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Published Online: 7 December 2007

Access, Patient-Care Issues Get Assembly Attention

Access to care and advocating to ensure that patients get quality care were among the issues high on the agenda for APA Assembly members at their fall meeting last month in Washington, D.C.
Among the actions taken by the Assembly was endorsing a proposal to have APA support federal and state initiatives to continue health insurance coverage to young adults who lose eligibility to stay on their parents' plan even though they are still dependents. For example, college students who drop out of school because of illness often lose eligibility, while their peers who don't attend college lose coverage when they graduate from high school.
“The issue is of special interest to psychiatry,” the proposal noted, since “late adolescence is the most common age for onset of mental illness, and these illnesses severely impact function, especially cognitive function.” Loss of coverage could seriously disrupt crucial treatment relationships in these individuals.
Anna Holmgren, M.D., received the Assembly's Profile of Courage Award at its meeting last month in Washington, D.C. With her is Laurence Dopkin, M.D., who nominated her. He is the Area 2 deputy representative to the Assembly Committee of ECPs. See story below.
©Sylvia Johnson Photography 2007
One of the highlights of the meeting was the presentation of the Assembly's Profile of Courage Award to Anna Holmgren, M.D. She was recognized for her extensive volunteer work in Baton Rouge and New Orleans immediately after Hurricane Katrina struck in 2005. She closed her New York practice after the storm to spend weeks helping police, other first responders, and victims cope with a life-and-death crisis for which none had planned. During much of this time the conditions under which she lived were brutal, including days sleeping on a cot in a room where the bodies of people who died while sheltered in the Superdome were stored. She noted that her experiences were still extremely difficult to talk about, and she dedicated the award to the police, 911 operators, and others who kept working without sleep or changes of clothes, even after they lost homes, their possessions, and the lives they once led.
On other fronts, the Assembly urged APA to partner with the American Association for Emergency Psychiatry and American College of Emergency Physicians in an effort to solve the problem of overcrowding that plagues many emergency departments, with a particular focus on how psychiatric patients are handled.
The group also voted to urge APA to adopt the position that “patients with acute behavioral problems receive appropriate emergency psychiatric and medical assessment prior to disposition, using procedures that have been recognized as sound by medical professional organizations.” This action was an attempt to prevent patients with serious psychiatric problems from being diverted from emergency departments, or even before they are seen in emergency departments, to facilities that lack “appropriate psychiatric and medical assessment.”
Use of the term “suicidality” also received attention from the Assembly, which endorsed a resolution that APA advocate that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) limit use of the term “suicidal behavior” to medications “that have been demonstrated to be associated with suicide per se.”
The concern about inaccurate use of the term arose in large part because of the FDA's practice of using it in relation to risks that may be associated with antidepressants, particularly in young people. The studies on which the FDA based its decision to mandate additional warnings on antidepressant labels, however, did not find an increase in suicides. The background to the Assembly proposal points out that in some patients, the willingness to discuss suicide may represent an improvement in their condition, that self-injurious behavior should not be automatically equated with suicide attempts, and that“ some actions that are pleas for help” end up being labeled“ suicidal.”
The Assembly also turned its attention to peripartum depression, calling on APA to continue supporting a congressional bill to increase research funding in this area. The delegates also want APA to send information about peripartum depression to district branches and urge them to work with nurse, midwife, and physician groups to educate new mothers on warning signs, and to distribute an APA review of the topic to psychiatry residency directors.
Telepsychiatry has for many years been viewed as a method of expanding access to psychiatric care, and the Assembly voted to establish a new grant program for district branches who want to undertake projects to expand access to and education about telepsychiatry in their areas. The proposal calls for APA to earmark $50,000 to cover the cost of 10 grants of up to $5,000 each.
In an effort to enhance access to care in underserved areas and share experiences and knowledge about this issue, Assembly delegates backed a proposal to survey residency training directors to gather information on“ expertise and activity in academic departments” regarding psychiatry practice in rural and underserved areas and to disseminate the survey findings to organizations and federal agencies that focus on this topic.
In other actions the Assembly voted to
support a proposed APA position statement on ECT, emphasizing that the treatment is a “safe and effective evidence-based medical treatment [that is] endorsed by APA when administered by properly qualified psychiatrists for appropriately selected patients.” (Position statements must be approved by the Board of Trustees before they become APA policy.)
adopt a draft position statement on release of patients' records to state medical boards. The statement stresses that patients should have the right to determine whether to release their records to a medical board investigating a complaint against a physician. If the patient refuses to consent, an independent panel should be convened to determine “whether the medical board's interest in obtaining the records outweighs the patient's interest in privacy.”
agree with the Board of Trustees that APA's secretary-treasurer position should be split into two offices in light of an unexpectedly large workload for the person serving in this combined position. The positions were separate until 2005.
support an AMA position statement on medical use of marijuana that states, “The AMA believes that effective patient care requires the free and unfettered exchange of information on treatment alternatives and that discussion of these alternatives between physicians and patients should not subject either party to criminal sanction,” as has been threatened by the federal government in the case of physicians who prescribe marijuana for medical use in the 12 states that permit it.
The Assembly also wants APA to urge the federal government “to implement well-designed clinical research into the medical utility of marijuana,” again backing an AMA statement on the issue.
ask the APA Committee on Psychiatric Diagnosis and Assessment for its evaluation of a proposal to change the term “mental retardation” to “intellectual disability” in the 2009 printing of DSM-IV-TR and to urge the federal government to approve adding this term to codes used in ICD-9-CM beginning in 2009.▪

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Published online: 7 December 2007
Published in print: December 7, 2007

Notes

Advocating for patients is one of APA's key strategic goals, and Assembly delegates give their support to a number of proposals to further that goal at their meeting last month.

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