Wrestling With A Texas County’s Mental Health System
Strong leadership and common-sense budgeting created a model mental health care system in San Antonio.
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Strong leadership and common-sense budgeting created a model mental health care system in San Antonio.
With specialized training and a redirection of resources, San Antonio's police force is taking better care of mentally ill people, keeping them out of jail and saving $10 million a year.
A one-year pilot project in Gosnold, Mass., provides recovering addicts with daily, sometimes hourly, help from a recovery coach.
It offers a plan geared to people with serious mental illnesses that will coordinate physical and behavioral services.
Patients in rural hospitals often have to wait days to see a psychiatrist. South Carolina is a leader in turning that around.
Caregivers blame Pennsylvania's decision not to expand Medicaid, as well as the continued stigma of seeking such care.
That state has defined autism behavioral therapy as a type of medical benefit not subject to the mental health parity law, a move that allows insurers more latitude to limit the benefits they offer.
Sheriff in San Francisco wants to make sure the 30,000 prisoners who come through the jail system every year have health insurance on the day they're released.
Even if parents are providing health insurance, they often can't find out about what's happening when their adult children suffer from severe mental illnesses.
The intersection of law enforcement and mental health has been a huge issue in Connecticut since the Newtown shootings. One department is training 20 percent of its officers to handle people with mental illnesses better.
But an influential panel of experts says there isn't enough evidence to recommend screening tests for the public.
In states that agreed to expand Medicaid, about 3 million people who have those conditions are now eligible for coverage, however the 24 states that refused the Medicaid expansion have nearly millions with severe mental illness without insurance.
Games, stories, tai chi and dancing help patients -- and caregivers -- cope with memory loss
Overwhelmed mental health professionals are using telephone consultations and other approaches to reach patients in underserved communities.
Anyone who buys a plan through the new online marketplaces will find mental health services covered as one of 10 "essential health benefits."
Federal and state laws expand psychiatric coverage, but some experts fear care will be in short supply.
In Los Angeles, there's a concerted effort to enroll the homeless into Medicaid, as the federal-state health insurance program opens for the first time to all poor adults.
Even for those with the will and drive to pursue treatment, the process remains difficult, frightening and full of holes. On the federal level, little has come from the task forces and promises that followed the Newtown shootings.
A reader asks: Where can my son with a mental illness find coverage once he turns 26 and can't be on our family insurance anymore?
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