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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  Friday, November 26, 2004


Texas Cuts Mental Health Services
Fox News story - "To save state taxpayers millions of dollars, Texas no longer automatically treats every mentally ill patient who relies on public help. Now, just the "sickest of the sick" get on-demand access to the state's 10 mental hospitals. That includes people with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. 'It made sense to institute a rational, rationing system because we all know we have more mental health need than we have resources,' said Joe Lovelace of the National Alliance of Mental Illness  in Texas."  
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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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State awards contracts for mental health care (Colorado)
Rocky Mountain News story - "The state has awarded five, four-year contracts worth $657 million to mental health care agencies across the state. The contracts direct where poor, mentally ill patients on Medicaid get care. It's been four years since the contracts were renegotiated. No new names showed up on the list, as the state stayed with current providers..."  
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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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New program centers on mental health for homeless (Illinois)
State Journal-Register story - "Mental Health Centers of Central Illinois has begun a grant-funded program called Projects for Assistance in Transition from Homelessness, or PATH, intended to get Springfield's mentally ill homeless population into services such as rehabilitation and counseling. Mentally ill people tend to distrust mental health services and are reluctant to seek help, said Brenda Diedrich, the administrator for Mental Health Centers of Central Illinois in Sangamon and Menard counties..."  
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Conference addresses mental health reform (North Carolina)
Story at The Daily Reflector - "The secretary of health and human services for North Carolina pledged support Tuesday for rural and low-wealth communities struggling with mandated mental health care reform. The state recognizes the reform poses greater challenges to such communities, Carmen Hooker Odom said at a conference in Greenville. A centerpiece of the reform involves removing local government agencies from the delivery of mental health services. Instead, the government will manage the delivery of services provided by private groups. However, the reliance on such groups could prove problematic in rural and low-wealth communities..."  
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