New Health Center To Treat PTSD In Military Women.

The Philadelphia Inquirer (12/6, Brubaker) reports, “Lourdes Health System is opening a 21-bed unit to treat active-duty military women with post-traumatic stress disorder and other behavioral illnesses.” According to Lourdes officials, the facility “is scheduled to open this month at Lourdes Medical Center of Burlington County in Willingboro and will be only the fifth such center in the country and the only one on the East Coast.” The piece cites US Department of Veteran Affairs data, which said that “women, who make up about 15 percent of the armed forces, are more likely to suffer post-traumatic stress disorder than men, in part because they are more likely to be sexually assaulted.”

Related Links:

— “New health center for military women, “Harold Brubaker, The Philadelphia Inquirer, December 6, 2012.

November, December, January Have Lowest Daily Suicide Numbers.

USA Today (12/6, Payne) reports, “The months of November, December and January actually have the lowest number of suicides per day, according to the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg Public Policy Center, which analyzed 1999-2010 data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). It found that averages were highest in the spring and summer.”

Related Links:

— “Holiday suicide myth persists, research says, “Cathy Payne, USA Today, December 5, 2012.

House Votes To Remove Term “Lunatic” From US Law.

Bloomberg News (12/6, Homan) reports, “The US House voted to remove the term ‘lunatic’ from sections of federal law, while the word ‘idiot’ would remain.” The measure, “which passed 398-1, would amend a section of the US Code that defines the meanings of certain words used in acts of Congress. Making the change would eliminate ‘references that contribute to the stigmatization of mental health conditions,’ according to an April 25 statement by the bill’s sponsor, Democratic Senator Kent Conrad of North Dakota.” The bill has the backing of the American Psychiatric Association, among others.

The AP (12/6) reports, “The congressional action is the latest effort to remove language from the US code that has become outdated or demeaning. Two years ago Congress took out references in federal law to the term ‘mental retardation.'”

Related Links:

— “Congress Erases ‘Lunatic,’ Keeps ’Idiot’ in Federal Law, “Timothy R. Homan, Bloomberg, December 5, 2012.

Thousands Hospitalized Due To Synthetic Marijuana Use.

USA Today (12/3, Leger) reports, “K2, Spice and other synthetic drugs that mimic a marijuana high sent 11,406 people…to the emergency room in 2010.” In fact, “in 59% of the cases involving patients ages 12 to 29, doctors found no other substance,” besides synthetic marijuana in the patients, which differs from most other drug-related hospital visits. According to USA Today, “At least 18 states outlawed the substances and the Drug Enforcement Administration instituted an emergency ban. In July, Congress banned sales of K2, Spice and other synthetic drugs under the Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act.”

The Hill (12/5, Viebeck) reports in its “Healthwatch” blog that, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, “Synthetic marijuana can cause vomiting, seizures, hallucinations and paranoid behavior on a level that lands people in the hospital.” The Hill adds, “Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA), who is behind a law that bans the drug’s chemical ingredients, hailed the study” detailing the dangers of synthetic marijuana. The story was also covered by HealthDay (12/5, Mozes) and by CBS News (12/5, Castillo).

Related Links:

— “Report: Synthetic pot sends thousands to hospital, “Donna Leinwand Leger, USA Today, December 4, 2012.

Small Study: Most Homeless Iraq, Afghanistan War Veterans May Have PTSD.

On its website, Salon (12/5, Lennard) reports that Yale University, using national administrative data from the Housing and Urban Development-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing (HUD-VASH) program, discovered that the majority of homeless Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who reported combat exposure, have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and “do not receive any” Veterans Affairs-service connected disability. Yale’s study, according to Salon, “assessed nearly 100 Iraq and Afghanistan vets.”

Related Links:

— “Majority of homeless Iraq and Afghanistan vets have PTSD, “Natasha Lennard, Salon, December 4, 2012.

Adolescent Risk Of Self-Harm Greater If Parent Dies Of Cancer.

Reuters (12/5, Seaman) reports that according to a study published online Dec. 3 in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, one in five adolescents whose parent has died of cancer may self-harm either by burning or cutting themselves. In contrast, only one in 10 adolescents with both parents living will engage in such behavior.

MedPage Today (12/5, Bankhead) reports that the study “authors identified several factors that had statistically significant associations with self-injury in both groups: female sex — OR 3.2; bullying before age 13 — OR 2.8; physical/sexual abuse — OR 6.5; low family cohesion — OR 3.2; no one to share joys/sorrows — OR 1.8; any childhood psychiatric morbidity — OR 9.0; deliberately harming others during a menstrual period — OR 2.9; attempted suicide/endangering own life — OR 6.0; [and] self-injury prior to 2000 — OR 11.7.” Researchers arrived at these conclusions after reviewing “government records of individuals born in Sweden from 1936 to 1973 and who died of cancer during 2000 through 2003.”

Related Links:

— “After parent’s cancer death, one in five kids self-injure, ” Andrew M. Seaman, Reuters, December 5, 2012.

Scan Studies Reveal How Meditation Changes The Brain.

The Boston Globe (12/4) reports, “Since 2002, the government’s National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine has funded about $57.7 million in scientific research into meditation, according to statistics provided by the office,” and “last April, the International Symposia for Contemplative Studies, a first-ever conference of researchers, scholars, and students in the field, drew 720 participants from all over the world.” While earlier research “focused on the health benefits of stress reduction from meditation,” recently “neuroscientists…have begun using magnetic resonance imaging to show that meditation can make actual structural changes in the brain.” For example, one imaging study conducted in 2005 found that people who meditate had more gray matter in areas of the brain involved in sensory processing and attention. A 2012 study found that meditation increases gyrification in the brain.

Related Links:

— “The effectiveness in meditation to treat an array of illnesses has led to studies of how meditation can change the brain, “Jan Brogan, Boston.com, November 25, 2012.

Patterns Found In Brain Injuries Associated With Contact Sports.

NBC Nightly News (12/3, story 7, 1:20, Williams) reported, “There is news tonight on a topic that has been in the news a lot of late — the connection between repeated concussions and long-term degenerative brain disease.”

The CBS Evening News (12/3, story 3, 2:30, Pelley) reported, “Scientists studied 85 brains, most from professional athletes, and 68 of them showed signs of damage.”

USA Today (12/4, Mihoces) reported, “John Mackey and Ollie Matson, Pro Football Hall of Famers, are among 33 deceased NFL players diagnosed in a new study with a brain disease linked to concussions. But the study also reports early-stage cases some who only played high school football.” The authors of the study “say that sounds an alarm that must be heard at the youth level of football and other sports with head impacts.”

The Boston Globe (12/3, Kotz) reported, “Published Monday by Boston University School of Medicine researchers, the study [pdf] reports on the autopsies of 85 brain donors, most of them professional athletes.” The study “provides new insight into an Alzheimer’s-like condition, called chronic traumatic encephalopathy [CTE], that is thought to be caused by repeat concussions or blows to the head.”

Related Links:

— “NFL brain study involves former high school players, “Gary Mihoces, USA Today, December 3, 2012.

Study: Most US Teens With Mental Disorders Not On Medication.

USA Today (12/3, Painter) reports, “Most US teens with mental disorders are not taking psychiatric medications,” according to a study published online Dec. 3 in the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine. In fact, “just 14% of teens with any mental disorder take medications designed to alter emotions or behavior, the study finds. In most cases, the medications are those considered appropriate for their conditions,” the study found.

Bloomberg News (12/4, Ostrow) reports that the study’s findings “show that American teens aren’t getting more psychiatric medications than necessary despite previous reports suggesting the contrary, the authors said. ‘It’s reassuring that the utilization seems to match the needs of these kids,’ said Benedetto Vitiello, the study author and chief of the Child and Adolescent Treatment and Preventive Intervention Research Branch at the National Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda, Maryland. ‘This paper does not suggest that there is an excessive use. If anything, it may suggest at times medications are used fairly sparingly and other treatments are used instead of medications,'” Vitiello added.

Related Links:

— “Most teens with mental disorders take no medication,”Kim Painter, USA Today, December 3, 2012.

Autism Advocates Highlight Need For Research At Congressional Hearing.

In its “On Parenting” blog, the Washington Post (12/1, Williams) reported that on Thursday, the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform heard testimony from advocacy groups and experts about autism research. The blog said that “for more than two hours, members of the committee asked Alan Guttmacher, the director of the Institute of Child Health and Human Development at the National Institutes of Health, and Colleen Boyle of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about research, possible causes and treatments.” Leaders from the Autism Society, Autism Speaks, SafeMinds, and the Asperger Initiative took part in the second panel. The Post described that “after hours of questions and testimony about what a burden autism is for families and society, two adults with autism, Ari Ne’eman and Michael John Carley, spoke.” According to the blog, “their testimony was moving and telling; they talked passionately about the need for services for adults with autism.”

Related Links:

— “Adults with autism tell Congress more funds needed for services, “Mari-Jane Williams, The Washington Post, November 30, 2012.