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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  Tuesday, July 06, 2004


The outline emerges (Nebraska)
Story in the Omaha World Herald - "A draft version of a mental- health plan for Nebraska may prove to be a good guide toward the flexible, progressive future the state so sorely needs for its mentally ill population. Some of the goals of the reform, ordered by the Legislature last session, are to decentralize the system, rationalize the distribution and use of mental-health services around the state and provide services in a more efficient, convenient way. Perhaps its most noticeable effect: The closing of the Hastings and Norfolk Regional Centers in favor of community-based care and treatment, including such services as group homes, crisis intervention and emergency treatment."  
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Mental health reform plans meet resistance (Texas)
Houston Chronicle story - "Joe Lovelace credits the public mental health system in Texas as the safety net that stabilized his son, Corley, after an eight-year struggle with schizophrenia. But now, as executive director of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill of Texas, Lovelace is under attack from other mental health advocates for selling lawmakers a business-minded system that runs on less money, demands more and serves fewer. The 'disease management' model, that begins a yearlong statewide rollout Sept. 1 is, in theory, an approach that rations ongoing outpatient care to only the sickest -- those with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder or severe clinical depression. Those with other mental illnesses will receive treatment only in times of crisis. Tax-averse lawmakers like the plan's promise of savings while critics object to cuts to an already starved system..."  
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