A state psychiatrist committed emotional maltreatment when he threatened a mentally ill patient at the Minnesota Security Hospital with electroshock therapy, a top state official has determined. The decision by Human Services Commissioner Lucinda Jesson overrules the department's inspector general, who decided last month that the psychiatrist's threats didn't merit a finding of maltreatment.
"The reasonable person on the street of St. Paul or St. Peter probably would find a psychiatrist saying — in a raised voice with some anger — that he was going to 'shock your brain' to a committed patient to be threatening," Jesson said in a letter released Tuesday that explained her decision.
"Clearly, this interaction was improper, inconsistent with the manner expected of a professional caregiver … I believe the preponderance of evidence shows the conversation constitutes abuse."
Jesson's action is significant because it comes in response to a rare, formal objection filed against the DHS by a state official whose office advocates on behalf of those with mental illness and developmental disabilities. The official asked Jesson to review Inspector General Jerry Kerber's initial decision to reject the maltreatment finding that was made by his own licensing investigators.
The psychiatrist, Dr. James Christensen, has now been warned that he will be automatically disqualified from working for the state if he commits any further maltreatment over the next seven years, according to a state licensing report.
Christensen, who denied to state investigators that he made such a threat against the patient, is the only full-time psychiatrist at the St. Peter treatment facility, where more than 300 of the state's most dangerous and mentally ill patients are housed. He has not responded to interview requests.
'Power differential' at issue
Roberta Opheim, the state ombudsman for mental health and developmental disabilities, is the official who asked Jesson in December to reconsider Kerber's actions.
"I'm gravely disturbed because there is a huge power differential between the doctor and the patient as shown in that threat," Opheim said at the time she filed her complaint. "That's a coercive statement the doctor made. Wouldn't any ordinary person be hurt, alarmed, if that threat was used against them?"