Sunday, October 25, 2009

Reps. Rooney and McMahon Introduces CARES Act to Allow for LMHC TRICARE

Press Release from the American Mental Health Counselor Association:

Independence 10/16/09 Alexandria, VA- October 16, 2009-

AMHCA commends Reps. Tom Rooney (R-Fl), a member of the U.S. House of Representatives Armed Services Committee, and Michael McMahon (D-NY), a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee, for today introducing legislation that would strip TRICARE of its licensed mental health counselor “supervision and referral” requirement, thus giving TRICARE beneficiaries immediate access to licensed mental health counselors. This legislation, appropriately titled the CARES Act, “The Counselor Accessibility Reform and Expansion for Soldiers Act,” would permit TRICARE beneficiaries the same direct access to licensed mental health counselors currently available to numerous beneficiaries of private insurance plans. Disturbing statistics about recurring incidents of post traumatic stress syndrome in soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan inspired Reps. Rooney and McMahon to introduce the CARES Act. Rep. Rooney says, “An important part of properly treating PTSD and other mental health problems facing our soldiers is to ensure them access to professional counselors.” Rep. McMahon identifies “face to face counseling with mental health professionals” as the means to ensuring America’s men and women of the Armed Forces “adequate, efficient mental health services.”

Before the genesis of the CARES Act, Congress tasked the Institutes of Medicine (IOM) to convene a panel and hold several meetings to make a recommendation to Congress as to whether to retain or strip TRICARE of its current “supervision and referral” requirement for licensed mental health counselors. The IOM panel has not yet issued a recommendation to Congress, and it is not expected to for several months.

AMHCA is committed to working with Reps. Rooney and McMahon, in addition to responding to the needs of the IOM TRICARE panel, to see the elimination of TRICARE’s current “supervision and referral” requirement for licensed mental health counselors.

Contact AMHCA Director of Legislative Affairs, Julie A. Clements, J.D., at jclements@amhca.org for more information

Monday, October 19, 2009

Please send letter to Congress:

Letter to Congressional Delegation

October 15, 2009

Dear Congress man/woman:

Daily headlines capture the attention of readers about declining state revenues, severe cutbacks in local aid, layoffs in state and municipal workforces, and reduced consumer spending. The headlines and the stories give only occasional play that the state’s fiscal condition has had on the safety nets low-income people rely upon for survival.

We are writing to you to ask you to put a continuation of the federal stimulus funding on the front burner for 2010 and 2011. The U.S. economy’s health cannot recover if fifty state economies continue to restrict spending and reduce growth.

Moreover, the important factor is what happens to people if state economies continue to bleed money, jobs, and services:

Home care services for elders and people with disabilities have been restricted, putting many at risk of going into a nursing home, which have a guaranteed stream of Medicaid funding.

People with disabilities relying on personal care services have their time allocations for toileting, bathing, and dressing cut to satisfy a bureaucratic need to reduce spending.
The service networks built over thirty years to provide non-institutionalized care for people with developmental and intellectual disabilities are broken in key areas, ones that are the linkages that underpin the whole service network: transportation, family support services, and vocational training.

The $1 billion of Federal Medicaid Assistance Percentage monies the Commonwealth applied to the FY10 state budget went a long way to stave off deep spending cuts. However, with the Massachusetts economy still shrinking, the devastation of deep budget cuts is coming within weeks as decreased tax revenues persist.

Renewing and expanding the FMAP stimulus funding is vital and has immediate advantages over construction and other projects. The money can be put to work almost immediately. The multiplier effect of Medicaid spending has been amply documented by leading economists. Finally, it is spent satisfying our national and state goals of “common wealth”.

A representative of our coalition will be calling you shortly to address this issue in person. We trust you will find our message appropriate to carry through the halls of Congress

Signed

Sponsored by www.dpcma.org.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

A Challenge for the Mental Health Profession: Disability History Awareness Month

On October 15th, 2009, at 2 PM at the State House in Boston, the celebration of Disability History Awareness Month will be proclaimed.

Below is the following Law:

AN ACT DESIGNATING DISABILITY HISTORY MONTH.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
D) Chapter 6 of the General Laws, is hereby amended by inserting after section 15K the following section:-

Section 15L. The governor shall annually issue a proclamation setting apart the month of October as Disability History Month to increase awareness and understanding of the contributions made by persons with disabilities. Appropriate state agencies and cities and towns and public schools, colleges and universities shall establish programs designed to educate and promote these objectives.
E) Approved August 26,


Congrats to the Youth with Disabilities Leadership group who lobbied their legislators to pass this bill.

I now ask how the Social Work and Mental Health fields will promote Disability History Awareness Month in the graduate curriculums on the college and university levels and in our profession.

I have been advocating for years that my training course on "Disability Sensitivity Awareness" for mental health and social work professions be approved for CEUs. I have not had any takers due to being told "there is no interest for this training."

OK, colleagues, what can we do to honor Disability History Awareness Month in our professions?

Please let me know.

Robbin Miller, LMHC
Facilitator
www.robbinmiller.vpweb.com