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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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Improving Depression Care Has Long-Lasting Benefits for African Americans and Hispanics
US Newswire press release reprinted at the NAMI web site - "Quality improvement programs that encouraged depressed patients to undergo standard treatments for depression (psychotherapy or antidepressant medication) and gave them and their doctors up-to- date information and resources to increase access to treatments reduced depression rates among African Americans and Hispanics 5 years after the start of the 6 to 12 month programs. The study, supported by the National Institute of Mental Health and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, is published in the April issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry."
SCHIP Changes in a Difficult Budget Climate: A Three-State Site Visit Report
A report (in Adobe Acrobat format) from the National Academy for State Heath Policy - " The National Academy for State Health Policy (NASHP) conducted site visits to three states— Texas, Utah and Virginia—between December 2003 and February 2004 to gather information about programmatic changes to SCHIP in the wake of recent budget debates. The site visits were two days long and included meetings with SCHIP staff, consumer advocates, health plan representatives, and lawmakers. The purpose of the site visits was to gain a deeper understanding of issues and challenges confronting states in the current fiscal environment."
Medicaid: A Lower-Cost Approach to Serving a High-Cost Population
A policy brief from the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Unisured that "brings new analysis to the debate concerning the efficiency of Medicaid versus private health insurance as a mechanism for covering low-income children and adults."
A 'Flip-Flop' on Patients' Right to Sue?
April 5 Washington Post story - "On Oct. 17, 2000, in a presidential debate against Democratic candidate Al Gore, then-Gov. George W. Bush of Texas promised a patients' bill of rights like the one in his state, including a right to sue managed-care companies for wrongfully refusing to cover needed treatment. ... Today, legislation for a federal patients' bill of rights is moribund in Congress. And the Bush administration's Justice Department is asking the Supreme Court to block lawsuits under the very Texas law Bush touted in 2000..."
Monitored Care Decreases Gap in Depression Treatment Between Whites, Minorities
Item in yesterday's Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report - "Increasing patient education and monitoring can decrease the gap in treatment outcomes among whites and minorities with depression, according to a study published in the April issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, the Wall Street Journal reports. The study, led by researchers from the University of California-Los Angeles and RAND, followed 1,356 patients with depression who were enrolled in the Patients in Care study and divided them among 46 randomly selected clinics to receive one of three depression treatments..."
FDA Sat on Report Linking Suicide, Drugs
LA Times story - "Ten months ago, when concerns arose about a possible link between children taking antidepressant drugs and suicide attempts, senior officials at the Food and Drug Administration ordered their leading expert to head up an examination of the evidence. When the government scientist filed his report last winter, however, his bosses decided to keep it secret — even though it found that children who took the drugs were twice as likely to be involved in serious suicide-related behavior as those who did not..." [Viewing Los Angeles Times stories requires registration, which is free].
Mental health still 'in turmoil' (UK)
BBC story - "Mentally ill patients are being subjected to "harrowing conditions", a group of charities and psychiatrists have said. Psychiatric wards remain overcrowded, unhygienic and run-down, according to Rethink, SANE, the Zito Trust and doctors. Some patients were also being denied latest drugs which have less side effects, the group said. They added government reforms were not happening fast enough..." See also resources at the SANE, Zito Trust and Rethink web sites.
Other Voices: Funding can't ignore mental health (Virginia)
Opinion piece in the Daily Press by Richard Kaye, director of the behavioral medicine program at Obici Hospital and public affairs representative for the Psychiatric Society of Virginia - "Deinstitutionalization, that is, moving the mentally ill from state hospitals to the community for services, is based on two premises: First, treatment in the community improves the quality of life for the individual, and second, the shift of care from state institutions to the community saves the taxpayer money. Despite the popularity of plans to close state hospitals, evidence from deinstitutionalization efforts across the United States shows that neither of these assumptions is correct..."![]()