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Inland Empire Chapter of CAMFT


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  • Wednesday, February 21, 2018 10:59 AM | Deleted user

    If you're interested in joining the discussion about what we, as mental health professionals can do together to make our voices heard in the discussion about gun control and mental health, a new Facebook group has been formed by therapists for this purpose.  Go to: https://www.facebook.com/groups/274845359715552/



  • Wednesday, February 14, 2018 10:54 AM | Deleted user

    Forecast Shows Deepening Shortage of Mental Health Professionals in California


    Is the increasing shortage of mental health professionals in California related to managed care?

  • Tuesday, January 23, 2018 2:35 PM | Deleted user

    Who Benefits When Health Plans Merge?

    Take Action to Bring Oversight and Accountability to Mergers

     

    Aetna. Anthem. Blue Shield. Humana. Who really benefits when health plans propose to merge? Shareholders, executives—or patients and the public? A bill in the California State Assembly, AB 595 by Assemblymember Jim Wood, will bring stronger oversight and accountability to proposed health plan mergers so major changes to our health care system are in the public interest.

    Right now, just five health plans control 90% of the California market - additional consolidation is likely to result in fewer choices and higher prices for millions of Californians. AB 595 will increase oversight and accountability of proposed mergers by strengthening the Department of Managed Health Care's ability to scrutinize them. 

    Despite the insurance industry’s claims, bigger is not necessarily better for consumers, and the state must thoroughly review proposed mergers, provide the public with the opportunity to voice concerns, and require health plans to put patients and the public first.

    AB 595 is facing a critical vote on the Assembly Floor this month.

    Take action NOW by emailing your Assemblymember to tell them to vote YES on AB 595 on the Assembly floor

     


  • Wednesday, October 25, 2017 1:28 PM | Deleted user

    From: ChapterLeadershipGroup@community.camft.org <ChapterLeadershipGroup@community.camft.org> on behalf of Laura C. Strom M.S. <privateemail152816@community.camft.org>
    Sent: Monday, October 23, 2017 2:24 AM
    To: RECAMFT Yahoo Group; EBC etree; ChapterLeadershipGroup@community.camft.org; board@camft.org; Eileen Schuster; crisisresponseeducation@community.camft.org; Pam Sweeney; Debra Rojas; Lily Sloane; Joe Ward (RECAMFT)
    Subject: [Chapter Leadership G] "Brief Disaster Response Training for Helping Professionals" can be seen at RECAMFT.org
     

    Dear Mental Health Community: 

    I'm pleased to say "Brief Disaster Response Training for Helping Professionals" is now available at no charge on the RECAMFT website. This is a free 2 hr. training RECAMFT sponsored for the community, after the Santa Rosa firestorm. It was presented by Doreen Van Leeuwen, LMFT, Advanced Critical Incident Responder, and Disaster Mental Health Specialist. 

    http://recamft.org/Disaster/

    Please share widely - thank you! 


    Laura C. Strom

  • Wednesday, October 04, 2017 3:08 PM | Deleted user

    ACTION REQUIRED: MEDICARE REIMBURSEMENT OF LMFTs!

    The U.S. Senate introduced the Seniors Mental Health Access Improvement Act of 2017 (S 1879), which would add LMFTs as Medicare providers. To ensure that S 1879 moves through the Senate, we need every member of CAMFT to contact our U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris and ask that they co-sponsor this important piece of legislation. CAMFT has created an email message that you can send with just a few clicks to help CAMFT’s lobbying efforts on this important legislation! Please contact our Senators by Friday, October 17.


    CLICK HERE TO CONTACT OUR SENATORS TO HELP LMFTs BECOME MEDICARE PROVIDERS!

    #MedicareNeedsMFTs


  • Wednesday, September 13, 2017 3:37 PM | Deleted user
    NHP's Quick summary and call for Action re: Bernie Sander's SP Bill below.   It appears to use Medicare fee-for-service as base rates and doesn't seem to allow for collective bargaining—there are other suggested changes below

     

     


    September 13, 2017



    I’m pleased to announce that Sen. Bernie Sanders, a longtime single-payer advocate, has filed a landmark single-payer bill in the Senate. The Medicare for All Act of 2017 has already earned sixteen co-sponsors, including Sens. Harris (D-Calif.), Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Shaheen (D-N.H.), Schatz (D-Hawaii), Hirono (D-Hawaii), Warren (D-Mass.), Markey (D-Mass.), Franken (D-Minn.), Booker (D-N.J.), Udall (D-N.M.), Heinrich (D-N.M.), Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Merkley (D-Ore.), Whitehouse (D-R.I.), Leahy (D-Vt.) and Baldwin (D-Wisc.).

    This unprecedented surge for Medicare-for-all is because of grassroots advocates like you! Our years of phone calls, lobby visits, town hall meetings and one-on-one conversations have brought single payer to the forefront of the national health care debate.

    But this is just the beginning. We must now work even harder, not just to win more support for single payer, but to implement policies that rein in skyrocketing health costs and deliver better medical outcomes for our patients.

    What can we do now?

    1. Call your Senator today: Regardless of party affiliation, every U.S. senator needs to hear from us! Call the capitol switchboard at (202) 224-3121. Tell both your senators to sign on as co-sponsors of the Medicare for All Act of 2017. For senators already sponsoring the bill, thank them for their support and ask them to improve the bill by fully covering medications and long-term care, funding hospitals through global budgets and banning investor-owned facilities.
    2. Donate to PNHP: Now more than ever, we need to dramatically increase our capacity to organize physicians in support of improved Medicare for all. Your contribution is crucial to amplify the voices of health care providers during this important moment. Consider becoming a member of PNHP or making an additional donation towards the fight for single payer: $25, $50 or even $100 will help us meet our goals.
    3. Register for our upcoming conference call: PNHP national board member Dr. Adam Gaffney will host a one-hour informational call on Tuesday, September 19 at 9pm Eastern (8pm Central, 6pm Pacific). To register for the call, please fill out this short form. You will have the opportunity to submit questions ahead of time and the call will be recorded and archived for future reference.

     

    What’s in the bill?

    Based on our initial analysis, we find the Medicare For All Act of 2017 to be a significant step forward in the fight for single payer. Taken together with the Expanded & Improved Medicare for All Act (H.R. 676), it would transform the U.S. healthcare system in a manner consistent with PNHP’s vision.

    Eligibility

    Everyone is covered automatically at birth. All residents covered regardless of immigration status.

    Benefits

    Covers medically-necessary services including primary and preventive care, mental health care, reproductive care, vision and dental care, and prescription drugs.

    Patient Choice

    Full choice of any participating doctor or hospital. Providers may not dual-practice within and outside the Medicare system.

    Patient Costs

    No premiums, deductibles or copays for medical services. Balance billing prohibited. Copays for some drugs.

    Cost Controls

    Eliminates most roles for private insurance by prohibiting duplicative coverage. Drug prices negotiated with manufacturers.

    How can the bill be improved?

    Based on decades of careful analysis and research, PNHP recommends several improvements to the Medicare for All Act that would save even more money and improve patient care:

    Fully cover all medications, without copayment: Sen. Sanders’ bill requires patient copays on some non-generic prescription drugs. Research shows that copays of any kind discourage patients from seeking needed medical care, increasing sickness and long-term costs. Experience in other nations prove that they are not needed for cost control.

    Establish a national long-term care program: In Sen. Sanders’ plan, long-term care would be administered by the states only for low-income individuals, similar to Medicaid today. Long-term care should be provided to all as part of a national health plan. Nearly 10 million Americans need help with the basic tasks of living or help to maintain their independence. More than 80 percent of those who need care live in their communities, not in nursing homes, and nearly 40 percent of them are under age 65.

    Fund hospitals through global budgeting: A “global budget” is a lump sum paid to hospitals and similar institutions to cover operating expenses, thereby eliminating wasteful per-patient billing. Global budgets could not be used for expansion or modernization (which would be funded separately through capital allocations), advertising, profit, or bonuses. Global budgeting minimizes hospitals’ incentives to avoid (or seek out) particular patients or services, inflate volumes, or upcode. Without global budgets, the national system has little power to constrain long-term cost growth.  

    Ban investor-owned health facilities: For-profit health care facilities and agencies provide lower-quality care at higher costs than non-profits, resulting in both higher mortality rates and greater payments compared to not-for-profit providers.

    We are excited about the momentum behind improved Medicare for all, and are eager to join the conversation on how best to design a single-payer system in the United States. Now let’s get to work!

    Sincerely,





    Carol A. Paris, M.D.
    President

     

     


  • Tuesday, August 29, 2017 3:19 PM | Deleted user

    The bylaws for the chapter have been reviewed and updated at the last two IE-CAMFT meetings. We will be submitting the changes to the membership for a vote at the September meeting.  Here is a link to the changes--the revised portions are in red:  IE-CAMFT_Bylaws[1] - needed revisions.docx

  • Monday, August 28, 2017 10:35 PM | Deleted user

    Yesterday, the California Democratic Party unanimously endorsed SB 562: the bill for single payer health care.

    Keep up the pressure by calling Speaker Rendon at 916-319-2063  and tell him it’s time to co-author SB 562 and move it forward.


    For more info visit: http://www.healthycaliforniaact.org/

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