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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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© Bill Davis, 2000-2003.
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Mounting Pressures: Physicians Serving Medicaid Patients and the Uninsured, 1997-2001
A "Tracking Report" from the Center for Studying Health System Change that examines the small decrease in physicians serving Medicaid patients and the large decrease in those providing charity care, and warns that "new budget pressures could lead states to freeze or cut Medicaid provider payment rates, which could then trigger access problems."
SSA Disability: Enhanced Procedures and Guidance Could Improve Service and Reduce Overpayments to Concurrent Beneficiaries
A report from the General Accounting Office that examines differences in the work incentives in the Social Security Disability Insurance, Supplemental Security Income, Medicare and Medicaid programs. This report is available through the Open Minds web site, which routinely makes a selection of white papers and reports available at no charge.
Team Treatment Helps Elderly Depression
AP story at InteliHealth - "Elderly patients suffering from depression fared better when there was a team approach to their care, a study suggests. Researchers found patients had fewer symptoms and greater quality of life when specially trained case managers worked with primary care doctors to help develop treatment plans."
Psychiatric Disorders Common Among Detained Youth
A December 10 National Institute of Mental Health press release on research reported in the December 2002 Archives of General Psychiatry which found that "among teens in juvenile detention, nearly two thirds of boys and nearly three quarters of girls have at least one psychiatric disorder."
Higher Out-of-Pocket Costs Cause Massive Non-Compliance in the Use of Prescription Drugs, and This Is Likely to Grow
A Health Care News story in Adobe Acrobat format - "A new Harris Interactive survey shows that as a direct result of the high out-of-pocket cost of drugs, many millions of people do not ask doctors for the prescriptions they need, do not fill the prescriptions they are given, use lower doses of drugs than those prescribed and take their drugs less often than they should. The higher peoples out-of-pocket cost for drugs, the more likely they are to be non-compliant. Furthermore, non-compliance is much worse among people in only fair or poor health the people who need the drugs the most than among those in good health."
Mental health fixes won't be sweeping, expert says Cleveland Plain Dealer story on the recommendations likely to be made by President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, which is chaired by Michael Hogan, director of the Ohio Department of Mental Health.
Michigan Plan to Cut Drug Costs Is Upheld
New York Times story - "Michigan acted legally when it attempted to cut costs by limiting the drugs doctors can prescribe to low-income patients, the state appeals court said in a decision released Monday. The unanimous decision was a victory for the Michigan Department of Community Health. It also sent a clear signal to other states, who have been waiting to see if courts would approve Michigan's unique approach." [Viewing New York Times resources requires registration, which is free]. See also the story at ABC News. Mental health advocates and pharmaceutical companies had together brought a lawsuit that led to a preliminary injunction halting the program earlier this year. Yesterday's action by the state appeals court lifted that injunction, as "drug companies and mental health advocates failed to show their case was likely to succeed."![]()