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Melanie Blocker Stokes MOTHERS Act Moves Forward

March 2, 2009 - 3:38pm 1878 reads 5 comments

o (Entities): Makes grants available to public or nonprofit private entity, which may include a State or local government, a public-private partnership, a recipient of a grant under the Healthy Start program, a public or nonprofit private hospital, community-based organization, hospice, ambulatory care facility, community health center, migrant health center, public housing primary care center, or homeless health center, or any other appropriate public or nonprofit private entity.

o (Activities): Eligible activities include delivering or enhancing outpatient, inpatient and home-based health and support services, including case management and comprehensive treatment services for individuals with or at risk for postpartum conditions. Activities may also include providing education about postpartum conditions to new mothers and their families, including symptoms, methods of coping with the illness, and treatment resources, in order to promote earlier diagnosis and treatment.

TITLE III- General Provisions

· (Funding): Authorizes $3,000,000 for fiscal year 2009; and such sums as may be necessary for fiscal years 2010 and 2011.

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Anonymous

This bill would be useful if there were alternative health solutions even mentioned or allowed. But in fact, it's just another mandated recruiting tool for the shills of Big Pharma... the psychiatric "doctors" and mental "health" centers who will just drug and shock the mothers. Sad.

Anonymous

Yes, we should move funds in this direction of truly helping women. However, the problem with that is that big pharma and psychiatry have their hands so deep in the “cash cow” pocket of the drug-market and have the public and physicians so convinced that anti-depressants and psychotropic drugs are the solution, that such a bill is not possible until all the smokescreens of the drug pushers are revealed and an honest bill is presented that is based on true medical ethics and a desire to truly help your fellow man.

I am convinced that this is simply the next strategy to hook all of society on “legal” drugs under the banner of “mental health.”

Let me point out one thing: How many billions of tax payer monies have been pumped into “mental health?” Now imagine that was your money and you had invested all that money into your company. What have those billions produced in terms of products — a few examples are 833,000 children and adolescents being prescribed psychotropic drugs every hour for “mental illnesses” that have never scientifically been proven to actually exist as “mental illnesses.” Another is the school shootings that are date coincident to the spike in prescription drugs in schools. Another is the suicides of kids and teenagers on these drugs.

We need to raise our confront of evil before blindly approving a new law into effect that could result in thousands of deaths to mothers and unborn children due to the adverse effects of the drugs that will most likely be administered as a “handling” for PPD. There is a solution to PPD and it is not psychotropic or anti-depressants drugs.

Please research the history of psychiatry and their mental health agenda.

Kindly,

Jules

Anonymous

If you go to Mothers Act legislative updates, Senator Menendez' office press release incorrectly states that the Mother's Act is broadly popular among the general public which is far from the truth. Over 50 public groups have joined together in the coalition against the Mothers Act.

They include:

AbleChild

The International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology

Alliance for Human Research Protection

International Coalition For Drug Awareness

Law Project for Psychiatric Rights,

and

Mindfreedom International.

Also, common sense dictates that any bill that wasn't passed in 8 years of trying never has been, was or ever will be popular with the general public.

Larry B.

Anonymous

where ar drugs mentioned? I don't see that at all.

Anonymous

This act is not about medication. This act is about screening new mothers for a very serious condition. Hospitals screen every single pregnant woman for gestational diabetes when almost ten times as many women develop a postpartum mood disorder and we don't screen any of them. This act is here only to help women who are suffering from it and to educate the caregivers to better care for them. And although medication is needed for some women suffering from postpartum mood disorders it is not for all. There are many behavioral and cognitive therapies that are widely used in the treatment of postpartum mood disorders in addtion to many alternative therapies such as acupuncture.

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