Archive for » June 15th, 2012«

Mental health services planned in BP spill deal


A $14.4 million share of the BP oil spill settlement will bring mental health counselors to coastal Louisiana areas affected by the 2010 disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.

The grant to the LSU Health Sciences Center is the largest single award of $36 million set aside for four universities in states affected by the oil spill to perform mental health services.

In addition to the LSUHSC, the University of Southern Mississippi, the University of South Alabama and the University of West Florida will join for the five-year program. They’ll train and send mental health experts to communities to work with doctors, at local clinics and at other sites in their states.

It’s one of four projects included in the estimated $7.8 billion settlement reached in May by London-based oil giant BP PLC and a committee of plaintiffs. The settlement has received preliminary approval of a federal judge.

Dr. Howard Osofsky, chairman of psychiatry at the LSU Health Sciences Center, says the program consolidates expertise in the affected states and is designed to deal with mental health issues lingering from the nation’s worst offshore oil disaster.

“Don’t just come in with surveys and hightail it out,” Rick Costa, a psychologist at LSUHSC and a member of its trauma team, told about 160 professionals attending a two-day conference in New Orleans, where the plan was discussed as part of a session on mental health and disasters.

The oil spill, which began in April 2010 and dumped an estimated 200 million gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico off the Louisiana coast, is the most recent disaster to hit the region. More typical are hurricanes that roar out of the tropics, wrecking communities and their economies.

Working in the New Orleans suburb of St. Bernard Parish after Hurricane Katrina struck in 2005, Costa said, counselors knew many people were wary of going to a mental health clinic. “We came to them,” he said, working in schools and other local gathering places.

And, rather than assuming they had the answers, the counselors created trusting relationships that allowed them to provide the services residents eventually told them they needed most.

St. Bernard, like much of neighboring New Orleans, was devastated by the storm surge of Katrina.

With the communities recovery slow though stead, the counselors stayed for the long term. “We became part of the community. We weren’t these two-headed scary monsters,” he said.

Under the developing plan for the oil spill states, some services would be offered in a similar manner, getting to the community through schools and other community centers.

The teams also will work in federally qualified health clinics and, where there are no such clinics, with other local doctors and their staffs to create “one-stop shops” for physical and mental health. The university combine is especially concerned about residents who are uninsured or live in areas where mental health services are limited.

The effort will focus on 17 coastal counties and parishes: Mobile and Baldwin in Alabama; Escambia, Santa Rosa, Walton, Okaloosa, and Bay in Florida; Orleans, Jefferson, St. Bernard, Plaquemines, Lafourche, Terrebonne and Cameron in Louisiana; and Hancock, Harrison and Jackson in Mississippi.

LSUHSC faculty and students already had been at work in coastal Louisiana, whose communities of fishermen were hard hit by the impact of the oil. The settlement will allow that work to be expanded to additional parishes, said Joy Osofsky, head of pediatric mental health and one of the project leaders for Louisiana.

Other projects expected to roll out from the oil spill settlement include training community residents to act as health workers in times of disaster and establishing a network of environmental health experts to help primary care doctors. Another project would make environmental health part of science classes in selected public high schools.


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2.38m People with ‘Super Blood’ Asked to Donate Ahead of the …


LONDON, June 15, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ –
Demand for universal blood type O Negative expected to be higher than donations being made during the games

New statistics from NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) announced yesterday reveal a gap between demand and supply of blood type O Rh Negative (O Negative) during national celebrations and underline an urgent need for O Negative donors to come forward ahead of the Olympics next month.

The statistics coincide with yesterday’s annual World Blood Donor Day (14th June). The theme this year is heroes. NHSBT marked the occasion with a special one-off blood donation session at the Tower of London to appeal to this group of blood donor heroes whilst also collecting blood from some Britain’s military heroes, the Beefeaters.

Around the jubilee celebrations demand for type O Negative blood was 69% higher than the number of donations being made, mirroring past public holidays such as Easter (25% higher demand than donations) and Christmas (29% higher demand than donations).

All blood types are needed to build stocks in advance of an exceptionally busy summer, but there is a particular need for O Negative donors to prepare for The Olympics. An estimated 1.2 million people and 15,000 athletes are expected to visit London as part of the Olympic Games, whose blood type may not be known, so should they need a transfusion O Negative blood is likely to be needed. The increased demands on stocks will be compounded by low numbers of donors coming forward in the midst of the disruption and distraction of the celebrations.

Type O Negative blood, often called the universal blood type, can be transfused into any patient regardless of their own blood type and is used in over a tenth (10.5%) of hospital procedures. Increased demand during holiday periods is often due to health services preparing for treatments over holiday periods including accidents, which may require O Negative blood to treat patients quickly when their blood group is not known.

Although O Negative blood is in the highest demand it is also in very limited supply. An estimated 7% of the eligible population (2.38m people) have O Negative blood and just 139,000 of these are donors, a number that has declined 19% in the last ten years. Their contributions are vital for treatments of other blood groups in emergency situations but also to treat others of their own blood type since they can only be transfused with O Negative blood.

The Tower of London, more usually linked with villains and blood-shed than blood donation, yesterday played host to a donation session for Tower residents (including Yeoman Warders, better known as Beefeaters) and employees as well as the general public with an emphasis on O Negative donations including O Negative donors and case studies helping to raise awareness and recruit new O Negative donors.

NHSBT spokesperson Jon Latham said: “Without O Negative blood donors many live saving procedures could be delayed or made more risky for patients and of course we wouldn’t be able to give transfusions to people with O Negative at all since they can only take blood of their own type. We’re appealing to this elite group of blood donors to help us prepare for the unprecedented demand expected around the Olympics to make sure our health services have the essential stocks they need. And if you don’t know whether you are O Negative or not, donating blood is the perfect way to find out!”

People of all blood types who would like to help with the national stock build appeal are encouraged to act now before the Olympics and make an appointment at
http://www.blood.co.uk or by calling 0300-123-23-23.

Notes to editors:

WORLD BLOOD DONOR DAY on June 14th, is a World Health Organisation global health awareness day to mark the birth of Nobel Prize winner Karl Landsteiner, who is recognised as the father of transfusion medicine and first discovered the main blood grouping system in 1900. The day hopes to encourage further volunteers across the globe to donate blood and also lead way to improving the safety and adequacy of national blood supplies.

A 30% blood stock build increase is needed to combat the drop in donations as people become distracted and their day to day routines are disrupted by the celebrations. Over 1 million additional visitors to the UK could also add to demand for blood due to illness or injury during the Games

New donation criteria recently introduced by NHS Blood and Transplant means that men can now donate blood more frequently bringing their total annual donation opportunities to four times a year

NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) is a joint England and Wales Special Health Authority. Its remit includes the provision of a reliable, efficient supply of blood and associated services to the NHS in England and North Wales. It is also the organ donor organisation for the UK and is responsible for matching and allocating donated organs

NHSBT collects approximately two million units of blood each year from 1.4 million blood donors

The NHS needs 7,000 voluntary donations of blood daily

Around 4% of the eligible population are active blood donors

A unit of blood is measured as 470mls (or just under a pint)

Female whole blood donors can give blood every 16 weeks, while male blood donors must wait 12 weeks between donations

There are four main blood groups – O, A, B and AB. Group O is the most common and therefore the most in demand. Over 95% of the blood collected is processed into its main components – red cells, platelets and plasma. A regular supply of blood is vital as red cells last only 35 days and platelets only seven days

Negative blood types are rarer among our indigenous population, which places more need on people of these blood types to donate

Compared with global blood types, however, the UK has a lower than average percentage of types B+ (8% UK vs. 20% global) and AB+ (3% UK vs. 5% global) creating a potential greater need for these blood types.

The Tower of London is part of Historic Royal Palaces, the independent charity that additionally looks after the Hampton Court Palace, Kensington Palace, the Banqueting House and Kew Palace. We help everyone explore the story of how monarchs and people have shaped society, in some of the greatest palaces ever built.

We receive no funding from the Government or the Crown, so we depend on the support of our visitors, members, donors, volunteers and sponsors. These palaces are owned by The Queen on behalf of the nation, and we manage them for the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport.

We believe in four principles. Guardianship: giving these palaces a future as long and valuable as their past. Discovery: encouraging people to make links with their own lives and today’s world. Showmanship: doing everything with panache. Independence: having our own point of view and finding new ways to do our work.
http://www.hrp.org.uk Registered charity number 1068852

For more information or to speak to a case study blood donor or recipient or a relevant spokesperson, please contact the NHSBT team at The Red Consultancy:

nhsbt@redconsultancy.com / +44(0)20-7025-6500 / +44(0)781-415-4705

SOURCE NHS Blood and Transplant

Copyright (C) 2012 PR Newswire. All rights reserved


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Catholic Charities USA Names Fr. Ragan Schriver, of Catholic …

/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ – Catholic Charities USA (CCUSA), one of the nation’s leading human services organizations, announced today that Fr. Ragan Schriver, Executive Director of Catholic Charities of East Tennessee, has been named as a new Board Member-elect.  His Board membership is scheduled to take effect during CCUSA’s Annual Gathering in St. Louis, MO, held September 29 to October 3, 2012.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20081008/CCUSALOGO)

“We are so very fortunate that Fr. Ragan will be joining our Board; he brings not only a wealth of experience, but also a tremendous amount of passion and energy for life and our work,” said Rev. Larry Snyder, President and CEO of CCUSA.  “We have benefited from his engagement and inspiring speaking for many years, and now we welcome his further involvement and leadership.”

A native of Knoxville, TN, Fr. Schriver has been Executive Director of Catholic Charities of East Tennessee since 1999.  During much of that time, he also served as an Associate Pastor and high school coach and teacher in the Knoxville area.  Presently, he is the Pastor of Holy Family Catholic Church.  He has served as Chair of the Diocesan Directors section of CCUSA, as Director of the Catholic Campaign for Human Development, and as a member of CCUSA’s Social Policy Committee.  Fr. Schriver was honored as the professional of the year by the Tennessee Conference of Social Welfare, and is an avid runner, tennis player and cyclist.

Catholic Charities USA’s members provide help and create hope for more than 10 million people a year regardless of religious, social, or economic backgrounds. For almost 300 years, Catholic Charities agencies have worked to reduce poverty by providing a myriad of vital services in their communities, ranging from health care and job training to food and housing.

SOURCE Catholic Charities USA


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VIDEO: MP: 'Liberating' to air mental health issues

Conservative MP Charles Walker said it was “liberating” to talk about mental health issues that have affected him for 31 years and it had made him a “more honest person”.

The chairman of the all-party mental health group said that people who are affected felt frightened and excluded, but had thanked him for raising the issue, while he said the press was more becoming more responsible about how it reported mental health.

He discussed the Commons debate on mental health with Andrew Neil, Andrew Pierce of the Daily Mail and political commentator Gaby Hinsliff.

Commons debate on mental health

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VA hiring 1600 mental health workers

The VA plans to hire 1,600 mental health clinicians and nearly 300 support staff at its facilities nationwide.

The VA plans to hire 1,600 mental health
clinicians and nearly 300 support staff at its facilities nationwide.







Laura Englehart
Reporter- Dayton Business Journal

Email
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The Department of Veterans Affairs 


plans to hire 1,600 mental health clinicians and nearly 300 support staff at its facilities nationwide.

That likely will translate into new positions at the Dayton VA Medical Center and other VA hospitals across Ohio.

In the past few years, Veterans Affairs has worked to improve its mental care for veterans, who increasingly have required treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other mental health issues.

Since 2009, the VA has increased its mental health care budget by 39 percent.

The VA currently employs 20,590 mental health workers, including nurses, psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers.

“As the tide of war recedes, we have the opportunity, and the responsibility, to anticipate the needs of returning Veterans,” said Eric Shinseki, Veterans Affairs secretary.

The VA currently has roughly 230 mental health clinicians and support staff in the Dayton region. Among the mental health services offered by the Dayton VA and its outpatients clinics are:

• a mental health walk-in clinic;

• Tele-health programs; and

• a suicide prevention program.

The Dayton VA hospital is the fourth largest in the Dayton region with 500 beds and more than 2,000 workers, including 111 active physicians. The hospital in 2011 brought in $336.4 million in revenue.

There are currently about 20 open positions in medical, dental and public health at the Dayton VA hospital, according to the government Web site usajobs.gov.

E-mail lenglehart@bizjournals.com. Call (937) 528-4426. Twitter.com/lenglehartDBJ

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Study to measure optimum frequency of blood donation


Today, June 14, countries across the world will celebrate World Blood Day to raise awareness of the need for safe blood and blood products and to thank voluntary unpaid for their life-saving gifts of blood.

Also commencing this week is a landmark research study by a collaboration between NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) and the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford, which will help determine whether blood can be safely collected more frequently than present practice.

As the UK population ages, the demand for blood and blood products is likely to increase. One approach to increase is to collect blood more frequently from existing donors. However, there is no strong scientific evidence to define the optimum interval between blood donations to maximise blood collections while maintaining donor well-being.

The study, which starts to recruit participants this week, aims not only to determine the optimal frequency of blood donations but also to define whether it is appropriate to tailor this interval to donors by their demographic, haematological, genetic and .

A joint England and Wales Special Health Authority, NHSBT provides a reliable, efficient supply of blood and associated services to the NHS in England and North Wales. NHSBT needs to collect up to 7,000 units of whole blood each day to meet demand from hospitals. This study, the first of its kind for NHSBT, will help determine whether donors can safely donate more frequently to help meet this demand.

Led by Professor John Danesh at the Department of Public Health and Primary Care at the University of Cambridge and Professor David Roberts at NHSBT, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, the INTERVAL study will recruit up to 50,000 blood donors to a conducted within the framework of the UK’s NHSBT service.

“Limits are set for the intervals between donation frequency to minimise iron deficiency,” explained Cambridge researcher Dr Carmel Moore, who is coordinating the trial. “The present inter-donation intervals in England are 12 weeks for men and 16 weeks for women, yet in Europe donation frequency can be as frequent as every eight weeks. A decisive experiment is needed to determine whether blood can safely be given more frequently by the 1.4 million people who give blood each year in England.”

The trial involves NHSBT staff across the 25 permanent donation clinics in England and will enrol whole-blood donors to a two-year study. Men will be randomly assigned to 12-, 10- or 8-week inter-donation intervals and women to 16-, 14- or 12-week intervals. At the end of the study, the impact of donation intervals on the amount of blood collected and donors’ health and well-being will be assessed.

“In addition to evaluating the inter-donation interval, we are interested in assessing whether some people may be able to safely give blood more frequently and will be happy to do so,” added Dr Moore. “On the other hand, others may be more susceptible to iron deficiency with repeat . To prevent donors becoming iron deficient, haemoglobin levels are routinely measured before giving blood; if levels are too low the donor is asked to return at a later date. Being turned away can be a bad experience and lead to people’s unwillingness to donate again. Tailoring donation intervals to individuals would mean more susceptible donors could be invited to donate less frequently, which may improve donor satisfaction and retention.”

“The study’s key anticipated contribution to the NHSBT will be to provide evidence to inform long-term policies that improve the health and well-being of donors and ensure the supply of blood,” said Jane Pearson, Assistant Director – Nursing and Component Donation Services (NHSBT).

Professor Danesh added: “Contributing to broader public health research, an additional value of the project will be provided through the creation of a national epidemiological bioresource to study the health of donors.”

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UN Agencies, Charities Demand Immediate Lifting Of Gaza Blockade

6/15/2012 4:18 AM ET
(RTTNews) – Several U.N. agencies joined a group of international charities on Thursday in making a joint call for the immediate lifting of a six-year Israeli blockade on the Gaza Strip, and expressed hope that their move would increase pressure on the Jewish State to lift the siege.

“For over five years in Gaza, more than 1.6 million people have been under blockade in violation of international law. More than half of these people are children. We, the undersigned, say with one voice: ‘end the blockade now,’” the 50 organizations and agencies said in a joint statement.

“The government of Israel is facing mounting international criticism for the Gaza blockade and this unanimous statement from some of the most world’s most respected international organizations is likely to increase pressure for the blockade to be lifted,” they added.

The U.N. agencies signatory to the statement are the office of the Humanitarian Coordination/Resident Coordinator for the occupied Palestinian territory, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), the U.N. Children’s Fund (UNICEF), U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), U.N. Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women), and the World Health Organization (WHO).

The international aid and development signatories of the statement include Amnesty International, CARE International, Medicos del Mundo – Espana, the Norwegian Refugee Council, Premiere Urgence – Aide Medicale Internationale, Save the Children and Secours Islamique France.

Also on Thursday, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon demanded the lifting of the blockade in line with Security Council resolution 1860 that calls for an “immediate, durable and fully respected ceasefire, leading to the full withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.”

Ban’s spokesman said the U.N. chief “has consistently urged the Government of Israel to allow the free movement of people into and out of Gaza, to further liberalize imports, in particular of construction materials, to allow exports and to maintain a flow of approvals for further reconstruction works. At the same time, he has also stated that Israel’s legitimate security concerns should be addressed.”

On Wednesday, Valerie Amos, Under Secretary-General for U.N. Humanitarian Affairs, had also called for the lifting of the blockade, pointing out the devastating impact it continues to have on the lives and livelihoods of 1.6 million Palestinians living in Gaza.

Israel imposed the blockade in Gaza after Hamas, a radical Islamist group, came to power in the Palestinian territory in June 2007, ousting secularist Fatah party led by Palestinian Authority President Mahmud Abbas.

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Activist says mental health issues plague Chad Holley

Chad Holley, the teenager at the center of the controversial videotaped police beating case in 2010, was off medication that helped keep aggressive behavior in check when he allegedly burglarized a home Wednesday, said community activist Quanell X.

Holley, who was arrested Wednesday for burglary, posted $10,000 bail and was released from the Harris County Jail Thursday.

As Quanell X escorted Holley out of the jail, the two did not comment as they made their way to a vehicle. Quanell later made a statement from Holley’s home in northwest Harris County.

At a brief press conference, Quanell said Holley had been taking medication for mental problems such as depression following the 2010 incident in which Holley was beaten by four Houston police officers during a burglary arrest.

“The young man has some serious mental health issues,” Quanell said.

Holley had refused to take his prescribed medication since he turned 18, which made him more aggressive and sometimes confused, Quanell said. He did not specify the medications Holley was taking or for what purpose.

He said he would help the Holley family receive assistance to obtain the necessary drugs and counseling. Since Holley turned 18, he has been unable to qualify for health assistance from the state, Quanell said.

“If he doesn’t get his mental health situation straight, something else crazy or stupid may happen with this young boy,” he said.

Holley’s mother, Joyce Holley, did not comment as she walked past reporters to go into her apartment.

Quanell said Chad Holley was not fully aware of the consequences of his decisions. “It is indeed a shame that this young man has let the entire community down,” Quanell X said.

Holley was on probation until his 18th birthday from a burglary conviction stemming from his 2010 arrest.

mayra.cruz@chron.com


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Veterans center increasing mental services

Local veterans will soon have access to a greater range of mental health services as a $2 million funding boost helps the Memphis Veterans Medical Center add specialists.

The hospital will hire 19 clinicians and two support personnel under a nationwide plan to add 1,600 mental health clinicians and 300 support staff. The hirings were announced this week by Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki.

The hiring plan will add an additional $2,094,000 to the hospital’s annual budget.

Jay Robinson III, medical center director and CEO, said the staffing boost is a part of the hospital’s efforts to improve its response for an influx of veterans with mental health issues.

The hospital’s announcement comes just days after a June 8 Associated Press report that there were 154 military suicides in the first 155 days of 2012 — up from 130 in the same period in 2011.

Robinson said the center’s goal is to make same-day mental health care access available for nonemergency situations. The current waiting period averages seven days.

Several of the new clinicians at the hospital will treat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder.

“People can move on and cope with that…,” Robinson said of PTSD. “It’s something that doesn’t get talked about a lot.”

Mary Fruit, chief of mental health service at the hospital, said the new hires will allow the center to increase the number of services available and the quality of care.

The coverage of PTSD diagnoses and suicides “have everyone paying attention — and they’re very critical and we do a lot to prevent and treat — but we’ve got a broader range we need to treat,” Fruit said. “And at the same time, we’re still doing our best to take care of every veteran we have.”

One of the new positions Fruit said she is most excited about is the marriage and family therapist.

Sometimes when veterans return from deployments, they struggle to reconnect with their families and re-adjust to life at home, she said.

“We’ve got to treat the veteran and the family to get our best outcomes.”

Additional services will include weekend and evening PTSD treatment hours for working veterans, substance abuse treatment and an expanded work therapy program.

The hospital treats about 60,000 veterans a year in a region that encompasses 19 counties in Tennessee, eight in Arkansas, 25 in Mississippi and one in Kentucky. The network includes 10 community clinics that provide primary care and general mental health care.

–Tessa Duvall: (901) 529-2643


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Manitoba’s top blood donor meets longtime recipient

A Manitoba man who has donated blood more than 300 times had a heartwarming meeting with a woman who has relied on thousands of blood donations.

Don Pryce has donated blood 361 times since he was 21 years old, making him Canadian Blood Services’ top blood donor in Manitoba.

“It kind of makes you feel better that you know you’re helping somebody, or you hope you’re helping somebody,” Pryce told CBC News.

On Thursday, Pryce met Rose Pallone, 42, who has received more than 1,500 blood donations to date.

Pallone has thalassemia major, a genetic blood disorder that can be fatal. She requires two units of blood every six to eight weeks.

“For me, it just means the world that I can relax and know that my future looks bright because there are [donors] such as Don,” Pallone said.

Canadian Blood Services arranged for Pryce and Pallone to meet at its Winnipeg clinic on Thursday as part of World Blood Donor Day.

There are about 3,500 blood donors in Manitoba who give about twice a year on average, according to the organization.

Canadian Blood Services says it is looking for more young Manitobans to step up and become first-time donors.


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