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P U B L I C A T I O N S

PULSE ANNUAL No. 2
January 2003

Recent Trends, Challenges and Issues in Funding Public Mental Health Services in the US
March 2002

PULSE ANNUAL No. 1
October 2001

 

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PULSE is a free service of the Centre for Community Change International, gathering new and noteworthy Internet resources for mental health providers, family members of individuals with mental illness, consumers of mental health services and consumer advocates. PULSE is researched, edited and designed by Bill Davis.



daily link  Wednesday, July 02, 2003


Disadvantaged Women Benefit From Antidepressants, Counseling
Reuters Health story at Medscape - "Despite concerns that a course of antidepressants and counseling might not benefit low-income minority women with depression, new research released Tuesday shows that these proven therapies are effective in such patients. Either 6 months of treatment with an antidepressant or at least 8 weeks of counseling helped reduce depressive symptoms in low-income mothers, according to the report published in the July 2nd issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association." See also the detailed abstract and ordering information at JAMA.  
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How Not to Fix Medicare
New York Times opinion/editorial piece by Jacob S. Hacker, assistant professor of political science at Yale University and a fellow at the New America Foundation, is author of The Divided Welfare State: The Battle Over Public and Private Social Benefits in the United States - "If this warning seems apocalyptic, that's only because most Americans are under the impression that the measures on the table are centrist compromises that would protect everyone's interests. In reality, neither the Senate nor the House legislation would achieve this. And while the Senate bill is indeed an attempt at compromise, albeit a deeply flawed one, the House bill is a radical measure directly at odds with Medicare's longstanding aims. It threatens to cripple the program for generations to come. Bluntly put, the House legislation is a ruse. The bill delivers a prescription drug benefit, but this benefit is simply the attractive window dressing for the legislation's ultimate aim: fundamentally revamping Medicare to create a competitive system based on private health plans..." [Viewing New York Times resources requires registration, which is free].  
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Suit pushes for better care of mentally ill (New York)
Albany Times-Union story - "State officials have discriminated against mentally ill people for decades by warehousing them in substandard adult homes, a lawsuit charged Tuesday. The suit -- filed by advocates for thousands of mentally ill residents -- seeks sweeping improvements in their care. It argues that the residents belong in apartments in normal neighborhoods, as mandated by the Americans with Disabilities Act, previous court decisions and the state's own policies." The suit - brought by Disability Advocates, an Albany-based nonprofit legal services organization, and a number of other orgganizations (the Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law, MFY Legal Services, New York Lawyers for the Public Interest and the Urban Justice Center) - names Gov. George Pataki and the heads of various state health departments as defendants.  
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HHS launches new efforts to create paperless health care system
July 1 HHS press release - "HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson today announced two new steps in building a national electronic health care system that will allow patients and their doctors to access their complete medical records anytime and anywhere they are needed, leading to reduced medical errors, improved patient care, and reduced health care costs. First, the Secretary announced that the Department has signed an agreement with the College of American Pathologists (CAP) to license the College's standardized medical vocabulary system and make it available without charge throughout the U.S. This action opens the door to establishing a common medical language as a key element in building a unified electronic medical records system in the U.S. Secondly, the Secretary announced that HHS has commissioned the Institute of Medicine to design a standardized model of an electronic health record. The health care standards development organization known as HL7 has been asked to evaluate the model once it has been designed. HHS will share the standardized model record at no cost with all components of the U.S. health care system. The Department expects to have a model record ready in 2004."  
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UCLA-Led Study Challenges Bipolar Depression Treatment Guidelines
AScribe Newswire item reprinted at PsycPORT - "A study led by a UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute researcher challenges standard treatment guidelines for bipolar depression that recommend discontinuing antidepressants within the first six months after symptoms ease. Study participants treated under the guidelines relapsed at nearly twice the rate of those who continued taking antidepressants in conjunction with their mood stabilizer medication during the first year after remission of acute bipolar depression. The researchers found no increased risk of manic relapse in those who continued the medication for one year. The findings appear in the July 2003 edition of the American Journal of Psychiatry." An abstract is available online and full text can be ordered from the same page. See also the journal's index of recent articles on bipolar disorder, again with free abstracts fee-based full text available.  
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Corrective action: Reform work just beginning (Montana)
Montana Forum story on the the prison inmate at the heart of a court ruling "that changed the way mentally ill inmates are treated" in the state after the State Supreme Court ruled that his treatment constituted cruel and unusual punishment - "Lawyers on both sides have been developing plans for treatment of the mentally ill at Montana State Prison. The proposals were due to be in Judge Neill’s hands Monday..."  
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NIMH grant program: Research on community integration for people with psychiatric disabilities
NIMH press release, which includes links to all required background documents and forms - "The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) invites research grant applications for multidisciplinary/translational research, especially mixed-methods research, that will explore (a) the individual, social, and service system conditions necessary for people with psychiatric disabilities to reintegrate into community life; (b) the organizational and service system conditions necessary to enable service providers to facilitate that reintegration; and (c) the effectiveness of rehabilitation strategies and programs in helping socioculturally diverse individuals who have widely varying goals, material and social resources, and clinical needs. This research has typically been called "disability" or "psychiatric rehabilitation" research. Historically, however, this research has focused fairly narrowly on the use of services; compliance; symptom reduction; easily assessed criteria of social and vocational success; and cost. The goal of this program announcement (PA) is to encourage researchers to think beyond usual assumptions underlying "psych rehab," program fidelity, and outcomes assessment and to encourage a focus on the individuals within and outside rehabilitation programs, who must function within personal, organizational, service system, cultural, and societal boundaries to achieve a return to community life."  
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New fiscal year brings tough choices for counties (Pennsylvania)
Pocono Record story - "County officials across Pennsylvania face tough decisions to suspend social service programs and, in many cases, lay off employees with the start of the new state fiscal year. The new state budget for fiscal 2003-04 contains major spending cuts for a host of social service programs run by counties. The programs taking the biggest hit provide drug and alcohol abuse treatment, mental health and mental retardation services, rape crisis services, local mass transit operations, local libraries and other social services under the umbrella of the Human Services Development Program. And as a new fiscal year began Tuesday, legislative leaders said there are no agreements in sight yet on restoring the cuts made in the early-bird budget passed last March. ..." See also the Philadelphia Inquirer story, Pennsylvania budget cuts already running deep.  
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New group home was a team project (Massachusetts)
Ipswich Chronicle story on the opening of a new group home, attended by "... town officials, mental health activists, board members and employees of the Housing Authority, environmentalists and others who collaborated to make the group home a reality."  
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Women and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: Moving Research to Policy (Canada)
This report (in Adobe Acrobat format) "...summarizes the findings of a research study funded by the Prairie Women's Health Centre of Excellence (PWHCE). The PWHCE supports policy-oriented research to improve the health status of Canadian women by making the health system more aware of and responsive to women's health needs." See also the executive summary of the report and pages indexing other commissioned reports and research projects at the PWHCE web site.  
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Western counties launch mental health reform (North Carolina)
Citizen-Times story - " Tuesday morning marked the beginning of a new era for Smoky Mountain Center for Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Substance Abuse Services. When the lights came on, the center was changed from an area program to a local management entity. ... The center is in the first phase of mental health reform, which was mandated by the N.C. General Assembly in November 2001 and will privatize services across the state in the next year."  
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