Another goodbye to a good friend
Dr. John Constantino ended his term on the Mental Health Commission recently, and I want to express our deepest appreciation and admiration for his outstanding leadership as member and chair of the commission for the past three and a-half years. Dr. Constantino’s time on the Commission coincides with some of the most difficult and stressful periods in DMH’s history. Multiyear funding reductions and the gradual erosion of DMH administrative and clinical leadership impacted DMH’s ability to provide critically needed, high-quality mental health services to Missourians. Statewide concerns about the lack of client safety within DMH services, highlighted prominently by the media, further eroded DMH credibility.
Throughout this period, John’s uncompromising leadership as chair of the commission helped overcome organizational paralysis, demanded higher levels of operational and clinical accountability, and helped create a more positive vision for DMH’s future. Under his guidance, the Mental Health Commission conducted a series of well-publicized statewide hearings and issued a critical report entitled “Building A Safer Mental Health System,” highlighting key DMH program safety and treatment problems, and recommending a blueprint for change now being implemented by DMH. While these recommendations necessarily focused on prominent safety issues in DMH programs, they went much farther in mapping a broader direction for improving the overall quality and accountability of DMH services.
Perhaps John’s mental health leadership over the last four years is best depicted in the following quote by Dr. Martin Luther King:
“The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort,
but where he stands in times of challenge and controversy.”
On behalf of everyone at the department, we wish John the very best in his numerous endeavors and look forward to a time when our paths will cross again.
Keith Schafer, Director

