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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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About PULSE | Channels | User's Guide | Email subscriptions | Publications

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  Friday, October 31, 2003


Editor's note: clearly, the most popular feature in the redesigned PULSE is the daily email service. Interested readers can now receive an email the day after any postings are added to PULSE. These emails contain the full text of the postings (and direct links to the sources). Each email you receive will also contain a link to unsubscribe. See the email subscriptions section of the PULSE home page to sign up. This daily option is also available for the new PULSE EXECUTIVE EDITION (sign up in the email subscriptions section of that page). As always, any comments and suggestions about how PULSE can better meet your information needs are always welcome. - Bill
  
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Medicating Young Minds
Time magazine feature article on the increasing use of behavioral drugs for children - "according to PhRMA, a pharmaceutical trade group, up to 10% of all American kids may suffer from some mental illness. Perhaps twice that many have exhibited some symptoms of depression. Up to a million others may suffer from the alternately depressive and manic mood swings of bipolar disorder (BPD), one more condition that was thought until recently to be an affliction of adults alone. ADHD rates are exploding too. According to a Mayo Clinic study, children between 5 and 19 have at least a 7.5% chance of being found to have ADHD, which amounts to nearly 5 million kids. Other children are receiving diagnoses and medication for obsessive-compulsive disorder, social-anxiety disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), pathological impulsiveness, sleeplessness, phobias and more." See also Exploring the Long-Term Effects of Behavioral Drugs on Youth at JoinTogether.  
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Mandated Treatment in the Community for People with Mental Disorders
Health Affairs article reprinted at Medscape that "explores the context within which coerced community treatment has arisen and seeks to break the impasse between advocates and opponents by placing mandated treatment within the larger conceptual framework of health care quality. The authors are all part of the Research Network on Mandated Community Treatment, a MacArthur Foundation funded project designed to evaluate programs in which mentally ill patients are instructed by the courts to get community-based treatment." [Viewing Medscape resources requires registration, which is free].  
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Managing Psychotropic Drug Costs: Will Formularies Work?
Health Affairs story reprinted at Medscape - " Spending for prescription drugs - once the fastest-growing component of health care spending in the United States - has taken second place to hospital costs but still continues to increase rapidly. In 2002, for example, prescription drug spending rose 13.2 percent over its 2001 level, down from a high of 18.4 percent in 1999. Within the broader category of prescription drugs, however, some of the fastest-growing drugs are psychotropic medications, especially new classes such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and atypical antipsychotics. Formularies, or lists of prescription drugs, are one of many tools that insurance companies and other payers use to control spending for prescription drugs..." [Viewing Medscape resources requires registration, which is free].  
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FDA Approves Long-Lasting Schizophrenia Drug
Reuters Health story at Medscape - "Drug makers Johnson & Johnson and Alkermes Inc. on Wednesday said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved sales of a long-acting injected form of its atypical antipsychotic Risperdal (risperidone) for schizophrenia. The drug, called Risperdal Consta, is the first long-lasting, newer-generation antipsychotic to be approved by the FDA, according to the companies. A patient given the new drug will receive an injection of Risperdal Consta at a doctor's office every two weeks. Risperdal Consta, which is already sold in 43 other countries, employs Alkermes' Medisorb technology, which involves encapsulating a drug in a polymer so it is released into the body slowly over time." [Viewing Medscape resources requires registration, which is free].  
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Group: Ban The Anti-Depressant Serzone
AP story at InteliHealth - "The anti-depressant Serzone, about to be pulled off the market in Canada and long gone in Europe, should be banned in the United States because of cases of deadly liver failure, a consumer advocacy group told the government Wednesday. It's impossible to predict which patient will develop liver failure, an unacceptable risk considering Serzone works no better than older anti-depressants that don't come with that side effect, Dr. Sidney Wolfe of Public Citizen told the Food and Drug Administration."  
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Bill seeks to preserve families
Mental Health Weekly article reprinted at the NAMI web site - "Recent reports from the General Accounting Office (GAO) and the President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health depicted bleak options for families seeking mental health services for a child. A bill introduced in Congress last week would use a relatively modest federal contribution to start building a family-friendly system of child services. Advocates immediately embraced the Keeping Families Together Act as offering hope to the thousands of parents who feel compelled to relinquish custody of their children in order to get them mental health care that is inaccessible in conventional systems..."  
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State hospital will not be closed (Pennsylvania)
Times-Herald story - "Norristown State Hospital will not be closing. Contrary to rumors, patients in the so-called forensic unit, where dangerous mentally ill or mentally retarded patients who have had contact with the criminal justice system are housed, will not be released into residential group homes. That message, delivered to a group of hospital employees and neighbors, was delivered yesterday during a public meeting of the board of trustees. The controversy stems from a September 2002 decision by the Pennsylvania DPW's office of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services to limit stays at mental institutions to two years. .."  
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State mental health, alcohol boards look into merger (Alaska)
Fairbanks News-Miner story - " The state boards on mental health and alcohol abuse are considering whether to merge. The Alaska Mental Health Board and the Advisory Board on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse held an unprecedented joint meeting in Fairbanks Wednesday to begin discussing the issue. Some said combining the two panels as Gov. Frank Murkowski wants is inevitable and overdue. The state has already merged administrative divisions dealing with substance abuse and mental health."  
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Mental health agency takes different view (North Carolina)
Story in the Free Press (Kinston) - " In an effort to maximize services for people with a mental illness, Eastpointe has changed its psychiatric business practices and adopted a corporate philosophy. The change came as a result of North Carolina House Bill 381, which required reforms at 41 mental health institutions statewide. The law - through the use of a local business plan - resulted in a mass consolidation of those institutions into 20 area programs. Duplin, Wayne, Lenoir and Sampson counties joined together to create Eastpointe in July. "  
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Head Games: As mental health services get cut further, the number of people in need grows (California)
Metroactive
feature story on Sonoma County's mental health system - "As the healthcare crisis tries to dodge the slings and arrows of recall elections and budget debacles, mental health has fallen to the bottom of most people's priority lists. ... But Sonoma County's mental healthcare is undergoing a crisis of its own. As a state system (which many feel wasn't meeting the mentally ill's needs before there ever was a budget crisis), it has already faced cuts and may see more next year. The problem is that the longer mental health needs go unmet, the more it costs the community as a whole...."  
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