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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, March 09, 2005


Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care This is the theme of the latest issue of Health Affairs, and a number of articles are available online - The Unfinished Civil Rights Agenda, Federal Policy Levers For Quality Improvement, The Private Sector's Role & Response, and Crossing The Language Chasm.  
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Navigating Medicare and Medicaid: Resource Guides for People with Disabilities, Their Families, and Their Advocates Page at the Kaiser Family Foundation web site with links to two new resource guides - "These guides explain the critical role Medicare and Medicaid have come to play in the lives and the futures of roughly 20 million children, adults, and seniors with disabilities - and give people with disabilities new information to help them get the most from these programs." The two guides, Navigating Medicare and Medicaid, 2005 and Keeping Medicare and Medicaid When You Work, 2005 are available in Adobe Acrobat format.  
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Our view: Mental health services are in a time of transition (Wisconsin) LaCrosse Tribune editorial - "The problem with suicide in La Crosse County came to the attention of officials in a big way when they saw several suicides of people who were not identified as high risk in the mental health system. Last November La Crosse County Human Services held a suicide prevention conference in La Crosse. A La Crosse Area Suicide Prevention Task Force was formed. On Tuesday, it released its recommendations. ... Having suicide addressed in a high-profile way is a very positive step for La Crosse County. In addition, county officials are in the middle of a redesign of mental health services, designed to make services more consumer-oriented and more focused on recovery. "  
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Mental health advocates wary of TennCare cuts plan (Tennessee) Story in The Tennessean - "The state's mental health commissioner said yesterday that impending TennCare cuts make it difficult to foresee the future of mental health care in the state. 'We, as a group, need to figure out if we're not going to have more resources, then how do we spend what we have more wisely,' Commissioner Virginia Trotter Betts told a group of more than 350 mental health advocates. The advocates are part of an effort by the Tennessee Coalition for Mental Health and Substance Abuse to raise awareness and erase stigmas of people dependent on the state for adequate health coverage."  
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Panel OKs bill to improve mental health insurance for state workers (Idaho) Story at Pocatello Idaho State Journal - "Advocates for Idaho's mentally ill have been trying for more than a decade to get the Legislature to pass legislation to bolster mental health insurance coverage in the state. It appears they'll be writing letters, providing research for lawmakers and lobbying for the cause for yet another session. State Reps. Elmer Martinez, D-Pocatello, Margaret Henbest, and Nicole LeFavour, both D-Boise, introduced a bill on the issue Tuesday that passed the House Health and Welfare Committee 7-5. The bill would start a three-year pilot program in which better mental health insurance would be offered to state workers."  
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Mental Health Care for Students at Risk (California) Los Angeles Times story - "Mental health care for about 30,000 of California's most troubled schoolchildren has emerged as a highly charged issue as the state continues to struggle with budget shortfalls. Already, counseling providers say, lack of state financial support has forced them to turn away an increasing number of students in need of treatment. And they fear more cuts could be ahead. ...  At issue is a recent proposal by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to shift responsibility for providing treatment from counties to school districts." [Viewing Los Angeles Times stories requires registration, which is free].  
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Feds hit on mental health help for kids  AP story at AZCentral.com - "Critical mental health services for children are threatened because the federal government misinterprets Medicaid law, one Democrat and one Republican said Tuesday. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., said state Medicaid programs were audited on the premise that the federal government is not permitted to fund the medical care of children in mental institutions. As a result, California, New Jersey, New York, Texas and Virginia have been asked to repay more than $10 million, the lawmakers said. 'Because the loss of these funds could threaten the viability of institutions that provide critical mental health services, these audits are a direct threat to the health of needy children,' the pair said in a letter to Mark McClellan, administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and Dan Levinson, the acting inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services."  
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