- The North Carolina House ed the proposed legislation this week.
- North Carolina is launching a $20 million pilot program to take law enforcement personnel out of the process of transporting mental health patients being involuntarily committed — aiming to end the traumatic practice of having officers handcuff and transport patients.
- Tens of thousands of Americans each year are voluntarily and involuntarily committed into psychiatric institutes. A memoirist and an organizer share their experiences inside the wards.
- The payments came after Eastpointe Health Services was ordered to merge with Trillium, the audit finds. Thousands of emails were also deleted ahead of the consolidation.
- Former employees of Jacksonville’s Brynn Marr Hospital allege that the facility engaged in patient record falsification and insurance manipulation. Their s appear to mirror past issues with the hospital’s parent company, Universal Health Services, documented in several lawsuits.
- More than a dozen former employees say understaffing at Brynn Marr Hospital contributes to what they describe as a dangerous place for patients and employees. Hospital officials say allegations of violence, sexual assaults, overmedication and lack of mental health therapy are unfounded.
- With the expansion of Medicaid next month, North Carolina is getting a big check from the federal government. State lawmakers plan to spend more than a billion dollars on mental healthcare, training doctors and nurses — and a few projects that don’t relate to health.
- The 54-bed hospital will children and teens experiencing mental health crises.
- Stigma, confusion and outright discrimination shape the health care experiences of many transgender and gender non-conforming people. In a national survey…
- Stigma, confusion and outright discrimination shape the health care experiences of many transgender and gender non-conforming people. In a national survey…