Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
New York City Launches Initiative Focused On The Mental Health Of Pregnant Women, New Mothers
Doctors in New York City will soon be asking new mothers some extra questions during medical visits. Along with 鈥淗ow鈥檚 your baby?鈥 they鈥檒l also ask, 鈥淎nd how are you?鈥 The new initiative to screen all pregnant women and new mothers for maternal depression was announced Tuesday by Chirlane McCray, Mayor Bill de Blasio鈥檚 wife, at a news conference at Bellevue Hospital. (MacMillan, 11/17)
Holding up San Antonio as an example, a report by a justice system policy group recommends that law enforcement agencies change their practices regarding mental illness, sex workers and addiction without waiting for legislative action. (Silver, 11/17)
Cardinal Innovations, one of North Carolina鈥檚 state-funded mental health managed care organizations, announced last week it would be changing the benefits offered to people with mental health and substance use issues and intellectual and developmental disabilities, effective this Friday. In a bulletin issued to service providers dated Nov. 11, Cardinal announced that people currently receiving services such as treatment from a Community Support Team, which provides 鈥渃ommunity-based mental health and substance abuse rehabilitation services鈥 for people with 鈥渃omplex and extensive treatment needs,鈥 will continue to receive those services. But effective Nov. 20, no new clients will be eligible for the service. (Hoban, 11/17)
Debbie Sizemore begged emergency-department doctors to reconsider. But they said her delusional husband wasn鈥檛 a threat, not to her or anyone. (Riepenhoff, Wagner and Kurtzman, 11/18)
In related news -
When he鈥檚 having a hard time coping, the 23-year-old Maryland man can get extra support with a few quick taps on his smartphone. That takes him to the Big White Wall, an online service that provides help 24/7 to people who are struggling with problems such as depression, stress and anxiety. It offers educational resources and courses led by mental health professionals. It also offers peer encouragement through virtual conversations. ... The service, which has been running in the United Kingdom for nearly a decade, is now drawing attention from several U.S. health systems looking for ways to increase access, especially in rural areas with few if any psychiatrists, counselors or even social workers. (Sun, 11/15)