Studies Point To Strong Link Between Head Injuries, Psychiatric Disorders

The Washington Post (12/6, Maese) reported that “science increasingly points to a strong link between head injuries and psychiatric and mood disorders.” For example, in one study involving 70 youngsters ranging in age from five to 14 who were tracked after having had a concussion, researchers found that “in the first six months, 36 percent…experienced a new onset of psychiatric disorders,” with 10 percent experiencing a “full depressive disorder.”

Another study published earlier this year in the Journal of Adolescent Health revealed that “repeatedly concussed teens to be three times more likely to develop depression.” That study examined health information from some 36,000 teens.

Related Links:

— “Concussions and depression: Questions renewed over whether there’s a link,” Rick Maese, Washington Post, December 6, 2014.

Teen Users Of Hookah and Snus Are More Likely To Turn To Cigarettes

Reuters (12/8, Doyle) reported that teenagers who use hookah or snus, a smokeless tobacco product, are more likely to use cigarettes, according to a study published in JAMA Pediatrics. The study, which surveyed more than 2,500 youths during 2010 and 2011, found that those who had used snus and hookah at the time of the first survey were two to three times more likely to be cigarette smokers by the second survey.

Related Links:

— “Teen hookah and snus users more likely to move on to cigarettes,” Kathryn Doyle, Reuters, December 8, 2014.

Report: Nearly 60% Of Patients Using Opioids Are Also Prescribed Other Medicines

The New York Times (12/9, Thomas, Subscription Publication) reports on a study released by pharmacy benefits managed Express Scripts that found that “nearly half the people who took the painkillers for over 30 days in the study’s first year were still using them three years later,” which may be “a sign of potential abuse.” Additionally, the report also found “nearly 60 percent of patients taking the painkillers to treat long-term conditions were also being prescribed muscle relaxants or anti-anxiety drugs that could cause dangerous reactions.”

According to Dr. Glen Stettin, a senior vice president at Express Scripts, “Not only are more people using these medications chronically, they are using them at higher doses than we would necessarily expect,” and “they are using them in combinations for which there isn’t a lot of clinical justification.”

Related Links:

— “Patients Prescribed Narcotic Painkillers Use More of Them for Longer, Study Finds,” Katie Thomas, New York Times, December 9, 2014.

NAMI Report: States Slow Response To Mental Healthcare Reforms

US News & World Report (12/9) reports that the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) has issued its State Mental Health Legislation report for 2014, which points out that this year, “Congress did not pass mental health care reforms and states slowed in their response to the issue.” The report, which analyzed “state spending on mental health and looks at what legislation states passed to address mental illness disparities,” revealed that even “though 27 states and the District of Columbia increased funding in 2014, this was a lower total than in 2013, when 37 states and the District of Columbia increased funding after three straight years of cuts.”

Related Links:

— “Two Years After Sandy Hook: Mental Health Funding Still Lags,” Kimberly Leonard, US News & World Report, December 9, 2014.

Depression In Seniors May Be Underrecognized, Undertreated

The Washington Post (12/8, Levingston) “Health & Science” blog reported that according to the Institute of Medicine, “by 2030, there will be as many as 14 million American seniors with mental health or substance abuse disorders, up from five million to eight million today.” Even now, “depressive disorders, along with dementia-related behavioral and psychiatric symptoms, are the most common maladies facing that group,” making depression an undertreated and underrecognized condition in seniors. Unfortunately, “the despair and withdrawal of depression can spark a rapid, functional decline, including problems with concentration.”

Related Links:

— “Depression is often undertreated in seniors,” Suzanne Allard Levingston, Washington Post, December 8, 2014.

Fifth Circuit Halts Execution Of Texas Inmate With Severe Mental Illness

USA Today (12/3, Jervis, Bacon) reports from Austin, TX that the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans on Wednesday “halted the execution of Texas killer Scott Panetti, whose case has sparked a global debate over whether people with severe mental illnesses should be put to death for their crimes.” Panetti’s attorneys “say he is too delusional to be executed,” and the appeals court “granted a reprieve less than eight hours before Panetti was scheduled to receive a lethal injection,” saying “it needed more time to ‘allow us to fully consider the late-arriving and complex legal questions at issue in this matter.’” Meanwhile, “Paul Appelbaum, of the American Psychiatric Association, which has lobbied against Panetti’s execution, said he was ‘pleased and relieved’ by the ruling.”
Related Links:

— “Court halts execution of mentally ill Texas inmate,” Rick Jervis and John Bacon, USA Today, December 4, 2014.

First-Ever State-By-State Ranking Of Mental Health Services Released.

The Washington Post (12/4, Bernstein) “To Your Health” blog reported that on Dec. 3, the advocacy group Mental Health America released the first-ever “state-by-state ranking of mental health services.” The states of “Massachusetts, Vermont, Maine, North Dakota, and Delaware received the highest overall scores when prevalence of mental illness is compared to access to care,” while “Arizona, Mississippi, Nevada, Washington, and Louisiana received the lowest marks.”

The report also found that “42.5 million Americans (18 percent) report some kind of mental illness – from mild, short-term disturbances to severe, long-term illness.”

Related Links:

— “Less mental illness among southerners, less access to treatment, too,” Lenny Bernstein, Washington Post, December 4, 2014.

NYTimes Says Newtown Report Shows Need For Gun Control

In an editorial, the New York Times (12/4, A30, Subscription Publication) says that a report on the Newtown shooting by Connecticut’s Office of the Child Advocate found that the mother of Adam Lanza failed to take appropriate action to treat her son’s mental illness. The report also “noted that severe mental illness is roughly stable around the world — schizophrenia, for example, occurs in one percent of developed countries — while gun violence varies.”

It also says in its summary that the “conclusion that access to guns drives shooting episodes far more than the presence of mental illness is inescapable. Those countries that have tight gun controls in general experience less overall gun violence and have fewer episodes per capita of mass shootings.” The Times says that shows that the “gun lobby” assertion that containing mental illness alone is enough is false.

Related Links:

— “Mental Illness and Guns at Newtown,” New York Times, December 3, 2014.

Kaiser Permanente Accused Of Understaffing Mental Healthcare Services

Modern Healthcare (12/5, Rubenfire, Subscription Publication) reports that Kaiser Permanente has been accused by members of the National Union of Healthcare Workers (NUHW) “of understaffing its mental-health services.” Now, NUHW is threatening to strike because of that. For its part, “Kaiser has responded that patients with urgent needs can be seen immediately, and it accuses the union in turn of sullying the system’s reputation for its own organizing purposes.” Last month, “NUHW members, who represent about 2,500 of Kaiser’s mental-health workers in California, voted…to strike if the system doesn’t make improvements.”

Related Links:

— “Kaiser mental-health staffing under fire again,” Adam Rubenfire, , December 4, 2014.

Request To Congress For Alzheimer’s Funding Faces Competing Budget Priorities

The Congressional Quarterly (12/4, Attias, Subscription Publication) reports that the Alzheimer’s Association is urging “Congress to provide an additional $200 million in fiscal 2015 funding, on top of a $100 million boost last fiscal year.” The association maintains that “the extra funds are necessary to meet the goal of developing effective prevention and treatment by 2025, as laid out in the National Plan to Address Alzheimer’s Disease.” However, “myriad competing priorities in a tough budget environment make fulfilling the request difficult.”

Related Links:

Congressional Quarterly (requires login and subscription)