to address mental health failings.

Gus Deeds was reportedly given an emergency psychiatric exam just a day before the tragedy, but was released because a bed could not be found in a mental health facility near the family’s Bath County home. Since that initial account, several hospitals have said they had a bed available but were never contacted, and now the state inspector general is looking into the matter, according to the Washington Post.

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The Post has reported dozens of cases of mental health patients released due to a lack of beds in just a 90-day period.

So, politicians and state officials will now struggle with mental health questions that are not new to Virginia.

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The phrase “slipped through the cracks” has been used many times to describe the mental health system failing Seung-Hui Cho in 2007. Cho killed 32 people and injured 17 at Virginia Tech before turning a gun on himself.

If there are lessons to be learned from these tragedies, what are they? One change won’t fix a broken system, but what do we need to get right first to address the problems in mental health care?

Tell us in the comments section below.


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