Latest Morning Briefing Stories

Bridging The Gap Between Medical And Mental Health Care

KFF Health News Original

Recognizing the strong link between psychiatric and physical illnesses, providers across the country are integrating primary care into mental health clinics with the help of federal funding.

Study Links Kindergartners’ Stumbles With Rocky Home Lives

KFF Health News Original

Researchers say children are more likely to have trouble learning and behaving in kindergarten if they’ve had adverse childhood experiences at home before age 5.

Latino Youth In California See Significant Rise In Psychiatric Hospitalizations

KFF Health News Original

Some experts say the 86 percent increase in psychiatric hospitalizations since 2007 means preventive care is seriously lacking; others believe reduced stigma has led more kids to accept help.

Medicaid To Fund More Addiction Treatment

KFF Health News Original

Some Medicaid plans will now get federal funding for 15 days of inpatient treatment. But Pennsylvania fears the new rule will close a loophole the state has been using to pay for longer stints.

Mental Health Courts Are Popular But Effectiveness Is Still Unproven

KFF Health News Original

The courts are designed as an alternative for people with mental health issues facing legal charges as a way to get help through community services outside of jail.

Depressed? Look For Help From A Human, Not A Computer

KFF Health News Original

Researchers asked people with depression to use an online cognitive behavioral therapy program at home. It helped no more than primary care visits. Most said they were too depressed to use it.

Stemming The Cycle Of Toxic Stress – For The Kids’ Sake

KFF Health News Original

An Oregon pediatrician is among a growing number of doctors nationally trying to help families whose kids are at risk of experiencing trauma with lifelong health consequences.

Texas Strives To Lure Mental Health Providers To Rural Counties

KFF Health News Original

Over a hundred counties in Texas don’t have a mental health worker, affecting about 3 million Texans. A new loan repayment program may not be enough to recruit them to rural areas.

Why Don’t We Have Mental Health Parity?

KFF Health News Original

The law says insurance companies must pay for mental health benefits the same as they do everything else. Addiction as much as diabetes. Depression as much as cancer. But around the country, consumers are taking their insurers to court saying the companies are refusing to pay up. The insurance providers say mental health is complicated, […]

When Prisons Need To Be More Like Nursing Homes

KFF Health News Original

By 2030, nearly one-third of all inmates will be over 55, the ACLU says, and caring for aged prisoners often costs twice as much as caring for younger ones. Some states – New York, California and Connecticut — are confronting the problem, however, with innovative programs meant to improve care and save money.

Achieving Mental Health Parity: Slow Going Even In ‘Pace Car’ State

KFF Health News Original

California regulators have tried harder than most to make mental health parity laws work but it’s been tough to enforce the rules and gain the cooperation of insurers.

Advocates Say Mental Health ‘Parity’ Law Is Not Fulfilling Its Promise

KFF Health News Original

A landmark federal law requiring insurers to cover mental illness as they would any other disease is not being followed or enforced, say patient advocates and attorneys. Insurers say they have taken “tremendous steps.”

Patrick Kennedy On Moving Mental Health Policy Out Of ‘The Dark Ages’

KFF Health News Original

This former member of Congress wants to change how the nation views mental illness – both in terms of streamlining research for new treatments and improving the mental health care system.

Texas Hopes to Attract More Mental Health Care Workers

KFF Health News Original

The new loan forgiveness program seeks to alleviate the state’s shortage of mental health professionals by luring them to communities that might otherwise be unattractive to new graduates.

Advocates For Disabled Are Troubled By California’s Assisted Suicide Bill

KFF Health News Original

Disability rights advocates say the bill allowing doctors to prescribe lethal medications to terminally ill patients could lead some disabled people to prematurely end their lives.