Stalking May Cause Psychological Distress.

HealthDay (10/19, Dallas) reported that, according to a study published online in the journal Social Science Quarterly, “women who are the victims of stalkers are up to three times more likely than their peers to experience psychological distress.” Researchers arrived at this conclusion after examining data “compiled on over 8,100 women from three major surveys.” Notably, “the psychological effects were even more profound for women who were stalked when they were older.”

Related Links:

— “Stalking Can Take Mental Toll on Victims, Study Confirms, “Mary Elizabeth Dallas, HealthDay, October 18, 2013.

Spanking Tied To Increased Risk Of Bad Behavior.

The New York Times (10/21, Bakalar) “Well” blog reports that, according to a study published online Oct. 21 in the journal Pediatrics, spanking kids may “increase the risk of bad behavior.” For the study, investigators “interviewed 1,933 parents when their children were three years old and again at five, asking whether and how often they were spanked.” When the youngsters were nine, they underwent evaluation as to how aggressive they were and how often they broke rules. After adjusting for confounding factors, the study authors “found that maternal spanking at age five was significantly associated with greater aggression and rule-breaking…at age nine.” Reuters (10/21, Pittman) also covers the story.

Related Links:

— “Spanking’s Link to Bad Behavior, “Nicholas Bakalar, The New York Times, October 21, 2013.

Kennedy Forum To Address US Mental Healthcare.

The AP (10/21, Smith) reported that the Community Mental Health Act, signed Oct. 31, 1963 by President John F. Kennedy, “aimed to build mental health centers accessible to all Americans so that those with mental illnesses could be treated while working and living at home, rather than being kept in neglectful and often abusive state institutions.” Half a century later, President Kennedy’s nephew, former Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-RI), pointed out that the US still has no “alternate policy to address the needs of” people with severe mental illnesses, many of whom are homeless or are incarcerated. This week in Boston at the Kennedy Forum, the former congressman is gathering mental health advocates to put together an agenda focusing on how to improve mental healthcare.

Related Links:

— “Kennedy’s Vision For Mental Health Never Realized, “Michelle R. Smith, Associated Press, October 20, 2013.

Study: No Mental Disadvantage Exhibited In Children Born To Teen Mothers.

HealthDay (10/18, Dotinga) reports that a study, published Oct. 16 in the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood, looked at statistics from the Millennium Cohort Study regarding 19,000 children born in the UK between 2001 and 2001 to determine whether children born to teen mothers had an intellectual disadvantage. Though researchers did discover a difference in verbal skills of children born to teens and those born to mothers between the ages of 24 and 34, they did not find a difference in spatial and nonverbal skills between children born to the two groups.

Related Links:

— “Children of Teen Mothers Don’t Have Mental Disadvantage, Study Suggests, “Randy Dotinga, HealthDay, October 17, 2013.

Report: More Patients With Multiple Chronic Conditions Not Taking Medicine.

USA Today (10/15, O’Donnell) reports that according to a National Council on Patient Information and Education study, “poor adherence to medications among patients with multiple chronic conditions has reached ‘crisis proportions’ in the US,” leading “to ‘unnecessary disease progression’ and complications and too many emergency room visits, hospitalizations and avoidable hospital re-admissions.” The coalition recommends “lowering or eliminating co-payments for medications used to treat the most common chronic diseases,” as well as “pushing pharmacies to better coordinate patients’ medications.”

Related Links:

— “Crisis: Patients not taking their medications, “Jayne O’Donnell, USA Today, October 15, 2013.

Former Rep. Kennedy Advances Mental Health Causes.

CQ (10/16, Attias, Subscription Publication) reports that former Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy (D-RI) “is attempting to use his famous family’s brand and his own experiences to advance the cause of mental health.” The retired congressman “is seeking to elevate the attention this issue receives at a time when the 2010 health care law should expand access to treatment options and a long-awaited rule for a mental-health parity law is soon to be released.” Mental health professionals as well as many members of Congress believe that “Kennedy has the authority to reach beyond partisanship as he tries to unite diverse advocacy groups behind a common agenda.”

Psychosis Symptoms Tied To Increased Rate Of Medical Comorbidities.

Medwire (10/16, McDermid) reports that, according to a study published in the October issue of the journal World Psychiatry, “people with symptoms of psychosis have an increased rate of medical comorbidities and unhealthy lifestyle habits even if they do not have a psychiatric diagnosis.” After analyzing “data from 224,254 participants in the World Health Organization World Health Survey,” researchers found that such patients “also had increased rates of healthcare indicators such as nonpsychiatric hospital stays, and prescribed medications.”

Related Links:

— “Psychotic symptoms alone denote medical health risk, “Eleanor McDermid, Medwire News, October 16, 2013.

Marketplaces May Offer More Limited Selection Of Physicians, Hospitals.

CNN (10/15, Luhby) reports that some consumers buying insurance from the new Affordable Care Act marketplaces “may find themselves restricted to more limited doctor and hospital networks than their peers outside the state-based exchanges enjoy.” According to the article, many insurance companies “have opted to limit their selection of doctors in some exchange plans to keep premiums and other costs down.”

Related Links:

— “Doctor choice in Obamacare? Not so much, “Tami Luhby, CNN, October 14, 2013.

Study Looks At Health Toll Of Guns On Children.

USA Today (10/14, Healy) reports on a new study published online in Pediatrics, which found “aspects of the health toll” inflicted on adolescents from gun injuries other than the death toll “get much less attention, including injury severity, the need for major surgical intervention, and high care costs.” The study found the impact to be particularly heavy for adolescent males aged 15 to 19, accounting for 83.2 percent of the gunshot wounds suffered by children in the study. According to the researchers, “the study provides ‘a broader look’ at the disproportionate and negative effects beyond fatalities.”

Related Links:

— “Death tallies belie true impact of kids’ gun injuries, “Michelle Healy, USA Today, October 14, 2013.

Psychiatrist Reacts To “60 Minutes” Piece.

In an opinion piece in the Denver Post (10/13, Milofsky), retired psychiatrist Jean E. Milofsky, MD, wrote in response to a recent “60 Minutes” appearance by psychiatrist E. Fuller Torrey, MD, author of “The Insanity Offense,” and psychiatrist Jeffrey A. Lieberman, MD, president of the American Psychiatric Association, in which the pair expressed the view that finding and then treating people with severe mental illness would reduce the chances of violent acts occurring, including those involving firearms and mass shootings. Dr. Milofsky pointed out that mental healthcare in the US is underfunded and that more than half of the US homeless population includes people with mental illnesses, and that no clinician is able to detect with absolute certainty the potential for violence in people with mental illness. She also reminded readers that the majority of people with severe mental illnesses are not violent and concluded that mental health reform is indeed needed, but so are societal approaches to reducing gun violence, an entirely separate issue.

Related Links:

— “And now it’s mental illness being blamed for violence, “Jean E. Milofsky, The Denver Post, October 12, 2013.