Studies Find Association Between Hearing Loss, Dementia.

The New York Times (2/11, Bouton) “Well” blog examines the relationship between hearing loss and dementia. “In a 2011 paper in the Archives of Neurology, Dr. [Frank] Lin and colleagues found a strong association between the two. The researchers looked at 639 subjects, ranging in age at the beginning of the study from 36 to 90 (with the majority between 60 and 80).” Participants were followed for about 18 years. “‘Compared to individuals with normal hearing, those individuals with a mild, moderate, and severe hearing loss, respectively, had a two-, three- and five-fold increased risk of developing dementia over the course of the study,’ Dr. Lin wrote in an e-mail summarizing the results.” A study of 1,984 seniors published online last month in JAMA Internal Medicine confirmed the 2011 study’s results.

Related Links:

— “Straining to Hear and Fend Off Dementia, “Katherine Bouton, New York Times, February 11, 2013.

Small Study: ED Overcrowding May Be Linked To Later PTSD Symptoms In ACS Patients.

Bloomberg News (2/12, Pettypiece) reports, “Chaotic, overcrowded emergency” departments (EDs) “may cause some heart patients to develop post-traumatic stress disorder,” according to research letter (2/12) published in JAMA Internal Medicine. Researchers “tracked 135 patients who came to the” ED “at a New York City hospital with a condition called acute coronary syndrome [ACS].” The investigators “compared the traffic at the” ED “during the time they were there with whether the patients experienced symptoms of PTSD a month later.”

Modern Healthcare (2/11, Subscription Publication) reports that the researchers found that “there was a connection between a crowded ED and getting symptoms of PTSD.”

MedPage Today (2/12, Petrochko) reports that in particular, researchers found that “greater emergency department crowding was tied to higher levels of one-month PTSD symptoms (Β=2.0, P<0.05) induced by ACS." The findings "remained significant after adjusting for patient characteristics (Β=2.5, P=0.01) and length of stay (Β=3.0, P=0.02)." HealthDay (2/12, Reinberg) reports that study author Donald Edmondson said, "The modern emergency department is excellent at acute care, but a number of health system and hospital-level pressures have overcrowded them to a point where being treated there can, at times, worsen long-term prognosis." Related Links:

— “Crowded Emergency Rooms Linked to PTSD in Chest Patients,”Shannon Pettypiece, Bloomberg, February 12, 2013.

VA Concerned About Suicide Rates Among Veterans.

USA Today (2/12, Zoroya) reports that the “historic pace of troop suicides confounding the military through the war years is following servicemembers into civilian life, according to preliminary analyses of new veteran data.” While “only 4.5% of men ages 18-34 are veterans, veterans account for 10.8% of suicides in that age group, according to statistics from the Department of Veterans Affairs. The numbers are based on death data collected by the VA from 21 states.”

Rep. Miller Pushing To Increase Speed Of VA Claims Processing. USA Today (2/11, King) reports Rep. Jeff Miller (R-FL), chair of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, “wants to speed up the time it takes to process veterans’ disability claims.” It is one of his two main priorities “outlined in a recent interview in his Capitol Hill Office. The other is providing veterans greater access to mental health services by allowing them to access the TRICARE system that serves active-duty military personnel.”

Related Links:

— “Suicide rate for veterans worries VA,”Gregg Zoroya, USA Today, February 12, 2013.

About 8% Of Stroke Survivors May Consider Suicide.

The AP (2/8, Marchione) reports, “One in 12 stroke survivors thought about suicide or that they would be better off dead,” according to research presented yesterday at the American Stroke Association conference in Honolulu. “That’s more than those with other health problems such as heart attacks or cancer, and it suggests that depression after stroke is more serious than many had realized.” The AP explains, “Depression may develop partly because strokes damage the very thing that controls mood – the brain, said a neurologist with no role in the study, Dr. Brian Silver of Brown University and Rhode Island Hospital.”

HealthDay (2/8, Preidt) reports, “The investigators analyzed data from the 2005 to 2010 US National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys and found that nearly eight percent of stroke survivors reported suicidal thoughts, compared with about six percent of heart attack survivors, five percent of diabetes patients and four percent of cancer patients.” Notably, “stroke survivors who had more severe depression, were younger, had higher body mass index…had less education, and were poorer, single or women were more likely to have suicidal thoughts,” the study found. “Seventeen percent of the people who’d had a stroke also had depression, which is the most common mental health complication in stroke survivors, the study authors noted.”

Related Links:

— “STUDY: MANY STROKE SURVIVORS THINK ABOUT SUICIDE,”Marilynn Marchione, Associated Press, February 7, 2013.

Maternal Depression, Domestic Violence May Raise Kids’ Risk For AD/HD.

HealthDay (2/8, Mann) reports, “Preschoolers whose parents report depression and intimate partner violence may be more likely to develop attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (AD/HD) by the age of six.” Furthermore, “young children with depressed moms may be more likely to receive prescription drugs to treat behavioral and mental health issues down the road,” according to a study published online Feb. 4 in the journal JAMA Pediatrics. The study “included more than 2,400 children who were three years old” and their parents who answered questionnaires regarding domestic violence and personal depression history.

Related Links:

— “Maternal Depression, Violence at Home May Raise Child’s ADHD Risk, “Denise Mann, HealthDay, February 7, 2013.

House Panel Chair Miller Proposes Tricare Expansion To Fill Mental Care Gap.

The AP (1/30, Freking) reports on House Committee on Veterans Affairs Jeff Miller’s (R-FL) proposal, under which veterans having trouble receiving timely mental healthcare from VA hospitals and clinics would have access to Tricare’s network of psychologists and psychiatrists, a move that “allows veterans to get care closer to home, particularly those who live in rural communities.” Miller “doesn’t have an estimated price tag yet but says that whatever it is, that’s part of the cost of war. … Even a modest increase in spending could make Miller’s proposal a tough sell at a time when Congress is focused on cutting the federal debt and dealing with the threat of [sequestration].”

Related Links:

— “Rep. looks outside VA to fill mental care gap, “Kevin Freking, The Associated Press, January 29, 2013.

After Newtown Shooting, Connecticut Officials Address Systematic Issues In Mental Healthcare.

USA Today (1/29, Stoller) reports, “In the third of four hearings scheduled by a legislative task force formed to prevent gun violence and improve school safety in the wake of December’s Newtown school shooting massacre,” Connecticut’s Mental Health Services Commissioner Patricia Rehmer “said risk assessments of mental-health patients are difficult and cannot be done with complete accuracy.” Jeremy Richman, whose daughter was killed at Sandy Hook, testified along with his wife. They “have started the Avielle Foundation to honor those killed on Dec. 14 and to prevent future violent acts by enhancing mental health care and ‘fostering community.'” Rehmer, “who said she was asked to address gaps in the mental health system, alternatives to outpatient commitment and mental health first aid, said the biggest gaps are for those with private insurance.”

The Wall Street Journal (1/30, A15, De Avila, Subscription Publication) notes the commission doesn’t know whether Newtown shooter Adam Lanza was ever treated for mental illness, and privacy laws suggest that the panel may never know. Testimony from Jennifer Maksel, the mother of a Sandy Hook survivor, explained that getting help from the local schools and hospital is hard when it comes to her son, who she said had Asperger’s Syndrome, attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, and oppositional defiant disorder.

Related Links:

— “Mental health experts talk about systemic issues, “Gary Stoller, USA Today, January 29, 2013.

Study Says “Coming Out” Has Health Benefits.

The New York Daily News (1/29, Miller) reported that according to a new study by Canadian researchers published in Psychosomatic Medicine, gays, lesbians and bisexuals who come out about their sexuality are “less anxious, depressed and burnt out than their closeted counterparts, or even than heterosexual people of similar age.” The study examined “87 men and women of varying sexual orientations, all of whom were around 25 years old,” and found that the out participants “had lower stress hormone levels and fewer symptoms of depression than those who weren’t public about their sexuality. Out gay and bisexual men also had lower stress and depressive symptoms than heterosexual men.” The study concluded that the constant stress of hiding one’s sexuality “can cause the hormone cortisol to spike, creating inflammation in the body – which in turn has been linked to increased risk of heart disease, diabetes and other chronic illness.”

NBC News (1/30, Alexander) in its “Vitals” blog reports the study’s finding “could help explain a remarkable study published last year by a group of researchers from Columbia University in the American Journal of Public Health. They found that after Massachusetts enacted its same-sex marriage law in 2003, there was a significant drop in medical and mental health care visits – and therefore costs – incurred by gay men.” The lead author of the study by McGill University and University of Montreal researchers, Robert-Paul Juster, said, “It seems to be that if you’re using more avoidance coping, and wishful thinking, then you get poorer health. If you aren’t dealing with the problem, it affects health in a negative way.”

Related Links:

— “Coming out is good for your health: Lesbians, gays, bisexuals less stressed than closeted and some hetero counterparts: study, “Tracy Miller, New York Daily News, January 29, 2013.

Some Mental Health Professionals Uneasy With Maryland Gun-Policy Proposal.

The Baltimore Sun (1/29, Rector) reports that as “law enforcement officials and politicians push new gun control measures, mental health providers say they feel caught in the middle and warn that some proposals would endanger their relationships with patients.” The Maryland General Assembly is presently, considering legislation, based on the state “task force’s work, to require mental health professionals to report patients who make verbal or physical threats of suicide or serious violence” and to allow law enforcement to use such “information to investigate and potentially seize” guns owned by the patients. But Dr. Paul Appelbaum, “past president of the American Psychiatric Association, said such efforts strip away the discretion of psychiatrists and other mental health professionals to decide the best course of action after hearing a troubling statement from a patient.”

Related Links:

— “Psychiatrists, mental health advocates uneasy with gun policy prescriptions, “Kevin Rector, The Baltimore Sun, January 28, 2013.

Childhood Adversity May Increase Comorbidity Risk In BD Patients.

Medwire (1/29, Davenport) reports, “Childhood adversity, including verbal, physical, or sexual abuse, is associated with the later development of multiple medical comorbidities in patients with bipolar disorder,” according to a study published online Jan. 18 in the Journal of Affective Disorders. The researchers from the Bipolar Collaborative Network in Bethesda, Maryland, administered questionnaires related to all types of childhood abuse, parental history of substance abuse or mood disorders, and suicidality to 904 individuals with bipolar disorder. They determined that the “most common medical conditions were allergies, migraine, headache, and head injury, which were found in 22.0%-37.2% of patients.” The results also indicated that the “prevalence of 16 medical conditions was significantly increased with increasing tCAS score, and included allergies, arthritis, asthma, chronic fatigue syndrome, chronic menstrual irregularities, fibromyalgia, head injury without loss of consciousness, hypertension, hypotension, irritable bowel syndrome and migraine headache.”

Related Links:

— “Childhood adversity raises comorbidity risk in bipolar disorder,”Liam Davenport, Medwire News, January 29, 2013.