Beacon, December 2, 2024 In 2023, the Bree released guidelines on best practices for addressing perinatal behavioral health. This is the first report for which the Bree has been able to consider a prospective evaluation on the uptake and effectiveness of one of it’s reports. We chose to conduct an evaluation on this report for…
Beacon November, 8th 2024 All of us have had the experience of unexpected change; it is part of the very nature of being human. We all know change brings challenges, but the opportunities that it presents are very often our second or even third thoughts. Humans like repetition, it’s how we learn. We like calm,…
A View from the Top August 15, 2024 “The amount of opioids prescribed and sold in the United States nearly quadrupled from 1999 to 2014. But, there was not an overall change in the amount of pain that Americans report.” 1 Between 2013 and 2024, the Bree Collaborative has produced seven guidelines on the topic…
A View From the Top July 30th, 2024 I live part-time a few blocks from the Empire State building. Down on the sidewalks of the city you are always walking under scaffolding, being routed around construction sites, and turning the corner to find a few building going up. In the chaos and bustle of every…
Transparency, access, and action keep me enthusiastic about the work that we do at our Bree Collaborative. I think often about the barriers put up around accessing knowledge – especially medical knowledge. This includes everything from the way that we write peer-reviewed articles, to the cost of being able to get those articles to read,…
Back to school supplies will always be appropriate in the fall – even when we are many years past our time in the classroom. That sense of a fresh start through a new pencil case is what we are working to bring to the penultimate webinar of our Framework for Action Webinar Series done in…
As we get a glimpse of the light at the end of the pandemic tunnel this summer, I think back to the early stages of the pandemic when celebrities, government officials, and media framed the viral outbreak as the “great equalizer.” A virus is incapable of discrimination, and many people (mostly coming from a place...
Maternity care has been on my mind lately. Mainly because my family is expecting our second child this summer and because of how new state policies intersect with our perinatal bundle. During this last legislative session, I watched with enthusiasm as Senate Bill 5068, that extended Medicaid coverage up to 12 months after a person...
Much of our conversation in the opioid prescribing for older adults workgroup has focused on how one’s body is psychologically different with each passing decade – metabolism, risk of side effects, pros and cons of different treatments. Our bodies tend to change in predictable ways. In addition to this body-focused process, the socio-political-cultural world in...
Vaccines are a revelation – countless lives saved and countless more improved due to not contracting a disease. The rapid development, production, and dissemination of our newest vaccine, to SARS-COV-2, is an even more remarkable addition to this legacy. Even more, our collective ability to pivot gives us leverage to push back when anyone in...
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