This is a blog for the Mental Health Policy Class at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work.
October 28, 2007
Should Middle School Students Have Access to Birth Control?
“I think it’s a great idea,” said Cathleen Allen, whose son is enrolled at King. “Someone is finally advocating for these students to take care of themselves.”
Ms. Allen added, “It’s an eye-opener for all of us, but when you look at the facts, why not?”
Bishop Richard J. Malone of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland is calling on the school committee to rescind its decision, as have the state and city Republican Parties. The city party is also pushing a recall for members who voted in favor.
Nick McGee, the city’s Republican Party chairman, said of the policy, “It is an attack on the moral fabric of our community, and a black eye for our state.”
On Friday, John Coyne, chairman of the school committee and one of the two members who voted against the plan, said he wanted the panel to reconsider the program. Mr. Coyne said that parents should have the option to enroll their children in all aspects of the clinic except reproductive health treatment, and that parents should be made more aware of the state’s confidentiality laws.
“I still don’t feel comfortable with this,” Mr. Coyne said. “There’s no talk about the health issues and the possible long-term ill effects on these young ladies.”
The school’s clinic functions much like a physician’s office and has been offering condoms and testing for pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases since 2000. It also offers dental, mental health and basic care.
The clinics at Portland high schools have offered oral contraceptives for years, said Douglas S. Gardner, the city’s director of health and human services. Health officials decided to extend the policy to middle school after learning that 17 middle school students had become pregnant in the last four years, seven of them in the 2006-7 school year.
Sexual misconduct plagues US schools
That got Gary C. Lindsey fired from his first teaching job in Oelwein, Iowa. But it didn't end his career. He taught for decades in Illinois and Iowa, fending off at least a half-dozen more abuse accusations.
When he finally surrendered his teaching license in 2004 — 40 years after that first little girl came forward — it wasn't a principal or a state agency that ended his career. It was one persistent victim and her parents. . . .
One report mandated by Congress estimated that as many as 4.5 million students, out of roughly 50 million in American schools, are subject to sexual misconduct by an employee of a school sometime between kindergarten and 12th grade. That figure includes verbal harassment that's sexual in nature.
Biden unveils health care plan
The plan would cost an estimated $110 billion each year. It would be paid for by rolling back tax cuts for the top 1 percent of Americans, eliminating tax breaks on capital gains and ending tax loopholes for hedge fund managers and private equity partners, the campaign said.
To provide health coverage for uninsured children, Biden proposes expanding the State Children's Health Insurance Program, or SCHIP, to at least 300 percent of the poverty level — or about $61,950 for a family of four, and raising the coverage age to at least 21. Families that don't meet the poverty criteria would be able to purchase coverage under the program.
Voters favor Democratic ideas to mend healthcare
October 27, 2007
Holiday-Suicide Link Newspapers Continue to Perpetuate the Myth
As noted in previous studies, the rate of suicide in the U.S. is lowest in December, and peaks in the spring and fall. Data collected by the National Center for Health Statistics show that this pattern has not changed through 2003, the most recent year for which national data are available.
October 23, 2007
House Failure To Override Veto Good News For Tobacco
The $35 billion raised by the tobacco tax increase over five years would have offset the cost of expanding the State Children's Health Insurance Program. The bill's supporters said that by 2012, the expansion would have allowed the program to cover nearly 10 million children.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., already has promised to have the same bill back on Bush's desk within two weeks. Asked whether the bill might include an alternative funding source, Pelosi said simply, "no."
Bush vetoed the bill on Oct. 3, arguing that it would encourage families to drop private insurance. He has offered $5 billion that would temporarily increase the number of children enrolled in the program, but would reduce enrollment over the next five years.
October 22, 2007
Should Cities Offer Safe Sites for Injection Drug Users?
October 12, 2007
Optimal treatment for depression (LA Times article)
Medicare Audits Show Problems in Private Plans
Kids get inadequate health care
October 11, 2007
Boom Times for Dentists, but Not for Teeth
Previously unreleased figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that in 2003 and 2004, the most recent years with data available, 27 percent of children and 29 percent of adults had cavities going untreated. The level of untreated decay was the highest since the late 1980s and significantly higher than that found in a survey from 1999 to 2002.
Despite the rise in dental problems, state boards of dentists and the American Dental Association, the main lobbying group for dentists, have fought efforts to use dental hygienists and other non-dentists to provide basic care to people who do not have access to dentists.
October 5, 2007
Fifth Of State Prison Inmates Mentally Ill
Suicide prevention team: Victim's dad, former tormentor
Kirk didn't even know the name of the quiet boy whom he and others tormented regularly on the crowded bus to Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin School. They called him "Polar Bear" because of his size and refused to make room for him in a seat. They made fun of him behind his back and to his face.
Last September, when the principal somberly announced that Andy Lehman had died in a car crash, it took awhile for Kirk to even figure out who Andy was. Then he discovered that the crash was no accident.
September 24, 2007
The Need for Improved Payment Systems (Commonwealth Fund Report)
War Costing $720 Million Each Day
The war is costing $720 million a day or $500,000 a minute, according to the group's analysis of the work of Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph E. Stiglitz and Harvard public finance lecturer Linda J. Bilmes.
September 19, 2007
Higher Costs, Worse Outcomes for Previously Uninsured Medicare Beneficiaries
The Commonwealth Fund-supported study, Use of Health Services by Previously Uninsured Medicare Beneficiaries, found that among U.S. adults ages 59 to 64 who had been diagnosed with hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, or stroke, those lacking insurance coverage had much higher medical costs—51 percent higher—after becoming eligible for Medicare at age 65, compared to those with insurance coverage.
Many Massachusetts hospitals will pay for errors
Bill makes drug-makers financial link to doctors known
States Differ Widely in Spending on Health Care, Study Finds
The study, published on Monday in the Web edition of the journal Health Affairs, said that Massachusetts, Maine, New York, Alaska and Connecticut had the highest per capita spending on health care in 2004. The lowest-spending states were Utah, Arizona, Idaho, New Mexico and Nevada. Per capita spending in Utah was 59 percent of that in Massachusetts.
Senate Passes Mental Health Parity Bill
"The passage tonight of the Mental Health Parity bill underscores our commitment to treat all patients facing all diseases with the dignity and respect they deserve," said Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. "This new legislation will bring dramatic new help to millions of Americans who today are denied needed mental health care and treatment." Passage came on the same day that supporters inundated House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office, urging a vote on mental health parity legislation in the House.
Medicare-for-all would keep everyone covered
September 18, 2007
Clinton unveils universal health care plan
September 12, 2007
How Are You Likely to Die?
September 6, 2007
U. S. Critics Slam Canada's Health Care System
A shortage of neonatal beds in Calgary meant that Karen Jepp and her husband J.P. had to travel to Great Falls, Mont., for the birth of Autumn, Brooke, Calissa and Dahlia on Aug. 12.
The chance of giving birth to identical quadruplets is one in 13 million, so the event attracted widespread international attention and caused many Americans to focus on Canada's universal system of health care.
Abortion in the Philippines: a national secret
Crisis on campus
Bipolar disorder in youths may be over-diagnosed
Mentally ill 'suffering neglect'
Up to 800,000 people commit suicide each year, mostly in poorer countries. Despite this, the authors say, 90% of sufferers in developing countries receive no care - and in some cases are chained to trees or kept in cages.
Many Immigrants Face Cultural Barriers, Other Obstacles to Psychiatric Treatment
When psychiatrist Amir Afkhami asked why the couple had waited two years to seek treatment for their son's schizophrenia, the answer was simple: "We thought he was just spoiled."
Youth Suicides Increased As Antidepressant Use Fell
Suicide Trends Among Youths and Young Adults Aged 10--24 Years --- United States, 1990--2004
Lancet Series (for those of you interested in international mental health)
Launching a new movement for mental health
“Despite the great attention western countries pay to the mind and human consciousness in philosophy and the arts, disturbances of mental health remain not only neglected but also deeply stigmatised across our societies.”
These are the introductory words of The Lancet's editor Dr Richard Horton, in a comment to introduce the series. He says: “For the most part, these organisations have done far too little, if anything at all?
Bill Bradley on Politics (New York Times Editorial)
August 28, 2007
Middle-Class Americans Join Ranks of Uninsured in 2006 as Private Coverage Shrinks
"Middle income Americans are now experiencing the human suffering that comes with being uninsured. It makes any illness a potential economic and social catastrophe," said Dr. Steffie Woolhandler, co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program and Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.
August 24, 2007
Medical Homes Promote Equity in Health Care
August 23, 2007
Why can't Americans give up their guns?
Romney's rhetoric glosses Massachusetts years
August 6, 2007
Science vs. politics gets down and dirty
But they have been lobbed in the course of a different estrangement: the standoff between the Bush administration and the nation's scientific community.
The relationship, which has been troubled since the dawn of the Bush presidency, hit a new low last month when Richard Carmona, surgeon general from 2002 to 2006, lashed out at his former colleagues in testimony before a House committee.
Lawmaker Calls for Registry of Drug Firms Paying Doctors
The lawmaker, Charles E. Grassley of Iowa, the senior Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, cited as an example the case of a prominent child psychiatrist, who he said made $180,000 over just two years from the maker of an antipsychotic drug now widely prescribed for children.
Under the influence
August 3, 2007
Children’s Health Plan Focus of New Struggle
But in the short term, members of both parties say, the broader outline of that struggle is likely to be reduced to a simple question: “Are you for or against children?” . . . . Representative John Shadegg, an influential conservative from Arizona, said, “This debate is the opening salvo in a battle over the future of health care in America.” . . . . Republicans say Mr. Bush’s opposition to the House and Senate bills stems from conviction and principle, not a political calculus. But, they say, he is not running for re-election and appears oblivious to the political risks for Republicans.
August 2, 2007
Child abuse claims raise queries about Maori culture
Bill Would Let States Force Drug Discounts
Van Hollen (D-Md.) said he will introduce a bill early this week allowing states to use their purchasing power to require drug companies to provide discounts on medications for low-wage workers. Under the proposal, states could negotiate the same breaks they get for people on Medicaid, the state-federal health-care program for the poor.
Skipping doses could be deadly
The Right Rx for Sadness
Bush Aide Blocked Report
Carmona told lawmakers that, as he fought to release the document, he was "called in and again admonished . . . via a senior official who said, 'You don't get it.' " He said a senior official told him that "this will be a political document, or it will not be released."
July 31, 2007
Paul Krugman: The Waiting Game
This is what you might call callousness with consequences. The White House has announced that Mr. Bush will veto a bipartisan plan that would extend health insurance ... to an estimated 4.1 million currently uninsured children. After all, it’s not as if those kids really need insurance — they can just go to emergency rooms, right?...
Yes, We Can All Be Insured
. . . .
Right now, Congress is trying to bring 3.3 million uninsured children into the State Children's Health Insurance Program. President George W. Bush says he'll veto the expansion as "the wrong path for our nation." He objects to "government-run health care" (like Medicare?) and says that SCHIP "deprives Americans of ... choice" (like the choice to go uninsured?). Buzzwords like "government run" are supposed to summon up monsters like "socialized medicine" that apparently still lurk under our beds. If these terror tactics work, prepare for another 46 million uninsured.
July 26, 2007
Children’s health must be nation’s priority (John Kerry on SCHIP)
Even more troubling, the president has launched a disinformation campaign to denounce this bill as a larger Democratic strategy or plot to massively expand federalized medicine. He has stubbornly pledged to veto a bill he hasn’t even read. Apparently, confronted with a bipartisan compromise to extend health care coverage to half of the 9 million American children without insurance today, the president sees only a vast, left-wing conspiracy.
Shortage of doctors affects rural U.S.
Express-Lane Medicine (Newsweek)
July 21, 2007
The Politics of Sex
Healing Healthcare (LA Times)
The cost question is a painful one because it inevitably leads to the question of sacrifice. If everyone is going to be covered, every treatment probably won't be. Clear conversation on this, however, begins with the recognition that this country already rations healthcare — those without insurance routinely go without care.The complexity of the country's healthcare crisis makes it difficult to debate in the rapid-fire exchanges that too often characterize our modern political campaigns. So it is all the more important that candidates present substantive proposals. America has a chance to grapple with this fundamental issue now. If we succumb instead to slogans, we will long regret it.
Sicko Review (The New Yorker)
Senate Panel Adds Billions for Health
The vote, 17 to 4, sends the measure to the full Senate, which is expected to take it up within two weeks. Mr. Bush has repeatedly denounced the bill as a step toward “government-run health care for every American,” describing it as a “massive expansion of the federal role” in health care, financed by “a huge tax increase.”
July 14, 2007
Start from ground up to fix health care
July 12, 2007
Critics Accuse Bush Administration of Trumping Science With Politics
During his testimony before a Congressional panel on Tuesday, Carmona said that "top Bush administration officials repeatedly tried to weaken or suppress important public health reports because of political considerations,"The New York Timesreported.
It doesn't surprise us to hear that the administration was ignoring science and attempting to silence scientists. That's how they have operated about stem cells for years. . . ."June 29, 2007
Psychiatrists Top List in Drug Maker Gifts
Bush calls a Democratic effort to expand a popular program a move toward government takeover of healthcare.
June 27, 2007
Closing the Divide: How Medical Homes Promote Equity in Health Care
June 22, 2007
Backlash on bipolar diagnoses in children
From his perch as one of the world's most influential child psychiatrists, Biederman has spread far and wide his conviction that the emotional roller coaster of bipolar disorder can start "from the moment the child opened his eyes" at birth. Psychiatrists used to regard bipolar disorder as a disease that begins in young adulthood, but now some diagnose it in children scarcely out of diapers, treating them with powerful antipsychotic medications based on Biederman's work.
States Face Decisions on Who Is Mentally Fit to Vote
Bush Again Vetoes Bill on Stem Cell Research
At the same time, Mr. Bush issued an executive order intended to encourage scientists to pursue other forms of stem cell research that he does not deem unethical. But that research is already going on and the plan provides no new money.
Advocates for embryonic stem cell research called the new plan a ploy to distract from Mr. Bush’s opposition to the studies. “I think the president has issued a political fig leaf,” said Sean Tipton, spokesman for the Coalition for the Advancement of Medical Research, an advocacy group. “He knows he’s on the wrong side of the American public.”
Study Finds 1.8 Million Veterans Are Uninsured
. . . . Rep. Bob Filner (D-Calif.), the committee's chairman, said taking care of veterans is a continuing cost of war. "All veterans should have access to 'their' health-care system," he said. "This is rationing health care to veterans, those who have served our nation. And I think it's unacceptable for a nation of our wealth and our ability."
June 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/09/washington/09surgeon.html
A National Survey of Physician–Industry Relationships
The authors of "A National Survey of Physician–Industry Relationships" (New England Journal of Medicine, Apr. 26, 2007) document widespread relationships between physicians and the pharmaceutical, medical device, and other medically related industries, and also find that such relationships vary according to type of specialty, practice setting, and other factors.
May 24, 2007
Doctors, Legislators Resist Drugmakers' Prying Eyes
May 15, 2007
An International Update on the Comparative Performance of American Health Care
May 13, 2007
The Millions Left Out
The New York Times
May 12, 2007
The United States may be the richest country in the world, but there are many millions — tens of millions — who are not sharing in that prosperity.
According to the most recent government figures, 37 million Americans are living below the official poverty threshold, which is $19,971 a year for a family of four. That’s one out of every eight Americans, and many of them are children.
May 12, 2007
Psychiatrists, Children and Drug Industry’s Role
These best-selling drugs, including Risperdal, Seroquel, Zyprexa, Abilify and Geodon, are now being prescribed to more than half a million children in the United States to help parents deal with behavior problems despite profound risks and almost no approved uses for minors.
April 27, 2007
Suicidal Acts Using Firearms Highly Lethal Compared to Other Means
"We found that where there are more guns, there are more suicides," said Matthew Miller, Assistant Professor of Health Policy and Management at HSPH and lead author of the study.
Suicide ranks as one of the 15 leading causes of death in the U.S.; among persons less than 30 years old, it is one of the top three causes of death. In 2004, more than half of the 32,439 Americans who committed suicide used a firearm.
April 25, 2007
Lawmakers urge closing gaps in federal-state gun laws
Members of Congress have shown little political appetite, however, for attempting to expand federal gun control in response to the massacre at Virginia Tech.
Seung-Hui Cho, who gunned down 32 people on campus and killed himself Monday, was evaluated at a psychiatric hospital in late 2005 and deemed by a judge to present "an imminent danger to himself as a result of mental illness." That should have disqualified him from purchasing a gun under federal law, experts say.
But Virginia court officials insist that because the judge ordered only outpatient treatment -- and did not commit Cho to a psychiatric hospital -- they were not required to submit the information to be entered in the federal databases for background checks.
Lawmakers pushed Sunday to eliminate such breakdowns. They called for uniformity between state and federal reporting to make background checks more dependable.
April 24, 2007
How Should Universities Respond to Potentially Violent Students?
Nor is knowing when to worry about student behavior, and what action to take, always so clear.
“They can’t really kick someone out because they’re writing papers about weird topics, even if they seem withdrawn and hostile,” said Dr. Richard Kadison, chief of mental health services at Harvard University. “Most state laws are pretty clear: you can only bring students to hospitals if there is imminent risk to themselves or someone else, so universities are in a bit of a bind that way.”
April 15, 2007
Phil Zimbardo on the Daily Show
Resisting the Drums of War
April 8, 2007
A Shock Wave of Brain Injuries
March 29, 2007
How do young people manage without health insurance?
March 26, 2007
Confronting Confinement
March 23, 2007
ACLU Free Speech Victory
Families USA Publications
Families USA Global Health Initiative
March 20, 2007
Is Genuine Health Care Reform Finally Feasible?

Sen. Barack Obama, the Democrat from Illinois, recently told the International Association of Fire Fighters that he will make sure that everybody in the country has universal health care by the end of his first term as president.
Not to be outdone, Democrat John Edwards, the former North Carolina senator and presidential candidate, has already laid out a fully detailed plan for universal health coverage. On NPR's Talk of the Nation, Edwards pledged that he would implement his plan even faster than Clinton and Obama would: before the end of his first presidential term.
Can the Best be the Enemy of the Good?
Representative Patrick J. Kennedy, Democrat of Rhode Island and chief sponsor of the House bill, has criticized as inadequate the Senate bill introduced by his father, Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts. Representative Kennedy is trying to mobilize mental health advocates to lobby for what he describes as “the stronger of the two bills, the House bill.”
March 18, 2007
Do You Support Prescriptive Authority for Appropriately Trained Psychologists?
March 17, 2007
The Best Health System in the World?
According to the National Scorecard on U.S. Health System Performance, the United States scored just 66 out of 100 when comparing the nation's average performance on three dozen indicators against benchmarks set either within the U.S. or abroad. Given America's high standards—and high spending on health care—that is simply unacceptable.
March 16, 2007
Social Isolation Is Hazardous to Men's Health
March 15, 2007
Harvard economist proposes team approach on healthcare
Paying for Care Episodes and Care Coordination (Karen Davis, NEJM)
Price Variations for Generic Drugs
[Note to Class: Will you refer your clients to Sam's Club? Do you have any ethical concerns about supporting companies like Walmart? Poke around this website and explore some of the interesting stories, and, if you have the time, read this book.]
March 6, 2007
Does Treatment Work for Sex Offenders?
Clinicians who work with sex offenders cling to relapse prevention nonetheless, and its durability speaks volumes about the troubled, politically fraught science of treating sex offenders. Not only is relapse prevention of questionable value, but so are the tests to gauge whether sex offenders in treatment still get inappropriately aroused, the drugs used for so-called chemical castration and the methods of predicting risk of reoffending.
Treatment methods have become particularly topical as thousands of sex offenders are confined or restricted beyond their prison terms under civil commitment laws on the books in 19 states.
March 4, 2007
Should sex offenders be released after they have finished their prison terms?
About 2,700 pedophiles, rapists and other sexual offenders are already being held indefinitely, mostly in special treatment centers, under so-called civil commitment programs in 19 states, which on average cost taxpayers four times more than keeping the offenders in prison.
March 3, 2007
Health-care debate revives
That promising moment didn't last long. After initially winning support from medical, business and labor groups, the Clintons' top-down plan collapsed under the weight of its own complexity. Attacks on 'Hillary Care' helped Republicans win control ofCongress in 1994. Ever since, health care reform has been considered too costly, in dollars and political capital, for most politicians to touch. But the beleaguered system's problems — one in seven people without insurance, rising premiums and lower reimbursements for those who have insurance, endless payment hassles — haven't gone away. Attempts at fixing them have been incremental and timid at best. That could be about to change. Several groups that usually are at odds on health care now agree on the need for broad reform. These strange bedfellows are still a long way from agreeing on a plan, but the fact that they now see a common need signals a shift in the political dynamic. "