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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, February 02, 2005


NAMI of Greater Chicago Announces Launch of Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) TrainingAnnouncement at the NAMI web site on Chicago becoming the largest U.S. city to offer Crisis Intervention Team training for its police officers- " Developed in collaboration with the Chicago Police Department, NAMI of Greater Chicago, the Illinois Office of Mental Health, and a host of Chicago area mental health providers, Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training for experienced Chicago police officers was launched in October 2004. This 40-hour training program is being piloted with officers from the 7th and 23rd districts and, once evaluated and refined, will be expanded to other districts. CIT training was initially developed in Memphis is 1990 and has been duplicated in many cities across the nation with success in terms of increased safety of officers, and decreased arrests and injuries to persons with mental illness." See also NAMI's CIT resources.  
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Leavitt Sees $60 Billion in Medicaid Savings Washington Post story - "New Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt said yesterday that $60 billion can be saved over the next decade in the Medicaid health program for the poor by closing loopholes, prohibiting 'accounting gimmicks' by states and eliminating wasteful spending on items such as overpriced prescription drugs. In his first address as secretary, Leavitt sought to dispel fears that President Bush is poised to cap federal spending on Medicaid. Leavitt said the administration will not limit spending on "mandatory" beneficiaries -- the recipients who are guaranteed coverage under federal law. But left unsaid was what the administration intends for Medicaid's optional patients and services, about two-thirds of all Medicaid spending..." [Viewing Washington Post stories requires registration, which is free.]   
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U.S. Youth Antidepressant Use Drops in 2004 - Report Reuters Health story at Yahoo - "Antidepressant use among children declined 10 percent in 2004, after U.S. regulators warned the drugs may be linked with increased suicide risk, pharmacy benefits firm Medco Health Solutions said on Tuesday. Use of drugs including Eli Lilly and Co.'s Prozac and GlaxoSmithKline Plc's Paxil fell 16 percent in the final quarter of the year, a time when use of the medications typically peaks, according to Medco. The drop began when the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in October 2003 cited reports of suicidal attempts among kids on certain anti-depressants." See also Study: Benefits of Antidepressants Outweigh Risks (HealthDay, at Yahoo), based on a study that appeared in the February issue of Nature Reviews: Drug Discovery - "Despite recent controversy over the potential effects of antidepressants in young users, the lifesaving benefits of drugs such as Paxil, Prozac and Zoloft far outweigh their risks, a new study suggests.  A comprehensive review of decades of data from Europe and the United States reveals a close correlation between dramatic declines in suicide and the introduction of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) family of antidepressants into the marketplace..."  
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Mental health chief: no cuts, and no new services in Romney budget (Massachusetts) State House News Service story - "Thousands of people with mental illnesses will remain stuck on waiting lists next year, despite a proposed increase in the state's mental health budget, Department of Mental Health Commissioner Elizabeth Childs said Monday. Addressing members of the Legislature's Mental Health Caucus, Childs said Gov. Mitt Romney's fiscal 2006 budget released last week is the first in four years to avoid cuts to the department, but will not allow DMH to take on any new clients or expand services to those already waiting." See also Budget constraints strain mentally ill housing needs (MetroWest Daily News).  
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Community Mental Health Making Cuts (Wisconsin) WLNS story - "The Shiawassee County Community Mental Health Services is looking at making $250,000 worth of cuts,which would cut 85 members of its staff a nd outsource those jobs for less pay. S ome worry this could hurt the quality of care... "  
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Panel moves forward on mental health issues (Kansas) Brief story in the Lawrence Journal-World - "A group of community leaders moved forward this morning with plans to form a task force to study mental health issues in Douglas County. The Community Health Improvement Project -- a coalition of 15 different organizations -- agreed during this morning's board meeting to add mental health to the list of issues the group is already studying..."  
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Planning process discussed for increase in mental health funds (California) Ukiah Daily Journal story, focusing on Mendocino County - "Proposition 63, the Mental Health Services Act, will bring added funding to county mental health agencies all across the state. How to spend that new money is a question to be determined by individual counties. At the Board of Supervisors meeting Tuesday, that question was discussed. Mental Health Director Beth Robey made a presentation to the board. After admitting there wasn't a plan ready for the board to consider, she discussed the necessary steps to reach such a plan. First, however, she went into detail on the goals of the voter-approved initiative..." See also Mental health to get fund boost in the Sacramento Bee.  
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