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IIMHL Update is researched,
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by Bill Davis.

For information about the International Initiative for Mental Health Leadership, please contact Fran Silvestri.











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.



daily link  Monday, January 12, 2004


New Communication Tool Empowers Patients with Schizophrenia
PR Newswire story at PsycPORT - "A new study published today in the leading psychiatry journal The British Journal of Psychiatry shows that a simple communication tool called 2-COM, which facilitates patient-psychiatrist communication, enables patients to play a greater role in contributing to the overall management of their condition and can lead to changes in how patients are treated. The results also found that 2-COM was of greatest value to those patients who are experiencing the most problems with the management of their disease."  
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Managing Crisis: The Role of Primary Care (UK)
Article in Family Medicine (Adobe Acrobat format) - " More than 30% of patients with serious mental illness in the United Kingdom now receive all their health care solely from primary care. This study explored the process of managing acute mental health crises from the dual perspective of patients and primary care health professionals."  
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Eating disorders and the serotonin connection: State, trait and developmental effects
A paper (in Adobe Acrobat format) in the Journal of Psychiatry & Neuroscience by Howard Steiger of the Eating Disorders Program at the Douglas Hospital Psychiatry Department, McGill University - " Alterations in brain serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine [5-HT]) function are thought to contribute to diverse aspects of eating disorders, including binge eating, perfectionism, impulsivity and mood-regulation problems. In addition, 5-HT anomalies in individuals with eating disorders are believed to have multiple determinants associated with secondary (state-related) effects of their nutritional status, hereditary effects (related to such trait variations as impulsivity or perfectionism) and, possibly, long-term neurobiologic sequelae of developmental stressors (such as childhood abuse). On the strength of the available neurobiologic and genetic data, this paper presents the idea that 5-HT variations in those with eating disorders represent (1) a structured coaggregation of biologic, psychologic and social influences and (2) converging state, trait and developmental effects. Data are taken to support a multidimensional model of 5-HT function in eating disorders that, it is argued, can serve as a prototype for etiologic modelling, diagnostic classification and clinical decision-making bearing not only upon eating disorders but also upon other psychiatric disturbances."  
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National Health Survey: Mental Health, Australia
A summary of findings from a major survey produced by the country’s Bureau of Statistics and published in December. The full report is available for a fee.  
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Knowing a person has schizophrenia affects police officers’ attitudes
Item in Mental Health Notes from CMHA/Ontario - "Police officers responded to hypothetical scenarios differently when they were told some people in the scenarios had schizophrenia: they saw people with schizophrenia as more dangerous and less responsible for their situation, as well as more worthy of help, according to a University of Chicago study. ... The results showed that when officers are told that a person has a mental illness, their attitudes and decisions are affected. The group who were told the person had schizophrenia had a higher perception of dangerousness than the group who had no label applied. They also felt more pity, were more willing to help, and believed the person with schizophrenia to be less responsible for their situation. The officers were more likely to perceive the person in need of assistance as credible if that person had schizophrenia, but were less likely to consider victims credible if they had schizophrenia."  
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World Health Organization calls on nations to invest in mental health
Item in the Mental Health Notes newsletter of CMHA/Ontario - "The World Health Organization (WHO) has called on the world to substantially increase its investment in mental health. The WHO has released a report, 'Investing in Mental Health,' as part of their global campaign to close the gap between the high rates of untreated mental disorders and the resources available for prevention, treatment and protection of the rights of people with mental illnesses. Despite the numbers of people involved directly – 450 million people around the world have a mental or behavioural disorder – almost 90 percent of those living in developing countries do not receive treatment, while 44 to 70 percent do not have or are denied access in developed countries." See also the full report, Investing in Mental Health, and a document on the Mental Health Global Action Programme at the WHO web site (both in Adobe Acrobat format).  
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Mental Health: Double-Teaming Depression
January 6 New York Times story - "Cognitive therapy and medication are regarded as equally effective in treating depression. But they work in very different ways, according to a study released yesterday comparing brain scans of depressed patients before and after treatment. The study, which was published in The Archives of General Psychiatry, involved 14 patients who attended 15 to 20 sessions of therapy and 13 comparably depressed patients who were treated with paroxetine, an antidepressant better known by its brand name, Paxil." "nyt" See also the Health Central item posted here last week.  
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Many with Eating Disorders Lack Mental Health Care
Reuters Health story at Yahoo - "In any given year, around one percent of young females throughout the world suffer from an eating disorder, but few receive mental health care for their condition, researchers in The Netherlands estimate. The estimates are based on a review of international research, mostly in Europe and the U.S., suggesting that about 0.3 percent of girls and young women have anorexia in a given year. But the number seen in mental health care may amount to only about one third of those cases, according to findings published in the International Journal of Eating Disorders."  
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Copyright 2003 © Bill Davis.

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