A key component in the dehospitalization of persons with chronic mental illnesses and their translocation to a wide range of settings has been the shift from state to federal funding encouraged by the Social Security Administration\u27s restrictions on funding for institutions for mental diseases (IMDs), usually referred to as the IMD exclusion. The overall effect of the exclusion, which limits federal funding for mentally ill patients receiving care in many settings, including state psychiatric hospitals, has been to create incentives for states to move patients out of state hospitals, which has contributed to homelessness and inappropriate incarceration. The author traces the background and development of the IMD exclusion, starting with ...
This dissertation is an analysis of social mental health policy pertaining to the treatment of indiv...
If there are any objective truths about society, one may be that where there is an established socie...
General hospitals are becoming the safety net provider for the seriously mentally ill (SMI) in the U...
The opioid epidemic, the high prevalence of mental illness among prison inmates, and the national sh...
This report examines the Medicaid Institutions for Mental Disease (IMD) exclusion, one of the very f...
Since deinstitutionalization occurred in the 1960’s, the United States’ overcrowded yet underfunded ...
Approximately 3.4% of Americans have a mental health condition and suicide is the 10th leading cause...
Deinstitutionalization was a mass movement away from institutional-focused mental healthcare in the ...
Anecdotal evidence suggests that the Federal IMD exclusion has resulted in states opting to shift co...
Over the past 20 years, state mental health agencies have shifted the bulk of funding for community ...
Over the past 20 years, state mental health agencies have shifted the bulk of funding for community ...
The financing of continuing care of chronic psychiatric patients is a universal problem. In every co...
In all the furor over the provision of health care in the United States-especially over who will pay...
Under the aegis of President John Kennedy, Congress first began to concern itself with the needs of ...
In 1963, under President John F. Kennedy, federal legislation was passed toward developing new metho...
This dissertation is an analysis of social mental health policy pertaining to the treatment of indiv...
If there are any objective truths about society, one may be that where there is an established socie...
General hospitals are becoming the safety net provider for the seriously mentally ill (SMI) in the U...
The opioid epidemic, the high prevalence of mental illness among prison inmates, and the national sh...
This report examines the Medicaid Institutions for Mental Disease (IMD) exclusion, one of the very f...
Since deinstitutionalization occurred in the 1960’s, the United States’ overcrowded yet underfunded ...
Approximately 3.4% of Americans have a mental health condition and suicide is the 10th leading cause...
Deinstitutionalization was a mass movement away from institutional-focused mental healthcare in the ...
Anecdotal evidence suggests that the Federal IMD exclusion has resulted in states opting to shift co...
Over the past 20 years, state mental health agencies have shifted the bulk of funding for community ...
Over the past 20 years, state mental health agencies have shifted the bulk of funding for community ...
The financing of continuing care of chronic psychiatric patients is a universal problem. In every co...
In all the furor over the provision of health care in the United States-especially over who will pay...
Under the aegis of President John Kennedy, Congress first began to concern itself with the needs of ...
In 1963, under President John F. Kennedy, federal legislation was passed toward developing new metho...
This dissertation is an analysis of social mental health policy pertaining to the treatment of indiv...
If there are any objective truths about society, one may be that where there is an established socie...
General hospitals are becoming the safety net provider for the seriously mentally ill (SMI) in the U...