U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

Fact Sheet: Overview of Law Enforcement-Mental Health Resources

NCJ Number
252146
Date Published
August 2018
Length
4 pages
Annotation

This overview of law enforcement-mental health resources profiles national Law Enforcement-Mental Health (LE-MH) Learning Sites, a police-mental health collaboration toolkit, LE-MH programs and publications, and police-mental health collaboration program checklists.

Abstract

LE-MH Learning Sites are 10 law enforcement agencies selected by the U.S. Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) to serve as resources for law enforcement agencies that want to develop or improve a comprehensive police-mental health collaboration (PMHC) that will improve outcomes for police officers' interactions with people who have mental illness. In 2017, the LE-MH Learning Sites responded to 2,536 requests for technical assistance, conducted 121 site visits, and delivered 236 training programs. In 2016, BJA launched an online toolkit that provides support to law enforcement agencies in planning and implementing programs that improve law enforcement personnel's response to people with mental illness. Profiles in programs and publications related to funding and technical assistance specifically for improving the law enforcement response to mentally ill persons features the federal Justice and Mental Health Collaboration Program (JMHCP), which provides grants and technical assistance for developing and improving police-mental health partnerships in serving mentally ill persons; a national curriculum that expands best practices for police responses to mentally ill persons; and a 42-state survey on mental health and crisis de-escalation training for law enforcement. Checklists are described for how jurisdictional policymakers, law enforcement leaders, and behavioral health agency leaders can assess their agencies and partnerships response to mentally ill persons who are encountered by law enforcement personnel.