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Webhealth
Webhealth has been specifically developed to provide access for people to
connect with Health and Social Services. This web-based approach builds on
the strengths of people and families to determine their support needs. Within the Webhealth website is Linkage. Linkage is a
partnership between an NGO, Pathways; primary health care, Pinnacle; and a
secondary provider/hospital, Health Waikato. It offers early intervention
services with a “one stop shop” in central Hamilton and New Plymouth.
Wednesday, October 29, 2003
NAMI Sees Cure for Schizophrenia Possible in 10 Years
NAMI press release - "The NAMI Policy Research Institute (NPRI) today announced creation of a Task Force on Serious Mental Illness Research, co-chaired by Edward Scolnick, MD, president emeritus of Merck Research Laboratories and NAMI medical director Ken Duckworth, MD, who is the former mental health commissioner for Massachusetts. The Executive Committee of NAMI’s Scientific Council, chaired by Jack Gorman, MD, chair of the Department of Psychiatry at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, will help coordinate the effort. 'NAMI takes seriously the statement of Dr.Thomas Insel, director of the National Institute for Mental Health (NIMH) that with the right investments, scientists are within reach of finding a cure for schizophrenia in the next ten years,' said NAMI national executive director Richard C. Birkel, PhD...."
F.D.A. Intensely Reviews Depression Drugs
New York Times story - "he Food and Drug Administration issued a public health advisory yesterday that makes clear that the agency has grown increasingly skeptical that there is any link between antidepressant use and the risk of suicide in teenagers and children. ... The F.D.A. plans to convene a panel on Feb. 2 to examine the relationship between suicide and antidepressant drug therapy. The panel will be asked to decide if the drugs should be prescribed to teenagers and children, if the drugs' warnings sections should be changed, and what studies should be done to determine if there is a link between antidepressant use and suicide in teenagers and children. To prepare for the meeting, the agency is undertaking an intensive review of pediatric studies of the drugs. ..." [Viewing
New York Times resources requires registration, which is free].
Prescription abuse grows across U.S.
Chicago Tribune story reprinted in the Billings Gazette (Montana) - "The face of drug addiction is changing in America, from cocaine or heroin addicts snorting or shooting up to teenagers and grandmothers popping pills purchased at the local pharmacy or delivered through the mail in plain packages. ... Prescription drug abuse is the fastest-growing type of substance abuse in the United States, a phenomenon fed by aggressive drug marketing, Americans' habit of taking pills for any ailment, physicians' tendency to over-prescribe and the Internet, which is expanding the availability of drugs exponentially."
Copyright 2003 © Bill Davis.
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