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    • What We Want --- SAMHSA Grant Opportunities Due Jan. 22, 2019
    • Anti-Social Personality Disorder >
      • DECONSTRUCTING ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITY DISORDER AND PSYCHOPATHY: A GUIDELINES-BASED APPROACH TO PREJUDICIAL PSYCHIATRIC LABELS [Hofstra Law Review 2013]
      • Personality Disorders -- Unscientific & Vague -- Must Be Reformed
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      • Job Accommodation Network on Executive Functioning Deficits
    • Medicaid & Medicare Network Adequacy >
      • OIG: STATE STANDARDS FOR ACCESS TO CARE IN MEDICAID MANAGED CARE (Sept. 2014)
      • OIG: ACCESS TO CARE: PROVIDER AVAILABILITY IN MEDICAID MANAGED CARE (Dec. 2014)
      • GAO 15-710: MEDICARE ADVANTAGE: Actions Needed to Enhance CMS Oversight of Provider Network Adequacy (Aug. 2015)
      • CMS: Promoting Access in Medicaid and CHIP Managed Care: A Toolkit for Ensuring Provider Network Adequacy and Service Availability (April 2017)
    • Medicaid Mental Health & Substance Use Disorder Parity >
      • CMS Parity Compliance Toolkit Applying Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Parity Requirements to Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Programs [Jan. 17, 2017]
      • Frequently Asked Questions: Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Parity Final Rule for Medicaid and CHIP [CMS October 11, 2017]
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      • Statement of the Department of Justice on Enforcement of the Integration Mandate of Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act and Olmstead v. L.C. (2011)
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      • Olmstead Nation ---State Pages: How Far to Comply with Olmstead?
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  • Mental Health By The Numbers
  • New Science Is Amazing AND It Has HUGE Moral Implications for Our Society: NOW
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  • Double V
  • " 'Defund the Police" Means 'Invest in the Resources Our Communities Need' " or Don't Cost Shift to the Police
  • VAGUE OLMSTEAD PLANS, EXPENSIVE LITIGATION
  • Updating & Reforming our Understanding & Treatment of "Anti-Social Personality Disorder" Blog
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  • CO HB22-1278
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  • Substance Issues & the Immune System


​An Orchid Series

 a wide-ranging potpourri to make reform easy

1.  Science Up

       This is pretty controversial advice in the mental health community, given the long sorry history of people with "mental illness" used unsuccessfully as guinea pigs for the newest, latest greatest idea.
           (See Mental Health Advocate Amy Smith's Rebuttal to some of our previous "science-based" arguments)
          Having said that the mental health profession is currently clinging to some pretty demonstrably out-moded ideas such as those contained in the DSM-5 which most mental health advocates aren't happy about either.
            (Dr. Tom Insel, then head of the National Institute of Mental Health states the DSM-5 "lacks validity" :

              
"The weakness is its lack of validity. Unlike our definitions of ischemic heart disease, lymphoma, or AIDS, the DSM diagnoses are based on a consensus about clusters of clinical symptoms, not any objective laboratory measure.

"In the rest of medicine, this would be equivalent to creating diagnostic systems based on the nature of chest pain or the quality of fever.

"Indeed, symptom-based diagnosis, once common in other areas of medicine, has been largely replaced in the past half century as we have understood that symptoms alone rarely indicate the best choice of treatment.

​"Patients with mental disorders deserve better.   NIMH has launched the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) project to transform diagnosis by incorporating genetics, imaging, cognitive science, and other levels of information to lay the foundation for a new classification system."

  https://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/directors/thomas-insel/blog/2013/transforming-diagnosis.shtml

          Further, some members of the mental health profession are waltzing into court and testifying to all kinds of things they couldn't possibly know.

           We really do need to get the mental health profession on a sounder scientific footing that is being done on a variety of fronts including the National Institute of Mental Health's RDoC Program.
 


More from the National Institute of Mental Health

          "This approach (RDoC) began with several assumptions:
  • A diagnostic approach based on the biology as well as the symptoms must not be constrained by the current DSM categories,
  • Mental disorders are biological disorders involving brain circuits that implicate specific domains of cognition, emotion, or behavior,
  • Each level of analysis needs to be understood across a dimension of function,
  • Mapping the cognitive, circuit, and genetic aspects of mental disorders will yield new and better targets for treatment.

"It became immediately clear that we cannot design a system based on biomarkers or cognitive performance because we lack the data.

"In this sense, RDoC is a framework for collecting the data needed for a new nosology. But it is critical to realize that we cannot succeed if we use DSM categories as the “gold standard.”

"The diagnostic system has to be based on the emerging research data, not on the current symptom-based categories.

"Imagine deciding that EKGs were not useful because many patients with chest pain did not have EKG changes. That is what we have been doing for decades when we reject a biomarker because it does not detect a DSM category.

"We need to begin collecting the genetic, imaging, physiologic, and cognitive data to see how all the data – not just the symptoms – cluster and how these clusters relate to treatment response.

"That is why NIMH will be re-orienting its research away from DSM categories. "

 
https://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/directors/thomas-insel/blog/2013/transforming-diagnosis.shtml 

​         
​​
Neuroscience News
Brains of People With Schizophrenia Related Disorders Aren’t All the Same

https://neurosciencenews.com/schizophrenia-neurobiology-10430/
​

Canadian researchers say:
​
 "It turned out that the relationship between brain function and social behaviour had nothing to do with conventional diagnostic categories in the DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders).”

the clinical competence problems & horrible ethical problems with regard to the DSM 5 have really been evident for awhile.  The Truth is Orchid pretty much just riffs off the research community in our criticisms.

Telling a profession with no bandwidth left to address Such a significant & complicated problem is not going very far.  And maybe it should give us some insight into individuals as well.

We need congress to fund comprehensive & timely integration of Research & Clinical Practice and have a clear mechanism to deal with the kind of huge ethical issues presented when the research & clinical practice don't match up.

The National Institute of Mental Health's Research domain Criteria Program [RDoc] is great -- but we need these ethical issues addressed now.

​Most clinicians are stretched to the limit.  If there are huge changes that need to be made -- & there are -- Clinicians are going to need a lot of support from the research community -- & both the research Community & Clinicians will need support from Congress and the states.

​

Picture
GeneSight has a contract with the US Dept. of Veterans' Affairs to provide pharmacogenomic testing to help guide clinicians’ medication decisions for veterans being treated for behavioral health conditions.   https://genesight.com/va/

List of Medications for which GeneSight provides pharmacogenomic testing:

https://genesight.com/patients/medications-and-genes-tested/  

​
Mental disorders are among the most complex problems in medicine, with challenges at every level from neurons to neighborhoods.

Yet, we know so little about mechanisms at each level. Too often, we have been guided more by religion than science.

That is, so much of mental health care is based on faith and intuition, not science and evidence.

On the plus side, we put a premium on listening and compassion. We help people to change through understanding.

But not enough of our care has been standardized to a high level of quality, as expected in the rest of medicine.


                                               ------------Dr. Tom Insel, Director of the National Institute of Mental Health from his October 2014 Blog Atonement
 
Your Brain Is More Than A Bag of Chemicals

​Cal-Tech Neuroscientist David Anderson's welcome talk on among other things the reason why many psychiatric medications do not work very well and can even do damage -- they are not targeted to specific neural circuits but to the brain globally.


​Our Take

Psychiatric Medication is an extremely complicated topic that is usually dealt with very simplistically by clinicians, individuals, attorneys, advocates and judges.

We Can't Put Up With That Anymore


    If we start to get "REAL" about the complexity of psychiatric medication, there is much more of a chance of "REAL" partnership between clinicians and the people they are trying to treat.

     Below are some of our thoughts on pharmacogenetic testing and making reform "easy." 

       Again, there are a whole lot of people, a whole lot of mental health professionals, a whole lot of county attorneys, and a lot of judges that generally think everything would be just great if that recalcitrant person with a "mental illness" would just take the psychiatric medication like he or she was supposed to.


              Of course, according to the New York Times we have 1 in 6 adults in the US saying they have taken psychiatric medication.
  
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/12/health/one-in-6-american-adults-say-they-have-taken-psychiatric-drugs-report-says.html?_r=0
​

                Further, at least sometimes, there are significant "reasons" why people may be resisting certain medications beyond mere delusion.

                 We really are having to come to terms with the incredible need for individualized medicine, and certainly individualized psychiatric medicine.

                  Using the buying power of the VA (which is being done) and Medicaid, we could really:
  • drive down the costs for genetic testing for psychiatric medication in appropriate cases;
  • lead to much greater confidence in psychiatric medication recommendations; and
  • could greatly shorten the time in finding an appropriate treatment regimen which can sometimes take years, if it is ever found at all.
  • P.S.  The National Institute for Mental Health has indicated that in some cases less may be more when it comes to anti-psychotics.
​           https://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/directors/thomas-insel/blog/2013/antipsychotics-taking-the-long-view.shtml

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  • Home
    • About Orchid >
      • Why Orchid?
      • ORCHID'S SYSTEMIC FOCUS & "ROOT CAUSE" ANALYSIS APPROACH TO PROBLEM SOLVING WITH A COMMITMENT TO CREATIVITY & INNOVATION
      • Disclaimers, Limitations and An Invitation
      • Orchid Board
      • Orchid Book Club
      • Conjecture, Science & Translational Research & Medicine
      • Orchid Themes & Symbols
      • The Tipping Point
      • Orchid's Website Advertising Policy
      • Statement for Potential Website Contributors
      • Contact
  • Blogs
    • Val's Blog
    • Val's Blog 2
    • ​TRANSLATIONAL/ ​TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE MONDAY
    • NEURO-DIVERSITY Wednesday
    • Olmstead Law & Order Thursday
    • Translational Medicine Friday
    • Translational Love, Relationships & Neuro-Diversity Saturday
  • Orchid's A-Z Index
    • Crisis Services in CO, the US & Around the World
    • Assertive Community Treatment & Flexible ACT Index
    • Housing & Homelessness Index
    • Criminal Justice
    • Innovation Index
    • For More: See the Main Orchid Index Page
  • US Federal
    • THE IMD RULE & ADMIN. ENFORCEMENT OF DISABILITY CIVIL RIGHTS LAWS
    • Medicaid & Supportive Housing & Housing-Related Services
    • CMS' FAILURE TO COVER HOUSING FOR LTC & THE IMD RULE: WHAT THEY HAVE IN COMMON IS DISCRIMINATION
    • National Take
  • Research & Translational Medicine
    • Immunology & Mental Health >
      • Alcoholism & the Immune System & Mental Health
      • Brain Injury, the Immune System & Mental Health
      • Celiac Disease & Sensitivities, the Immune System & Mental Illness
      • Mental Illness & The Immune System
      • Racial Discrimination & the Immune System & Mental Health
      • Trauma & the Immune System & Mental Health
      • ***Physical Health Issues, the Immune System & Mental Health Index
    • University of Chicago: Institute of Translational Medicine
  • Hot Topics
    • What We Want --- SAMHSA Grant Opportunities Due Jan. 22, 2019
    • Anti-Social Personality Disorder >
      • DECONSTRUCTING ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITY DISORDER AND PSYCHOPATHY: A GUIDELINES-BASED APPROACH TO PREJUDICIAL PSYCHIATRIC LABELS [Hofstra Law Review 2013]
      • Personality Disorders -- Unscientific & Vague -- Must Be Reformed
    • Executive Functioning & "Prison Brain" >
      • Job Accommodation Network on Executive Functioning Deficits
    • Medicaid & Medicare Network Adequacy >
      • OIG: STATE STANDARDS FOR ACCESS TO CARE IN MEDICAID MANAGED CARE (Sept. 2014)
      • OIG: ACCESS TO CARE: PROVIDER AVAILABILITY IN MEDICAID MANAGED CARE (Dec. 2014)
      • GAO 15-710: MEDICARE ADVANTAGE: Actions Needed to Enhance CMS Oversight of Provider Network Adequacy (Aug. 2015)
      • CMS: Promoting Access in Medicaid and CHIP Managed Care: A Toolkit for Ensuring Provider Network Adequacy and Service Availability (April 2017)
    • Medicaid Mental Health & Substance Use Disorder Parity >
      • CMS Parity Compliance Toolkit Applying Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Parity Requirements to Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Programs [Jan. 17, 2017]
      • Frequently Asked Questions: Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Parity Final Rule for Medicaid and CHIP [CMS October 11, 2017]
    • Olmstead Disability Rights >
      • Statement of the Department of Justice on Enforcement of the Integration Mandate of Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act and Olmstead v. L.C. (2011)
      • Comprehensive Olmstead Planning
      • the Logical Long Term Consequences of our failure to provide Intensive Community MH Treatment
      • Olmstead Nation ---State Pages: How Far to Comply with Olmstead?
  • Take A Walk Around Orchid's Resource Block
  • Colorado Abuse & Neglect Scandals Involving People with Disabilities
  • Mental Health By The Numbers
  • New Science Is Amazing AND It Has HUGE Moral Implications for Our Society: NOW
  • Olmstead & Homelessness
  • Double V
  • " 'Defund the Police" Means 'Invest in the Resources Our Communities Need' " or Don't Cost Shift to the Police
  • VAGUE OLMSTEAD PLANS, EXPENSIVE LITIGATION
  • Updating & Reforming our Understanding & Treatment of "Anti-Social Personality Disorder" Blog
  • Reform of " Anti-Social Personality Disorder" in Criminal Justice
  • CO HB22-1278
  • New Understandings Matter
  • Mental Health, Ethics & Law
  • CO Olmstead Disability Homeless Law & Policy Project
  • Inflammation, the Immune System, Neuro-Developmental Disorders, Psychiatric Disorders, Substance Use Issues & Chronic Disease
  • Microglia and the Brain's Immune System
  • Substance Issues & the Immune System