The origin of mental health courts stemmed from situations similar to those preceding the development of drug courts – repeat offenders in need of treatment services. With community mental health resources dwindling, the courts were seeing more repeat offenders with untreated serious mental illness. Florida’s jails and prisons are not designed, equipped, or funded to deal with serious mental illness, so the creation of the mental health court model (a problem-solving court docket model) was a logical response.
Mental health courts generally share the following goals: to improve public safety by reducing criminal recidivism; to improve the quality of life of people with mental illnesses and increase their participation in effective treatment; and, to reduce court - and corrections - related costs through administrative efficiencies and often by providing an alternative to incarceration.
Monitoring and treating offenders with serious mental illness in a mental health court can be more effective, efficient, and less expensive than the remedies available through traditional justice system approaches.
As of July 2024, Florida has 32 mental health courts and 1 juvenile mental health court in operation. Florida’s mental health courts admitted 2,217 participants in 2023.
The components of mental health courts, from Improving Responses to People with Mental Illnesses: The Essential Elements of a Mental Health Court, Bureau of Justice Assistance:
This 2007 document, prepared by the Council of State Governments Justice Center for the Bureau of Justice Assistance describes ten essential elements of a mental health court, including planning, confidentiality, informed choice, court team, and treatment services.
This site provides research-driven strategies and tools to increase public safety and strengthen communities.
This report, authored by the Steering Committee on Families and Children in the Court's Mental Health Subcommittee, provides recommendations for improving Florida's Mental Health System.
This October 2022 report, authored by the National Judicial Task Force to Examine State Courts' Response to Mental Illness, was developed to “assist state courts in their efforts to more effectively respond to the needs of court involved individuals with severe mental illness.”
Max Pierre, a current participant progressing through mental health court in the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit, purchased the copyrights to a song and incorporated new lyrics describing his experience in mental health court. Problem-solving court staff in the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit integrated his song into a video to promote National Drug Court Month and Mental Health Awareness Month, both in May. The Nineteenth Judicial Circuit dedicates the video to individuals who continue to battle substance use and/or mental health disorders and to each team member who works tirelessly to assist and guide them in all problem-solving courts.
Office of Problem-Solving Courts