14-02-2017 07:29 PM
14-02-2017 07:29 PM
14-02-2017 07:29 PM
14-02-2017 07:29 PM
14-02-2017 07:29 PM
14-02-2017 07:29 PM
@FrankGQuinlan wrote:yes @Phoenix_Rising, but we are all in it together..
We can all talk to our local member of parliament! We can all write a letter to the paper...
@FrankGQuinlan Yep. And it is super encouraging to know that there are people like you out there who DO get it and DO want to see change. I had my first psychiatric admission in 1997 and even though I don't really see that much has genuinely changed since then, I like knowing that there is a growing tide of people who are advocating for change and I am more than happy to add my voice to that tide
14-02-2017 07:29 PM
14-02-2017 07:29 PM
There is the provision to provide 10 more sessions under MHCP but you need to wait 3 months to do this - this is a very long time when you are under a lot of stress/distress and the mental and physical toll can be life threatening - why is the wait so long - surely it would be better to have continuous access to these sessions for continued care!
14-02-2017 07:30 PM
14-02-2017 07:30 PM
@BlueBay Hi there - this is the right place to say whatever is on your mind 🙂
The MBS sessions are limited because it saves money - rationing.
Discharging people trying new meds, or without support, just sounds like like poor practice - wherever it occurs. I bet they dont discharge their cardiac patients before they are ready!!
14-02-2017 07:31 PM
14-02-2017 07:31 PM
14-02-2017 07:32 PM
14-02-2017 07:32 PM
@FrankGQuinlan I understand that your role is to campaign for change here. There has been a lot of talk about the inadecuacy of the 10-12 sessions. I suffer from BPD. I know many others who do too, and am collating information as a freelance journalist to write articles specifically relating to this condition. People who suffer from BPD have often alienated themselves from the (economic) support of friends and loved ones. I know many who don't have the means to afford the private treatment on offer from private clinics for DBT, myself included. But, when the remission rate is so high after a solid year of DBT, and the economic potential to lift someone from welfare dependency is greater that the economic costs of fully subsidising treatment for DBT, isn't it short-sighted at best, and a form of class warfare at worst to not fully subsidise treatment for those not able to afford it?
14-02-2017 07:33 PM
14-02-2017 07:33 PM
@Andra I am lucky enough to hear many of those stories first hand, and I agree with you that many are the same.
But it is always better if people tell their own stories - it can be very powerful in politics!
14-02-2017 07:33 PM
14-02-2017 07:33 PM
@FrankGQuinlan wrote:@MelLeighD It is certainly a numbers game, and the sessions limit is mostly about rationing.
But to be honest I was not aware of rationing based on diagnosis. I think GPs can prep a plan for any MH conditions - so people can acess the sessions
I think if you check out the fine print, yes, there are issues around who qualifies for a mental health care plan based on diagnosis. GPs etc tend to work around it by identifying depression/anxiety as the issue...even if the person actually has a formal diagnosis of borderline personality disorder.
14-02-2017 07:34 PM
14-02-2017 07:34 PM
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