Michigan’s state-run inpatient psychiatric care system is broken. And sadly, the more we learn, the worse it gets.
The state auditor has now confirmed what patients and parents have been telling me for almost two years —the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) is failing to protect our most vulnerable residents seeking mental health care.
On Sept. 30, the nonpartisan state Office of the Auditor General (OAG) published its independent investigation into the Office of Recipient Rights (ORR), the agency within MDHHS tasked with protecting the rights of public mental health service recipients.
I requested this review two years ago because families have been coming to me with alarming stories, such as physical abuse, poor living conditions, insufficient food, short staffing, and a lack of communication from facility personnel to parents.
The audit shines much-needed light on why recipient rights complaints are going unanswered and how MDHHS has failed to properly investigate claims of abuse, neglect or even death in a timely manner.
Since joining the Senate, I have heard from parents who say our state’s system failed their children. I’ve spoken with past patients and families whose loved ones were receiving care at the former Hawthorn Center. Their accounts are heartbreaking. Many felt abandoned by a system that was supposed to help them.
State law requires the ORR to initiate investigations of apparent or suspected rights violations in a timely and efficient manner and to immediately initiate investigations involving alleged abuse, neglect, serious injury, or death of a recipient. The ORR defines “immediately” as within 24 hours of the receipt of a complaint, according to staff training materials.
According to the OAG report, investigations were not immediately initiated for over 30% of sampled complaints alleging abuse, neglect, serious injury or death, and almost 40% of sampled investigations had late status reports or lacked sufficient information to determine status report timeliness.
Alarmingly, the OAG found that the ORR did not complete its investigations and interventions in a timely manner for almost 20% of sampled complaints.
Michigan’s Mental Health Code requires the ORR to complete investigations within 90 days after receiving a complaint. Yet, for the 56 completed investigations that were reviewed, nearly 30% took between 98 days and nearly 14 months to complete, with an average of just under six months.
And in nearly half of the cases reviewed, video cameras that could have provided the truth weren’t even functioning.
The OAG found that video surveillance and audio recording capabilities at the five state psychiatric hospitals were not always in place or consistently functioning, even though they could have helped resolve more than 40% of the investigations reviewed.
When the state accepts responsibility for those in psychiatric care, it accepts a sacred trust: to defend their dignity, to protect their rights, and to act swiftly when those rights are threatened or violated.
There is a serious need for increased oversight of the state’s psychiatric facilities and accountability for those charged with caring for vulnerable patients in their care.
That’s why I have introduced legislation to strengthen patient rights, improve oversight of state-run psychiatric hospitals and demanded legislative hearings.
Michigan residents deserve all our state hospitals to be places of healing — not fear. And the ORR must serve as a guardian to patients — not a silent bystander.
I say to MDHHS Director Elizabeth Hertel and her leadership team: Oversight is not optional. Accountability is not a suggestion. It is a charge owed to every patient and every family who places their trust in your care.
State Sen. Michael Webber, R-Rochester Hills, represents Michigan’s 9th district and serves as the minority vice chair of the Senate Committee on Health Policy. This op-ed appeared in The Detroit News on Oct. 5, 2025.