Episodios

  • Presenting: The Fifth Branch
    Sep 27 2024

    In Seattle, police responded to nearly ten thousand scenes of people in crisis last year. And one of the only remaining paths into Washington State's largest psychiatric hospital is through jail.

    But some cities are experimenting with ways to disentangle mental health care from policing — setting up new branches of emergency services that specifically handle mental illness, addiction, and homelessness. Tradeoffs recently teamed up with The Marshall Project to produce The Fifth Branch, a three- part series examining a new approach being tested in the city of Durham, North Carolina.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    37 m
  • Presenting: Hush
    Sep 24 2024

    A story from the 'Hush" investigative podcast from Oregon Public Broadcasting. In this episode, reporter Leah Sottile explores the case of Jesse Lee Johnson, a Black man who lived for 17 years on Oregon's death row for a crime he says he didn't commit.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    43 m
  • Lost Patients Live: First-Person Stories from Seattle's Mental Health Crisis
    Jun 26 2024

    Lost Patients compares the system for treating mental illness in America to an elaborate house, where every room, hallway and staircase was designed independently by a different architect. So what is it like to be shuttled from room to room? What sorts of tradeoffs are doctors working within this system forced to make every day? And what might it look like to design care around the needs of patients?

    KUOW and the Seattle Times convened a forum at the Seattle Public Library to hear perspectives and answer questions. Featured guests included:

    • Laura Van Tosh, patient advocate and founder and convener of Mental Health Policy Roundtable
    • Carolynn Ponzoha, patient advocate and content creator who goes by @psychotic.in.seattle on TikTok
    • Timothy Jolliff, acting senior director of clinical programs at the Downtown Emergency Service Center in Seattle
    • Dr. Paul Borghesani, associate professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine

    You can find resources for people with mental illness and related stories from The Seattle Times and KUOW here:

    https://www.seattletimes.com/component/lost-patients-podcast/
    https://www.kuow.org/podcasts/lost-patients

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    55 m
  • Disease Without Knowledge
    Apr 23 2024

    "Something is preventing us from building a system that works for people with serious mental illness. In lieu of that, patients are often left to improvise recovery for themselves. They learn to live with their inner voices and build their own support structures. Can their stories give us insight into what a functioning system of psychiatric care might look like — and what might be getting in the way?


    You can find resources for people with mental illness and related stories from The Seattle Times and KUOW here:
    https://www.seattletimes.com/component/lost-patients-podcast/
    https://www.kuow.org/podcasts/lost-patients

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    50 m
  • Coming up on Lost Patients
    Apr 16 2024

    A look ahead at the final episode of Lost Patients, coming next week on April 23. We'll explore what recovery looks like for people with serious mental illness — and what it might look like for our fractured system of psychiatric care itself.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    3 m
  • The Way Out
    Apr 9 2024

    After 10 months at Washington State's largest psychiatric hospital, Adam Aurand is discharged onto the streets of downtown Seattle — ejected into a world shaped by decades of deinstitutionalization and failure to build community-based mental health care. His mother rushes to save him before he gets pulled back into the "churn." A Seattle Times reporter tries to pinpoint where the discharge process failed — and the investigation leads her to new conclusions about the limitations of psychiatric care in the U.S.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    53 m
  • Opening
    Apr 2 2024

    In the middle of the last century, a movement to free patients from state-run psychiatric hospitals swept the U.S. This movement — deinstitutionalization — is widely blamed for seriously mentally ill people ending up on the streets. The real story goes much deeper than a loss of psychiatric hospital beds. It's about how incentives and decisions half a century created the dysfunction many people with serious mental illness are lost in today.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    46 m
  • Nostalgia
    Mar 26 2024

    After Carrie Davidson learned that her great-grandmother died in a psychiatric hospital, she spent years tracking down details of her life there. Was the asylum a refuge? Or a prison? This earlier era hangs like a shadow over our approach to care today. We peer into horror and nostalgia that surrounds our societal memories of these mental institutions — and try to sort out which narrative is true.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    48 m