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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  Monday, December 27, 2004


To Treat Autism, Parents Take a Leap of Faith
New York Times story - "esperate parents of autistic children have tried almost everything - hormone injections, exotic diets, faith healing - in the hope of finding a cure. But more than 60 years after it was first identified, autism remains mystifying and stubbornly difficult to treat. About the only thing parents, doctors and policy makers agree on is that the best chance for autistic children to develop social and language skills is to enroll them in some type of intensive behavioral therapy. ... Yet the science behind behavioral treatments is modest at best. Researchers have published very few rigorously controlled studies of the therapies, and the results of those studies have been mixed..." [Viewing New York Times resources requires registration, which is free].  
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Correctional Psychiatry Needs More Clinicians
December 17 Psychiatric News story - "The field of child and adolescent psychiatry is not the only practice area enduring a serious shortage of trained clinicians. A similar chasm between supply and demand is a constant concern in correctional psychiatry as well, pointed out Cassandra Newkirk, M.D., at an APA Assembly session devoted to workforce issues. Newkirk, director of mental health programs at New York's huge Riker's Island prison, described the dimension of the need for psychiatrists in correctional systems by noting that of the 4 million Americans in prison or on parole in 2003, about 25 percent had a psychiatric disorder. She pointed out that inmates are the only population in the United States who have a constitutional right to mental health care. But clinicians have to be available to provide it, of course..."  
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Recent drug warnings may spur major overhaul of FDA safety procedures
Boston Globe story reprinted at PsycPORT - "Just as the Enron scandal triggered an overhaul of corporate accounting practices, the nation's prescription drug crisis may prompt a sweeping revamp of the way the Food and Drug Administration ensures drug safety, some say. The momentum for FDA reform is driven by the recent parade of drug problems dominating the nation's front pages, including antidepressants that heighten suicidal thoughts and behaviors among children, and the painkillers naproxen, Bextra, Celebrex, and Vioxx increasing the risk of heart attacks or strokes..."  
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Treating Childhood Anxiety Prevents Adult Disorders
Reuters Health story at Yahoo - "Panic disorders, phobias and other childhood anxiety conditions should be treated during childhood so that they won't be carried over into adulthood, according to advice in the latest Harvard Mental Health Letter. Various studies show that anxiety disorders are among the most common psychiatric conditions present during childhood. In many instances, adults with anxiety disorders experienced their first symptoms during their early childhood years. Yet many parents may not be aware that their child is experiencing such symptoms..."  
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The Dictionary of Disorder
New Yorker feature on Robert Spitzer - "Robert Spitzer isn’t widely known outside the field of mental health, but he is, without question, one of the most influential psychiatrists of the twentieth century. It was Spitzer who took the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders—the official listing of all mental diseases recognized by the American Psychiatric Association (A.P.A.)—and established it as a scientific instrument of enormous power. Because insurance companies now require a DSM diagnosis for reimbursement, the manual is mandatory for any mental-health professional seeking compensation. It’s also used by the court system to help determine insanity, by social-services agencies, schools, prisons, governments, and, occasionally, as a plot device on “The Sopranos.” This magnitude of cultural authority, however, is a relatively recent phenomenon."  
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Court decision on mental illness may free some patients (Oregon)
Statesman Journal story - "Oregon taxpayers have shelled out about $300,000 to keep Richard Laing locked up on crowded psychiatric wards for the criminally insane. Laing says that’s crazy. ... He could have a good case. Hospital records indicate Laing hasn’t shown symptoms of mental illness since he was committed to Oregon State Hospital’s forensic program for the criminally insane nearly three years ago. Now, the fiery mental patient is at the center of a legal controversy due to come before the Oregon Supreme Court in early January. At issue is the legal definition of mental illness, and whether people diagnosed solely with alcohol or drug dependency belong at the psychiatric hospital."  
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