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











Link Minds, Like Mine TV ad (WMV format)

We are featuring the second of three TV Ads developed in New Zealand by the Link 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. It may take sometime to download this file especially if you are not using a DSL line.



daily link  Monday, May 03, 2004


Adding a mental health care team to a primary care clinic increases on-site treatment
Item in CMHA/Ontario's Mental Health Notes based on an article in the April issue of Psychiatric Services - "Intergrating a mental health care team within a primary care clinic improved the clinic’s ability to evaluate and stabilize patients’ psychiatric disorders and reduced referrals to specialized services, according to a study for the Department of Veterans Affairs..."  
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Hidden cost of depression in seniors: $9 billion in care from spouses, children
University of Michigan Health System press release - "A new study reveals that depression among senior citizens carries a huge unrecognized cost: many extra hours of unpaid help with everyday activities, delivered by the depressed seniors' spouses, adult children and friends. Even moderately depressed seniors, the University of Michigan study finds, require far more hours of care than those without any symptoms of depression, regardless of other health problems they may have. If depressed seniors' 'informal' caregivers were paid the wages of a home health aide, the cost to society would be $9 billion a year, the researchers estimate. That puts depression second only to dementia in the national annual cost for informal caregiving, based on previous studies of the same data. And the findings illustrate the major impact of depression on both seniors and their loved ones. The findings, which will be published in the May issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry, are based on data from the U-M's Health and Retirement Study, a long-term survey of older Americans conducted by the U-M Institute for Social Research."  
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PSI quietly joining ranks of top mental health-care firms
Story in The Tennessean - "When 2003 began, PSI had just five inpatient facilities and 700 beds. By the end of the year, it had added 18 facilities and had a total of 2,900 beds. Today, the company owns 22 inpatient psychiatric facilities and leases four more with a total of 3,200 beds in 15 states. Of those beds, 55% are for acute-care hospital patients. The rest are for patients who need longer-term residential stays. Last week, PSI signed an agreement to buy four more facilities with a total of 360 beds as part of a $47 million deal. Psychiatric Solutions also manages 43 inpatient behavioral facilities inside hospitals that are owned by others. In addition, PSI manages 11 government-owned facilities..."  
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Copyright 2003 © Bill Davis.

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