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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  Monday, February 16, 2004


TopAbstracts in Addictions
Index at Doctor's Guide of "the abstracts most highly rated/most read by nearly 300,000 physicians who received a Doctor's Guide newsletter or visited a website powered by Doctor's Guide in the past 14 days. Over 2000 peer-reviewed journals are covered by TopAbstracts."  
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Brief Psychotherapies for Depression: Current Status
Article in Current Opinion in Psychiatry at Medscape - "Treatment trials suggest that brief therapies can be effective for individuals from different ethnic and patient sub-populations. There is limited evidence on cost-effectiveness of brief therapies and the data on the benefits for different modes of therapy delivery suggest there are still a number of issues to address in this area. Work on mediators and moderators is in its infancy, but there is a number of factors, such as therapeutic alliance, certain personality traits and the notion of sudden therapeutic gain that appear to be important predictors of outcome across all brief therapies for depression." [Viewing Medscape resources requires registration, which is free].  
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Officers learn how to deal with mentally ill people in a crisis (Florida)
Florida Today story on the Palm Bay Police Department's new Crisis Intervention Team, designed to train officers "to deal with mentally ill people in a crisis." The story notes that "between 50 and 80 law enforcement agencies nationwide have set up the teams, following a model developed in Memphis in the late 1980s..."  
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Co-existing alcohol-use and psychiatric disorders - Promising new treatment
Story in Medical News Today (UK) - "Individuals who have co-existing alcohol-use and psychiatric disorders must overcome a number of significant hurdles on their way to recovery: multiple health and social problems, double the stigma, a poor response to traditional treatments, a lack of joint treatment options, and a chronic cycle of treatment entry and re-entry. Symposium proceedings published in the February issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research examine treatment options for this group, with a focus on four major psychiatric disorders: social anxiety disorder, depression, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia."  
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U.S. Nears Clash With Governors on Medicaid Cost
Front page New York Times story - "The Bush administration is headed for a confrontation with states over the financing of Medicaid, the nation's largest health program, as federal officials crack down on arrangements used by many states to shift costs to the federal government. The federal action comes as states, struggling with severe fiscal problems, are cutting benefits and restricting eligibility for the program, which serves 50 million low-income people each year. Federal officials and auditors contend that states use creative bookkeeping and other ploys to obtain large amounts of federal Medicaid money without paying their share. Washington and the states split Medicaid costs, with the federal government paying 50 percent and sometimes more than 70 percent. But in many cases, the Bush administration says, states have paid their share with 'phantom dollars,' instead of state or local tax revenues." [Viewing New York Times resources requires registration, which is free].  
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Major changes ahead in mental-health care (Montana)
Story at the Daily Inter Lake - "For years, mental health consumer advocates have urged consumer involvement in managing the Medicaid dollars that control their lives. On Wednesday in Kalispell, state officials, service providers and consumers of mental health services met to begin to figure out how to make the idea work. Passed by the Legislature, SB347 jump-started a bureaucratic overhaul. The renovation aims to make department officials, consumers and providers partners in dividing up and managing limited money for mental health services..."  
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Mental health center staff cuts may reduce area inpatient beds (Missouri)
Story in The Business Journal (Kansas City) - "The loss of 110 staff positions -- 20 percent of the total staff -- at Western Missouri Mental Health Center in June will mark a continued contraction of mental health services in the Kansas City area. The staff reduction is part of an effort to reduce the Missouri Department of Mental Health budget by $7.4 million and redirect $8.6 million from state-owned facilities to not-for-profit providers. Diana McFarland, director of the division of comprehensive psychiatric services, said Western Missouri's new facility, set to open in a few weeks, will be more efficient so that it can increase capacity -- the new center will have 105 beds, up from 100 -- with significantly less staff. The state plan calls for the staff cuts to save $3.1 million."  
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Embattled mental health leader retires with critics' respect (Montana)
Great Falls Tribune story on Don Anderson, who is retiring after 13 years as the state's top mental health administrator. The story includes an overview of changes in the state's mental health services during that time.  
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No bidders in privatizing state mental health hospitals (Texas)
AP story at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram - "No firms have turned in bids to run Texas' nine mental health hospitals, and only one company sent in a proposal to run a state school for people with mental retardation. Last month, eight companies expressed interest in bidding to run a state school or a state hospital. State officials are hoping to privatize the facilities to save money. When the deadlines arrived Thursday and Friday, most of the companies apparently could not fulfill the state's requirement that they maintain current services while cutting costs by 25 percent."  
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