Economic Tumult May Be Tied To Increase In Suicides Among Middle-Aged Adults

The Washington Post (2/28, Millman) “Wonkblog” reported that a study published online Feb. 26 in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine suggests that “economic tumult may have been behind a sharp increase in suicides among adults between 40 and 64.” After analyzing “information from the National Violent Death Reporting System, a detailed database maintained by the CDC,” researchers found that “the proportion of suicides linked to external factors — such as job, financial or legal woes — increased from 33 percent in 2005 to 37.5 percent by 2010 among middle-age adults.”

Related Links:

— “The financial crisis may have been to blame for a sudden spike in middle-age suicides,” Jason Millman, Washington Post, February 27, 2015.

Report: US Faces A Shortage Of Up To 90,000 Physicians By 2025

The Washington Post (3/4, Bernstein) “To Your Health” blog reports that the US “faces a shortage of as many as 90,000 physicians by 2025, including a critical need for specialists to treat an aging population that will increasingly live with chronic disease…reported” the Association of American Medical Colleges. This “report predicts that the greatest shortfall, on a percentage basis, will be in the demand for surgeons – especially those who treat diseases more common to older people, such as cancer.”

Related Links:

— “U.S. faces 90,000 doctor shortage by 2025, medical school association warns,” Lenny Bernstein, Washington Post, March 3, 2015.

Review: 7.2% Of Kids Worldwide May Have AD/HD

HealthDay (3/4, Thompson) reports that a review published online March 3 in the journal Pediatrics suggests that 7.2 “percent of children worldwide have attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (AD/HD).” The review’s conclusion is based upon “data from 175 prior studies conducted over” 36 years, encompassing some “one million” North American and European youngsters. Notably, the review’s “estimate comes in lower than the latest data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which reports that 11 percent of US school-age children had been diagnosed with AD/HD by 2011.”

Related Links:

— “About 7 Percent of Kids Worldwide Have ADHD: Study,” Dennis Thompson, HealthDay, March 3, 2015.

Status Of Smoking In US, Efforts To Control Habit Discussed.

The Chicago Tribune (2/26) provides an overview of the status of smoking and efforts to control the habit in the US, noting that more than 50 years after the first US surgeon general’s report highlighting its dangers, “smoking remains the leading cause of preventable disease and death” in the US. The article notes that those “who continue to smoke may subject themselves to at least 11 kinds of cancer, numerous other diseases and a lower quality of life.” The paper notes that even with smoking rates “half of the population percentage of what they were in 1964, the American Lung Association says that more than 43 million Americans, or one in five people in the U.S., still smoke.”

Related Links:

— “The 50-year war on smoking is far from won,” Barbara Sadick, Chicago Tribune, February 26, 2015. (Registration Required — free for five articles)

Study Puts Cigarette-Related Deaths At Higher Rate Than Before.

The Washington Post (2/26) reports in its “Wonkblog” that two-thirds of smokers “will die early from” cigarette-related diseases, “unless they choose to kick the habit,” citing new research from Australia published in BMC medicine. The study of more than 200,000 people, unveiled this week, “found about 67 percent of smokers perished from smoking-related illness.” The rate, according to the Post, “is higher than doctors previously estimated.”

Related Links:

— “The terrifying rate at which smokers die from smoking,” Danielle Paquette, Washington Post, February 26, 2015.

Two US Lawmakers Outline Plans To Introduce A Pair Of Mental Health Reform Bills Next Month

The Hill (2/27, Sullivan) reports that that earlier this week, “Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) and Rep. Tim Murphy (R-Pa.)…outlined plans to introduce a pair of mental health reform bills next month, amid a push that began in the wake of the mass shooting in Newtown, Conn.” According to the Hill, “Rep. Murphy, a longtime champion of mental health reform, plans to reintroduce a version of a bill he pushed in the last Congress, he said at a mental health event hosted by The Hill.” Meanwhile, “Sen. Murphy said he would introduce a bill that has ‘some differences’ but is ‘substantially similar’ in the Senate around the same time.”

Related Links:

— “Lawmakers to ramp up mental health push,” Peter Sullivan, The Hill, February 26, 2015.

“American Sniper” Case Illustrates Difficulties Of Mental Illness Defense

The AP (2/25) reports the case of Eddie Ray Routh, the former Marine convicted of killing “American Sniper” author Chris Kyle and another man, “illustrates the difficulty of succeeding with” mental illness defenses. One factor is that jurors don’t know that a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity means the defendant will be sent to a mental hospital for life, unless “the state could no longer establish that he had a severe mental illness and was likely to harm another person if he didn’t receive inpatient treatment.”

Related Links:

— “Experts: Insanity case as in ‘American Sniper’ hard to win,” Associated Press, Washington Post, February 25, 2015.

Homeless People With Mental Illness May Face High Risk Of Heart Disease

HealthDay (2/25, Preidt) reports that research published in BMC Public Health suggests that homeless individuals who have a mental illness may face a high risk of heart disease. Investigators “found that they have a 24.5 percent risk of heart attack, fatal or nonfatal stroke, or sudden cardiac death over 30 years.” The study indicated that “the risk of cardiovascular disease in homeless people with mental illness was highest among men and those with substance abuse disorders.”

Related Links:

— “Mental Illness, Homelessness Linked to Heart Disease in Study,” Robert Preidt, HealthDay, February 25, 2015.

Study, Poll: Mental Health Impacts Of Unemployment May Be Devastating

The Washington Post (2/25, Paquette) “Wonkblog” reports that the “mental health impacts of unemployment can be devastating.” For example, “a CDC study found suicide rates rise and fall with the economy.” What’s more, depression appears to be “higher among long-unemployed Americans, according to a recent Gallup poll: About one in five reported having depression.”

Related Links:

— “How unemployment warps your personality over time,” Danielle Paquette, Washington Post, February 24, 2015.

Study: Deaths From Prescription Narcotic Painkillers Have Soared

USA Today (2/25, Leger) reports that a study from the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics indicates that “deaths from prescription narcotic painkillers have soared as the opioid drugs became more popular and powerful.” The data indicated that “four out of five people who used a prescription narcotic painkiller in 2011 to 2012 took pills equal to or stronger than morphine.” The investigators also found that “the percentage of people who took painkillers stronger than morphine, which include such drugs as fentanyl, hydromorphone, methadone and oxycodone, grew from 17% in 1999 to 37% in 2012.”

Related Links:

— “CDC: Deaths soared as narcotic painkillers grew popular,” Donna Leinwand Leger, USA Today, February 25, 2015.