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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  Thursday, March 18, 2004


NAMI Task Force Calls For Stronger, Smarter Investment In Federal Scientific Research on Serious Mental Illnesses To Build on Break-Throughs
Story at the NAMI web site on the release of a 40-page report, Roadmap to Recovery and Cure (in Adobe Acrobat format) - "...At a time when the President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health has called for major changes in the nation’s mental healthcare system, the report reveals a significant gap between scientific research and treatment services—calling both 'totally inadequate—and unnecessarily so.'" See also, at the NAMI web site, Background information about the Task Force and a list of its members.   
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Journals to bolster mental health research
Article at the Science and Development Network (UK) web site - " Editors from some of the world's leading medical journals have pledged to increase the amount of mental health research from developing countries that is published in their journals. In a joint statement with the World Health Organisation (WHO), 42 editors representing journals such as the British Medical Journal and The Lancet agreed to reduce the barriers that impede publication of mental health research from the world's poorer nations. ... Researchers from developing countries often fail to meet the rigorous requirements of the world's top journals because of limited access to information, lack of advice on research design and statistics, difficulty in writing in a foreign language and overall material, financial and infrastructural constraints. As a result, most research from such countries is published in low-profile journals that are not widely distributed."  
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