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Passages Behavioral Health Services was founded out of need to service mentally ill, co-occurring, correctional clients seeking a second chance. Our 40 years of clinical experience has prepared us to do this work which includes providing case management, Community Living Suppports (CLS), clinical assessment, treatment planning and more. Passages Behavioral Health also manages re-entry housing for this population know as the Passages House. We provide a service that not only bridges folks to another chance but helps maintain their progress in the community.

Friday, August 22, 2008

Missing DNA Parts Linked to Schizophrenia Risk

Provided by: Associated PressWritten by: Malcolm Ritter, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jul. 30, 2008

NEW YORK - Two huge international studies show that people who lack certain chunks of DNA run a dramatically higher risk of getting schizophrenia, a finding that could help open new doors to understanding and diagnosing the disease.

These deletions are rare, each found in less than one per cent of schizophrenia patients. But each one boosts the risk of disease by as much as 15-fold, by one estimate.

Scientists said studying such abnormalities may help them find new medications by shedding light on what causes the disease. And if enough rare aberrations can be found eventually, they may be combined into a test to help in diagnosis, said Kari Stefansson, chief executive officer of deCode Genetics of Reykjavik, Iceland, and an author of one of the studies.

Schizophrenia is currently diagnosed by its symptoms.
The human DNA can be thought of as a very long string of letters - about three billion of them - that sometimes form words (genes). Each newly identified deletion removes a section of about half a million to two million letters.

In the past, scientists have found specific genes and deletions linked to schizophrenia risk. But the new work is notable because two large studies independently identified the same two DNA deletions, and those aberrations have such a big impact on disease risk. Stefansson's paper also reports evidence for a third deletion.

While the DNA deletions are linked to only a tiny fraction of schizophrenia cases, it's not unusual that a very rare cause of a disease provides insights that apply more generally, said Dr. Pamela Sklar of Massachusetts General Hospital, an author of the other paper. She said such knowledge can lead to treatments for many people.

Both papers were published online Wednesday by the journal Nature. Experts not connected with the work praised the results.

"This is tremendous" for basic research into the disease, said Dr. Linda Brzustowicz of Rutgers University. But since the deletions found so far are related to such a small fraction of schizophrenia cases, she said it's too early for companies to offer to test people for them.
Stefansson's paper, which included authors from more than a dozen centres in the United States, Europe and China, reported findings from DNA tests in about 4,700 people with schizophrenia and more than 40,000 healthy people. Sklar's paper, which included scientists from 11 institutes in the United States, Europe and Australia, tested about 3,400 people with schizophrenia and 3,200 others.

Both papers found that while the deletions were rare in schizophrenia patients, they were even rarer in people without the disease. Scientists say the disease results from a combination of genetic predisposition and environmental influences.

The two deletions found by both research groups boost schizophrenia risk 12-fold and 15-fold, Stefansson's group calculated. A third deletion his group found appears to raise risk about threefold.

Sklar said she was "absolutely delighted" that the papers found the two deletions independently, using different methods.

Anne Pulver, a schizophrenia genetics expert at Johns Hopkins University, said the papers represent a welcome shift in focus for finding genetic variants that affect risk of schizophrenia.
Traditionally, that search has centred on relatively common variants, each with little effect on an individual's risk. The new approach seeks rare variants that play a larger role. The new approach should help identify subgroups of patients with different genetic causes for their disease, she said. Eventually that could lead to treatments that are tailored to the differing biological causes, with improved outcomes, she said.
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On the Net:
Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature
Information on schizophrenia: http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/schizophrenia

Sunday, August 10, 2008

A brief overview of Interface Consultation Services current endeavors:

I. Blog Focus - We continue to post weekly on ICS and Counseling Connections.Our posts include mental health research, news and thoughts we feel providers and clients will find valuable.

II. Counseling Connections - Provides Licensed Professional Online and Telephone Mental Health Counseling, Coaching and Services.

III. Telemental Health Triage - We continue our day-to-day service commitment to Riverwood Center to provide professional triage services so their consumers are assured efficient and timely access to mental health services, appropriate level of care assignments and expert telephone crisis triage.

IV. MPRI - Michigan Prisoner Re-entry Initiative for the Mentally Ill - ICS are contracted as the Regional Care Coordinators for the Western Michigan providing services to 18 counties. ICS has hired 5 contracts to assist with this initiative. This program continues to grow at a very fast pace and it the only program of it's kind in the US. This speciality program is designed for mentally ill prisoners who are returning to the community. As Care coordinators we provide funding for housing, psychiatric medications, specialized placements as well as care coordination and consultation on some very difficult cases for the program.

V. Passages - ICS is offering Mobile, Intensive, Short-term, Targeted Case Management Services located in Western Michigan will provide case management service option that requires an immediate, flexible, direct-service and mobile response.

This service is designed to provide the intensity of services needed to the non-severely and persistently mentally ill/indigent population that are currently underserviced or are unable to obtain these services at this time through traditional providers.

VI. Utilization Management Opportunities - We continue to provide acute care preauthorization services for Riverwood Center.

VII. College Level Course - ICS owner/partner, Kathlene LaCour is an part-time facility member at Kalamazoo Valley Community College.Please contact us via email by clicking on the link to learn more about how we can service your consulting needs or call (269)929-1292.