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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.
Wednesday, March 31, 2004
Learning From Prozac: Will New Caution Shift Old Views?An essay in the
New York Times by Tanya Luhrmann,professor at the University of Chicago and the author of
Of Two Minds: An Anthropologist Looks at Modern Psychiatry on last week's FDA public health advisory on antidepressants - ".... Yet even if it turns out that the antidepressants do increase suicidal thoughts or actions in some people, that pales as a public health problem beside the challenge of treating depression in the general population. Most people with serious depression — an illness that affects one of 10 Americans at some point — never seek treatment. Antidepressants, whatever their side effects, work for many people and have undoubtedly prevented countless suicides. Still, most experts agree that the drugs do not work well enough. Many people improve but do not recover completely. About a third of depressed patients do not respond to any medication at all. In this sense, the drug agency's action may have salutary consequences. Studies have made it increasingly clear that the best treatment for most psychiatric difficulties is a combination of medication and psychotherapy, or at least continuing contact with a mental health professional..." [Viewing
New York Times resources requires registration, which is free].
Health care bill plays down race Story in the
Times-Picayune (New Orleans) - "There is little dispute that when it comes to health, race matters. A bookshelf full of studies has shown that African-Americans, Hispanics and American Indians get sicker and die sooner than white people. A landmark scientific report in 2002 found that they also receive worse health care, sometimes because of doctors' prejudices. But legislation that the Republican Senate leadership says is a top priority diverges from the notion that race is the most important factor separating the sick from the healthy. The bill, sponsored by Majority Leader Sen. Bill Frist, R-Tenn., with Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., as the only Democratic co-sponsor thus far, would make poverty a bigger part of the equation. That could make more poor white people eligible for government assistance..."
Painful cuts loom for Medicaid (Florida)March 29 story in the
St. Petersburg Times on proposals by Gov. Jeb Bush of "a far more radical idea" than tightening eligibility and the scope of optional services - "...a spending cap that would mean some poor people could be left without medical care. The governor has dispatched state health officials to Washington, D.C., to talk to federal Medicaid administrators about making Florida a pilot program for reengineering Medicaid, which is straining state budgets across the nation. The plan would allow Florida to keep Medicaid programs while serving fewer people...."
Copyright 2003 © Bill Davis.
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