Guest guest Posted March 5, 2006 Report Share Posted March 5, 2006 I am sorry that this post is a little late, but it still provides info as to what is going on with mental health. john What's Driving Minnesota Governor to Pour Millions for Mental Health? ALLIANCE FOR HUMAN RESEARCH PROTECTION (AHRP) Promoting Openness, Full Disclosure, and Accountability www.ahrp.org FYI Dr. Effrem, Pediatricain and Policy Analyst, who is a member of the AHRP board of directors, as well as on the board of EdWatch, will be the keynote speaker at a dinner explaining why universal mental health screeing poses a danger to everyone. You can still purchase tickets for Dr. Effrem's talk in Minnesota on March 2. News reports from St. Pioneer Press (below) indicate that Minnesota governor, Tim Pawlenty " announced Friday a $109 million plan to improve mental health care in Minnesota by recruiting psychiatrists, increasing crisis services and encouraging caregivers to use proven methods of diagnosis and treatment. " The governor added, " We for too long have overlooked the mental health dilemma in Minnesota and the United States. " Our suspicions are understandable given that those who have targeted American's school children as a market for mental screening and psychoactive drugs won't even debate the issue in public. The fact is, there is no evidence of a mental health crisis, as well no evidence of " proven methods of diagnosis and treatment. " There are, however, unacknowledged, financial stakes for all involved in a campaign spreading false and misleading information. Those who promote the idea that a mental health criis can be fixed by screening followed by treatment are marketing psychotropic drugs on sheer speculation about unproven risks of suicide. Dr. Effrem is investigating the Minnesota programs outlined below, and will provide more information about the undisclosed risks of screening. Public apathy and misplaced trust has allowed our public schools to become a laboratory for an uncontrolled experiment being conducted on innocent children. The greatest danger to children's mental health and well-being is the invasion of children's learning centers by mental health service providers. No one has informed parents that TeenScreen's predictability rate is only 16%! No one has informed parents that TeenScreens track record is an 84% false-positive rate! This makes TeenScreen far less reliable than the flip of a coin. TeenScreen is designed to increase the number of children labeled " depressed and suicidal " then prescribed dangerous psychotropic drugs. Most psychotropic drugs--including antidepressants--have not been approved as safe for use in children. They carry black box warnings a bout inducing mania, violence, and 1 in 50 under 18 year olds become suicidal. Mental screening is supported by both Big Government and Big Pharma: it is spreading like a pandemic. Contact: Vera Hassner Sharav 212-595-8974 veracare@... http://www.edwatch.org/updates06/020806-march2.htm March 2nd EdWatch Event The Dangers of Universal Mental Health Screening Legislation in Minnesota Mental health screening legislation will affect all Minnesota children in public, private, and home schools. Be informed. Learn what you can do. Thursday March 2, 2006 Co-sponsored by The Minnesota Family Council The Minnesota legislature is considering universal mental health screening for K-12, pre-school, all kids at least once by age three, and infants. Mental Health screening is subjective and inaccurate in children. Diagnoses very often reflect simple behavioral issues or politically incorrect attitudes and values. Powerful medications with serious side effects are almost always used as the treatment. R. Effrem, M.D., Pediatrician and Policy Analyst Board of Directors of four national organizations: EdWatch International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology Alliance for Human Research Protection National Physicians Center Dinner and Presentation When: March 2nd, 2006 Where: Green Mill Restaurant Plymouth 2705 polis Lane North www.greenmillplymouth.com Registration and Dinner: $25 Reservations by Monday, February 27 Special offer for college students -- call our office. Register: Click here for flyer and registration form or call EdWatch at 952-361-4931 Time: 6:30 p.m. Social 7:00 p.m. Dinner 7:45 p.m. Program Background information: Routine mental health (social & emotional) screening is subjective and inaccurate in children. Mental health (social & emotional) diagnoses very often reflect simple behavioral issues. Mental health (social & emotional) labels that result from mental health screening are almost always treated with powerful medications that have serious side effects. Many children have been seriously harmed or died from the overuse of psychotropic drugs, including children whose parents were forced to use those drugs by the schools. Mental health (social & emotional) diagnoses have sometimes been the result of screening for politically incorrect attitudes and values. Using drugs to control behavior is dangerous and wrong, especially when study after study has shown these drugs to be ineffective and dangerous. Prescriptions for psychotropic drugs for children have increased by 300% in ten years. Legislation to require universal mental health screening of all Minnesota children at least once by age three almost passed into law in 2005. Register Now for this important event as the 2006 Legislature convenes. Invite your teachers, principals, administrators, school board members of private and public schools and pre-schools to attend. Invite your home school groups. Governor Wants to Revamp State's Mental Health Care BY JEREMY OLSON ST. PAUL PIONEER PRESS February 25, 2006 Gov. Tim Pawlenty announced Friday a $109 million plan to improve mental health care in Minnesota by recruiting psychiatrists, increasing crisis services and encouraging caregivers to use proven methods of diagnosis and treatment. " We for too long have overlooked the mental health dilemma in Minnesota and the United States, " he said. The three-year plan would redistribute $60 million that is already committed to mental health care, but add nearly $50 million from the state's health-care access fund. Pawlenty described the mental health system as " cobbled together. " State Human Services Commissioner Goodno described the system as often failing to diagnose mental illness, or offer appropriate treatment for those who are diagnosed. Both officials called for the " integration " of mental health care -- making physical health providers more adept at mental health treatment and mental health providers more aware of the physical needs of their patients. " There is already integrated care, " Goodno said. " It's just not done very well. " In reaction, Rep. Tom Huntley, DFL-Duluth, said he was concerned about using the access fund, which is generated by a tax on health care providers. He preferred to use that money as it is used currently, to enroll more low-income Minnesotans in the state's public health programs. Much of the governor's plan would require legislative approval. Huntley also worried that the plan would put private insurers, instead of individual counties, in charge of state mental health funds. The plan includes $26.8 million to standardize the mental health benefits offered by Minnesota's various public assistance programs, and possibly put private plans in charge of managing those benefits. The funding would replace $22 million in grants given to individual counties for mental health services. The Mental Health Association of Minnesota is being " tentative " in its reaction, said Meicher, executive director of the advocacy group. She liked its $17.4 million proposal for school-based mental health services, but shared concerns about using private health plans to administer public mental health benefits. Pawlenty and Goodno said standard statewide benefits would reduce cases in which treatments are offered in one county but not another. One problem in Minnesota is the front door to the mental health system. Often patients in crisis go to emergency rooms, which end up holding the patients for days as they try to find open psychiatric beds. Regions Hospital in St. has had 10 to 16 mentally ill patients taking up ER beds at the same time because there was no place to move them. Regions has been forced on some days to divert ambulances to other hospitals, partly because of this problem, said Dr. Brent Asplin, medical director of the Regions ER. " It has really become a crisis for emergency departments all over the Twin Cities, " he said. " We can't expect our emergency departments to deliver life-saving emergency care if they are being forced to serve as our community's inpatient mental health wards. " Pawlenty's plan would seek to address this problem through an additional $13.5 million in mental health crisis services. Other highlights include: o $7.5 million to recruit caregivers by increasing state payment rates for mental health services. o $5.7 million to expand proven methods of outpatient care and residential treatment. o $253,000 to create a system that tracks when psychiatric beds are open or mental health services are available. o $323,000 to create a system that evaluates mental health caregivers on their outcomes. Such measurements are already used to evaluate care of other diseases, such as diabetes. ----------------- Pawlenty unveils major initiative to improve mental health for children and adults NEWS RELEASE February 24, 2006 Gov.Tim Pawlenty has announced $109 million in new and redirected government investments to transform the way the state provides mental health services and improve mental health care and treatment for children and adults. " Our current mental health care system needs improvement and this initiative will deliver significant advancements in access, quality and accountability, " Governor Pawlenty said. " Nearly all of us know someone touched by the challenges of mental illness. Fortunately, the negative stigma surrounding mental illness is breaking down as people recognize it as a health care issue that can be successfully treated. " Untreated mental illness creates significant and unnecessary human and economic costs, and tackling this challenge is a key part of health care reform, " Governor Pawlenty said. Currently, more than 25 percent of caregivers in the Minnesota Family Investment Program, the state's welfare system, received a severe mental health diagnosis within the past three years, while 30 percent of children in Minnesota's child welfare system suffer from serious mental health disorders. Significant transformation of the state's mental health system is needed to create a new fiscal framework that ensures the most effective care is being delivered in a timely and efficient manner. It is also necessary to provide innovative workforce solutions to ensure an adequate supply of mental health professionals, as well as coordinate caregiving to improve health and social outcomes for Minnesotans. Key elements of Gov. Pawlenty's mental health care initiative include: o Adopting a consistent mental health benefit set with proven treatment across all publicly funded health care programs; o Requiring that mental health care be integrated with other health care services and effectively coordinated with social services and education; o Simplifying access to treatment, establishing clear lines of accountability, and evaluating performance based on client outcomes; and o Targeting significant investments in mental health infrastructure, including investing in statewide crisis services, reducing mental health clinician shortages that prevent access to timely treatment, increasing best practices, improving services for specialty populations, and developing performance-based systems of accountability that focus on client outcomes. The transformation of mental health services builds on the recommendations of the Minnesota Mental Health Action Group, an unprecedented public-private effort to improve health care in the state. The proposal addresses issues in the current public health care system, such as the current lack of incentives for early identification and intervention, as well as many opportunities for cost shifting and cost avoidance. In the past, consumers have experienced a fragmented care system with varying levels of access and care coordination. Health care consumers with mental illness were often forced to become very sick before they received appropriate services. The proposal is funded with $49.5 million from the Health Care Access Fund and $59 million in redirected investments. Adopting a consistent mental health benefit set across DHS programs ($26.8 million; offset by $22.8 million redirected adult mental health grant funds) The new initiative will create a consistent mental health benefit package, which includes proven treatments. Participants in Minnesotas publicly funded health care programs (GAMC, MinnesotaCare, PMAP) will have access to an effective mental health benefit set modeled after what currently exists for Medical Assistance, fee-for-service recipients, providing significant progress toward reaching the benefit set recommended by the Minnesota Mental Health Action Group. Integrating care systems ($32.5 million; offset by $28.4 million redirected state grant funds) By creating an integrated payment and service model that improves the coordination between mental health care, physical health care, and social services, the proposal establishes clear accountability for performance based on client outcomes. It will also help alleviate the potential loss of federal funds. Shore up childrens school-based mental services infrastructure ($17.4 million) Due to federal regulation changes, a primary funding sources for these services is being diminished. This investment would pay for these services for uninsured and under-insured children. Develop statewide mental health crisis intervention and stabilization infrastructure as a first-line safety net for children and adults ($13.5 million offset by $8.2 million redirected from increase in county share for commitments to state operated hospitals) Mental health crisis services are provided 24/7/365 in a local community, and are the first line of service for persons who are experiencing a mental health crisis. This investment would provide critical services in the community to people who would otherwise need hospital level of care. It helps alleviate the existing shortage of psychiatric bed capacity. Monitor and track availability of mental health services ($253,000) A statewide, Web-based system will be developed to monitor and track the availability of mental health services, focusing first on psychiatric acute care capacity. Develop and support evidence-based practices ($5.7 million) Investments in statewide infrastructure and training will focus on the transformation of local treatment capacity to best practices. The goal is to provide quality care as measured by standardized assessment and performance outcomes, so that the very best type of treatment for each case is ensured. Address workforce shortages, including psychiatrists and other critical mental health professionals ($7.5 million) Today, access to critical mental health services is significantly limited by shortages of qualified professionals. These funds will create economic incentives supporting recruitment and retention of these professional by providing enhanced reimbursement rates for providers serving a high proportion of public clients. Develop capacity to address the mental health care needs of specialty populations ($5 million) State and county government will need to continue to support access to treatment for some serious mental health disorders that are not common enough to be sufficiently supported by other sources. Examples include eating disorders, co-occurring disorders, culturally specific treatment needs and attachment disorders. In some cases, these treatment needs are purchased outside of Minnesota. Create a system for measuring mental health service outcomes ($323,000) A Web-based statewide outcomes evaluation system for mental health services will be designed and implemented to monitor treatment outcomes and improve care. Source: St Pioneer Press Source: Hometownsource FAIR USE NOTICE This email contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. I am making such material available in my efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. I believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material in this email is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. 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