Title 24 › Chapter 4— SAINT ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL › Subchapter III— MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE FOR DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA › § 225
Congress says the District’s mental health care is now split between the federally run Saint Elizabeths Hospital and the District’s Mental Health Services Administration. It requires that the services Saint Elizabeths provides continue. Saint Elizabeths has provided many services for over 100 years, including eight types of care such as inpatient and outpatient treatment, substance abuse care, court and prison psychiatric evaluations for federal and local courts, care for people covered by federal benefits, programs for special groups, research support, and professional training. Congress wants the District to have, by October 1, 1993, one coordinated mental health system that is community-based, high quality, cost-effective, and offers a full range of inpatient, outpatient, residential, and support services while protecting patients’ rights. The plan must follow the Dixon v. Heckler court consent decree. The District and Federal Government must share transition costs fairly. Hospital employees must be treated with care: they should get first chance at similar new jobs and the Federal Government must pay for retraining. The Federal Government should keep high-quality research and training at Saint Elizabeths. The District must set licensing and accreditation standards that match good federal rules and standards of the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals. The plan must also include direct services for homeless people with mental illness.
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Hospitals and Asylums — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
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Citation
24 U.S.C. § 225
Title 24 — Hospitals and Asylums
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60