Archive for the ‘psychiatry’ Tag

Do you want insurance companies to interfere with your prescriptions? I don’t.   Leave a comment

Contact your elected state officials about pharmacy prior authorizations

prescription

Pharmacy prior authorizations are making ever-greater demands on physician offices and are consuming an increasing share of doctors’ time. I simply ask that you write to your Governor, your State Senator, and your State Assembly Person. (Insurance is regulated by the state.)

You may copy and paste the following letter and send it electronically to each of your elected state officials. For NJ residents, use this link and paste the letter, modifying it as you wish:

http://www.njleg.state.nj.us/SelectMun.asp

For people in other states, an internet search will provide your elected state officials.

……………………..

Dear Governor:

Dear State Senator:

Dear Assembly Person:

I am urging legislation that will reform pharmacy prior authorization demands by health insurance companies, a critically important patient protection, to ensure that psychiatrists, other physicians and health care professionals can prescribe the medications they believe are the most appropriate and efficacious for their patient’s condition. This is especially important at a time when we need to reduce avoidable hospitalizations – a strong component of which is ensuring that patient receive the medications they need.

Currently, psychiatrists are spending nearly a fifth of their time on prior authorizations, time their patients need in order to remain healthy and out of the hospital. Among other things, legislation should remove the requirement that a prescriber “demonstrate” that a medication is medically necessary and warranted – a process that health insurance companies have used to demand endless evidence and documentation. Furthermore, these demands vary among the more than two dozen health insurance companies who each have their own formularies.

Continuity in prescribing psychiatric medication is especially important as different patients with the same diagnosis respond differently to the same medication. There is no one-size-fits-all in psychiatric practice. it takes time to find the most effective medication and dose for any given patient.

As such, I urge you to support legislation that allows doctors to treat patients.

Very truly yours,

Trailer of my entire library of YouTube psychiatry channels   1 comment

videos entire library

Dr. Linet is board certified both in General Adult Psychiatry and in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. This is a trailer of his full library of psychiatric videos. You can subscribe to the entire library (or to individual channels – adult psychiatry, child psychiatry, ADHD, and Parental Alienation Syndrome).

http://www.youtube.com/user/leslinetmd

See my video profile compiled by Vitals “where doctors are examined.”   Leave a comment

See my video profile compiled by Vitals.com

THE AWESOME POWER OF 3 POUNDS OF MEAT… WOW   Leave a comment

Mind is a universe

The human brain weighs 3 pounds… 3 pounds of meat. How it thinks is a mystery far beyond my ability to explain. 
I comment on this photo which depicts the brain’s awesome power but also to convey how easy it is for something so complex to have even a tiny error that could result in a problem. The complexity is enormous. It contains 100 billion neurons. These 100 billion neurons make CONNECTIONS to one another. 
Bear with me for a moment without getting bored. I read once that the number of neural connections in a single human brain is equal to the number of all the atoms in the universe multiplied by the age of the universe – the age, not in years or light years, but in pico seconds. (A pico second is on millionth of a millionth of a second… which is the same as a trillionth of a second.) So the age of the universe in pico seconds is a really, really BIG number. Multiply that by the number of atoms in the universe and you have an even BIGGER number for the brain’s neural connections.
CONCLUSION: It would be a miracle for the brain to work perfectly and very understandable that it so often might have even a tiny error. 3 pounds of meat that thinks, wow.