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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  Tuesday, February 22, 2005


Scientists Criticize Bush Administration for Allegedly 'Stifling' Advancements Item in the outstanding Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report - "The 'voice of science is being stifled' by the Bush administration, which includes few scientists in policy discussions and has proposed reductions in funds for research and education programs, according to speakers at a meeting of the American Association for Advancement of Science on Sunday, the AP/Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports. According to the AP/Journal-Constitution, speakers said that some scientists in federal agencies are 'being ignored or even pressured' to revise study conclusions when they do not agree with administration policies..."  
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National Governors Association Analyzes President's Budget, Medicaid Proposals NGA press release at their web site - "President Bush's $2.5 trillion fiscal 2006 budget includes a 1 percent decrease in non-defense discretionary spending less homeland security. The health care changes include a $60 billion reduction in Medicaid spending over 10 years; $16.5 billion Medicaid and SCHIP spending increases; and several health care-related federal tax incentive provisions totaling about $125 billion over 10 years to expand insurance coverage." See also NGA's Analysis of the Proposed FY 2006 Budget (Adobe Acrobat format) and the San Francisco News Chronicle story, Governors Oppose Bush's Medicaid Cuts.  
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Mental illness targeted (California) San Bernadino Sun story - "Half a million more people are expected to settle in San Bernardino County by 2010 a population surge that will undoubtedly strain the county's health-care system. West End areas, such as Ontario, Chino and Rancho Cucamonga, as well as Fontana, already are experiencing the growth. As a way to combat the influx of children and adolescents suffering from mild to severe behavioral disorders in that area, Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in Fontana recently opened the Ontario Mental Health Offices."  
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Fighting drugs with drugs is latest addiction therapy KRT wire story at the Grand Forks Herald (and many other papers around the US) - "The weapon of the future in the war on drugs will likely be ... drugs. Researchers are optimistic about a host of new medications that target the chemical cycle of addiction. Some block the intense pleasure that makes drugs such as heroin so seductive while others calm the brain during withdrawal. Long-acting versions of two drugs already approved - naltrexone for heroin addicts and alcoholics, and buprenorphine for opiate addicts - are on the horizon. They should combat one of the biggest treatment problems: Addicts often dislike taking anything that prevents getting high. Other researchers are taking a different tack, testing vaccines that teach the body to treat illicit drugs like invading microbes..."  
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Housing projects under way (Michigan) Traverse Record-Eagle story on an apartment project that is "one of two 'special needs supportive housing' developments pushed ahead by Foundation for Mental Health Grand Traverse/Leelanau. The $2.6 million project will offer more permanent housing options for the low-income and homeless, said Carol Moorman, the foundation's executive director."  
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House Speaker Chopp's sister testifies in support of mental health parity bill (Washington) Seattle Post-Intelligencer story - "The sister of House Speaker Frank Chopp told lawmakers Monday that they need to end insurance discrimination and pass a bill that would force health insurance companies to cover mental health the same way they cover physical health. Jo-Anne Wilson, 60, told the Senate Health & Long-Term Care Committee that after she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 1986, she had to pay significant out-of-pocket costs for many items associated with her treatment, including most prescriptions..." See also the related news story, Legislation would make insurers treat mental illness like other health problems and the commentary piece, Parity in health care, in the same source.  
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Medicaid cuts threaten mental health services (Washington) King County Journal story - "King County could lose about $10 million and hundreds of mentally ill people in the county could end up on the streets July 1, unless the state Legislature comes up with $82 million to restore federal Medicaid cuts statewide. The loss of the federal funds will affect thousands of people across the state. Already, hundreds of mentally ill people have been turned away from community services. Experts say many of them will end up in jail, on the streets or in emergency rooms if they can't get help anywhere else. The state has already cut its funding for the mentally ill in King County, lopping off $40 million in six years..."  
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