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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  Tuesday, September 30, 2003


Long-term Management of Bipolar Disorder
A new CME from Medscape. From the introduction - " Bipolar disorder is a chronic, recurrent illness associated with tremendous societal costs -- increased healthcare costs, loss of productivity, lower quality of life, and suicide.The illness is also characterized by increased risk of recurrence with age. However, maintenance treatment, in general, has been short-term and episode-focused. Maintenance treatment, in bipolar disorder, is achieved by using medications that, alone or in combinations, prevent the occurrence of new episodes, optimize socio-occupational functioning by keeping the severity of interepisode symptoms to a minimal level, and are tolerable to facilitate long-term compliance with the medication regimen. Remission and "functional recovery," the primary goals of treatment, are possible despite the complex nature of bipolar disorder..." [Viewing Medscape resources requires registration, which is free].  
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Stanford Research Finds Gene Variations That Alter Antidepressant Side Effects
Stanford University Medical Center press release at PsycPORT - "Researchers at Stanford University Medical Center have identified a genetic marker that can explain why some people experience side effects to common antidepressants while others do not. They also found that a key liver enzyme involved in breaking down these antidepressants surprisingly played no role in the development of side effects nor in how well the drugs worked. The findings may lead to fewer side effects for patients undergoing antidepressant drug therapy." See also the abstract of "Pharmacogenetics of Antidepressant Medication Intolerance" at the American Journal of Psychiatry (full text is available for a fee),  
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Numbers of Americans With and Without Health Insurance Rise, Census Bureau Reports
Census Bureau press release - "The number of people with health insurance rose by 1.5 million between 2001 and 2002, to 242.4 million, and the number of uninsured rose by 2.4 million, to 43.6 million, the U.S. Census Bureau reported today. An estimated 15.2 percent of the population had no health insurance coverage during all of 2002, up from 14.6 percent in 2001..." The full report, Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2002, is available in Adobe Acrobat format. See also the overview of the report and reaction to it at the Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report. Related news stories include Census Finds Many More Lack Health Insurance (Washington Post), Big Increase Seen in People Lacking Health Insurance (New York Times, registration required),  and Number of nation's uninsured up sharply (Philadelphia Inquirer).  
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Journals toughen disclosure rules
Baltimore Sun story - "...As commercial backing for researchers grows, Nature and other top scientific and medical journals are redoubling efforts to safeguard the credibility that makes them some of the most influential magazines in the world. Nature has broadened disclosure rules for authors beyond original research papers to include reviews... of earlier discoveries. Science is contemplating refinements of its rules, while it becomes more assertive about pursuing conflict disclosures from authors. The Journal of the American Medical Association continues to take great care with commercially sponsored research. JAMA, for example, is asking authors of one potentially important paper to have their data reviewed and verified by at least one expert with no connection to the company that funded the research..."  
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Race and the Blues
Psychology Today article by Hara Estroff Marano - "Depression is often ignored in the African-American community. Depression is as prevalent a problem as it is for the population as a whole, affecting 6% in any year. Within the black community there are groups whose experience or environment makes them especially vulnerable to depression and other mental health disorders. Yet depression carries such a stigma in the black community that the word is not easily uttered. Nor is the condition readily talked about. One major consequence is that depression is often misunderstood by those who have it, undetected and untreated, perpetuating unnecessary suffering at a time when helpful treatments are available and capable of preventing the long-term damage now thought to result from recurring bouts of depression."  
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State to appeal court order to relinquish control of AMHI (Maine)
WMTW-TV story - "Gov. John Baldacci and Attorney General Steven Rowe Tuesday announced that the state will appeal portions of a judge's ruling in which she ordered the state's psychiatric hospital placed in receivership. Rowe says a notice is being filed Tuesday and details of the state's appeal of Superior Court Chief Justice Nancy Mills' ruling will be filed in the days ahead.Among the points to be raised by the state is whether the court had a legal basis to order a receiver for the Augusta Mental Health Institute. The state also challenges the court's conclusion that the state did not act in good faith when it said it had complied with the so-called consent decree that orders improvements in conditions and treatment of Maine's mentally ill people."  
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Hospital commended for sparing mental health unit (South Carolina)
Story from Carolina Morning News - "A decision by the Beaufort Memorial Hospital Board of Directors to continue funding for its mental health unit drew praise from the families who rely on its services. 'We're very pleased the hospital board recognized the concerns of the community and responded to those needs,' said Guyla Daley of Hilton Head, vice chairman of the South Carolina chapter of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill. ... The hospital board voted to accept the administration's $3.68 million annual operating budget which includes continued operation of the unit, although the specific level of service in the 20-bed section has not yet been identified, according to spokeswoman Courtney McDermott."  
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Representatives Addressing the Issue of Mental Health (Nebraska)
KDUH-TV story - "Scottsbluff got a visit today from Sate Rpresentatives seeking public opinion about how to reorganize Nebraska’s mental health system. Representatives from the state’s health and human services committee held meetings. and toured some mental health facilities… including the Cirrus House. Representatives want to know what’s working in the current mental health program. And what’s not. They say… at least one regional mental health center in the state will close… forcing some people who need services to go elsewhere..."  
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Mental Health Court Is Ready (West Virginia)
Wheeling News-Register story - "In a ceremony that brought together legal and behavioral health professionals in Wheeling, West Virginia Supreme Court Justice Larry Starcher on Monday signed an administrative order creating the state's first mental health court diversion program. The program, a pilot project, is being implemented in Ohio, Marshall, Brooke and Hancock counties under a $150,000 U.S. Department of Justice grant. 'This program will work but it will only work through the cooperation of the judges and the (mental health) providers. If you don't make it work, it won't work,' Starcher said."  
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Mental health center cuts 11 beds (Wisconsin)
Green Bay Press-Gazette story - "The Brown County Mental Health Center has eliminated 11 unoccupied beds after the state denied a request to temporarily waive monthly assessments for them. The county has de-licensed eight beds in the center’s 64-bed developmental disability unit and closed three at its 96-bed nursing home, according to a letter that center administrator Earlene Ronk sent to the state earlier this month. The beds will no longer be available, even if the county pursues a regional center to serve a larger area."  
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