Archive for » September 1st, 2012«

Mental Health patient attack inquiry

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Romney campaign launches donation by text message

GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney is accepting campaign contributions by text message.

The campaign’s new “text-to-donate” operation, announced Friday, allows mobile phone users to make $10 donations by texting the word “GIVE” to 37377. The Romney campaign said the program would start this week through Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile and U.S. Cellular.

The campaign said other carriers will soon follow.

The Federal Election Commission decided in June to allow text donations in political campaigns. The agency limits donations to $50 per cellphone account per billing period, or $200 total. They are paid through a donor’s phone bill. Higher donations would require that donors identify themselves to the campaigns.

Last week, the Obama campaign set up a similar program that allows contributors to text the word “GIVE” to 62262.

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Connaughty Centre charities ‘need to come up with plan’

The Connaughty Centre in CorbyThe Connaughty Centre has been used by community groups since 1969

Groups that use a community centre in a Northamptonshire town will have to prepare a business plan to keep it open, the county council has said.

Although the authority does not own the Connaughty Centre in Corby, it serviced the building and had staff based there.

Following a consultation period, the Conservative-run council has decided to move its staff from the premises.

The council said the building, also used by charitable organisations and youth groups, was too expensive to run.

‘Corby’s heritage’

A spokesman said: “Over the past six months we have been consulting with those groups and organisations who currently use the Connaughty Centre about options for the building’s future.

“We know that the building is not needed for the delivery of our own services.

“We’ve offered to work with Corby Youth Works to try to develop a business plan that we could then talk to the building’s owners about.”

The building is owned by the Homes Communities Agency.

Carol Copeland is the director of Youth Works Community Interest Company (CIC) which is based at the Connaughty.

She said: “The council does not want the responsibility for maintaining the building any more so we are looking to see if we can take that responsibility on.

“The Connaughty Centre has been a part of Corby’s heritage for the last 40 years and it is the only purpose built youth facility in the county.

“If this building goes then Northamptonshire would have lost what I believe to be the county’s only purpose-built youth facility.”

It first opened as a youth centre in 1969.


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Mental-health group gives nod to helpers

People who have never had a close relationship with someone who has mental-health problems likely will never fully understand the impact they have on lives.

Rob understands.

Rob asked to keep his last name confidential to protect his son’s identity. His son, who at age 5 knew he wanted to be a brain surgeon. Who always got good grades and didn’t get in much trouble. Who entered the pre-med program at CU-Boulder in 2006.

“Within one month, things went really, really awry,” said Rob. “We didn’t know what it was. At first we thought it was drugs. … Now we’re wishing it had been just a drug thing.”

The young man was eventually diagnosed with bipolar disorder. He’d go days without sleeping. His parents took shifts watching him, making sure he stayed safe. Sometimes things got out of hand, and sometimes police were called. Police freaked him out, so sometimes he got taken down.

“It was pretty horrible to watch,” said Rob.

But finally, the right officer arrived – one who had gone through crisis-intervention training. One who took the time and had the knowledge to talk him down, get him help and follow through.

“It was the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen,” said Rob.

Law-enforcement agencies throughout the region have joined forces with Arapahoe/Douglas Mental Health Network and the National Alliance on Mental Illness, among others, to form the Crisis Intervention Teams Association of Colorado.

“The goals of CIT were to train law-enforcement officers in the recognition of mental illness, to enhance their verbal crisis de-escalation skills, and to provide more streamlined access to community-based mental health services,” reads the CITAC website. “By engaging mental-health consumers with appropriate community supports, the well-being of the individual and the safety of the community can both be enhanced.”

On Aug. 28, members from DCSO, Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office, Englewood Police Department, NAMI, ADMHN and more came together to bestow giraffe statuettes upon officers and others who shined throughout the year – getting help for a 14-year-old, meth-addicted, sexually traumatized chronic runaway, for example, or talking a schizophrenic woman out of her bedroom for the first time in days.

“The giraffe can stick its neck out,” said Judith Brody of Nami. “Everyone who gets one today really stuck their neck out.”

Capt. Attila Denes of the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office said in the beginning, the different agencies realized they were all dealing with the same people. It made sense to work together, sharing information and building trust.

“CIT is all about changing systems through collaboration and cross-pollination,” he said. “We didn’t hold the whole pie, we each had a piece of it.”

The statistics show significant changes in the right direction, said Denes, resulting in less criminalization of mental health and fewer police contacts escalating to the point of calling in tactical teams.

Rob says his son is an example of the program’s success; he’s staying on his medication and has a renewed interest in life.

“This is a life-changing curve thrown at them, and that’s why they don’t want to live,” he said.


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Obama Campaigns For Veterans’ Mental Health


Enlarge Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP

Members of the military listen to President Barack Obama during his visit to Fort Bliss, Texas on Friday.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP

Members of the military listen to President Barack Obama during his visit to Fort Bliss, Texas on Friday.

On Friday, President Barack Obama was at Fort Bliss, Texas, where he spoke to troops and met with military families, including some who lost loved ones in Afghanistan.

As that war winds down, the president is ordering additional help for those with invisible battle scars. As a rash of suicides has shown, mental injuries can be just as deadly as a roadside bomb.

Surrounded by soldiers in camouflage fatigues, Obama recalled his last visit to Fort Bliss, exactly two years earlier. That was the day he announced a formal end to combat operations in Iraq.

We are now seeing more deaths among our service members and veterans than we were seeing on the battlefield in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“It was a chance for me to say, on behalf of the American people, to you and all who served there, welcome home, and congratulations on a job well done,” Obama said.

Troops from Fort Bliss were among the last to fight in Iraq, and they’re still fighting in Afghanistan. By next month, though, when the last of the Afghan “surge” troops withdraw, Obama says the U.S. will have only a third as many troops in those countries as it did four years ago. He promised additional services for returning troops as they cope with the mental damage left by those wars.

“Just as we give you the best equipment and technology on the battlefield, we need to give you the best support and care when you come home,” the president said.

Hiring More Help For Veterans

Obama signed an executive order on Friday, directing the Veterans Administration to hire 1,600 new mental health professionals, and to expand the capacity of its crisis line so those who are in crisis can see a counselor within 24 hours.

“This is an unexpected and very positive move in the right direction,” said Paul Sullivan, the former executive director of Veterans for Common Sense. “It’s not just a step. It’s a huge leap.”

Five years ago, Veterans for Common Sense sued the VA over inadequate care. Sullivan says there’s an urgent need for additional help. On average, 18 veterans and one active-duty service member take their own lives every day.

Need Help Now?

Call The VA Veteran Crisis Line at 1-800-273-8255.

“We are now seeing more deaths among our service members and veterans than we were seeing on the battlefield in Iraq and Afghanistan,” he says.

In addition to the extra professionals, the VA will hire 800 peer support counselors. The president has also set up a task force to recommend other ways the government can help those suffering from traumatic brain injury and post traumatic stress disorder.

Getting Veterans To Get Help

The White House says money for the additional mental health care will come from existing resources, though the president sought a 10-percent increase in overall VA funding next year.

Sullivan says the administration and Congress should be prepared for an increased mental health care bill. More than 2 million troops have served in Iraq and Afghanistan, often for lengthy and repeated deployments.

“We know that deployment increases the risk of post traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury,” he says. “So it’s going to be really important for veterans listening out there and their family members and friends to come forward and ask for help.”

The Defense Department has already been encouraging service members and veterans to seek the help they need through its “Real Warriors” campaign of video testimonials and public service announcements. Obama says that message will be amplified with a new awareness campaign that will start immediately.

“I know that you join me in saying to everyone who’s ever worn the uniform, if you’re hurting, it’s not a sign of weakness to seek help. It’s a sign of strength,” Obama said. “We’re here to help you stay strong. Army strong. That’s a commitment I’m making to you.”

The U.S. may be turning a page on a decade of war, Obama said, but its responsibility to care for the troops has only just begun.


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Attorney General Coakley probes donations to Lt. Gov. Timothy P. Murray

The employees, who are maintenance workers, testified that they attended three fund-raisers for Murray, giving $100 each time and meeting the lieutenant governor. One of them, Robert Hamilton, also said that former housing boss Michael E. McLaughlin asked him and other employees to help get out the vote for Murray and Governor Deval Patrick on Election Day in 2010.


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Belk Invites Community Nonprofits to Participate in Fall Charity Sale


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PR Web

Charlotte, NC (PRWEB) August 31, 2012

Belk invites schools and other nonprofit organizations in the company’s 16-state market area to participate in its semi-annual Belk Charity Sale, Saturday, November 3, from 6:00 – 10:00 a.m. The four-hour, in-store shopping event offers an excellent fundraising tool for participating organizations and an opportunity for customers to support local charities while taking advantage of special discounts on purchases during the event.

Belk Charity Sale tickets are available now to participating nonprofit organizations for sale in advance of the event. One hundred percent of the proceeds from each $5 ticket sold will be retained by the local charity. There is no limit to the number of tickets charities can sell, or to the amount of money they can raise. Belk will provide tickets and informational materials at no cost to participating organizations.

Beginning Friday, October 26, tickets may also be purchased at Belk stores with all revenues from in-store ticket sales equally divided among participating charities and schools in each local store. In 2011, Belk’s Charity Sale raised more than $10 million for hundreds of participating charitable organizations throughout the South.

On the morning of the Belk Charity Sale, the first 100 customers to arrive at each store will receive a Belk gift card ranging in value from $5 to $100, and a chance to win one of three $1,000 Belk gift cards being awarded company-wide. Also, participating charities and schools will be registered to win one of three $1,000 donations from Belk in a company-wide drawing.

Charity representatives interested in taking part in this one-of-a-kind fundraising event should contact their local Belk store manager for more information. In order to participate in the Belk Charity Sale, organizations must have an IRS Section 501(c)(3) designation from the Internal Revenue Service.

For more information about Belk Charity Sale Fall 2012, please contact your Belk store.

About Belk, Inc.
Charlotte, N.C.-based Belk, Inc. (http://www.belk.com) is the nation’s largest privately owned mainline department store company with 303 Belk stores located in 16 Southern states. The company was founded in 1888 by William Henry Belk in Monroe, N.C., and is in the third generation of Belk family leadership. Its belk.com Web site offers a wide assortment of fashion apparel, shoes and accessories for the entire family along with top name cosmetics, a wedding registry and a large selection of quality merchandise for the home. To connect with Belk via Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, blog, mobile phone text messages or by email, go to:Belk Get Connected.

Modern. Southern. Style.
Belk seeks to satisfy the modern Southern lifestyle like no one else, so that our customers get the fashion they desire and the value they deserve. Our vision is for the modern Southern woman to count on Belk first – for her, for her family, for life.

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Notes on President Obama's Fort Bliss visit

During President Barack Obama’s third visit to Fort Bliss on Friday he spoke about several issues included providing better access to mental-health care, and sequestration, a process that was part of the congressional debt reduction deal. Here are a few highlight from the president’s visit.

Tweets from the tarmac at Biggs:

  • Air Force One lands at 11:30 a.m. at Biggs Army Airfield.
  • After Obama descends from the plane by himself, he is greeted by U.S. Rep. Silvestre Reyes, D-El Paso, and the following Army officials: Maj. Gen Dana J.H. Pittard, commanding general of the 1st Armored Division and of Fort Bliss; Gen. Lloyd J. Austin III, vice chief of staff for the Army; Raymond F. Chandler III, sergeant major of the Army; Command Sgt. Maj. Ronnie R. Kelley.
  • About 100 soldiers and their family members situated on the tarmac boisterously greeted Obama as he walked over to shake their hands. The president spent about five minutes at the meet-and-greet, then headed off in the presidential state car for a round-table discussion with soldiers who have sought treatment for mental-health issues and their family members.
  • More than 20 vehicles were in the president’s motorcade.
  • About 1:30 p.m., Pittard, Austin, Chandler and Kelley arrive back on the tarmac after Obama’s speech and ahead of the presidential motorcade.
  • Just after 2 p.m., the president’s motorcade arrives on the tarmac. Obama says goodbye to Pittard, Austin, Chandler and Kelley, then ascends the stairs to Air Force One before giving a quick wave to members of local media.
  • Pittard speaking to local reporters after Air Force One departs said the president’s commitment to behavioral health care for veterans is “very encouraging..
  • “We have a president who cares about soldiers and their families,” Pittard said. “We’re very impressed with the new initiatives coming out of the White House.”

    Tweets from 1st Aviation Support Battalion Hangar:

  • There are 5,000 soldiers and family members waiting in the heat for President Obama to speak.
  • Soldiers from the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division are sitting on the risers. These soldiers are expected to deploy to Afghanistan in fall.
  • The soldiers have been on their feet for about 3 hours. After hours on their feet, some sat down on the floor. Women in heels took off their shoes. More than 200 soldiers outside the hangar are sitting on tanks. There are also a few soldiers sitting in a helicopter nearby waiting for the President.
  • At 1 p.m., president Obama arrives. On his way up to the podium he shakes the hands of several soldiers from the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division.
  • Prior to giving his speech, Obama acknowledged those in Louisiana who are being threatened by Hurricane Isaac..
  • “As a country, we stand united with our fellow Americans in their hour of need,” Obama said.

  • Obama begins to speak about the reason why he’s here: “I’ve come back to Bliss for a simple reason,” Obama said. “Two years ago, I was here to mark a historic moment in the life of our nation and our military — the end of major combat operations in Iraq.”
  • Obama then speaks about the war in Afghanistan: “This is still a very tough fight. You know this..
  • “Just as we did in Iraq, we are going to end this war responsibly,” Obama said.

  • President then touches briefly upon cuts Congress has proposed to the military budget..
  • “There’s no reason those cuts should happen because folks in Congress ought to come together and agree on a responsible plan that reduces the deficit and keeps our military strong.”

  • The President then speaks about a new executive order he has signed that will provide better access to mental-health care for the soldiers and their families: “We need to give you some support when you come home.”
  • Obama also talks about providing better access to higher education: “When you take off that uniform, we will help you participate in our economy,” he said. “…If you’ve been a medic in theater (action) you shouldn’t have to start at nursing 101 if you decide you want to go into the medical profession here in the United States. If you’ve been a mechanic on a multimillion-dollar piece of equipment, you shouldn’t have to come back and start all over again in getting credentialed to work on a car here in the United States.”
  • Obama then transitions to speak about assisting soldiers into the civilian work force: “After fighting for America, you shouldn’t have to fight for a job in America..
  • Soldiers respond to his remarks with “Hooah.”

  • Obama ends his speech by staying that the war in Iraq is over and the transition to ending the war in Afghanistan is under way. On his way out, Obama shakes the hands of the soldiers and their families. Soldiers take out their smartphones and cameras and attempt to get a photo of the president.
  • Before the speech, the three families of fallen soldiers Staff Sgt. Robert “Junior” Loeza, Sgt. Velton Locklear, and Sgt. Isela Rubalcava met privately with President Barack Obama. Afterward, family members of the fallen soldiers spoke to the media:.
  • “He gave us his condolences and he said that he would be there if we needed anything,” said his father Roberto Loeza. “Sadly, I have to say that it even though it hurts, I shouldn’t be here — my son should be here. He’s the one that earned the honor.”

    Alex Hinojosa may be reached at ahinojosa@elpasotimes.com; 546-6137.

    Hayley Kappes may be reached at 546-6168; hkappes@elpasotimes.com.


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    Mental health hospital shuts doors, patients moved

    MONTGOMERY, AL (WSFA) -

    60 people are out of a job as a state health facility shuts its doors. Greil Hospital on Upper Wetumpka Road closed August 31st. It’s all part of a plan to reduce the state mental health department’s expenses. But some staff members believe it will hurt the community.

    “Almost disbelief,” says Dr. James Edwards, a psychiatrist at Greil Hospital.

    Dr. Edwards fears losing the hospital could hurt the community.

    “Seems to be one of the only ones in the central part of the state. A hospital facility that’s really going to be missed I think because there aren’t enough hospital beds in the area.”

    He doesn’t understand why the facility must close when the state pays very little to use the building.

    “I personally don’t see how it could be cost effective.”

    “It is not the facility cost it’s the operational cost,” says State Mental Health Commissioner Jim Reddoch.

    Reddoch says operating Greil Hospital costs $10-million dollars per year.  It’s money he admits isn’t in the budget.

    Closing Greil and Searcy Hospital in Mobile County should save the department roughly $20-million dollars each year.

    But what happens to the patients?

    “They’ve gone to group homes, intermediate care homes, crisis stabilization units,” adds Reddoch.

    Some have also been transferred to other state hospitals.

    “They all have a place to go. They all have after care supports in place when they walk out the door.”

    But even that care could be in jeopardy pending the outcome of the statewide vote on a proposed constitutional amendment to take money from a state savings account to balance the General Fund budget.

    If it isn’t passed, Reddoch says the savings generated from closing the hospital wouldn’t make any difference.

    “This is a critical vote for the future of our state.”

    The Mental Health Department is currently diverting some of the savings to community mental health centers so when they receive patients from the closed hospitals, these centers have the funds to care for them.

    There are no current plans for the Greil Hospital building. Officials say they have considered using it for community health services, but haven’t made a decision.

    Copyright 2012  WSFA 12 News.  All rights reserved.


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    Tax incentives have not increased organ donations: study

    With more than 100,000 people on waiting lists for organs, states are using tax breaks to encourage people to donate organs. But such tactics aren’t working, according to a new study published in the American Journal of Transplantation.

    The researchers looked at trends before and after the time-frame of 2004 and 2008, when fifteen states introduced tax deductions. The study found no significant change in donation rates.

    But this doesn’t mean the tax breaks should be stopped. “They’re worth keeping if they unload the financial burden from people who have already decided to donate,” the study’s team leader, Massachusetts General Hospital’s Dr. Atheendar Venkataramani told the Daily News.

    23-YEAR-OLD MAN WITH AUTISM DENIED HEART TRANSPLANT

    The researcher suggested three possible explanations for the lack of difference: a deduction may not cover the cost of donation, the public might not be aware of the policies or otherwise-willing donors may have already been persuaded by previous interventions — effectively depleting the donor pool.

    Discovering new avenues to increase donations is fraught with challenges. “The tricky thing in the U.S. is that there is an ethical resistance to outright paying for donors. We need to work within the political and ethical restraints that we share as a society,” notes Venkataramani.

    One politically feasible option may be the paired-organ market. This addresses a frequent problem with donations: a person might want to give their organ to a loved one, who needs one, but can’t because there isn’t enough of a biological match between the two individuals.

    NURSE ACCIDENTALLY THROWS AWAY HEALTHY DONOR KIDNEY DURING SURGERY

    But if another pair of donor and recipient that do match the first set can be found, then they can trade with each other — ending up with two viable transplants.

    Through such a paired-donor market, individuals can help people they don’t know, understanding that the action helps the person they do know. “It’s an issue of semantics… It’s a way to make anonymous donations personal,” Venkataramani said.

    Taking this one step more, a chain-donation system would extend participants beyond two donors and two recipients. This system might lead to even better results. Alvin Roth, an economist at Harvard University, for instance, has described how such large donor-chains could produce more transplants.

    HOSPITAL HELPS POST-TRANSPLANT TEEN EASE LONELINESS WITH ‘CAT IMMERSION’

    Another feasible tactic, Venkataramani said, would be changing our donation system from one in which people choose to join to one that people choose to leave. Many people in the United States want to become organ donors but never get around to it. In a number of European countries, for example people often default into donating because there is a slight cost to opting out.

    “Let’s say you want to be an organ donor,” Venkataramani said, “but you need to fill out paperwork to legally become one. It’s a small nuisance, so you might procrastinate and never get around to it. If you have to opt out, it’s still a small nuisance but in the other direction.”

    With thousands waiting for transplants, suggest these the researchers, such approaches proved a better better to boost donations compared with the present tax-based strategies.

    mwalsh@nydailynews.com


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