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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, September 10, 2003


Supreme Court rules on cases that drew APA interest and input
An overview, in the September APA Monitor of four cases decided in June by the US Supreme Court ("spanning affirmative action, forced medication for trial competency, sexual contact in same-sex couples and the prosecution of child sexual abuse...") in which the APA had filed amicus curiae briefs.  
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U.S. mental health system needs less stigma, more consumer input
Article in the September APA Monitor - "President Bush's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health has recommended strategies to improve the quality of mental health services, including making early mental health screening common practice."  
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VA Restructuring Has MidSouth Concerned
AP
story reprinted at Military.com - "Several people attending a hearing for a proposed restructuring plan for the Department of Veterans Affairs expressed concerns about the availability of services. The plan is intended to improve medical services and close old, underused facilities. The hearing Monday was conducted by the CARES Commission, a national, independent panel reviewing plans of VA regions. Commission members questioned local VA officials about shortcomings in mental health services and how the proposal would affect those services. ... The MidSouth region that includes Kentucky is projected to have among the largest unmet mental health needs by 2012, [commissioner Richard] McCormick said, and it already lags behind most of the VA system in providing mental health care, including services for veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder."  
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Service agencies merge to weather hard times (California)
San Mateo County Times story - "Although California's dismal economy put dents in many social services budgets, two veteran County agencies are still running strong, now that they've joined forces. Family and Community Enrichment Services, Inc. (FACES) and Youth and Family Assistance (YFA) recently announced completion of their merger to create Youth and Family Enrichment Services (YFES). A reduction in public funding and private philanthropic dollars prompted the boards of both agencies to join forces to ensure the continuation of the free and low-cost substance-abuse, youth and family, training and clinical services provided to low-income community members."  
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Powerless to help him (Pennsylvania)
York Daily Record story focusing on one of the 20 presecription drug-related fatalities in York County over a two-year period, which notes that "prescription drugs killed more people in York County during those two years — 2001 and 2002 — than street drug overdoses," that "the federal government has identified Pennsylvania as one of several states with a substantial prescription drug problem," and that in 2001, Pennsylvania led the nation in OxyContin pharmacy thefts and robberies. The story also includes a link to Overdose and prescription information (Adobe Acrobat). The news story is the first of a three day series, "Pain Killers."  
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Mental-health hole remains (North Carolina)
Story in the News Observer - " Last month, the state approved Wake County's plan for mental health reform. But one of its key points, the establishment of psychiatric inpatient services at a local hospital, is still foundering. The state's philosophy about providing mental health services has evolved over the past few years, switching from mainly institution- and hospital-based care to a more community-centered approach. A 1999 U.S. Supreme Court ruling prompted the change to rely on mental hospitals only as a last resort..."  
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County delays Kino vote on privatizing mental unit (Arizona)
Tucson Citizen story - "Pima County supervisors postponed voting on a $1.7 million contract to hire a Texas-based management firm to run the psychiatric unit at Kino Community Hospital but approved funds to increase the number of beds to 98 from 64.... Supervisors approved other Kino-related contracts aimed at satisfying state and federal health officials that the hospital is making strides in correcting various policy and procedure deficiencies."  
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