Barriers to Care in New Orleans
Four years after Hurricane Katrina, children in New Orleans are still at risk for mental health problems and yet continue encountering barriers to care, according to a July report by the Government Accountability Office. The GAO estimated that some 187,000 children were living in the four parishes that make up the metro area, and that a “substantial number of these children may need referrals for mental health services.” Lack of providers and lack of funding continuity were cited as barriers to providing services, along with transportation problems, competing family priorities, and concerns about stigma. Federal grants have helped, but aren't enough, said GAO. Sen. Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.) and Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) requested the study.
Violence Against Women Is Focus
The Obama administration has named Lynn Rosenthal, a national expert on domestic violence policy, the first-ever White House adviser on violence against women. She will advise the president and vice president and will work with federal agencies on their domestic violence and sexual assault prevention programs. She also will consult advocacy groups and members of Congress to develop new policies. Ms. Rosenthal served most recently as the executive director of the New Mexico Coalition Against Domestic Violence. The White House announcement said she was a major advocate for reauthorizations of the Violence Against Women Act of 2000 and of 2005 and helped states and communities implement the legislation.
Malpractice Payments Are Down
Medical malpractice payments were at record low levels in 2008, according to an analysis by the consumer-advocacy group Public Citizen. For the third straight year, 2008 saw the lowest number of malpractice payments since the federal government's National Practitioner Data Bank began tracking such data in 1990, the group said. The data showed that 11,037 payments were made last year, which Public Citizen said was nearly one-third lower than the historical average. The monetary value of payments was either the lowest or second lowest since 1990, depending on how inflation was calculated, the group said. The total cost of all malpractice insurance premiums fell to much less than 1% of the total $2.1 trillion in annual health costs in 2006 (the most recent year for which full data were available). The cost of actual malpractice payments to patients fell to 0.2% of overall health costs, the group said. David Arkush, director of Public Citizen's Congress Watch division, said in a statement that the numbers indicate that many victims of medical malpractice receive no compensation for their injuries.
Early Schizophrenia to Be Studied
Funds provided to the National Institute of Mental Health by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act are going to pay for a large-scale trial to determine whether early and aggressive treatment reduces the symptoms and prevents deterioration in functioning in people with chronic schizophrenia. The NIMH announced the launch of the Recovery After an Initial Schizophrenia Episode (RAISE) trial in late July to see whether early, diverse, and individually targeted treatment will help people return to work and school. The interventions “will be designed from the outset to be readily adopted in real-world health care settings and quickly put into practice,” said NIMH director Thomas R. Insel in a statement. The research will be led by Dr. John M. Kane at the Zucker Hillside Hospital in Manhasset, N.Y., and by Dr. Jeffrey Lieberman at the Research Foundation for Mental Hygiene in New York.
Many Young Adults Uninsured
About 5 million adults aged 19-23 years in the United States had no health insurance in 2006 for the entire year, and 30% of them said they didnot think it was worth the cost, according to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. The AHRQ found that 46% of uninsured young adults worked full time and 26% worked part time. Only 19% of those who were uninsured throughout 2006 were full-time students, the agency said. In addition, 19- to 23-year-olds who were uninsured for the entire year were only about half as likely as those who had insurance part of the year to have a usual source of care, such as a family doctor–just 36% of the wholly uninsured reported a usual source of care.
FDA Seeks Tobacco Comments
The Food and Drug Administration wants public input on how to implement its new authority to regulate tobacco products. In a Federal Register notice, the agency said it would rely on public comments when implementing the new Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act and when establishing the FDA Center for Tobacco Products. It said it is interested in suggestions for reducing tobacco use and protecting public health, but that remarks on any aspect of its new regulatory authority are welcome. Comments can be submitted at