F u s e program
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Some fifty years after the United States began adding fluoride to public water supplies to reduce cavities in children’s teeth, declassified government documents are shedding new light on the roots of that still-controversial public health measure, revealing a surprising connection between fluoride and the dawning of the nuclear age. The article went on to be nominated as the year’s 18th most censored story in the 1998 Project Censored Series.
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This introduction is taken from Waste Not #414 (September 1997) where the article was first published. With the belief that the information should be withheld no longer, the authors gave their report to Waste Not, and others, with a short note: “use as you wish.” The authors, Griffiths and Bryson, spent more than a year on research. The report offers a glimpse into the history of fluoride, a bio-accumulative toxic that Americans ingest every day. By any yardstick, this report was an award-winning scoop for any national paper.
F U S E PROGRAM FULL
Despite much favorable comment from editors, and full documentation, the story remains unpublished by the Monitor. The FUSE team will be accessible 24 hours a day, 7 days a week and will follow many of the tenets of an Assertive Community Treatment model of care.įollowing enrollment in the FUSE program, the individuals will be asked to sign a release/exchange of information with various healthcare providers that they have had (or will have) care with to enhance collaboration and continuity of care.Introduction: The following article was commissioned by the Christian Science Monitor in the spring of 1997.
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This case management program will consist of a team of providers including a nurse, a psychiatric prescriber, master’s level clinician(s), a recovery support specialist, a supported employment specialist, and a case manager trained in substance use, all to provide wraparound support services to help individuals stabilize, improve their lives and reduce their use of the justice system, shelters, and emergency departments. The FUSE Program will link individuals to housing when it’s needed and engage participants in an intensive case management/supportive services program. The FUSE Program will begin with outreach to the identified individuals and work to build trust and rapport to engage in services. It is the intent of the McLean County FUSE Program to identify the individuals in our community with the most frequent contact with multiple systems of care. McLean County understands that many of these individuals likely have multiple interactions with emergency departments or inpatient behavioral health units or individuals with the highest utilization of emergency departments may not interact with the justice or homeless systems but still require increased care. McLean County partnered with the Corporation of Supportive Housing (CSH) and the University of Chicago, through funding from Arnold Ventures, to create a tool designed to match individuals with interactions with the justice system and the homeless system, within the County. These individuals are the highest users of emergency rooms, jails, shelters, and other crisis services and systems of care. The McLean County’s Frequent User System Engagement (FUSE) program is designed to help the community break the cycle of homelessness and crisis among individuals with complex medical and/or behavioral health needs.