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P U B L I C A T I O N S

PULSE ANNUAL No. 2
January 2003

Recent Trends, Challenges and Issues in Funding Public Mental Health Services in the US
March 2002

PULSE ANNUAL No. 1
October 2001

 

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PULSE is a free service of the Centre for Community Change International, gathering new and noteworthy Internet resources for mental health providers, family members of individuals with mental illness, consumers of mental health services and consumer advocates. PULSE is researched, edited and designed by Bill Davis.



daily link  Wednesday, March 05, 2003


Political science
Article in the new APA Monitor - "Allegations of politicization are threatening the credibility of the federal government's scientific advisory committees."  
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Anger
Feature section in the new APA Monitor, including articles on Angry thoughts, at-risk hearts, Anger across the gender divide and Advances in anger management.  
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Oregon cuts off prescriptions to mentally ill in bid to save cash
New York Times story reprinted at the Seattle Post Intelligencer - "...Oregon took a drastic step this week to cover budget shortfalls: It cut off medications to thousands of schizophrenics, manic-depressives, drug addicts and other mentally ill people. A decade ago, Oregon was widely hailed as a pioneer in providing health insurance, including prescription drug coverage, not only to the poor, but also to people who make just enough money that they do not qualify for federal Medicaid. Now, in a reversal that has stripped a once-ambitious program to its core, Oregon has pared back the insurance, and removed prescription drug coverage for things such as mental illness and drug addiction. About 100,000 poor people are suddenly scrambling for the basic medications that allow them to function."  
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Patients, advocates criticize plan to close Lowell mental health center (Massachusetts)
Lowell Sun story - "Advocates for the mentally ill yesterday sharply criticized the Romney administration's planned closing of the Solomon Mental Health Center outpatient clinic, saying the decision leaves more than 500 mentally ill adults with few alternatives for services. The closing of the Varnum Avenue facility, which Gov. Romney's staff claims will save the state $1 million annually, also will leave 20 therapists out of work."  
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Mental-Health Bill Comes With Warning (Arkansas)
Story in The Times Record - "An $11.5 million price tag for mental health care is far cheaper than a likely lawsuit against the state, the sponsor of a bill warned Monday. The money in House Bill 1760 would pay for community-based acute mental illness services for patients who today wind up in local jails because hospitals have closed beds for such patients, advocates said at a news conference."  
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Mental health panel considers budget cuts (South Carolina)
Story at The State - "The S.C. Mental Health Commission met for more than four hours Tuesday in Columbia to sketch out about $15 million in potential budget cuts. Furloughs of "nonessential" administrative staff are among the constraints being considered, said Geoff Mason, the commission's chief of staff."  
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Yale Symposium Addresses Recovery from Mental Illness
Yale press release on a March 29 event - "Speakers at the symposium, which is titled, 'Towards Recovery from Mental Illness: How the Brain Develops and Adapts,' will explain how recent research holds promise for revolutionary advances in the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of mental illness. The presentations will be directed at a lay audience and will be non-technical in nature."  
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Riley proposes spending cuts (Alabama)
Crimson White story - "Gov. Bob Riley proposed both immediate spending cuts and fundamental financial reforms in an effort to remedy the state's budget crisis in his first State of the State address in Montgomery on Tuesday.... Riley cited the consolidation and closure of several mental health facilities...."  
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County health system to cut more services (California)
Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal on the largest cuts to health services since 1980 - "Mental health services will suffer $7.6 million in cuts. Emergency mental health services will remain, while follow-up outpatient services will be scaled back."  
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