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Evidence that American football can lead to chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), continues to grow. As a result, some parents are opting to sign their sons up for other sports.

A high school football player tackles an opponent.
©james boulette/Thinkstock

In the 2017-2018 school year, 6.6% fewer high school athletes participated in tackle football than did 8 years before according to the National Federation of State High School Associations. As the movement away from football continues, a pronounced shift is occurring in the prevalence of young black men in the game.

Many black parents encourage their sons to play football as a way to protect them gang activity. In addition, the sport can be their sole option for securing a college education for their children, an article in the Atlantic said. A recent survey of 50,000 8th-, 10th-, and 12th-grade students found that tackle football is predominantly the domain of black youth.

“This divergence paints a troubling picture of how economic opportunity – or a lack thereof – governs which boys are incentivized to put their body and brain at risk to play. Depending on where families live, and what other options are available to them, they see either a game that is too violent to consider or one that is necessary and important, if risky. Millions of Americans still watch football; NFL ratings were up this season,” Alana Semuels wrote in the article. “That a distinct portion of families won’t let their children play creates a disturbing future for the country’s most popular game.”

“Without a reversal in economic fortunes for poor communities across the country, football could one day become a sport played almost exclusively by black athletes, while still enjoyed by everyone. Black athletes – who already make up the majority of players in the most dangerous on-field positions – would continue to suffer from long-term brain damage, their life cut short by dementia and the scourge of CTE,” she wrote.

Meanwhile, numerous outlets reported that Super Bowl LIII garnered the lowest ratings since 2008.
 

Psychiatric hospital set to close

In both Kansas and Missouri, a shortage in mental health care has become evident, according to an article in the Kansas City Star. And now the Two Rivers Behavioral Health System, a private psychiatric hospital in southeast Kansas City, Mo., is closing its doors. The result will be a loss of 129 jobs and 105 fewer mental health beds in the city.

Patients currently in the facility will be relocated, and their care will continue. But for those who come after, care will now be tougher to find.

Two Rivers, owned by Pennsylvania-based Universal Health Services, treats children and adults. It had 2,347 discharges in 2017 and almost $28 million in revenue but had a net loss of about $3.4 million. The facility has been under scrutiny in the past two decades over its treatment of patients, with accusations about the bolstering of false memories concerning involvements in satanic cults and the treatment of a convicted sex offender who assaulted another patient. The most recent state inspection showed that Two Rivers had failed to provide a safe environment for six patients who were considered suicide risks. The patients had unsupervised access to the nurses’ station, as well as access to pens that could have been used for stabbing and a charging cord that could have been used for strangulation.

In an interview with the Star, Mark Stringer, director of the Missouri Department of Mental Health, said private psychiatric hospitals like Two Rivers are finding it harder to keep functioning, partly because of nursing shortages. Private facilities are not subsidized like state mental hospitals and are unable to secure staff from other facilities.

“There is a general worry about the availability of psychiatric services for people in crisis; there’s just no doubt about that,” Mr. Stringer said. “The loss of beds certainly hurts.”
 

 

 

New center offers ‘kind patient care’

In Nashville, Tenn., a new mental illness crisis treatment center is open. The center offers a 24/7 option for those with mental health issues who have run afoul of the law. Instead of incarceration, they can receive treatment, the Tennessean reported.

Estimates are that more than 1 million residents of Tennessee aged 18 years and older have a mental health or substance use disorder. About 25% of those residents having a serious mental health illness.

The new facility includes a crisis walk-in center and a unit where those in the throes of a mental health crisis can seek care. A goal is to get people suffering from an urgent mental illness crisis connected to help faster, especially when they come into contact with police.

“It’s very important to come to a place that’s going to get you help,” Bonnie Kelly said in the article. Ms. Kelly, who reportedly has bipolar disorder, has been arrested several times for disorderly conduct tied to her condition. “It means everything. It is good, kind patient care, rather than just getting you out of the way.”

Aside from benefiting those in need of mental health care, the center will ease the strain on Nashville police, who currently spend more than 5,000 hours each year responding to mental health–related calls. The officers must remain with the person until transfer to a jail or mental health facility is done.

“As a city, we are recognizing that there is a need, and we are investing in that,” East Precinct Commander David Imhof said in the article. “We are helping a population that has had no voice in the past.” Right now, fewer than 60% of patients discharged from state mental health facilities receive any sort of coverage. The result can be cycles of release, arrest, and incarceration.
 

Agency aims to protect patients

The Oregon Health Authority has stepped in to prevent numerous state-funded mental health facilities run by the same contractor from booting out patients with severe mental health problems.

The contractor is Kepro, a Pennsylvania-based company. Since December, the health authority has reversed decisions to release 17 patients, according to an article in the Oregonian. The harder line follows revelations by the newspaper of serious harm to patients who had been released before they were capable of caring for themselves.

Kepro was hired by the health authority and paid $27 million to evaluate the medical needs of mental health patients in Oregon. As part of the evaluation, 215 of 250 patients were deemed unqualified to remain in care.

One was Ruane Oliverio, who has schizophrenia, who was kicked out of a locked facility in Portland last June. Clinicians had warned against her release, insisting that her mental state remained too vulnerable. After being hospitalized multiple times, she was sent to the Oregon State Hospital, the highest and most expensive level of care. She was one of those targeted for release. This decision was reversed, and she continues to receive care.
 

 

 

Coalition seeks mental health care for refugees

A new coalition called Matters Involving Neuro-Disorders, or MIND, is trying to help refugees with mental health conditions. The effort is a response to several mental health-related deaths of refugees during 2014-2016, a video produced by the San Diego Union-Tribune said.

“Refugees are brought to this country to help them rebuild their lives,” said Justin Mudekereza, executive director of New Neighbor Relief, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping refugees adjust to their new lives in the United States. “They have gone through a lot in their countries, then from there, they went to refugee camps, where they spend 15-20 years or more before they got a chance to come to this country.”

Sheila S. Mitra-Sarkar, PhD, of the Institute of Public Urban Affairs at San Diego State University, described the need for a “comprehensive solution” to help refugees adapt to their new society, learn English, find housing and employment, and thrive.

“When I see a patient or someone who seems to have a psychological issue ... I look at everything that goes around them,” said John C. Kuek, PhD, of La Maestra Community Health Centers in San Diego. “I’m looking at the housing issue, the employment issue, and translational issue – meaning they have some family back home and they have a live family here to care for.”

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Evidence that American football can lead to chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), continues to grow. As a result, some parents are opting to sign their sons up for other sports.

A high school football player tackles an opponent.
©james boulette/Thinkstock

In the 2017-2018 school year, 6.6% fewer high school athletes participated in tackle football than did 8 years before according to the National Federation of State High School Associations. As the movement away from football continues, a pronounced shift is occurring in the prevalence of young black men in the game.

Many black parents encourage their sons to play football as a way to protect them gang activity. In addition, the sport can be their sole option for securing a college education for their children, an article in the Atlantic said. A recent survey of 50,000 8th-, 10th-, and 12th-grade students found that tackle football is predominantly the domain of black youth.

“This divergence paints a troubling picture of how economic opportunity – or a lack thereof – governs which boys are incentivized to put their body and brain at risk to play. Depending on where families live, and what other options are available to them, they see either a game that is too violent to consider or one that is necessary and important, if risky. Millions of Americans still watch football; NFL ratings were up this season,” Alana Semuels wrote in the article. “That a distinct portion of families won’t let their children play creates a disturbing future for the country’s most popular game.”

“Without a reversal in economic fortunes for poor communities across the country, football could one day become a sport played almost exclusively by black athletes, while still enjoyed by everyone. Black athletes – who already make up the majority of players in the most dangerous on-field positions – would continue to suffer from long-term brain damage, their life cut short by dementia and the scourge of CTE,” she wrote.

Meanwhile, numerous outlets reported that Super Bowl LIII garnered the lowest ratings since 2008.
 

Psychiatric hospital set to close

In both Kansas and Missouri, a shortage in mental health care has become evident, according to an article in the Kansas City Star. And now the Two Rivers Behavioral Health System, a private psychiatric hospital in southeast Kansas City, Mo., is closing its doors. The result will be a loss of 129 jobs and 105 fewer mental health beds in the city.

Patients currently in the facility will be relocated, and their care will continue. But for those who come after, care will now be tougher to find.

Two Rivers, owned by Pennsylvania-based Universal Health Services, treats children and adults. It had 2,347 discharges in 2017 and almost $28 million in revenue but had a net loss of about $3.4 million. The facility has been under scrutiny in the past two decades over its treatment of patients, with accusations about the bolstering of false memories concerning involvements in satanic cults and the treatment of a convicted sex offender who assaulted another patient. The most recent state inspection showed that Two Rivers had failed to provide a safe environment for six patients who were considered suicide risks. The patients had unsupervised access to the nurses’ station, as well as access to pens that could have been used for stabbing and a charging cord that could have been used for strangulation.

In an interview with the Star, Mark Stringer, director of the Missouri Department of Mental Health, said private psychiatric hospitals like Two Rivers are finding it harder to keep functioning, partly because of nursing shortages. Private facilities are not subsidized like state mental hospitals and are unable to secure staff from other facilities.

“There is a general worry about the availability of psychiatric services for people in crisis; there’s just no doubt about that,” Mr. Stringer said. “The loss of beds certainly hurts.”
 

 

 

New center offers ‘kind patient care’

In Nashville, Tenn., a new mental illness crisis treatment center is open. The center offers a 24/7 option for those with mental health issues who have run afoul of the law. Instead of incarceration, they can receive treatment, the Tennessean reported.

Estimates are that more than 1 million residents of Tennessee aged 18 years and older have a mental health or substance use disorder. About 25% of those residents having a serious mental health illness.

The new facility includes a crisis walk-in center and a unit where those in the throes of a mental health crisis can seek care. A goal is to get people suffering from an urgent mental illness crisis connected to help faster, especially when they come into contact with police.

“It’s very important to come to a place that’s going to get you help,” Bonnie Kelly said in the article. Ms. Kelly, who reportedly has bipolar disorder, has been arrested several times for disorderly conduct tied to her condition. “It means everything. It is good, kind patient care, rather than just getting you out of the way.”

Aside from benefiting those in need of mental health care, the center will ease the strain on Nashville police, who currently spend more than 5,000 hours each year responding to mental health–related calls. The officers must remain with the person until transfer to a jail or mental health facility is done.

“As a city, we are recognizing that there is a need, and we are investing in that,” East Precinct Commander David Imhof said in the article. “We are helping a population that has had no voice in the past.” Right now, fewer than 60% of patients discharged from state mental health facilities receive any sort of coverage. The result can be cycles of release, arrest, and incarceration.
 

Agency aims to protect patients

The Oregon Health Authority has stepped in to prevent numerous state-funded mental health facilities run by the same contractor from booting out patients with severe mental health problems.

The contractor is Kepro, a Pennsylvania-based company. Since December, the health authority has reversed decisions to release 17 patients, according to an article in the Oregonian. The harder line follows revelations by the newspaper of serious harm to patients who had been released before they were capable of caring for themselves.

Kepro was hired by the health authority and paid $27 million to evaluate the medical needs of mental health patients in Oregon. As part of the evaluation, 215 of 250 patients were deemed unqualified to remain in care.

One was Ruane Oliverio, who has schizophrenia, who was kicked out of a locked facility in Portland last June. Clinicians had warned against her release, insisting that her mental state remained too vulnerable. After being hospitalized multiple times, she was sent to the Oregon State Hospital, the highest and most expensive level of care. She was one of those targeted for release. This decision was reversed, and she continues to receive care.
 

 

 

Coalition seeks mental health care for refugees

A new coalition called Matters Involving Neuro-Disorders, or MIND, is trying to help refugees with mental health conditions. The effort is a response to several mental health-related deaths of refugees during 2014-2016, a video produced by the San Diego Union-Tribune said.

“Refugees are brought to this country to help them rebuild their lives,” said Justin Mudekereza, executive director of New Neighbor Relief, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping refugees adjust to their new lives in the United States. “They have gone through a lot in their countries, then from there, they went to refugee camps, where they spend 15-20 years or more before they got a chance to come to this country.”

Sheila S. Mitra-Sarkar, PhD, of the Institute of Public Urban Affairs at San Diego State University, described the need for a “comprehensive solution” to help refugees adapt to their new society, learn English, find housing and employment, and thrive.

“When I see a patient or someone who seems to have a psychological issue ... I look at everything that goes around them,” said John C. Kuek, PhD, of La Maestra Community Health Centers in San Diego. “I’m looking at the housing issue, the employment issue, and translational issue – meaning they have some family back home and they have a live family here to care for.”

Evidence that American football can lead to chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), continues to grow. As a result, some parents are opting to sign their sons up for other sports.

A high school football player tackles an opponent.
©james boulette/Thinkstock

In the 2017-2018 school year, 6.6% fewer high school athletes participated in tackle football than did 8 years before according to the National Federation of State High School Associations. As the movement away from football continues, a pronounced shift is occurring in the prevalence of young black men in the game.

Many black parents encourage their sons to play football as a way to protect them gang activity. In addition, the sport can be their sole option for securing a college education for their children, an article in the Atlantic said. A recent survey of 50,000 8th-, 10th-, and 12th-grade students found that tackle football is predominantly the domain of black youth.

“This divergence paints a troubling picture of how economic opportunity – or a lack thereof – governs which boys are incentivized to put their body and brain at risk to play. Depending on where families live, and what other options are available to them, they see either a game that is too violent to consider or one that is necessary and important, if risky. Millions of Americans still watch football; NFL ratings were up this season,” Alana Semuels wrote in the article. “That a distinct portion of families won’t let their children play creates a disturbing future for the country’s most popular game.”

“Without a reversal in economic fortunes for poor communities across the country, football could one day become a sport played almost exclusively by black athletes, while still enjoyed by everyone. Black athletes – who already make up the majority of players in the most dangerous on-field positions – would continue to suffer from long-term brain damage, their life cut short by dementia and the scourge of CTE,” she wrote.

Meanwhile, numerous outlets reported that Super Bowl LIII garnered the lowest ratings since 2008.
 

Psychiatric hospital set to close

In both Kansas and Missouri, a shortage in mental health care has become evident, according to an article in the Kansas City Star. And now the Two Rivers Behavioral Health System, a private psychiatric hospital in southeast Kansas City, Mo., is closing its doors. The result will be a loss of 129 jobs and 105 fewer mental health beds in the city.

Patients currently in the facility will be relocated, and their care will continue. But for those who come after, care will now be tougher to find.

Two Rivers, owned by Pennsylvania-based Universal Health Services, treats children and adults. It had 2,347 discharges in 2017 and almost $28 million in revenue but had a net loss of about $3.4 million. The facility has been under scrutiny in the past two decades over its treatment of patients, with accusations about the bolstering of false memories concerning involvements in satanic cults and the treatment of a convicted sex offender who assaulted another patient. The most recent state inspection showed that Two Rivers had failed to provide a safe environment for six patients who were considered suicide risks. The patients had unsupervised access to the nurses’ station, as well as access to pens that could have been used for stabbing and a charging cord that could have been used for strangulation.

In an interview with the Star, Mark Stringer, director of the Missouri Department of Mental Health, said private psychiatric hospitals like Two Rivers are finding it harder to keep functioning, partly because of nursing shortages. Private facilities are not subsidized like state mental hospitals and are unable to secure staff from other facilities.

“There is a general worry about the availability of psychiatric services for people in crisis; there’s just no doubt about that,” Mr. Stringer said. “The loss of beds certainly hurts.”
 

 

 

New center offers ‘kind patient care’

In Nashville, Tenn., a new mental illness crisis treatment center is open. The center offers a 24/7 option for those with mental health issues who have run afoul of the law. Instead of incarceration, they can receive treatment, the Tennessean reported.

Estimates are that more than 1 million residents of Tennessee aged 18 years and older have a mental health or substance use disorder. About 25% of those residents having a serious mental health illness.

The new facility includes a crisis walk-in center and a unit where those in the throes of a mental health crisis can seek care. A goal is to get people suffering from an urgent mental illness crisis connected to help faster, especially when they come into contact with police.

“It’s very important to come to a place that’s going to get you help,” Bonnie Kelly said in the article. Ms. Kelly, who reportedly has bipolar disorder, has been arrested several times for disorderly conduct tied to her condition. “It means everything. It is good, kind patient care, rather than just getting you out of the way.”

Aside from benefiting those in need of mental health care, the center will ease the strain on Nashville police, who currently spend more than 5,000 hours each year responding to mental health–related calls. The officers must remain with the person until transfer to a jail or mental health facility is done.

“As a city, we are recognizing that there is a need, and we are investing in that,” East Precinct Commander David Imhof said in the article. “We are helping a population that has had no voice in the past.” Right now, fewer than 60% of patients discharged from state mental health facilities receive any sort of coverage. The result can be cycles of release, arrest, and incarceration.
 

Agency aims to protect patients

The Oregon Health Authority has stepped in to prevent numerous state-funded mental health facilities run by the same contractor from booting out patients with severe mental health problems.

The contractor is Kepro, a Pennsylvania-based company. Since December, the health authority has reversed decisions to release 17 patients, according to an article in the Oregonian. The harder line follows revelations by the newspaper of serious harm to patients who had been released before they were capable of caring for themselves.

Kepro was hired by the health authority and paid $27 million to evaluate the medical needs of mental health patients in Oregon. As part of the evaluation, 215 of 250 patients were deemed unqualified to remain in care.

One was Ruane Oliverio, who has schizophrenia, who was kicked out of a locked facility in Portland last June. Clinicians had warned against her release, insisting that her mental state remained too vulnerable. After being hospitalized multiple times, she was sent to the Oregon State Hospital, the highest and most expensive level of care. She was one of those targeted for release. This decision was reversed, and she continues to receive care.
 

 

 

Coalition seeks mental health care for refugees

A new coalition called Matters Involving Neuro-Disorders, or MIND, is trying to help refugees with mental health conditions. The effort is a response to several mental health-related deaths of refugees during 2014-2016, a video produced by the San Diego Union-Tribune said.

“Refugees are brought to this country to help them rebuild their lives,” said Justin Mudekereza, executive director of New Neighbor Relief, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping refugees adjust to their new lives in the United States. “They have gone through a lot in their countries, then from there, they went to refugee camps, where they spend 15-20 years or more before they got a chance to come to this country.”

Sheila S. Mitra-Sarkar, PhD, of the Institute of Public Urban Affairs at San Diego State University, described the need for a “comprehensive solution” to help refugees adapt to their new society, learn English, find housing and employment, and thrive.

“When I see a patient or someone who seems to have a psychological issue ... I look at everything that goes around them,” said John C. Kuek, PhD, of La Maestra Community Health Centers in San Diego. “I’m looking at the housing issue, the employment issue, and translational issue – meaning they have some family back home and they have a live family here to care for.”

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