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Behavioral Managed Care - 20 Insider Tips

May 3, 4, 5 2006, Interface Consultation Services very own Kathlene B. LaCour will be providing day long seminars at three locations in Pennsylvania and New Jersey through PESI. Come and join us! There's still time to sign up and learn some of the inside scoop on how to get what you need for your clients and increase your credibility with managed care organizations.

The Stigma of Mental Illness

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Many people suffering from mental illness feel that society does not want them or understand them. As mental health professionals, we are here to educate families and society about mental illess. At some point in our lives most people are touched by mental illness with a family member, friend or even ourselves. May is Mental Health Awareness Month! Spread the news of healing and support for those suffering from mental illness.

Continuity of Care

There are research findings that indicate that adequate Continuity of Care is related to better symptom control and decreased length of hospitalization and evidence suggests that it may be associated with improved mental health, functioning, and quality of life, as well as better medication compliance and decreased emergency room visits and rehospitalizations. Continuity of Care means different things for different people but we are speaking hear about the continuity of working with an individual agency and an individual service provider. The relationship between the provider and the patient or client provides an increased understanding and trust of each other. Providers say things like, “I know that he has not been taking his medications, he has had a run in with his mother and he is starting to decompensate when he starts talking about religion. It’s a trigger for me to ask him about these things. He doesn’t usually bring them up on his own.” Other providers report that so...

Alzheimers Disease & Dementia

According to an article by the Alzheimer’s Association titled, Think About Future, Maintain Your Brain Today our brain health is as important as our physical health. When people think about staying fit, they generally think from the neck down. But the health of your brain plays a critical role in almost everything you do: thinking, feeling, remembering, working, and playing – even sleeping. The good news is that we now know there’s a lot you can do to help keep your brain healthier as you age. These steps might also reduce your risk of Alzheimer’s disease or other dementia. Simple lifestyle modifications also would have an enormous impact on our nation's public health and the cost of healthcare. If you make brain-healthy lifestyle changes and take action by getting involved, we could realize a future without Alzheimer's disease. Stay mentally active Remain socially involved Stay physically active Adopt a brain-healthy diet Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dement...

To Err is Human

None of us are perfect, though many strive for this lofty goal. Making “mistakes” is a normal part of human behavior, it is the crux of learning for most yet for others it is the bane of their existence. Perfectionist individuals tend to constantly assess their performance, measuring their outcomes by some internalized, rigid standards of right and wrong, best and worst, success and failure, etc. Recent clinical findings suggest there is an area of the human brain where neurologists have isolated processes related to mistake-making. "We have been interested in how the brain processes error," explained lead author Dr. Stephan Taylor, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Reporting in the April 12 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience , his team found that an area of the brain called the rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC) becomes very active when people realize they've made a mistake that carries negative consequences -- for e...

ADHD Patch

The FDA has recently approved the first patch called Daytrana to treat ADHD . This patch contains the stimulant methylphenidate (the same active ingredient in Ritalin) and is designed to be worn for 9 hours. The FDA recommends it's use only when taking the oral medication by mouth has been a hardship. Nearly 3.3 million Americans age 19 and younger used an ADHD drug last year, according to Medco Health Solutions Inc., a prescription drug benefit program manager. A panel of outside experts recently recommended to the FDA that the drugs bear labels that caution users in plain language about possible dangers, including stroke and hallucinations. Earlier, another FDA panel recommended that the medicines include so-called "black-box" warnings. That is the strongest warning a prescription drug can bear.

Teens, Epilepsy & Depression

As we have previously written, the area of medical illness and associated mental health disorders is an emerging and important issue. Not unlike substance abuse and mental illness and their respective practices, the medical and the mental health communities are increasingly cognizant that co-occurring disorders in their areas may be more the norm than the exception. In particular, recent clinical findings suggest that adolescents with epilepsy may suffer higher rates of depression . This is just one of many medical/mental health concerns that is gaining professional and public attention. Recent clinical study results in the Journal of Neurology (March 2006) indicate that up to 60 percent of all teens with epilepsy will experience depression or another psychiatric illness. What's worse, only about 33 percent of those teens will receive treatment, according to the study. That lack of treatment may put teens with epilepsy at a higher risk for suicide as well. The study reported th...