President Obama Concerned About NCAA Football Players’ Mental Health.

Multiple sources reported on President Obama’s interview with the New Republic, where he expressed concern over the mental health of the nation’s collegiate football players in light of similar concerns being addressed by the NFL. The President expressed that, if he had a son, it would be a difficult choice to let him play football, in light of the recent evidence that a large amount of players are experiencing brain injuries as a result of the repeated collisions they endure.

USA Today (1/27, Lopresti) reports, “The president of the United States is worried about the most pressing college football issue of our time…The carnage of concussions has Barack Obama’s attention, as it should everyone.” According to USA Today, “You play the game long enough, get hit in the head hard enough, have that happen enough times, and you might not even recognize yourself one day,” due to chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, as a result of repeated blows to the head. USA Today finishes the piece by calling on the NCAA to act, saying, “Nobody should let bureaucratic malaise get in the way on this one. The president means you, NCAA.”

Related Links:

— “Concussions in football: The president is watching, “Mike Lopresti,USA Today Sports, January 27, 2013.

Experts Warn US Senators About Gaps In Children’s Mental Healthcare.

Reuters (1/26, Morgan) reported that last week, experts warned US lawmakers about the gaps in the mental health system that have prevented many kids from getting treatment that could prevent tragedies later in life. In written testimony to the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, Michael Hogan, head of the President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, said, “We see the results of insufficient mental healthcare in school failure and suicide.” Hogan remarked, “while the gaps in children’s mental healthcare are huge, there is also reason for hope,” adding that this is in part “because we know more about what works, and what doesn’t.” Hogan was scheduled to appear at the Senate committee’s hearing, which was prompted by the shootings at Newtown’s Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Related Links:

— “U.S. mental health experts urge focus on childhood screening,”David Morgan, Reuters, January 25, 2013.

Physicians Urged To Screen Active Military Members For Depression.

American Medical News (1/28, Fiegl) reports that “suicides by active U.S. service members exceeded the number of combat deaths in 2012, and the rate of suicide among military members has been on the rise.” The article adds, American Medical Association President Jeremy A. Lazarus, MD, a psychiatrist in Denver, said that “physicians should educate themselves and have information about mild brain injuries, postcombat depression and PTSD.” According to American Medical News, “about half of active military members and veterans with illness related to their service will seek care from a physician in private practice,” and Lazarus “said physicians should be prepared to ask questions and screen these patients for depression and anxiety.”

Related Links:

— “Doctors warned on combat link to military suicide risk,”Charles Fiegl, Amednews, January 28, 2013.

Alzheimer’s Groups Push For Brain Imaging To Be Covered By Medicare, Insurers.

Bloomberg News (1/28, Cortez) reports the Alzheimer’s Association and the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging advocate that “advanced imaging that detects plaque in the brain should be covered by Medicare and private insurers for select people with dementia to help diagnose or rule out Alzheimer’s disease.” The recommendations “are the first to help govern the burgeoning field of brain imaging and may increase the use of the practice to improve care for the 5 million Americans affected with Alzheimer’s.” The article notes that “amyloid plaque is a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease,” but not everyone who has it also is afflicted with Alzheimer’s. “PET scans require a drug injected into patients to highlight the plaque for doctors.” Eli Lilly’s Amyvid (florbetapir F 18 injection) is the “only compound currently approved for use with PET scans for this purpose,” and it is currently not covered by Medicare. The cost of the scans can vary from $1,000 to $3,000.

Related Links:

— “Insurers Urged to Cover Brain Imaging for Alzheimer’s, “Michelle Fay Cortez, Bloomberg, January 28, 2013.

Report: AD/HD Medication-Related Emergency Room Visits Up Sharply.

The Los Angeles Times (1/25, Healy) reported in its “Booster Shots” health blog that a study found that between 2005 and 2010, “ADHD medication-related emergency room visits have more than doubled – from 13,379 in 2005 to 31,244 in 2010,” with the increase being “particularly pronounced in those over 18.” The data was “reported Thursday in an issue of the DAWN (Drug Abuse Warning Network) Report, published by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, an office of the National Institutes of Health.” About half of the “stimulant-related emergency department visits –15,585 in 2010 – were for ‘non-medical’ use of ADHD medication: They were to treat stimulant-related effects in patients who either had not been diagnosed with ADHD and prescribed the drugs or in patients who were not taking the medication as prescribed.”

Related Links:

— “Emergency room visits for ADHD medications rise sharply, report says, “Melissa Healy, Los Angeles Times, January 25, 2013.

Senate Panel Addresses Mental Healthcare For First Time Since 2007.

CQ (1/25, Attias, Subscription Publication) reports members of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee on Thursday held what they said was their first meeting on mental healthcare since 2007. There, lawmakers referenced the Newtown school shooting and also addressed questions about mental healthcare overall and their own priorities. For example, Chairman Tom Harkin “said ‘the critical investments’ need to be made to provide access to treatment for those with mental illness so they can lead healthy lives.” On this topic, Thomas Insel of the National Institute of Mental Health said sequestration cuts “would prevent certain studies from being carried out, which could include scaling up a project focused on the predictors for early psychosis.” While Democrats pushed for the release of a mental health parity rule, which SAMHSA director Pamela S. Hyde said was in the works, Insel noted that those “who receive treatment are 15 times less likely to commit a severely violent act than those who are not treated.”

Congress Reviewing Mental Health System.

CQ (1/24, Attias, Subscription Publication) says leaders in both houses of Congress, spurred by the Newtown school shooting, “appear focused on reviewing the current [mental health] system while speaking in broad terms about what issues should be discussed.” For example, the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee “is holding a hearing Thursday – its first of the new Congress – focused on mental health, and a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee is also expected to hear testimony on the topic.” Also, Julio C. Abreu at Mental Health America said US Sen. Al Franken will introduce legislation to increase access to mental healthcare in schools. The group also seeks a bill “to enhance community mental health centers by setting eligibility criteria and extending coverage under Medicaid.”

Report: Iraq, Afghanistan Veterans Showing Symptoms Of Gulf War Illness.

USA Today (1/24, Kennedy) reports that a new study released Wednesday by the Federal Institute of Medicine found that veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars may be suffering from chronic multisymptom illness, formerly known as Gulf War illness. Paul Rieckhoff, CEO of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, said this “may be the first time that the symptoms suffered by veterans of the 1991 Gulf War have been linked to veterans of the current wars, which started in 2001 and 2003.” The researchers “investigated treatments for Gulf War illness, including any existing research, to see what worked for veterans.” They found that veterans who suffer from chronic multisymptom illness have “symptoms in at least two of six categories: fatigue, mood and cognition issues, musculoskeletal problems, gastrointestinal problems, respiratory difficulties and neurologic issues that last for at least six months.”

Related Links:

— “Report: New vets showing Gulf War illness symptoms, “Kelly Kennedy, USA Today, January 23, 2013.

More Psychiatric Patients Forced To Wait In EDs Due To Cutbacks In Inpatient Beds.

The Washington Post (1/23, Khazan) reports on an “increasingly common” problem for psychiatric patients nationwide, where mental health patients are “boarded” in hospital emergency departments “in part because of cutbacks in inpatient hospital beds.” The Post explains, “As states trimmed their budgets in the economic downturn, resources for mental health patients were among the casualties.” The piece notes, “For many patients suffering from psychiatric crises, this translates to longer waits in emergency departments, where they receive no treatment for days – and sometimes weeks – while social workers try to chase down open spots in psychiatric wards, doctors said.”

Related Links:

— “Psychiatric patients wait in ERs for days and weeks as inpatient beds are scaled back, “Olga Khazan, The Washington Post, January 22, 2013.

Sexual, Physical Assault May Raise Suicide Risk Among US Soldiers.

HealthDay (1/23, Preidt) reports that “U.S. military personnel who were the victims of sexual or physical assault as adults are at increased risk for suicidal thoughts or actions, according to a new study” published Jan. 18 in the journal Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior. Meanwhile, college students “were more likely to think about or commit suicide if they were sexually assaulted as children or adults.” Investigators came to these conclusions after having “273 active-duty U.S. Air Force personnel with an average age of about 26 and 309 undergraduate college students with an average age of about 20 complete surveys anonymously.”

Related Links:

— “Physical, Sexual Assault May Raise Soldiers’ Suicide Risk, “Robert Preidt, HealthDay, January 22, 2013.