Title 24 › Chapter CHAPTER 4— - SAINT ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE FOR DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA › § 225
Congress requires the District of Columbia to run one coordinated mental health system by October 1, 1993. Right now mental health care in the District is split between the federal Saint Elizabeths Hospital and the District’s Mental Health Services Administration. Saint Elizabeths, created in 1855 and in operation for over 100 years, provides many services such as inpatient and outpatient psychiatric care, substance abuse treatment, court-related evaluations and care, services for some federal beneficiaries, programs for special groups, research, and training. Keeping those services available is important for District residents, people in the District who need care, federal beneficiaries, and for national mental health research. Moving some or all Saint Elizabeths functions to the District aims to make care more efficient, more community-based, and supports District self-government. The plan must give high-quality, cost-effective, community-based care across inpatient, outpatient, residential, and support services. It must protect patient rights and meet the Federal court consent decree in Dixon v. Heckler. The District and Federal Governments should share transition costs fairly. Hospital employees must be treated fairly, be first offered comparable jobs, and the Federal Government must help retrain them. Federal research and training at Saint Elizabeths should continue. The District must use accreditation and licensing standards like those of the Joint Commission, and include services for homeless people with mental illness.
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Hospitals and Asylums — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
24 U.S.C. § 225
Title 24 — Hospitals and Asylums
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73