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March 16, 2007

Research scientist says "Clinicians must recognize stress during pregnancy"

U.K. research scientist Vivette Glover (Imperial College, London) addressed the Royal Society of Medicine's Conference on Reproductive Psychiatry this week, calling for more focus on the way maternal stress during pregnancy impacts the developing fetus.

Glover cited research suggesting that maternal stress during pregnancy may "predispose babies to emotional, behavioral, and cognitive problems in later life," stating, "We need to recognize stress early in prgnancy and we need to provide greater help for reach woman affected by it."

For more on Glover's findings and the latest research on fetal affects of maternal stress, click here.

March 13, 2007

PSI website to share state & local events, educational opps

The Postpartum Support International (PSI) website has a cool new feature under development! Each state support page now has a button announcing training opportunities and other events of interest to professionals, volunteers, and advocates working in the field of maternal mental health.

This new feature is just getting launched, but should be fully functional soon! To check out the state support pages, click here.

January 21, 2007

NIMH director to speak on "prevalence & global impact of depression" at World Economic Forum

Just received this announcement from the press office at the National Institutes of Health (NIH):

WHAT:
Dr. Thomas R. Insel, Director, NIMH, will present on the prevalence and global burden of depression, its enormous economic impact, and new advances in treatment at the World Economic Forum annual meeting. Depression is the leading cause of medical disability for people worldwide age 15-44 according to the World Health Organization's World Health Report on the global burden of disease. Depression is common among the world's population, resulting in significant economic costs. Dr. Insel will also participate in two additional sessions -- one that focuses on funding for mental health research and innovation, and another that addresses urbanization from a public health perspective.

WHEN:
January 24-28, 2007

WHERE:
Davos, Switzerland

WHY:
The World Economic Forum Annual Meeting, "Shaping the Global Agenda -- The Shifting Power Equation." The World Economic Forum is an independent international organization committed to improving the state of the world by engaging leaders in partnerships to shape global, regional and industry agendas. The annual meeting is the Forum's flagship event that engages leaders from business, politics, religious groups and non-government organizations to shape the global, regional and industry agendas.

October 19, 2006

NMHA accepting proposals for 2007 conference in DC

The call has been issued for "Bringing Wellness Home" in 2007:

Who: National Mental Health Association
When: June 6-9, 2007
Where: Hyatt Regency on Capitol Hill, 400 New Jersey Ave., N.W., Washington, DC

NMHA is calling on advocates, consumers, community leaders, researchers and other mental health stakeholders to submit presentation proposals for its 2007 annual meeting. Each year the event brings together over 500 mental health leaders from across the country to strategize on strengthening the nation's mental health movement.

To submit a proposal, click here. The deadline is November 15, 2006.

NMHA will consider presentations for the following areas:

Advocacy - Public policy issues and strategies at the federal, state and local levels to ensure equality, access and quality-of-care for all children and adults with mental health needs.

Education & Outreach - Effective outreach techniques to educate various populations about critical mental health topics from promotion, prevention and intervention perspectives.

Services - Adults & Older Adults - Successful efforts to support the recovery and empowerment of adult and older adult mental health consumers.

Services - Children & Families - Issues surrounding the mental health needs of children and families.

Affiliate Management - The business of running a Mental Health Association, possibly including board development, staffing, leadership, consumer involvement, strategic planning, and marketing membership.

Affiliate Resource Development - Budget management, financial diversification, fundraising. and grant management for Mental Health Associations.

All submitters will be notified about the status of their proposals by January 2007. For more info, contact NMHA at 800.969.NMHA (6642) or send email to: 2007meeting@nmha.org.

May 19, 2006

"Mrs. United States" Edrienne Carpenter Saves the Day

On May 12 I attended a Capitol Hill briefing on perinatal mood disorders organized by a little-known nonprofit group called the Family Mental Health Institute (FMHI). Unfortunantly, the event was neither well-publicized nor particularly well-attended, with almost no press and only a small handful of congressional staffers on hand. I learned about it quite by accident, thanks to my client Judy Meehan, exec director of the National Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition and one of her colleagues at the National Mental Health Association.

The lack of buzz, the poor planning and turnout did not reflect the urgency and importance of women's mental health. Nor, I believe, did it reflect how interested or committed our congressional leaders are in women's health, child health, and family wellbeing. They simply didn't know it was happening. And those who did attend did not get a clear "call to action," so they returned to their offices without a real mandate for doing something about the problem.

Sad, and a bit of a waste. But the up-side is that the small group of us who attended did get to meet and hear the personal story of former "Mrs. United States" Edrienne Carpenter, the guest speaker. As "Mrs. Texas" and "Mrs. United States," Edrienne has used her public visibility to educate about postpartum depression, appearing on The Dr. Phil Show and speaking to community groups across the country.

As a survivor of severe PPD that went undiagnosed and untreated for years, Edrienne has become an unlikely but powerful advocate for accessible diagnosis and treatment, accurate information, and better overall health care for mothers who suffer from perinatal mood disorders. Her story is not uncommon, but her willingness to share its ugliest, most personal details makes for an undiluted wake-up call.

In my view, the two most pressing goals for advocates working toward better perinatal mental health - both of which Edrienne Carpenter alluded to in her Hill address - are:

* Universal, mandatory screening of all women for early PPD detection, as part of basic perinatal medical care, and

* Educated, proactive healthcare providers (ob/gyns, pediatricians, nurses, midwives, doulas, childbirth educators) who take mental health seriously, are capable of recognizing mental health symptoms in their patients, and are capable of treating or referring women.

These goals are hefty but achievable, if we’re willing to build bridges across organizational, disciplinary, and party lines. Perinatal mood disorders are among the most easily-treatable conditions around, once a woman gets professional help. We can prevent needless suffering and damage to families IF all of us who are women, care about women, and work with women agree to work together.

One more silver lining from this under-utilized opportunity on Capitol Hill: Sharon Brigner, an RN and senior director of clinical/medical policy for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), a trade association located in DC, shared good news about the 197 new medications currently under development to treat various psychiatric conditions.

Even more important was the "access issue" Sharon spoke to. For the millions of Americans without health insurance, getting recommended prescriptions filled is a huge problem. For individuals taking psychotropic medications, it is often responsible for them skipping their meds, discontinuing their meds indefinitely, or "rationing" medication - which may cause relapses and serious health consequences. I appreciated the brochure Sharon shared abou the Partnership for Prescription Assistance, which provides needed medications to people who don't have prescription insurance coverage and can't afford what their doctor prescribes. The PPARx program provides 2,500 medications free or "nearly free." To find out if you qualify, call their toll-free hotline: 1.888.4PPA.NOW (1.888.477.2669). There are Spanish-speaking counselors available on the hotline, too - Hablamos Espanol!