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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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Medicaid's Federal-State Partnership: Alternatives for Improving Financial Integrity - Summary of Issues, Approaches, and Alternatives for Reform
A report in Adobe Acrobat format from the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured - "In this report ... Penny Thompson, former deputy director for the Center for Medicaid and State Operations, used existing models from the private sector and other government programs to assess Medicaid’s financial management and to develop options for improvement. This table summarizes the report’s findings."
Economist Testifies About 10 Myths of the Uninsured
News release from the Center for Studying Health System Change - "If members of Congress want to make a 'serious dent' in reducing the number of Americans without health insurance, they will have to 'claim and redirect a considerable amount of public resources,' economist Len Nichols, Ph.D., vice president of the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), told a congressional committee today. 'The single most important reason people are uninsured in this country is they are not willing to pay what it costs to insure themselves, and their unwillingness to pay is highly but not perfectly correlated with low income,' Nichols testified at a hearing of the U.S. House of Representatives Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health. 'If policy makers really want to increase coverage, they're going to have to subsidize people, probably quite substantially, since most of the uninsured have incomes below twice-times poverty,' Nichols said." See also Nichols' testimony. At the Kaiser Family Foundation site, the testimony of Diane Rowland, Executive Vice President and Executive Director of the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, is also available (in Adobe Acrobat format)
A Quiet Revolution: Law As An Agent Of Health System Change
Editorial article in the latest Health Affairs - "This paper considers law’s impact on health system change. Federal courts and state regulators have remade the rules of the medical marketplace, restricting the methods available to managed care organizations to control costs. Legal conflict, however, has had a larger effect through its influence on market actors’ perceptions and expectations. In anticipation of adverse legal outcomes and in response to consumers’ and investors’ anxiety, health plans changed business strategies, backing away from aggressive cost management. We conclude with four lessons about law’s role in the health sphere—lessons that stress the power of legal conflict to shape perceptions and to thereby change behavior before legal change occurs."
SAMHSA: $4.3 Million Statewide Family Network and Consumer Network Grant Applications Re-Issued
SAMHSA press release - "The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) has re-issued its notice that it will accept applications for FY 2004 grants to provide funding for family and consumer networks that support effective substance abuse and mental health service delivery to address the needs of children and adolescents with serious emotional disturbances, and their families. The application dates are extended so applicants can use SAMHSA’s new grant application process." See also information on the new grant process.
Holden signs mental health care bill (Missouri)
St. Louis Post Dispatch story - "Gov. Bob Holden signed legislation Wednesday that could make it easier for some children to receive state-funded mental health care. Under current law, the state can only provide long-term mental health care to children whose families meet the eligibility guidelines of the Medicaid program for the poor and disabled, or who relinquish custody of their children to the Department of Social Services. Under the bill signed by Holden, state officials can waive the normal means test used to qualify for Medicaid so that parents do not have to place their children in state custody to get the needed care."![]()