Brattleboro Retreat. Photo by Randy Holhut/The Commons
Brattleboro Retreat. Photo by Randy Holhut/The Commons

Editor’s note: This story first appeared in The Commons, a weekly nonprofit news organization that covers Windham County.

Program cuts announced on Nov. 14 during union contract negotiations have some Brattleboro Retreat workers concerned that an already rising number of patientsโ€™ assaults against staff at the psychiatric hospital could escalate.

The Retreat announced last week that 31 staff members would lose their jobs as the hospital cuts two programs: Therapeutic Activities Services and inpatient chemical dependency counselors.

The number of teachers in the Meadows Educational Center, the Retreatโ€™s private school, will also be reduced. A handful of administrative employees were also laid off, and more staffing cuts could lie ahead.

The cuts come at a time when the Retreat workers are dealing with an increasingly challenging clientele and an environment in which staff are reporting more injuries as a result of encounters with patients.

Though the number of staff injuries declined by more than half between 2007 and 2011, there has been a 37 percent increase in the number of complaints filed with the Brattleboro Police Department in the first five months of this year.

According to Peter Albert, a licensed clinical social worker and a Retreat senior vice president and spokesperson, in recent years patients have come to the facility with more complex needs, placing more pressure on the hospital and prompting the Retreat to shift its programing.

Patients once routinely arrived at the Retreat with one diagnosis, such as depression. Many patients arrive now with multiple diagnoses. A typical patient might be diagnosed with depression, a substance addiction, and medical issues.

โ€œItโ€™s important to recognize the people weโ€™re treating have significant mental illness,โ€ said Albert.

Union President Bonnie Chase said it is reasonable to expect that the reduction in staff will lead to more injuries.

Christine Gray, a Retreat nurse, said a number of patients will likely be more heavily medicated, absent a therapeutic services program and addiction counselors. Patients learn coping skills in these programs, she said. Without such skills, medication becomes a patientโ€™s next avenue of symptom management.

Gray said the childrenโ€™s programs will feel the loss most keenly because the therapeutic activities are โ€œintricateโ€ to their care.

Assault on duty

Laura Lodge, a mental health worker, alleges that a patient violently assaulted her and a colleague on Sept. 11.

According to Lodge, a male patient knocked her to the ground and beat her in the back of the head multiple times. Pinned to the floor, she says she could not reach the alarm.

Another female colleague heard her screaming. The male patient โ€œturned onโ€ the second woman, she said, and then returned to attacking Lodge.

Lodge said she was treated by medical staff at the Retreat and then sent to Brattleboro Memorial Hospital for tests.

Brattleboro Retreat. Photo by Randy Holhut/The Commons
Brattleboro Retreat. Photo by Randy Holhut/The Commons

By her account, the assault left her with severe black eyes, โ€œeggsโ€ on the side and back of her head, and eight stitches.

The other woman has some โ€œbrain damage,โ€ said Lodge.

โ€œHe knew what he was doing,โ€ said Lodge of the male patient.

Lodge contacted the police to file charges. The officer filed a full report and photographed Lodgeโ€™s injuries, she said.

According to Lodge, however, the officer told her, โ€œNothing will be done.โ€

She said that she was told the Windham County stateโ€™s attorney will not prosecute because the assaults are โ€œan acceptable part of my job.”

Windham County Stateโ€™s Attorney David Gartenstein said that in Vermont police have the authority to prepare charging documents and refer them to the stateโ€™s attorney. Gartenstein said he would not discourage people from making a report to the police. The stateโ€™s attorneyโ€™s office reviews reports from such incidents at the Retreat and makes independent decisions about each report, he said.

The process to determine whether to prosecute patients in a psychiatric facility โ€œinvolves complicated issues related to a defendantโ€™s capacity to participate in [court] proceedings,โ€ said Gartenstein. A personโ€™s โ€œcompetencyโ€ and โ€œsanityโ€ affect the ability to prosecute, said Gartenstein.

According to Lodge, the male patient hurt two other staff.

Lodge alleged that โ€œ[management] is just trying to cover it up,โ€ she said, also charging that her supervisor, a clinical manager is โ€œnow on the outs with the administrationโ€ after advocating for her.

Will Shafer, a nurse, said the Retreat โ€œis not set up forโ€ the complexity of its current patient population, and he said that the hospital is putting its staff โ€œin harmโ€™s way.โ€

Shafer said the hospital needs better alarm systems, for starters. He added that the hospital is also starting to mix the more acute, and potentially violent, patients with other less-dangerous patients from other units.

This strategy puts not only staff but also other patients in harmโ€™s way, Shafer and Lodge said.

The two staffers said they worry for the young mental health workers who are left alone to watch โ€œassaultive menโ€ during their shift.

Shafer said that the male patient who attacked Lodge was moved to his unit. He would not have known the patient was dangerous if Lodge had not called to tell him.

Lodge also said that โ€œthereโ€™s not enough staffโ€ on her unit. Routinely, staff members from a previous shift must work a following shift to make up the numbers, she said.

The โ€œforensicโ€ patients โ€” a population that comes to the hospital under the directive of the judicial system โ€” stay at the Retreat longer, sometimes months longer, than patients in the hospitalโ€™s other programs do, she said.

Not having the therapeutic activities โ€œdamages their care,โ€ Lodge said.

The Retreatโ€™s stance on safety means patients arenโ€™t safe from one another, she added. โ€œ[The Retreat] is acting reactively to the assaults not proactively to the assaults,โ€ said Shafer.

When asked if the Retreat had to adjust its training for staff to address the issue, Lodge responded, โ€œYou canโ€™t train for being assaulted.โ€

Careful not to re-stigmatize

Albert, the Retreat senior vice president, is concerned that attention drawn to staff dangers could reflect unfairly and inaccurately on the majority of the hospitalโ€™s patients. Itโ€™s important, he said, to guard against re-stigmatizing patients who are managing mental illness. Most are not violent, he said.

โ€œIโ€™m not dismissing [the staffโ€™s] concerns,โ€ said Albert. โ€œWe all need to appreciate thatโ€™s what our work now is.โ€

Peter Albert, senior vice president of the Brattleboro Retreat. Photo by Randy Holhut/The Commons
Peter Albert, senior vice president of the Brattleboro Retreat. Photo by Randy Holhut/The Commons

Staff have a โ€œtough job,โ€ Albert said, and hospital workers should feel free to voice concerns. If employees donโ€™t feel comfortable doing so, โ€œthen thatโ€™s a piece we need to work on with people,โ€ Albert said.

According to Albert, staff have access to an employee assistance program, which connects staff with psychiatrists and other resources.

In job interviews, the Retreat talks with new hires about the ways mental illness can โ€œmanifestโ€ in a personโ€™s behavior, he said. The Retreat has required more trainings and debriefings of staff after incidents, he said. The hospital has formed a Consumer Advisory Group comprised of past patients and professionals to help work with staff and patients on ways to move forward.

Staff can request to make a formal report to law enforcement, he said, but the Retreat tries to educate staff about the challenges of prosecuting a patient with mental illness.

The Retreat has increased staffing on units, he said, but that is not the only solution.

The hospital has contracted with an architect who specializes in designing mental health facilities, as part of a $8 million investment in the renovation of patient units and repairs to the Retreat’s historic buildings.

The hospital wanted to use the units as โ€œtherapeutic tools,โ€ Albert said. The new designs decrease the number of beds and increase the number of quiet spaces that patients could use.

Police activity

According to Brattleboro Police Chief Eugene Wrinn, the departmentโ€™s responses to calls originating at the Retreat have decreased. These calls included everything from pulled fire alarms to injuries.

Starting in 2007, the police responded to 142 calls, said Wrinn. Those numbers decreased each year to 56 in 2011.

But between January and June of this year, the department responded to 38 calls.

Thirty-eight calls in five months, reflects a rate of increase of roughly 37 percent over the previous year.

Wrinn said his department has met with the Retreat to discuss how the police can best cooperate with staff to ensure everyoneโ€™s safety.

The police want to protect the community, said Wrinn. But the department wants to steer clear of interfering negatively with a personโ€™s therapeutic care, he said.

Wrinn said the the hospital has developed a solid process for when to involve police. He added that the long run of decreasing numbers of calls to the Brattleboro Police Department reflects the Retreat’s proactive measures.

The Commons has obtained data from the stateโ€™s Department of Labor and Industry, Division of Workers Compensation listing injuries to Retreat employees spanning September 2011 to November 2012.

According to a brochure from the Vermont Department of Labor, โ€œAn employer must promptly report all work injuries that result in either an absence from work or require medical attention.โ€

Off the 55 staff injuries listed, 14 involved โ€œhitting,โ€ being โ€œstruck,โ€ โ€œpunched,โ€ or โ€œattacked.โ€ Eight citations had the code description โ€œhead โ€” multiple injury.โ€

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