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News & Announcements
ONC Clarifies Policy on Substance Abuse E-records and Privacy (posted 7/7)
Posted: July 07, 2010
The Health and Human Services Department has published guidelines on the conditions under which records pertaining to a patient’s alcohol and drug abuse can be shared via electronic health information exchange systems. A 30-year old federal law has protected the confidentiality of substance abuse patient records and prohibited their disclosure without the patient’s consent. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) and the Office of the National Coordinator (ONC) this week published a set of frequently asked questions to clarify how healthcare providers and other organizations can apply the regulations specifically to electronic health records and HIE, reports Government Health IT. To download the guidelines and FAQs from the SAMHSA website click here.
Journal Issue Focuses on Social Determinants of Children’s Mental Health (posted 7/7)
Posted: July 07, 2010
The May 2010 issue of the Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved (JHCPU) focuses on the social determinants of children’s health and mental health. This is the second issue of a two-part series highlighting this issue area. To view the May 2010 Part II issue online click here. To view the November 2009 Part I issue online click here.
Articles Include: - Views of Young, Rural African Americans of the Role of Community Social Institutions in HIV Prevention
- Social Determinants of Mental Health Treatment among Haitian, African American, and White Youth in Community Health Centers
- Assessing Racial/Ethnic Differences in the Social Consequences of Early-Onset Psychiatric Disorder
- The Impact of New Health Insurance Coverage on Undocumented and Other Low-Income Children: Lessons from Three California Counties
How to Engage Black Men in the HIV/AIDS Fight (posted 7/7)
Posted: July 07, 2010
This essay by CEO and Founder of the Black AIDS Institute is the third in a series of editorials about the critical role that Black men play in ending the AIDS epidemic in Black America. Part 1 described three reasons that Black men matter in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Next we explored why Black men - particularly heterosexuals, but in recent years HIV-negative gay men as well - have largely been absent from the effort to end the epidemic. Here Phil Wilson examines what needs to change to engage Black men, whether straight, gay, bisexual or questioning. To read the essay click here.
SAMHSA Hosts First Ever Pride Month Event (posted 7/5)
Posted: July 05, 2010
SAMHSA recently held its first ever LGBT Pride Month event, which was attended by over 100 individuals from various federal agencies including SAMHSA, community members, and national organizations. SAMHSA leadership and invited guests discussed key behavioral health issues for LGBT populations: the impact of the Network for LGBT Tobacco Control; substance abuse and LGBT populations; provider perspectives on addressing the need of LGBTQ youth; and assets-based approaches to LGBT populations and behavioral health. This was followed by reflections from audience members and discussants from the National Coalition for LGBT Health; the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors; the American Psychological Association, Society for the Psychological Study of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Issues (Div. 44}; and the National Gay & Lesbian Task Force. - To download the agenda from the event click here.
- To download Dr. Gamache's presentation: Part 1 (10MB), Part 2 (10MB).
- To download Dr. Libby's presentation click here (3MB).
- To download Dr. Scout's presenation click here (1.3MB).
Presenters: - Peter Gamache, Ph.D. Candidate conducts research, monitoring, and evaluation. He produces national and regional needs assessments, evaluates outreach, testing, and treatment programs, develops educational curricula, and is a collaborative partner with federal, state, and community‐ and faith-based organizations. His professional experience includes serving as the national evaluator of initiatives administered by SAMHSA, HRSA, and the CDC. As a former at‐risk youth, he received the Turnaround Achievement Award from his middle school at the age of 13. He is currently completing a Ph.D. at the University of South Florida, College of Education, Department of Psychological & Social Foundations that focuses on cross‐cultural health education for youth. Having worked as a research faculty member at the University of South Florida (USF) on multiple research and evaluation projects and a consultant for non‐profits in Washington, DC, Peter's experience includes cross‐system program design and implementation for marginalized youth across the United States. Peter serves on the SAMHSA National Evaluation Team for the National Evaluation of the Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services for Children and Their Families Program and the SAMHSA National Workgroup to Address the Needs of Children and Youth who are Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Questioning, Intersex, Two-Spirit (LGBTQI2-S) and their Families.
- Therissa A. Libby, Ph.D. is a neurobiologist who has studied cellular mechanisms of addictive drugs and addiction. She studied opioid receptors (receptors for heroin and similar drugs) at the University of Minnesota and mechanisms of psychostimulants (cocaine and amphetamines) in the Integrative Neuroscience Section at the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). Dr. Libby is now primarily an educator. She has her own company as an author and continuing education facilitator, and is a part-time faculty member in Psychology at Towson University in Baltimore, Maryland. Prior to her career in research, Dr. Libby worked in addiction treatment for twelve years, specializing in continuing care, women's treatment, and HIV/AIDS prevention and intervention. She has presented at numerous regional, national and international conferences as well as local workshops for addiction professionals. Her published works include Heroin: The Basics and co-authorship (with Humberto Fernandez) of Heroin.
- Scout, Ph.D. is the Director of the Network for LGBT Tobacco Control, the Director of Science Policy for the National Coalition for LGBT Health, and an Adjunct Assistant Clinical Professor at Boston University School of Public Health. He specializes in transgender health, tobacco, social determinants, health disparities, surveillance, and HIV. As Director of The Network he leads a team of four who provide a variety of support, training, and technical assistance services for tobacco control professionals and policymakers in all health arenas. Dr. Scout has been advocating for greater inclusion of LGBTs in federal health policies for over ten years. He is a co-author of the Gay And Lesbian Medical Association Provider Guidelines for LGBT Care and of an online LGBT cultural competency training, also offered by GLMA. In 2007, Scout was one of the first recipients of the community service award from the National Coalition for LGBT Health, in 2008 he received the President’s Award from the National Association of Gay and Lesbian Addiction Professionals. Scout is an openly transgender father of three living in a small town in Rhode Island. The Network for LGBT Tobacco Control is a project of The Fenway Institute at Fenway Community Health in Boston, MA.
- Durryle Brooks, M.A. is the Program Manager for GLBTQ Initiatives. Over the last seven years, Durryle has studied the intersections of race, gender, sexuality, and religion—closely examining the impact of those interconnections on the development of GLBTQ people. At Advocates, Durryle oversees the Anti-Homophobia and Transphobia Project, which provides capacity building assistance to community based organizations seeking to better serve the needs of GLBTQ youth of color. In addition, Durryle oversees YouthResource, a site designed by and for gay, lesbian bisexual, transgender, and questioning young people. The site provides accurate and science-based sexual and reproductive health information for GLBTQ youth in addition to exploring other issues relevant to GLBTQ youth. Durryle received his bachelors of arts degree in religious studies from St. Mary’s College of Maryland and his masters of arts degree in sexuality studies from San Francisco State University.
Photograph Credit: Lombard for News
CDC Launches Routine Primary Care HIV Screening Program (posted 6/28)
Posted: June 28, 2010
On Thursday, June 17, 2010, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention launched a new phase of its Act Against AIDS campaign, "HIV Screening. Standard Care." (HSSC) to assist physicians in making HIV testing a standard part of medical care. HSSC is designed to increase implementation of CDC’s 2006 HIV screening recommendations. These recommendations advise that all patients between the ages of 13 and 64 be tested for HIV as a routine part of medical care at least once – regardless of perceived risk for the disease – and that individuals at high risk (e.g., those with multiple or HIV-infected partners) be tested at least annually. The HSSC website provides both physicians and consumers with information and resources about HIV screening. CDC estimates that more than 200,000 individuals (one in five Americans living with HIV) are unaware of their infection, and primary care providers can play a critical role in ensuring that Americans know their HIV status. Early diagnosis and treatment are key to helping HIV-infected individuals live longer, healthier lives and preventing HIV transmission to others.
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