Lost Patients is a deeply-reported, six-part docuseries examining the difficulties of treating serious mental illness through the lens of one city's past, present and future. With real-life testimonials from patients, families, and professionals on the front lines, Lost Patients provides a real, solutions-oriented look at how we got stuck here...and what we might do to break free.
Lost Patients is a joint production of KUOW and The Seattle Times. It is distributed by the NPR Network.
![Lost Patients](https://cdn.statically.io/img/media.npr.org/assets/img/2024/02/23/lost-patients_cover-3000x3000_sq-9a12d727ad4eb33088e4a679a5687fa466f1c30b.jpg?s=1100&c=15&f=jpeg)
Lost Patients
From NPR
Imagine a sprawling house in which every room, doorway, and hall passage was designed by a different architect. Doorways don't connect. Staircases lead to nowhere. Rooms are cut off from each other. That's how reporter Will James describes our complicated system for treating people with severe mental illness – a system that, almost by design, loses patients with psychosis to an endless loop between the streets, jail, clinics, courts and a shrinking number of hospital beds.
Lost Patients is a deeply-reported, six-part docuseries examining the difficulties of treating serious mental illness through the lens of one city's past, present and future. With real-life testimonials from patients, families, and professionals on the front lines, Lost Patients provides a real, solutions-oriented look at how we got stuck here...and what we might do to break free.
Lost Patients is a joint production of KUOW and The Seattle Times. It is distributed by the NPR Network.
Most Recent Episodes
Heidi Aurand mourns the memory of her late son Adam in her Portland home on June 27, 2023. Daniel Kim/The Seattle Times hide caption
Lost Patients Episode 4 - Opening Washington State Archive hide caption
Kathleen and Michael are portrayed on Friday, March 8, 2024, at their home in Seattle. KUOW Photo/Megan Farmer Megan Farmer/KUOW Photo hide caption