weirdwriter, to random
OutOfExile_IDR_Voice, to disabilityjustice
@OutOfExile_IDR_Voice@kolektiva.social avatar

I was sick, and you said "You look fine to me".
I was sick, and you cast me off.
I was sick, and you used it against me.
I was sick, and you took my health care.
I was sick, and you battered and killed.
I was sick, and you fought for a wooden hammer.
I was sick, and you fought about blue and red.
I was sick, and you fought as the nations watched with disdain.
I was sick, and you fought the "wrong" while resembling it.
I was sick, as you fought for "all" but, forgot about us.

OutofExile_IDR ©2023

Click here 🧠 to expand.

My adaptation of Matthew 25:39 inspired by the work below. (Not an endorsement for religion or church)

I was hungry, and you blamed it on the communist
I was hungry, and you circled the moon.
I was hungry, and you told me to wait
I was hungry, and you set up a commission.
I was hungry, and you said "So were my ancestors".
I was hungry, and you said we don't hire over 35.
I was hungry, you said God helps those…
I was hungry, and you told me I shouldn't be.
I was hungry, and you told me machines do that work now.
I was hungry, and you had napalm bills to pay.
I was hungry, and you said the poor are always with us.
Lord, when did we see you hungry?

Adaptation of Matthew 25:37 by Anonymous – 1971

Image by Alex Velazquez from Pixabay https://pixabay.com/users/alex2171-3560452/

@disability @disabilityjustice @actuallyautistic

SteveBologna,
@SteveBologna@mstdn.social avatar
essie_is_okay, to random
@essie_is_okay@aus.social avatar

I can't remember where I read this. But telling mentally ill people to eat well and exercise to boost their mood is like giving someone a new pair of scissors that is still in the packaging. The person needs scissors to open the new scissor packaging. This is not a helpful thing to do at all.

artworkshop, to random Russian
@artworkshop@mastodon.social avatar
DivergentDumpsterPhoenix, to autisticadvocacy
@DivergentDumpsterPhoenix@disabled.social avatar
morri,
@morri@norden.social avatar

@ceruleanarc @DivergentDumpsterPhoenix @actuallyautistic @autisticadvocacy i also recognise me in other sutistics kidsaround that are part of sll ND families that are like me as s kid.

LordCaramac,

@DivergentDumpsterPhoenix @actuallyautistic @autisticadvocacy I used to have a lot of difficulty dealing with emotions, both mine and those of others. It changed all of a sudden when I started smoking weed at the age of 17 - it's like THC amplifies and enhances my emotions and also my reactions to the emotions of others.

appassionato, to bookstodon
@appassionato@mastodon.social avatar

Chemically Imbalanced: Everyday Suffering, Medication, and Our Troubled Quest for Self-Mastery

Chemically Imbalanced is a field report on how ordinary people dealing with common problems explain their suffering, how they're increasingly turning to the thin and mechanistic language of the "body/brain," and what these encounters might tell us.

@bookstodon
#books
#nonfiction
#suffering
#medication
#MentalHealth

admin, to socialpsych
@admin@mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org avatar

TITLE: Correctional Psych: Links to 15 Articles on Addressing the Mental Health Needs of Justice-Involved Individuals in Custody & the Community

Thank you Dr. Pope.

-------- Forwarded Message --------

Correctional Psych: Links to 15 Articles on Addressing the Mental Health Needs of Justice-Involved Individuals in Custody & the Community
Psychiatric Services issued the following announcement about a curated collection of articles:

Correctional Psychiatry: Addressing the Mental Health Needs of
Justice-Involved Individuals in Custody and the Community

/Editor’s Choice provides essential curated collections from recent issues of Psychiatric Services/.

Lisa B. Dixon, M.D., M.P.H., Editor of Psychiatric Services <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554321%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=1&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=Cor0sLYMf9o>
Lisa B. Dixon, M.D., M.P.H., Editor of /Psychiatric Services/

The legal aims of the correctional system are to protect the community and to punish, deter, and offer rehabilitation to the offender. These goals may be at odds with the aims of psychiatric providers working in such settings. Consequently, jails and prisons can be challenging settings for the provision of mental health services for patients, providers, and the correctional staff. Even so, encounters with the criminal justice system can create opportunities for individuals with a severe mental illness, a substance use disorder, or both to obtain needed treatment that may otherwise be unavailable or difficult to access or that an individual would not choose to pursue in the community. With the development of diversion models and community-based forensic programs, such patients now have access to unique treatment strategies addressing concomitant legal and mental health needs.

This collection provides an update regarding correctional mental health care. The provision of mental health services within correctional environments continues to pose unique challenges, such as limited access to medications that are readily available in the community. Diversion programs that transition justice-involved individuals with mental illness from traditional criminal justice pathways toward treatment may reduce the burden of severe mental illness within correctional facilities and the risks to patients in such settings. At the same time, patients may be hesitant to engage in systems that they perceive to be coercive or overbearing. Innovations in meeting the mental health needs of incarcerated and justice-involved patients remain vital due to the ongoing high prevalence of mental illness and barriers to care faced by these populations.
/Brian Holoyda, M.D., M.P.H./
/Jacqueline Landess, J.D., M.D./
/Lisa B. Dixon, M.D., M.P.H. /

OVERVIEW

Drivers of County Engagement in Criminal Justice–Behavioral Health Initiatives <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=2&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Allison E. Cuellar, Ph.D., et al.
2022, Volume 73, Issue 6, pp. 709-711

Prevalence of Mental Health Needs, Substance Use, and Co-occurring Disorders Among People Admitted to Prison <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=3&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Amanda Butler, Ph.D., et al.
2022, Volume 73, Issue 7, pp. 737-744

Mental Health Services in a U.S. Prison During the COVID-19 Pandemic <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=4&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Paul R. S. Burton, M.D., et al.
2021, Volume 72, Issue 4, pp. 458-460

Differential Incarceration by Race-Ethnicity and Mental Health Service Status in the Los Angeles County Jail System <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=5&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Oona Appel, Psy.D., et al.
2020, Volume 71, Issue 8, pp. 843-846

TREATMENT IN CUSTODY

A Legal Right to Clozapine Therapy for Incarcerated Individuals With Treatment-Resistant Schizophrenia <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=6&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Theordore R. Zarzar, M.D., et al.
2021, Volume 72, Issue 4, pp. 482-484

Clinical Outcomes of Specialized Treatment Units for Patients With Serious Mental Illness in the New York City Jail System <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=7&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Elizabeth B. Ford, M.D., et al.
2020, Volume 71, Issue 6, pp. 547-554

Ending Restrictive Housing in Prisons for People With Mental Disorders <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=8&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Benjamin A. Barsky, J.D., M.B.E.
2022, Volume 73, Issue 4, pp. 463-466

Grave Disability in U.S. Jails and Prisons <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=9&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Nathaniel P. Morris, M.D., and Renée L. Binder, M.D.
2022, Volume 73, Issue 5, pp. 577-579

Litigation Over Sleep Deprivation in U.S. Jails and Prisons <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=10&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Nathaniel P. Morris, M.D., et al.
2021, Volume 72, Issue 10, pp. 1237-1239

DIVERSION AND COMMUNITY TREATMENT FOR JUSTICE-INVOLVED INDIVIDUALS WITH MENTAL ILLNESS

A New Commitment Pathway for Offenders With Serious Mental Illness: Expedited Diversion to Court-Ordered Treatment <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=11&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Steven K. Hoge, M.D., M.B.A., and Richard J. Bonnie, LL.B.
2021, Volume 72, Issue 8, pp. 969-971

Lessons in “Slow” Engagement From Staff and Administrators at a Prebooking Jail Diversion Program <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=12&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Neely Myers, Ph.D., et al.
2022, Volume 73, Issue 10, pp. 1117-1122

Affordability of Forensic Assertive Community Treatment Programs: A Return-on-Investment Analysis <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=13&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Daniel Maeng, Ph.D., et al.
2023, Volume 74, Issue 4, pp. 358-364

Benefits and Drawbacks of Police Integration Into Assertive Community Treatment Teams <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=14&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Catherine L. Costigan, Ph.D., et al.
2022, Volume 73, Issue 4, pp. 447-455

Barriers to and Facilitators of Implementing Peer Support Services for Criminal Justice-Involved Individuals <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=15&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Wallis E. Adams, M.P.H., Ph.D., and Alisa K. Lincoln, M.P.H., Ph.D.
2021, Volume 72, Issue 6, pp. 626-632

Using Medicaid Coverage to Improve Peer Support and Other Services for Incarcerated Persons With Mental Illness <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554325%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=16&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=lLUpknOh0Ak>
Marvin S. Swartz, M.D., et al.
2021, Volume 72, Issue 6, pp. 621-622

Please note that not all articles in this curated collection are available without a subscription.

RELATED BOOKS

Psychotherapy in Corrections <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554327%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=17&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=31QK7PR48Zk>
Peter N. Novalis, M.D., Ph.D., Virginia Singer, DNP, and Carol M. Novalis, M.A.

Psychiatric Services in Correctional Facilities, Third Edition <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554328%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=18&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=MOxTR8vxwIU>
American Psychiatric Association

People With Mental Illness in the Criminal Justice System <https://dmanalytics2.com/click?u=http%3A%2F%2Fparacom.paramountcommunication.com%2Fct%2F62554329%3Asd_QoCiNS%3Am%3A1%3A901157293%3A20270F63EBE77AA480CCB272276F3193%3Ar&i=19&d=vfo4LNDWS6ik7X1Zb1cQxw&e=michael%40hygeiacounseling.com&a=zGBk3vnuQzO5AVOk--pTZA&s=YMYGUcKclck>
Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry, Committee on Psychiatry and the Community

Ken Pope

#psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #corrections #jail #prison #forensic
admin, to socialpsych
@admin@mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org avatar

I'm forwarding this to the list because:

a) It's timely and vaguely related to the Iowa transgender material,
b) It's about a psychology professor,
c) It mentions Univ. of Florida turning over to the state government the mental health records of transgender students (!!)

See below.

Thank you Dr. Pope.

--- Forwarded Message ---
Subject: Psychology Prof Brought Millions to FL State U, Now Warns of Unsafe "Hostile Environment" for Black & LGBTQ Students, Faculty, & Staff
Date: Fri, 08 Dec 2023 07:01:51 -0800
From: [email protected]

The Tallahassee Democrat includes an article: “This professor brought millions to Florida State. Now he's leaving a 'hostile’ environment” by Walter R. Boot, Ph.D.

Here’s the author note:

Walter R. Boot, Ph.D., is a professor of psychology at Florida State University and has been a member of the FSU faculty since 2008.

Here are some excerpts:

In early 2022, “Don’t Say Gay'' became law based on the premise that the mere mention of LGBTQ people is dangerous. The run-up and aftermath of its passage involved hostile rhetoric painting queer and trans individuals as pedophiles and groomers, rhetoric that came not just from citizens but from state officials.

As it became increasingly clear that LGBTQ students, faculty, and staff at Florida State University had targets on their backs, I explained my concerns in an April 2022 email and made a simple request of FSU President Richard McCullough: give us a reason to stay.

<snip>

His response was something along the lines of, “If I say or do anything, I will be fired, and my replacement will be worse.” His office tells me that he disputes this account.

Later, I was told his refusal to express support was because “the University’s 501(c)(3) status limits the University’s participation in political advocacy.” My concerns were dismissed as mere politics. Since then, matters have only gotten worse.

In December 2022, the FBI alerted FSU to a threat of mass violence against gay people on campus. FSU has yet to acknowledge this threat publicly. We learned about it only through a newspaper article the next month after an arrest had been made.

Alarmed by this incident and concerned for campus safety, I again pressed President McCullough’s office to express support for queer and trans community members publicly. They did not.

Gov. DeSantis then demanded that universities turn over information about transgender students. Information requested included intimate information about treatments, surgeries, mental health diagnoses, and facilities that transgender students were referred to for care. FSU complied with this request, shifting its response from silence to active harm.

<snip>

Equality Florida and the Human Rights Campaign have issued travel advisories citing the very real perils of traveling to or living in Florida while queer or trans. At FSU, these perils are exacerbated by uncaring leadership.

I will be leaving FSU at the end of this year. The purpose of my message is not to change the mind of members of the administration. Any additional efforts seem futile. It is to foreshadow the experience of anyone considering FSU as their home, particularly individuals who are Black, trans, gay or lesbian, queer, or who belong to any other group currently under siege by the state of Florida.

I brought millions of dollars of funding to FSU, volunteered for service roles demanding significant commitments, and stepped up to teach classes no one else could or would. I went above and beyond what is required again and again.

Yet, President McCullough remains unwilling to even offer a few words of public support for queer and trans members of the FSU community.

If you are considering FSU as your home, do not expect them to make any effort to support or protect you in an increasingly hostile and dangerous environment for people like us. Consider your options carefully. You deserve better than what FSU has to offer.

Ken Pope

Ken Pope, Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, Hector Y. Adames, Janet L. Sonne, and Beverly A. Greene
Speaking the Unspoken: Breaking the Silence, Myths, and Taboos That Hurt Therapists and Patients (APA, 2023)

Hector Y. Adames, Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, Melba J.T. Vasquez, & Ken Pope:
Succeeding as a Therapist: How to Create a Thriving Practice in a Changing World (APA, 2022)

Ken Pope, Melba J.T. Vasquez, Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, & Hector Y. Adames:
Ethics in Psychotherapy & Counseling: A Practical Guide, 6th Edition (Wiley, 2021)
“When people show you who they are, believe them the first time.”
—Maya Angelou


Merely forwarded by:  
Michael Reeder LCPC  
Baltimore, MD

#psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #transgender #lgbtq #hipaa #medicalrecords #genderaffirming
DivergentDumpsterPhoenix, to actuallyautistic
@DivergentDumpsterPhoenix@disabled.social avatar

When services fail to make themselves accessible or helpful to minority groups, they have failed completely.

I think about mental health services in particular, both CAMHS and adult services, that constantly fail to support neurodivergent people.

@actuallyautistic @autisticadvocacy @audhd @neurodiversity

exploreyourarchive, to histodons
@exploreyourarchive@hcommons.social avatar

New blog alert: "The Practice of Inclusion Within the Walls of Fulbourn Asylum" https://www.exploreyourarchive.org/the-practice-of-inclusion-within-the-walls-of-fulbourn-asylum/

As November highlights to us the importance of inclusion, we delve into the records of Fulbourn Hospital (formally Fulbourn Asylum), held by Cambridgeshire Archives. Bringing light to mental health histories is instrumental in helping us learn today. We can understand better the lives that were lived, and the practices faced by the patients who were in this type of care.

@histodons

imperfectcognitions, to philosophyofpsychiatry
@imperfectcognitions@mas.to avatar

This week, Zsuzsanna Chappell summarises the final talks from this year's Philosophy of Psychiatry and Lived Experience workshop. The talks touched on safety and borderline personality disorder, transformative experience, and shared decision-making in psychiatric . @philosophy @psychiatry @philosophyofpsychiatry
https://imperfectcognitions.blogspot.com/2023/11/philosophy-of-psychiatry-and-lived_01211871313.html

admin, to socialpsych
@admin@mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org avatar

TITLE: Polite Example Letter to a Health-Related Website Endangering Your Privacy

THIS is the letter I wish more people would send to health-related websites and merchants when they observe a privacy problem!

fullscript.com is a service that dispenses non-pharma products to patients (like medical grade supplements) based upon doctor's orders. You have to be referred by a physician to get a patient account. They even have a way of integrating with EHR systems.

They need to get security right.

To: Fullscript Support &lt;[email protected]&gt;

Dear Fullscript Team:

I have always appreciated being able to order from your excellent website.

Your service strives to supply patients with supplements and medicines ordered by doctors. As such, what is ordered can give insight into medical conditions that patients may have.

You may or may not be covered by HIPAA regulations, but I'm sure you will agree that ethically and as a matter of good business practice, Fullscript would want to maintain medical privacy of patients given that medical practices trust you.

This is why I'm concerned with the HIGH level of 3rd party tracking going on throughout your product catalogue. On your login page, the Firefox web browser displays a "gate" icon to let me know that information (I believe my email address) is being shared with Facebook. This is also the case with your order checkout page (see attached screenshot showing Facebook "gate" icon, as well as Privacy Badger and Ghostery plug-in icons in upper right-hand corner blocking multiple outbound data connections).

Privacy Badger is a web browser plugin that detects and warns of or stops (depending upon severity) outbound information from my web browser to 3rd party URLs. Directly below is Privacy Badger's report from your checkout page:

~~~~  
Privacy Badger (privacybadger.org) is a browser extension that automatically learns to block invisible trackers. Privacy Badger is made by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit that fights for your rights online.

Privacy Badger blocked 23 potential trackers on us.fullscript.com:

insight.adsrvr.org  
js.adsrvr.org  
bat.bing.com  
static.cloudflareinsights.com  
script.crazyegg.com  
12179857.fls.doubleclick.net  
12322157.fls.doubleclick.net  
googleads.g.doubleclick.net  
connect.facebook.net  
www.google-analytics.com  
analytics.google.com  
www.google.com  
www.googletagmanager.com  
fonts.gstatic.com  
ad.ipredictive.com  
trc.lhmos.com  
snap.licdn.com  
o927579.ingest.sentry.io  
js.stripe.com  
m.stripe.network  
m.stripe.com  
q.stripe.com  
r.stripe.com  
~~~

Please note that I was able to successfully checkout WITH Privacy Badger blocking protections on, so most of this outbound information was NOT necessary to the operation of your website.

There are several advertising networks and 3rd party data brokers receiving some kind of information.

I am aware that a limited amount of data sharing can be necessary to the operation of a website (sometimes). I am also aware that this all is not malicious -- web development and marketing does not usually talk to the legal department before deploying tools useful to gathering site usage statistics (Crazy Egg and Google Analytics). However, these conversations need to happen.

As for "de-identified" or "anonymized" data -- data brokers collect information across several websites, and so are able to reconstruct patient identities even if you don't transmit what would obviously be PHI (protected health information). As an example, if Google sees the same cookie or pixel tracking across multiple websites and just one of them sends a name, then Google knows my name. If Facebook is sent my email address (as looks to be the case), and I happen to have a Facebook account under that same email address, then Facebook knows who I am -- and can potentially link my purchases with my profile.

The sorts of computing device data that you are collecting and forwarding here may well qualify as PHI. Please see:

Use of Online Tracking Technologies by HIPAA Covered Entities and Business Associates  
<https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/privacy/guidance/hipaa-online-tracking/index.html>

This HHS and OCR guidance includes many 3rd party tracking technologies.

What I would really like to see happen is:

a) A thorough look at what information your website is sending out to what 3rd parties, along with an understanding of how data brokers can combine information tidbits from multiple websites to build profiles.

b) Use of alternative marketing analysis tools that help your business. For example, there are alternatives to Google Analytics that do not share all that data with Google and still give your marketing team the data they need.

c) An examination if you are sharing information about what products patients are clicking on and/or purchasing with 3rd parties. This would be especially problematic. (Crazy Egg tracks client progress through a website, but I'm unclear if they keep the information or just leave it with you.)

d) Use of alternative code libraries that are in-house. For example, web developers frequently utilize fonts.gstatic.com, but you could likely get fonts and other code sets elsewhere or store them in-house.

I appreciate you taking time to read this and working on the privacy concerns of your patients and affiliated medical practices.

Thanks.

~~~~~~  
#AI #CollaborativeHumanAISystems #HumanAwareAI #artificialintelligence #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy #EHR #medicalnotes #progressnotes @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @socialwork @[email protected] #mentalhealth #technology #psychiatry #healthcare #patientportal #HIPAA #dataprotection #infosec @[email protected] #doctors #hospitals #BAA #businessassociateagreement #coveredentities #privacy #HHS #OCR #fullscript
admin, to socialpsych
@admin@mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org avatar

TITLE: Further Adventures in the HIPAA Silliness Zone

This short essay was inspired by a video I watched going over Microsoft legal agreements, the upshot of which is that they can harvest and use ALL of your data and creations (See *1 below in References). This inspires interesting HIPAA questions to say the least:

  1. IF you have a HIPAA agreement with Microsoft, do they actually NOT harvest or use your data? How do they track that across all their applications and operating systems to tell?

  2. Do their HIPAA and regular legal departments even talk to each other?

  3. If you have a HIPAA agreement for your work computers, but then access your data through home computers, are all bets off? (And what sole proprietors don't mix use of computers for both?)

Now I don't really believe that Microsoft is doing all of this. What I THINK is that their lawyers just wrote overly broad legalese to protect them from all situations. Still -- legally it leaves us hanging. I certainly don't know that they are NOT doing it.

Then, I start thinking on some of the other crazy security situations I've encountered the past few years:

-- The multi-billion dollar medical data sales vendor that bought a calendar scheduling system, then wrote a HIPAA BAA agreement in which the PROVIDER has to pay any financial damages and penalties if THEY slip-up and lose data. (*2). Gee, what could go wrong?

-- The new AI progress notes generator service that sends data to 3rd parties including Google Tag Manager, LinkedIn Analytics, Facebook Connect, and Gravatar (*3)

-- The countless data breaches currently hitting hospitals across the USA. (*4)

It's all really quite mind numbing if you are a small healthcare provider or sole practitioner. I suspect 99% of us have just tuned this all out as noise at this point. After all, do we have the time or money to take on the legal departments of multi-billion dollar corporations?

The net results of this will be helpless nonchalance, boredom, and a gradual shifting of liability to US when upon occasion data is actually leaked by our vendors. And, of course, ever more fear and uncertainty in professions already full of it. Oh, and client data flowing through data brokers everywhere.

So what can we do? At first glance, not much. We need to be pressuring our professional associations to take on (or further take on) data security concerns including liability of giant "subcontractors" and insurance companies versus small healthcare providers. We also need to be supporting HHS and Federal government efforts to stop 3rd party trackers, including cookies, web beacons, pixel tracking, etc. from being allowable on systems related to healthcare. (*5) Bonus points if the penalties can apply mainly to larger corporations rather than hitting small provider offices hard.

Thanks,
Michael Reeder LCPC
Baltimore, MD

REFERENCES:

(*1)  
The following video walks through the Microsoft Services Agreement and Microsoft Privacy Agreement to explain how Microsoft reserves the rights to use all data that you transmit through their services, or create or store in their apps (including data stored on OneDrive). It also collects information from all the programs used on your Windows machine. (This would seem to mean they can harvest data from your local hard drive, but I'm not sure.)

Microsoft Now Controls All Your Data  
[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=1bxz2KpbNn4&amp;pp=ygUkTWljcm9zb2Z0IG5vdyBjb250cm9scyBhbGwgeW91ciBkYXRh](https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=1bxz2KpbNn4&pp=ygUkTWljcm9zb2Z0IG5vdyBjb250cm9scyBhbGwgeW91ciBkYXRh)  
"("Data"), how we use your information, and the legal basis we use to process your Personal Information. The Privacy Statement also describes how Microsoft uses your content, i.e. Your communications with other people; the submissions you send to Microsoft through the Services; and the files, photographs, documents, audio, digital works, live streams, and videos that you upload, store, transmit, create, generate, or share through the Services, or any input you submit to generate content ("Your Content")."

(*2)  
Full Slate: Last I checked their HIPAA, privacy, and BAA agreements. Although they reserve the right to change these agreements without notification and just post them to their website, so who knows at this point. <https://www.fullslate.com>

(*3)  
Autonotes.ai: In fairness, they claim that no HIPAA data should be input into their system, even though you are writing progress notes. As of 7/30/23 they sent some sort of data to Google Tag Manager, LinkedIn Analytics, Facebook Connect, Gravatar which was severe enough that the Ghostery browser plug-in felt compelled to block or flag the transmissions. I hope they have changed this.

It should be pointed out that services similar to Full Slate and Autonotes claim that data sent to 3rd parties is not PHI and/or necessary to the operation of the service. This all could be true. I find that when Privacy Badger, or Ghostery, or my Pihole DNS server block these 3rd party transmissions that the vast majority of the time services work just fine.

Please also see Use of Online Tracking Technologies by HIPAA Covered Entities and Business Associates  
<https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/privacy/guidance/hipaa-online-tracking/index.html>

This HHS and OCR guidance includes the sorts of 3rd party tracking technologies often referred to as non-PHI, or de-identified. My non-lawyer mind is suspicious that violations could be found at several services.

(*4)  
Just take a look at any of the daily headlines on Becker's Hospital Review:  
<https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/cybersecurity.html>

(*5)  
Hospital associations sue HHS over pixel tracking ban  
<https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/healthcare-information-technology/hospital-associations-sue-hhs-over-pixel-tracking-ban.html>

--

#AI #CollaborativeHumanAISystems #HumanAwareAI #artificialintelligence #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy #EHR #medicalnotes #progressnotes @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] #mentalhealth #technology #psychiatry #healthcare #patientportal #HIPAA #dataprotection #infosec @[email protected] #doctors #hospitals #BAA #businessassociateagreement #Microsoft #coveredentities #privacy #HHS #OCR
lauramayphd, to politicalscience
@lauramayphd@sciences.social avatar

In the latest episode of the Conflict Tipping Podcast, we explore the often overlooked but vital topic of mental health amidst conflict. Join us as Dr. Nawaraj Upadhaya discusses the importance of primary mental health care, and how he is trying to make it more accessible in crisis areas.

Find the episode on your podcast platform of choice, or linked below!

#MentalHealth #SocialConflict #conflict @politicalscience

Podbean: https://conflicttipping.podbean.com/e/supporting-mental-health-in-conflict-with-dr-nawaraj-upadhayab/

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0FdfDvqxo5NDwiOsp8KXZD

imperfectcognitions, to philosophyofpsychiatry
@imperfectcognitions@mas.to avatar

On the blog this week, Zsuzsanna Chappell reports from the 'Philosophy of Psychiatry and Lived Experience workshop', which is part of project bringing together philosophers with lived experience of mental disability or difference #mentalhealth #livedexperience @philosophy @psychiatry @philosophyofpsychiatry
https://imperfectcognitions.blogspot.com/2023/11/philosophy-of-psychiatry-and-lived.html

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