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Veterans Suicide Prevention Bill Appears Headed For Passage
McClatchy (1/23, Wise, Subscription Publication) reports in continuing coverage that a measure aimed at reducing veteran suicides is “on the verge of final passage” now that its leading critic, Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) has left the Senate. Coburn blocked the measure in December “citing cost concerns,” but supporters “say extra funds aren’t necessary to consolidate and improve the Department of Veterans Affairs’ suicide prevention programs,” and they “expect the bill to get another shot at final passage in the Senate in the coming days.”
Related Links:
— “Bill to prevent vets’ suicides raises questions about funding,” Lindsay Wise, McClatchy, January 23, 2015.
Emotion May Consolidate Memories
The New York Times (1/22, A14, Carey, Subscription Publication) reports that research (1/22) published online Jan. 21 in Nature suggests that “the surge of emotion that makes memories of embarrassment, triumph and disappointment so vivid can also reach back in time, strengthening recall of seemingly mundane things that happened just beforehand and that, in retrospect, are relevant.”
NBC News (1/22, Fox) reports on its website that “the findings…suggest there could be a good way to improve peoples’ memories – perhaps people who are beginning to forget things, like early Alzheimer’s patients, says” Lila Davachi, “who oversaw the experiments.”
Fox News (1/22) reports on its website that the investigators “agreed that the study’s results prove the memory system is highly adaptive and more complex than previously thought.”
Related Links:
— “How the Brain Stores Trivial Memories, Just in Case,” Benedict Carey, New York Times, January 21, 2015.
Senate Committee Advances Veterans’ Suicide Prevention Bill
The Congressional Quarterly (1/22, O’Brien, Subscription Publication) reports that yesterday, by a vote of 15 to 0, the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee approved HR 203, the Clay Hunt Suicide Prevention for American Veterans Act, a measure that “would require annual third-party evaluations of Veterans Affairs Department mental health and suicide-prevention programs and promote collaboration between the VA and non-profit mental health organizations to stem the epidemic of veteran suicides.” The proposed legislation, which is “named for Clay Hunt, a Marine veteran of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan who was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and committed suicide in 2011 at age 28,” would also “create a pilot program to repay the loans of some psychiatrists who agree to serve in the Veterans Health Administration.”
Related Links:
— Congressional Quarterly (requires login and subscription)
University Of Pennsylvania Bioethicists Argue For Return Of The Mental Asylum
The Philadelphia Inquirer (1/21, Burling) reports that in a paper published in the Jan. 20 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, bioethicists from the University of Pennsylvania make the argument “for the return of the mental asylum.” In the article, called “Improving Long-term Psychiatric Care, Bring Back the Asylum,” the bioethicists argue that the US “has too few inpatient beds for people with serious mental illnesses.” For that reason, some people with severe mental illnesses “are winding up homeless or in prison, nursing homes, and hospital emergency departments.” The authors of the paper use the “original meaning” of the word asylum, that is, “a place of safety, sanctuary, and healing, or at least dignified healing for people who are very sick.”
Related Links:
— “Penn ethicists call for a return of the mental asylum
Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/health/mental-health/20150121_Penn_ethicists_call_for_a_return_of_the_insane_asylum.html#lxwcHSF1eu1q0pSR.99,” Stacey Burling, Philadelphia Inquirer, January 21, 2015.
PIER Program Has Become National Model Of Early Detection, Treatment Of Mental Illness
The Portland (ME) Press Herald (1/18, Lawlor) reported that “a program started at Maine Medical Center…has become a national model for early detection and treatment of mental illness.” Called the Portland Identification and Early Referral (PIER) program, the program “has gained a foothold in several states – including California – and as it expands it has attracted national media attention.”
The program detects the earliest symptoms of serious mental illnesses and treats them before problems become severe. In Maine alone, “symptoms turning into a ‘full-blown psychotic diagnosis’ fell 26 percent in the Portland area over a six-year period in the 2000s, but rose 8 percent in other parts of the state, where the PIER program was not in place, according to a study published in October in Psychiatric Services scholarly journal,” a publication of the American Psychiatric Association.
Related Links:
— “Maine treatment for mental illness serves as national model,” Joe Lawlor, Portland Press Herald, January 18, 2015.
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