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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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The Quest to Protect Medical Privacy
Article in the July Psychiatric Times - "Now that the HIPPA compliance deadline has passed, it seems as though Congress is no closer to reaching a solution to the issue of patient privacy. What should physician groups such as the American Psychiatric Association be doing to support patient privacy, and are they doing enough?"
Debate on Patriot Act hits home (Illinois)
Column in the Northbrook Star (Illinois) on a local forum on the Patriot Act, which "is now facing scrutiny from a public which fears the law will prove a greater threat to civil liberties than to terrorists." The story notes that "a core change in the law, and one most troubling to many critics, blurs the distinction between law enforcement investigations and surveillance aimed at foreign agents" - and quotes American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois Communications Director Ed Yohnka that "federal officials can now seek computer records, library, bookstore records, education records, health records, even mental health records without showing probable cause."
Search for wellness goes online
York Daily Record (Pennsylvania) story on the latest survey by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, which indicates that eighty percent of adult Internet users in the US have searched online for information about at least one of several major health topics. The survey found that 63 percent — looked for information on a specific disease or medical problem, 47 percent searched for information on a particular medical treatment or procedure. One in three Internet users has looked for prescription or over-the-counter drug information, one in four has looked for health insurance information and one in five has looked for mental health information. On the related page at the Pew web site on on Internet Health Resources, both the questionnaire used and the full report are available in Adobe Acrobat format.
Report Shows Worrisome Link between Child and Parental Mental Health Problems; Strong Need for Family-Based Treatment
University of Washington press release via PR Newswire - "New research from the UW's Washington Kids Count project shows the emotional well-being of Washington children is strongly linked to their parents' mental health. In turn, parents' mental health is profoundly sensitive to their children's emotions and behavior. According to the Family Matters: Mental Health of Children and Parents report, elementary school children whose parents experienced symptoms of poor mental health or high parental aggravation (parents who feel stressed or angry toward their children) were almost five times as likely to have severe emotional and behavioral problems as children whose parents reported better mental health or only moderate aggravation. For adolescents, the risk of having severe emotional and behavioral problems was almost three times greater if a parent experienced symptoms of poor mental health or high levels of aggravation. Similarly, parents were about five times more likely to report mental health challenges if they had a child with severe emotional and behavioral problems. ... 'This research confirms what we know from working with children and families on a daily basis: that treating the family as a unit is critical in treating mental health problems,' said Scott Hanauer, director of Children's Home Society of Washington's Cobb Center for Youth..." See also, at the Human Services Policy Center web site, a policy brief based on the report and a bibliography of resources on parent and child mental health available on the web. Both documents are in Adobe Acrobat format.
US HIV doctors not taking their patients' mental health seriously
Story at Aids Map - "The majority of HIV-positive American patients are not asked about their mental health by their HIV doctor, according to American research presented as a poster at the Second International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis and Treatment in Paris. The study involved interviews with 153 US HIV specialists and 253 of their patients. Although over 80% of doctors said that their patients’ mental health was a ‘high priority’ when making decisions about treatment, 62% of patients said that they had never been asked questions about their mental health by their doctor."![]()