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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, August 13, 2003


Policy makers’ values may shape public treatment system, study finds
An item on a study published in Psychiatric Services in the latest edition of the Canadian Mental Health Association's weekly newsletter, Mental Health Notes - "Policy makers and stakeholders with an interest in schizophrenia have some common views and some different views about what kind of treatment initiatives should be funded, according to a study published in Psychiatric Services. The results suggest that identifying the important values of various interest groups is an important step in building consensus about schizophrenia treatment policy." [Editor's note - Mental Health Notes, by the way, which is also available via e-mail at no charge, is consistently informative, well researched and well presented (take a look at some back issues to get a sense of its scope and depth), and many PULSE readers should definitely consider subscribing. - BD]  
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Human Resources in the Non-Profit Sector (Canada)
A report (in Adobe Acrobat format) at the Canadian Policy Research Network web site - "In a presentation to the Halifax Metro United Way in May 2003, CPRN's President, Judith Maxwell, reviews CPRN's findings on the characteristics of Canada's non-profit sector organizations and the paid workers they employ. Largely statistical in content, her presentation outlines the size of the non-profit sector, profiles its employees, assesses the quality of their jobs, their level of job satisfaction and the skill requirements and training response of the sector." The associated page at the CPRN site also provides links to a variety of related reports.  
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Electronic Disability Claims Processing: Social Security Administration’s Accelerated Strategy Faces Significant Risks
A GAO publication (in Adobe Acrobat format) of the statement of Linda D. Koontz, Director Information Management Issues, available via the Open Minds web site, which notes, "SSA’s goal to establish a more efficient, paperless disability claims processing system is important, and one that could benefit millions. To achieve this goal, SSA’s immediate focus is on developing an electronic folder to store claimant information and large volumes of medical images, files, and other documents that are currently maintained in paper folders, and then make this information accessible to all entities involved in disability determinations. SSA’s accelerated strategy calls for development of this capability by January 2004 rather than in 2005, as originally planned. "  
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Health foundation closing in October (Maryland)
Feature article in the Baltimore Sun - "The Maryland Health Care Foundation was formed by the state legislature six years ago to funnel to public good some of the windfall from the for-profit conversions of hospitals and health insurers, notably the giant CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield. ... Now that the CareFirst deal has been derailed by controversy over executive bonuses, and the sale of hospitals has cooled, the foundation is out of money. Although it launched some valuable programs with $8 million since 1997, lacking new sources of funding on the horizon, the foundation plans to close Oct. 1. "  
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Self-Help Groups OK Despite Web Inroads
USA Today story reprinted at PsycPORT - "The rapid growth of online support groups apparently hasn't wiped out Americans' appetite for the face-to-face kind: Nearly 1 out of 5 attend groups at some point in their lives, a psychologist reported over the weekend. National surveys show about 26 million have participated in self-help groups and 11 million attend now, says Stanford University psychologist Keith Humphreys. " The story notes Humphreys' comments that there's "solid evidence" that face-to-face peer support groups really help people with mental disorders and addictions. that that "recovering alcoholics and drug addicts who go to peer support groups run up lower medical bills than those who try to go it alone," and that "patients with mental illness are less likely to be hospitalized again if they participate in self-help groups."  
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Shortage of Adult Day Services in Most U.S. Counties
A page at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation web site on the results of an RWJF-funded National Study of Adult Day Services survey. This page indexes a variety of related resources, including the report's conclusions, an executive summary, and an Adult Day Services Census Interactive Map that allows you to "find out how adult day services stack up in your state or county." The executive summary notes that the survey included 3,407 adult day centers in the United States, 53 percent of which are "well established, having been open for 11-20 or more years," and that 24 percent of those who receive these centers' services are diagnosed with mental retardation/developmental disabilities and 14 percent have a chronic mental illness.  
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Some counties are feeling pinch, others not (Pennsylvania)
Story in the Lancaster Eagle-Gazette - "Fairfield County isn't the only one up to its neck in Medicaid expenditures. The Washington County Mental Health and Addiction Recovery Board has experienced the same fate, but on a slightly greater scale..."  
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Fewer jail sentences 'would ease overcrowding' (UK)
Story at the Guardian - "More offenders should receive community service instead of jail sentences to cut record levels of suicide and overcrowding in Britain's prisons, according to a report published today. The Prison Reform Trust (PRT) warned that an immediate reduction in the prison population was needed to halt rising drug abuse, mental health problems and staff sickness in a system where 85 out of 138 jails (62%) in England and Wales are overcrowded." The report itself isn't yet available in the "Justice and Victims" section of the Home Office web site - though you will find a number of useful recent reports at a Research Development Statistics index, such as Prisoners’ drug use and treatment: seven research studies and Substance use by young offenders: the impact of the normalisation of drug use in the early years of the 21st century.  
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Mental health center closes (Georgia)
Gainesville Times story - "Lakewinds, a Gainesville center that offered short-term residential treatment to mental health patients in crisis, has closed, in part because of state budget cuts. ... The agency serves mentally ill and developmentally disabled patients in 13 Northeast Georgia counties. About half of its revenue comes from client fees and insurance reimbursement, the rest from government funding. In fiscal year 2004, its allocation from the state was about $13 million, down from $16 million in fiscal 2001."  
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Mental health program handover will mean 49 job cuts (Canada)
Winnipeg Sun story - "The Salvation Army is turning over its mental health program to the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority -- a change that will result in four less beds and 49 people out of work. ... The Salvation Army will shut down its mental health program, including a crisis stabilization unit and a mobile crisis unit, by April 2004, said Jon Einarson, Salvation Army spokesman."  
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