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Latest News Around the Web

Study Finds No Association Between Suicide And Fluoxetine, Venlafaxine.

Reuters (2/18, Grens) reported that according to a study published online Feb. 6 in Archives of General Psychiatry, no association was found between suicide and antidepressants among children and adults taking fluoxetine or venlafaxine. In addition, results based on unpublished data, also found that antidepressants may decrease the risk of suicide in adults.

Sheriff Says Cook County Jail “Largest Mental Health Provider” In Illinois.

The New York Times (2/19, A25A, O’Shea, Subscription Publication) reported that at the Cook County Jail in Illinois, an estimated 2,000 of some 11,000 prisoners “suffer from some form of serious mental illness,” according to Tom Dart, the Cook County sheriff. “Dart said the system ‘is so screwed up that I’ve become the largest mental health provider in the state of Illinois.'” Unfortunately, “the situation is about to get worse, according to Mr. Dart and other criminal justice experts. The city” of Chicago “plans to shut down six of its 12 mental health centers by the end of April, to save an estimated $2 million, potentially leaving many patients without adequate treatment — some of them likely to engage in conduct that will lead to arrests.”

Related Links:

— “Psychiatric Patients With No Place to Go but Jail,”BRIDGET O’SHEA , The New York Times, February 18, 2012.

Studies Suggest Gender Uncertainty May Subject Children To Trauma, Abuse.

USA Today (2/21, Healy) reports, “Children whose activity choices, interests and pretend play don’t conform to expected gender roles face an increased risk of abuse and future trauma,” according to a study published online Feb. 20 in the journal Pediatrics. “One in 10 kids display gender non-conformity before age 11 and, on average, are more likely to experience physical, psychological and sexual abuse and experience post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) by early adulthood,” the study of “nearly 9,000 young adults” found, with abuse “perpetrated mostly by parents or other adults in the home,” the study authors explained.

Pointing out an opposite viewpoint, the AP (2/20, Tanner) reported, “Offering sex-changing treatment to kids younger than 18 raises ethical concerns, and their parents’ motives need to be closely examined, said Dr. Margaret Moon, a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ bioethics committee,” who was not involved in the study. “Some kids may get a psychiatric diagnosis when they are just hugely uncomfortable with narrowly defined gender roles; or some may be gay and are coerced into treatment by parents more comfortable with a sex change than having a homosexual child, said Moon, who teaches at the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics.” She stated that it’s “harmful ‘to have an irreversible treatment too early.'”

According to MedPage Today (2/21, Walsh), a second study published in the same journal found that “among children and teens evaluated for medical intervention to suppress puberty or for hormone therapy, 44% had been given a psychiatric diagnosis — most often depression — and 21% reported self-mutilation.” MedPage Today adds, “In 2009, guidelines on the treatment of adolescents with this disorder were published by the Endocrine Society, recommending delay of puberty with reversible gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogs at Tanner stages 1-2 in eligible adolescents.” The study authors wrote, “This fully reversible treatment allowed patients time until age 16 to decide, in consultation with health professionals and their families, whether to begin hormone treatment that would allow them to transition physically.” Also covering the story are CBS News /WebMD (2/20, Mann) and HealthDay (2/21, Esposito).

Now Chicago, before that LA where the LA County jail was the largest mental institution in the US. – TEA

Related Links:

— “Gender Uncertainty Risky for Kids,”Nancy Walsh , MedPage Today,February 20, 2012.

Ask the Doctor Q and A: I disagree with your “mental illness is more normal” advertising around Baltimore

QUESTION:
To Whom It May Concern,

I live in Baltimore MD where there are several advertisements throughout the city & county reading something of the sort…”Mental
illness is More Normal Than You Think.” However, I disagree totally.

Mental illness is not normal at all. Normal means “conforming to the standard or the common type; usual; not abnormal; regular; natural or average in any psychological trait, as intelligence, personality, or emotional adjustment, free from any mental disorder; sane.” If a person has a mental illness or mental disorder, then they are not sane, meaning normal.

The message that you all are displaying, I am sure, is to inform society that there are many mentally ill people with normal traits; yet, these people are not at all normal, due to the complexity of their illness.

Thank You.

ANSWER:
Thank you for writing. Your point is definitely a good one. Our intent was to indicate in a succinct and hopefully “catchy” way that mental illness occurs more frequently – is less uncommon – than most people think. In this way we hope that the general public will recognize that the problems of mental illness and its treatment are important – due to the number of people affected. Also, it is our wish to reduce the stigma of having a mental illness by pointing out that many people suffer from illness of this type.

NPR’s Scott Simon Speaks Out on Sports and Brain Damage

The following is Copyright 2012 by National Public Radio. Read the original and listen to the piece at NPR’s website.

A Fan’s Notes On Pro Sports, Brain Damage
By Scott Simon
National Public Radio January 28, 2012

I will watch the Super Bowl next weekend, along with several billion other people. I expect to cheer, shout and have some guacamole.

But as a fan, I’m finding it a little harder to cheer, especially for my favorite football and hockey players, without thinking: They’re hurting themselves.

Not just breaks and sprains but dangerous, disabling brain damage.

Case studies have mounted over the last year. Dave Duerson of the 1985 Super Bowl-winning Bears shot himself in the chest just after the last Super Bowl and left a note: “Please, see that my brain is given to the NFL’s brain bank.”

That’s Boston University’s Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy, which determined that Mr. Duerson’s brain had been battered by at least 10 concussions and countless other football hits that may have caused dementia, addiction and depression that led to his death.

Jim McMahon, once the team’s brash quarterback, confided at a 25th reunion that his memory is “pretty much gone.”

“It’s unfortunate what the game does to you,” he said.

The dazzling Walter Payton of that same famous team died of liver disease. But a biography published last year achingly depicts the depression and addictions Mr. Payton suffered during decades of hits: thousands in games, tens of thousands in practice.

Sidney Crosby of the Pittsburgh Penguins is hockey’s greatest star — the skater who scored Canada’s goal over the U.S. to win a Gold Medal at the 2010 Olympic Games.

But Sid the Kid suffered a concussion last January. Who knows when, or if, he’ll play again?

Just a few weeks ago, John Branch of The New York Times wrote a heart-piercing series after 3 NHL “enforcers” — paid brawlers — died within four months last year. He focused on Derek Boogaard of the New York Rangers, who accidentally overdosed on booze and oxycodone at the age of 28.

Boston University’s Center opened Derek Boogaard’s brain and found profound damage.

Chris Nowinski, a center co-director, is a former pro wrestler who loves contact sports. But he went to a Boston Bruins hockey game shortly thereafter and says that when a routine brawl broke out, fans stood and cheered. He couldn’t.

Several former players have filed lawsuits. Sports writers and pundits have called for new rules and equipment, although most studies show new rules and equipment may do little to limit injury while players grow larger, faster, and risk more to sign million-dollar contracts.

I’ll watch the Super Bowl next week with my children and wonder how comfortable we fans can be, sitting and snacking while too many of the players we cheer entertain us and get rich at such terrible cost to themselves.

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