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Improving The Physical Health and Wellbeing of Adult Users of Mental Health Services Through Multi-Agency Working (Adobe Acrobat document)
"A number of recommendations arising from a research project exploring perceptions of the physical health of adults with serious mental health problems have been implemented in the Cambridge locality of the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust, in England over the last two years. This project reported on findings from parallel focus groups discussions with service users and carers plus interviews with front-line inpatient and community mental health staff..."
Wednesday, December 01, 2004
Brain Researchers to Develop New Class of Drugs to Repair Psychiatric DisordersUniversity of British Columbia press release - " 'Smart' drugs capable of targeting specific brain cells to control psychiatric disorders such as autism and schizophrenia may be ready for early clinical trials within three years, with the launch of a $1.5 million project to take place at the Brain Research Centre (BRC), a partnership of the University of British Columbia and Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute (VCHRI). The new drugs would be the first significant change in decades to medications used to treat psychiatric disorders, says neuroscientist and team leader Yu Tian Wang, a UBC professor of Medicine and BRC member."
Medicaid Coverage for Poor Adults - A Potential Building Block for Bipartisan Health ReformPaper by Stan Dorn of the Economic and Social Research Institute - "This paper explores whether giving state Medicaid programs increased flexibility to cover uninsured, poor adults could be one element of a broader, bipartisan expansion in health coverage. Among households with incomes below the Federal Poverty Level (FPL), million working-age adults now lack coverage, comprising 27 percent of the uninsured."
Treatment of Anxiety Increases, But Some Groups Left Out Psychiatric News story - "Although more Americans are being treated for anxiety than in the past, there is still room for improvement—especially in the case of African Americans, Hispanics, and people with less education. Anxiety disorders are among the most prevalent psychiatric conditions in the United States, yet people with anxiety disorders have tended to be under-diagnosed and undertreated. Now there is some good news: The outpatient treatment of people with such conditions nearly doubled between 1987 and 1999—from 0.43 per 100 Americans to 0.83 per 100 Americans, a highly significant difference. This finding has emerged from a study headed by Mark Olfson, M.D., a professor of clinical psychiatry at Columbia University and reported in the September
Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. "
MCOs Still Not Getting Mental Health Care Right Psychiatric News story - "Managed care plans are doing a better job of providing quality treatment for many conditions—but not for mental illness. Managed care plans that publicly report performance data showed significant gains in quality of care last year on several critical measures, but no gains were recorded on key measures in the treatment of mental illness, according to a report by the National Committee on Quality Assurance (NCQA). The NCQA's annual report, 'State of Health Care Quality,' found that performance improvements recorded last year among the 563 managed care plans that reported their results were among the largest ever. These plans cover about 69 million people and represent a subsection of the broader health care system, according to the NCQA." See also the
full report, in
Adobe Acrobat format.
Depressed Workers on the Job Hurt the Bottom Line Psychiatric News story - "Major depression diminishes work performance in terms of both productivity and task focus, resulting in workers missing the equivalent of 2.3 days a month. Lost productivity due only to employee absenteeism may underestimate the true effect of depression on people's work lives. A study in the October
American Journal of Psychiatry suggests that diminished productivity while workers are on the job—what has been called "presenteeism"—may significantly add to the costs attributable to untreated or inadequately treated depression. Moreover, compared with other conditions that significantly impact on-the-job productivity, depression appears to be among the most debilitating, according to the study."
Copyright 2003 © Bill Davis.
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