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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.











InShape (MS Word document)
"In SHAPE is a new wellness program of Monadnock Family Services. The goal of In SHAPE is to improve physical health and quality of life, and reduce the risk of preventable diseases of individuals with severe mental illnesses."



daily link  Friday, November 26, 2004


Effectiveness of Antidepressant Unclear in Elderly
Reuters Health story at Yahoo - "Depressed people 75 or older are just as likely to improve after an 8-week course with an inactive, placebo drug as with an antidepressant, new research indicates. The study shows that after a short course of the antidepressant medication citalopram (Celexa), around one-third of elderly people with depression went into remission -- the same improvement rate seen in people taking a placebo drug. However, study author Dr. Steven P. Roose of the New York State Psychiatric Institute in New York City cautioned that these findings do not suggest that the antidepressant is no better than doing nothing at all. "  
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Serious Psychological Distress More Common in Diabetics
Reuters Health story at Medscape - "Adults with diabetes are considerable more likely to experience depression, anxiety and other disorders that cause serious psychological distress (SPD) than those without diabetes, researchers report in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report for November 26. Dr. K. H. McVeigh, of the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, and colleagues queried 9,590 people as part of the 2003 New York City Community Health Survey. Responses to six questions regarding sadness, nervousness and other feelings were the basis for classification as having SPD." [Viewing Medscape resources requires registration, which is free].  
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Overcoming Stigma in Asian American Mental Health
Conference report from Medscape Psychiatry & Mental Health - "The New York Coalition for Asian American Mental Health held its first national conference in New York at the New York Academy of Medicine from October 1-2, 2004. The conference featured top experts from around the country in the behavioral healthcare of Asian Americans, including primary care providers, mental health professionals, researchers, and advocates. The program aimed to bring together, for the first time on a national level, diverse voices and ideas to help address the complex issue of psychiatric stigma in the Chinese, Filipino, South Asian, Southeast Asian, Japanese, and Korean communities; to develop best practice models; and to offer opportunities for the 300 attendees to network with their peers..." [Viewing Medscape resources requires registration, which is free].  
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Patients at Augusta Mental Health Institute expressed selves in tunnel art
Ottawa Citizen story - "Bright reds and oranges explode on a dark underground mural, while a quiet evergreen forest screens a blue lake and mountain on another. Artwork and poetry bring life to the dreary walls of a little-known network of tunnels connecting the complex of buildings that long housed Maine's mental patients. Some of the murals and verses, which have been posted on the Internet, tell stories of pain and loneliness that shadowed the lives of those who were confined to the Augusta Mental Health Institute."  
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Study: Diverted Drug offenders Likely To Relapse
KCRA story - "Drug offenders sent to treatment instead of jail in the early days of California's Proposition 36 were far more likely to be re-arrested than were criminals sent to rehabilitation through other diversion programs, says a UCLA study released Friday. The findings by University of California, Los Angeles, researchers echo opponents of the initiative approved by 61 percent of voters in November 2000. Judges and prosecutors favored drug court programs that include stronger penalties for offenders who skip or fail treatment programs, while Proposition 36 requires that first- and second-time nonviolent drug offenders be sent to treatment programs instead of prison. But the UCLA study, published in the American Society of Criminology journal Criminology & Public Policy, suggests a big problem is that Proposition 36 offenders aren't getting enough treatment to make a difference."  
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Resources for mental health falling short (Florida)
The final installment of a three-part series in the Gainesville Sun - "Now what? Without funding for continuing health care, the population of the mentally ill in Florida's jails and prisons could increase. In 1971, the Florida Legislature passed the Baker Act, which ensures the civil rights of people with a mental illness. Under the Baker Act, the mentally ill can be involuntarily confined for up to 72 hours while they are being evaluated." See also the previous articles, Mental health system is stressed and Florida's mental health system surveyed.  
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Copyright 2003 © Bill Davis.

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