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Like Minds, Like Mine Ad (WMV movie file)
During the next three months, we will feature a series of TV Ads developed in New Zealand by the Like Minds, Like Mine programme. This highly successful anti discrimination programme has been very effective in presenting to the people of New Zealand how mental health problems affect many of our neighbors and friends. You can see the first of the three ads about Lana on our IIMHL website via the link above. It may take some time to download this file especially if you are not using a DSL line. These ads are the most recognizable component of the five year campaign. I encourage you to visit their web site where you can download a copy of their 2003-2005 national plans.
Thursday, March 04, 2004
U.S. Medicaid Program Could Improve Financial ManagementReuters Health story at
Medscape - "The joint state-federal Medicaid health program for the poor could take steps to better manage its finances without a radical change to the entire program, analysts said Tuesday. Tensions between the federal government, which pays just over 60 percent of total costs for the health insurance program for an estimated 44 million low-income women, children, elderly and disabled Americans, and the states, which pay the remaining 40 percent, have been rising in recent months. Last year, the federal government floated a proposal to review state Medicaid budgets in advance, giving them effective veto power over state mechanisms for providing their share of the funding. In January, the administration published a proposed rule change to require states to provide the data needed to implement the prospective review plan, giving states just 24 hours to comment. Governors cried foul, and after they appealed directly to President Bush during the governors' annual meeting in Washington last month, the proposal was temporarily withdrawn..." [Viewing
Medscape resources requires registration, which is free].
Peer to Peer Resource CenterA new web site affiliated with the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance - "At the Peer-to-Peer Resource Center, we believe that the support of peers – other mental health consumers – is essential to wellness and recovery. We are working to bring peer support the recognition it deserves, and to make peers an integral part of every consumer’s treatment team. Our goal is to put in place a national system to train and certify peer specialists who work with other mental health consumers to promote outcomes of self-directed recovery, independence, and community integration..."
Scientists Retract Vaccine-Autism LinkAP story reprinted at
InteliHealth - "Most of the scientists involved in a widely discredited 1998 study that suggested a link between childhood vaccinations and autism have renounced the conclusion. A formal retraction is to be published this week in
The Lancet medical journal by 10 of the 13 authors of the paper, which raised the possibility that the measles, mumps and rubella triple vaccine could be linked to autism."
New Program Promotes Choice, Accountability In Substance Abuse Treatment SAMHSA press release - "Thousands of Americans with substance use disorders will have the opportunity to choose their treatment options for recovery under Access to Recovery, a new $100 million discretionary grant program for states, announced today by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). The competitive grant program will give recipient states, territories, the District of Columbia and tribal organizations broad discretion to design and implement federally supported voucher programs to pay for a range of effective, community-based, substance abuse clinical treatment and recovery support services. By providing vouchers to people in need of treatment, the grant program promotes individual choice for substance abuse treatment and recovery services. It also expands access to care, including access to faith- and community-based programs, and increases substance abuse treatment capacity..." See also
Access to Recovery and
Access to Recovery: How It Will Work, also at the SAMHSA site.
Copyright 2003 © Bill Davis.
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