Latest Morning Briefing Stories

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.

Calming Dementia Patients Without Powerful Drugs

KFF Health News Original

In California nursing homes, just over 15 percent of dementia patients are on antipsychotic drugs. That’s far more than advocates say is necessary. But that number is down from almost 22 percent just three years ago.

NYC Respite Centers Help Keep Mentally Ill Out Of Hospitals

KFF Health News Original

A quiet seven-bedroom facility is one of four publicly funded mental health centers in New York City that provide an alternative to hospital stays for people on the verge of a mental health crisis.

Decoding Your Diagnosis: Psychiatrists Unveil Plain-English Guide For Patients

KFF Health News Original

The American Psychiatric Association is releasing a new resource, Understanding Mental Disorders: Your Guide To DSM-5, to give patients and their families a better understanding of what these conditions involve and arm them with tools to advocate for their care.

When Depression And Cultural Expectations Collide

KFF Health News Original

A teen from a Taiwanese immigrant family struggles with depression as her mother worries and tries to understand. Asian American families like this one often have trouble seeking and finding appropriate treatment.

KHN Video: Momentary Healing

KFF Health News Original

Wynne Lee, 17, struggled with depression and cultural expectations for several years. The teen from Diamond Bar, California, is like many kids from Asian American families who often have trouble finding appropriate treatment.

Rule Proposed On Providing Mental Health ‘Parity’ In Medicaid Program

KFF Health News Original

Seven years after passing a mental health parity law, the federal government issues its first proposal on how public programs such as Medicaid and CHIP should comply.

Battle For Mental Health Parity Produces Mixed Results

KFF Health News Original

Some of the obvious problems, such as separate deductibles for mental health care, have been eliminated. But advocates are concerned about more subtle insurance processes, such as reviews of medical necessity, that could be hampering coverage.

Research Plan Could Drive ‘Culture Change’ In How Mental Illness Is Diagnosed, Treated

KFF Health News Original

The National Institute of Mental Health released a five-year strategic plan that prioritizes the genetics of mental illness, the development of treatments based on those findings and the discovery of brain patterns related to a range of mental health disorders.

Mental Health Providers Look For Federal Incentives To Go Digital, Too

KFF Health News Original

The federal government is spending $26 billion to get doctors and hospitals to move to digital records to help coordinate care, but the funding does not include mental health clinics, psychologists and psychiatric hospitals.