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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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Report critical of Virginia system for children
Richmond Times-Dispatch story - "Virginia's failure to help children and teenagers with mental-health problems has forced many families to give up custody of their children to get them help. This assessment is the central finding of a report that will be delivered tomorrow to state officials seeking ways to fix Virginia's system for helping troubled children. The report finds that families' decisions to relinquish custody to get help is 'a direct result of inadequate access to and availability of prevention, early intervention, and intensive mental health and substance abuse treatment services for children and adolescents.'"
HHS Awards $34 Million for Children's Mental Health Initiative
PR Newswire press release at Yahoo - "Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson today announced awards totaling $34 million to develop comprehensive community-based mental health services for children and adolescents with serious emotional disturbances and their families. These six-year grants build on President Bush's compassionate agenda that fosters innovative community-based solutions for families in need."
Tioga lawmakers hear appeal for mental health funding (New York)
Press and Sun-Bulletin story - "Tioga County lawmakers on Tuesday heard the pleas of more than 30 people, including staff members of the Tioga County Mental Hygiene Department, who want to save the jobs of people who work with the mentally ill. Lawmakers are considering cutting 10 positions from the department to reach their goal of limiting a 2005 property tax increase to no more than 8 percent. Tioga workers and those affected by mental illnesses spoke to the Legislature for two hours.
Californians like idea of rich footing the bill
Houston Chronicle story - "Despite widespread aversion to new taxes, there is one most Californians don't seem to mind: the one they don't have to pay. Supporters of a measure on the November ballot are seizing on the sentiment to push for a vast expansion of services for the mentally ill. Their plan is to let millionaires pay the bill. Polls show their campaign has been effective. The proposal targets a small group of taxpayers for one of the largest state tax increases in recent history. "
High-tech cell phones help protect mental health workers (Missouri)
Kansas City Star story - "Caseworkers at the Johnson County Mental Health Center are now equipped with high-tech cell phones that provide hands-free communication with an outside lifeline. Under a pilot project, about 20 caseworkers carry cell phones equipped with global positioning technology that allows a supervisor to track employees. The phones also provide instant two-way communication. The hope is that the wireless technology could help safeguard caseworkers and possibly prevent situations like the one in which center caseworker Teri Lea Zenner, 26, was killed..."![]()