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Latest News Around the Web

Youth Who Reported Experiencing Severe Psychological Distress Were More Likely To Have Vaped Cannabis In Previous Month, Study Indicates

Psychiatric News (10/25) reports, “Youth who reported experiencing severe psychological distress were more likely to vape cannabis in the previous month than those who did not report psychological distress, according to” a study. Investigators came to this conclusion after looking “at the association between cannabis vaping and psychological distress among 22,202 youth aged 11 to 18 years using data from the 2022 National Youth Tobacco Survey.” The findings were published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

Related Links:

— “Over 60% of Youth Who Vape Cannabis Report Psychological Distress, Psychiatric News , October 25, 2023

Biden Administration Requests $1.55B From Congress To Address Fentanyl Crisis

NBC News (10/25, Guilfoil) reports, “The White House on Wednesday requested $1.55 billion from Congress to address illicit fentanyl driving overdose deaths across the country as part of a broader funding package.” This money “would be included alongside money for grants to states, territories and tribes through a Department of Health and Human Services program that aims to help strengthen addiction treatment, overdose prevention measures and recovery support services.” The request “comes after the administration asked Congress for money focused on foreign policy and border issues, including an additional 1,000 law enforcement personnel and investigative capabilities to prevent cartels from moving fentanyl into the country.”

Related Links:

— “White House presses for money to prevent opioid deaths as congressional dysfunction stymies aid,”Kyla Guilfoil, NBC News , October 25, 2023

Earlier Follow-Up Visit After Psychiatric Inpatient Discharge Was Associated With Lower Risk Of Suicide, Study Indicates

Healio (10/25, Cooper) reports, “An earlier follow-up visit after psychiatric inpatient discharge was associated with lower risk of suicide in a population-based study from South Korea.” The data indicated that “earlier follow-up lowered suicide risk for patients with substance use disorder, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression, suggesting that ‘more intensive follow-up’ is needed immediately after discharge, particularly for the prevention of suicide in those deemed high-risk at admission…wrote” the researchers. The findings were published in JAMA Network Open.

Related Links:

— “Earlier follow-up lowered suicide risk after psychiatric inpatient discharge,”Justin Cooper, Healio, October 25, 2023

CDC: Burnout, harassment driving mental health crisis among health care workers

The New York Times (10/24, Weiland) reports, “Health workers feel burnout more frequently than they did before the COVID-19 pandemic, while also struggling with symptoms of anxiety and depression, sleep problems and harassment, according to a federal survey of American workers published on Tuesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.” The result “compared data from 2018 and 2022 and underscored a dire staffing crisis in the nation’s health work force, which limped through the pandemic amid long hours, high turnover, violence in emergency departments and public vitriol over vaccines, masks and treatments.”

The Hill (10/24, Weixel) says the report found that, “overall, about 46% of health care workers reported feeling burnout often or very often in 2022, compared with 32% in 2018.” Almost “half of those in the field also reported they were likely or very likely to apply for a new job – in contrast to other worker groups who reported a decrease in job turnover intention.”

Healio (10/24, Rhoades) reports, “Harassment at work also rose from 6.4% to 13.4% from 2018 to 2022, and was linked to increased odds of: anxiety,” depression, and burnout.

Related Links:

— “Why Health Care Workers Are Burning Out,”Noah Weiland, The New York Times, October 24, 2023

Young Adults In US Experience Anxiety, Depression Twice As Frequently As Teenagers, Survey Indicates

The Washington Post (10/24, Reynolds Lewis) reports, “Young adults in the United States experience anxiety and depression twice as frequently as teenagers, according to a new nationally representative survey.” The survey, from “Making Caring Common, a project of Harvard University’s Graduate School of Education,” found that “thirty-six percent of young adults — ages 18 to 25 — reported anxiety, compared with 18 percent of younger teenagers — ages 14 to 17 — while 29 percent felt depression, compared with 15 percent in the younger age group in the survey.”

Related Links:

— “The Washington Post (requires login and subscription)

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