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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  Wednesday, January 28, 2004


"Why Is HHS Obscuring a Health Care Gap?"
Commentary column in the Washington Post by H. Jack Geiger, professor emeritus of community medicine at the City University of New York Medical School and a past president of Physicians for Human Rights - "Over the past four years my colleagues and I have read and reviewed more than a thousand careful, peer-reviewed studies documenting systematic deficiencies and inequities in the health care provided for African Americans, Hispanics, Native Americans and members of some Asian subgroups. The evidence is overwhelming. Unfortunately, the Department of Health and Human Services seems intent on papering it over..." See also Democrats: HHS spins health report, posted here January 14.  
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Changes In Health Insurance Coverage During The Economic Downturn: 2000–2002
Article in Health Affairs - "Using Current Population Survey data from 2000–2002, this paper documents the changes that led the uninsured population to grow by 3.8 million during that time period. All of the increase in the uninsured occurred among adults, and two-thirds was among low-income adults. The extent to which the loss of employer coverage resulted in people becoming uninsured depended on their access to public programs: Children were more likely than adults to gain public coverage; women more likely than men; and parents more likely than nonparents. Middle- and higher-income Americans were also affected because many lost income and because rates of employer coverage were lower."  
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Recent Advances in Prepubertal Mood Disorders: Phenomenology and Treatment
Current Opinion in Psychiatry article at Medscape whose purpose is to "review examines advances over the last year in the field of prepubertal mood disorders," which concludes (in part) that "Despite significant progress there remains a striking paucity of data to direct clinical practice in the treatment of prepubertal mood disorders. Data are badly needed to clarify the risk-benefit ratio in circumstances in which potential side effects are not fully understood and the consequences of not treating may, themselves, be detrimental." [Viewing Medscape resources requires registration, which is free].  
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Antipsychotic Drugs Raise Diabetes Risk
Reuters Health story at Yahoo - "Four prominent medical organizations warned on Tuesday that a widely prescribed class of antipsychotic drugs increase the risk of diabetes, echoing concerns raised by U.S. regulators and researchers. The American Diabetes Association, American Psychiatric Association, American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists and the North American Association for the Study of Obesity joined forces in a statement published in the February issue of Diabetes Care. The drugs, known as atypical antipsychotics, are used to treat a variety of mental illnesses, including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, dementia, psychotic depression, autism and developmental disorders and generate more than $8 billion a year..."  
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Often, Time Beats Therapy for Treating Grief
New York Times "Personal Health" story - "It is commonly assumed in this therapy-oriented world that nearly every grieving person can benefit from bereavement counseling or therapy. But both the experience of psychologists who provide bereavement services and a thorough review of the literature on the results of grief therapy suggest otherwise. Rather, the findings suggest, a majority of people who suffer the loss of a loved one neither need nor benefit from participation in a bereavement group or from more formal grief therapy. These people experience what might be called a normal grief reaction, and the symptoms of it gradually diminish over 6 to 18 months." [Viewing New York Times resources requires registration, which is free].  
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Human rights for women in prison systemically undermined: commission report (Canada)
CP story at CanadaEast - "Systemic flaws routinely erode the human rights of women in prison, says the Canadian Human Rights Commission. It makes 19 recommendations in a report released Wednesday on how to fix discrimination on the basis of sex, race and disability. Critics of the corrections system launched a human rights complaint against the federal government in 2001 for what they've long said is discriminatory and inhumane treatment of women in prison. ... Women who are classified as maximum security often have mental health problems, do not have access to all the services they need and often end up in segregation for months on end, exacerbating their condition. ..." See also the Protecting Their Rights section of the Canadian Human Rights Commission site, where the report and submissions from stakeholders that served as input to the report, and other related documents are available.  
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Scathing report on Youth Authority (California)
San Jose Mercury News story - " Juveniles sentenced to California Youth Authority facilities for serious crimes are regularly locked in cages, over-medicated and denied essential psychiatric treatment, according to a report commissioned by the state Attorney General's Office. The report, obtained Tuesday by the Mercury News, found that the nine institutions examined were more like prisons than facilities designed to reform and rehabilitate youthful offenders, and that conditions there worsened the problems of wards who suffered from mental health disorders and substance abuse problems." The report is not yet available at the California Attorney General web site, but should be within the next few days.  
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