Remarks by President John F. Kennedy on mental illness and mental retardation, 5 February 1963
This item is a press copy of President John F. Kennedy's televised remarks regarding his special message to Congress on mental illness and mental retardation delivered from the White House Fish Room. In his speech, the President discusses his plans for a national mental health...
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OCR Page 1 of 2FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, FEBRUARY 5, 1963
OFFICE OF THE WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY
THE WHITE HOUSE
REMARKS OF THE PRESIDENT
32
ON MENTAL RETARDATION
THE FISH ROOM
blett
I have sent to the Congress today a series of proposals
to help fight mental illness and mental retardation. These two
afflictions have been long neglected. They occur more frequently,
affect more people, require more prolonged treatment, cause more
individual and family suffering than any other condition in
American life.
It has been tolerated too long, It has troubled our
national conscience, but only as a problem unpleasant to mention,
easy to postpone and despairing of solution. The time has come
for a great national effort. New medical, scientific and social
tools and insights are now available.
With respect to mental illness, our chief aim is to
get people out of state custodial institutions and back into
their communities and homes, without hardship or danger. Today
nearly one-fifth of the 279 state mental institutions are fire
and health hazards.
Three-fourths of them were opened before World War Two.
Nearly half of the 530,000 persons in our state mental hospitals
are in institutions with over 3,000 patients getting little or
no
individual treatment. Many of these institutions have less
than half of the professional staff required.
Forty-five percent of them have been hospitalized for
ten years or more. If we launch a broad, new mental health pro-
gram now, it will be possible within a decade or two to reduce
the number of patients now under custodial care by 50 percent
or more.
Mental retardation ranks with mental health as a major
health, social and economic problem in this country. It strikes
our most precious asset, our children. It disables 10 times as
many people as diabstes, 20 times as many as tuberculosis and
600 times as many as infantile paralysis.
There are between 5 million and 6 million mentally
retarded children and adults, an estimated 3 percent of our
population, much too high for a country of our resources and
wealth. There are many causos, many of them still unknown, but
I think that statistics already point to a direct relationship
between lack of prenatal care and mental retardation,
Primarily for lack of funds, between 20 and 60 percent
of the mothers receiving care in public hospitals in some large
cities receive inadequate or no prenatal care and mental retar-
dation is more prevalent in these areas. I am recommending a
new, five-year program of assistance to states and local health
(OVER)
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