Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Parents Are Leery Of Schools Requiring ‘Mental Health’ Disclosures By Students

Parents should be far more than 'concerned'. They should be "I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take this anymore".

There's only one way to prevent school shootings: Arm The Teachers.

Hoplaphobic (unreasoning fear of an inanimate object) Virtue Signaling as tax funded public policy results in the deaths of children and teachers. Look at London. They already (purportedly) got rid of the guns. Now they're suffering knife violence. Turn In Your Knives.






Calling the police, even in a best case police response event, takes time. In that time people die.

Hire off duty cops as Hall Security? It's better than nothing BUT, big but here, it's not permanent. Local politicians will find another use for the money, cancel the expenditure, and you're back to zip, zero, nada. Plus, the teachers have more emotionally invested in the children than cops who won't personally know them.

Mental Health Treatment isn't science no matter what its sales force says. It's Scientism.

Alfred Adler: Delusional Marxist Dupe
Alfred Adler: Marxist Crackpot At A Glance
BF Skinner: Beyond Freedom & Reason & Dignity
Bleuler The Schizophrenifier: Séance Scientist
Carl Jung: Alchemy, Astrology, Flying Saucers & Seances
Carl Jung: Aryan Christ: A Book Review
Carl Jung: Psychic Pyramid Seller
Erich Fromm: Marxist
Freud's Absurd Homunculi
Freud Fell Short, Scholars Find
Freud, Fraud In Science
Freud Was A Fraud: Triumph of Pseudoscience
Jean-Martin Charcot: Another LYING Psychological Fraud
Marsha Linehan: Communism's Dialectic Through Buddhism
Nazi Doctors, Moral Vulnerability And Contemporary Medical Culture
Wilhelm Reich: Communism Generates Great, Sanity Inducing Orgasms
Wilhelm Reich: FDA Concludes, "A Fraud Of The First Magnitude"



Kaiser Health News
Sept 25, 2018

Florida school districts now have to ask if a new student has ever been referred for mental health services, but will it help troubled kids, or increase stigma instead? (Andrea D'Aquino for NPR)

Children registering for school in Florida this year were asked to reveal some history about their mental health.

The new requirement is part of a law rushed through the state legislature after the February shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.

On registration forms for new students, the state’s school districts now must ask whether a child has ever been referred for mental health services.

“If you do say, ‘Yes, my child has seen a counselor or a therapist or a psychologist,’ what does the school then do with that?” asked Laura Goodhue, who has a 9-year-old son on the autism spectrum and a 10-year-old son who has seen a psychologist. “I think that was my biggest flag. And I actually shared the story with a couple of mom friends of mine and said, ‘Can you believe this is actually a thing?'”

Goodhue said she worries that if her children’s mental health history becomes part of their school records, it could be held against them.

[ED; odds are real good that such a record Will be held against them, for life.]


State Medical Board Has A Simple Solution To Help Amid Physician Mental Health Crisis

“If my child was on the playground and something happened,” she said, “they might think, ‘This child has seen mental health services. This must mean something’ — more than it really means.”

The question was largely overlooked until parents started filling out school registration forms this summer. It was one sentence in a 105-page school safety bill that contained such controversial measures as increasing the minimum age to buy a gun and arming school employees.

Parents express concern that the information could fall into the wrong hands and may follow children throughout their education, said Alisa LaPolt, executive director of the Florida chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness.

“In a perfect world, getting treatment for mental health challenges would be no different than getting medical treatment for a skin rash or a bad cold or a broken leg,” LaPolt said. “But that’s not the world we live in right now. There is stigma around mental illness and getting treatment for it.”

School districts say counselors will use the information to help Florida students get the services they need.

Some districts will share the information only with psychologists and administrators. Others say they will provide access to teachers and front-office staff as well.

School counselors say they understand the stigma surrounding mental illness. Some say the way the law was written doesn’t help. The mental health question was grouped with requirements to report arrests or expulsions.

“I can certainly understand parents having a reaction when they see those questions, sort of, asked back to back, said Michael Cowley, manager of psychological services for Pinellas County Schools.

But in order to help students, Cowley said, school officials must first determine who needs mental health services.

“The process we’re trying to develop and everything we’re trying to do is just with an eye toward reducing stigma, increasing awareness and getting students access to more care,” Cowley said.

The requirement has school districts worried about more than just stigma. The state left implementation of the provision up to local districts.

At a meeting in Tampa, Fla., Hillsborough County School Board member April Griffin raised the issue of patient privacy and a federal law that protects it, known as HIPAA.

“I could foresee some lawsuits around this,” Griffin said.

Still, counselors say more parents may support the law once they start to see children getting the counseling they need.

The school safety law provides nearly $70 million to increase access to mental health services in schools. National experts say the money is long overdue.

Florida has historically been among the worst states in terms of providing money for mental health care, said Ron Honberg, senior policy adviser for the National Alliance on Mental Health.

“We know that the symptoms of mental health conditions and serious mental illnesses in particular tend to surface during the teen years and early 20s,” Honberg said. “And that’s a time when we should be putting the most resources into interventions.”

In Broward County, where Parkland is located, the district is using part of the $6 million it received to hire 50 staff members — many of them counselors, psychologists and social workers.

Their ability to reach students in need could depend on whether parents feel comfortable checking “yes” on a registration form.

This story is part of a partnership that includes WUSF, NPR and Kaiser Health News.

KHN’s coverage of children’s health care issues is supported in part by the Heising-Simons Foundation.

Julio Ochoa, WUSF: @julioochoa



Thank You Mr Ochoa and KHN.




Post Script:


But we could At Least keep guns out of the wrong hands, with stricter "Common Sense" Laws, right?



How Background Checks Have Failed To Deliver On Promises 

 https://bearingarms.com/tom-k/2018/09/24/background-checks-failed-deliver-promises/


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