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Latest News Around the Web

Firearm Injury Survivors Often Experience Recurrent Firearm Injuries, Study Indicates

According to CNN (8/28, McPhillips, Christensen), researchers have found that “recurring gun injuries” are not uncommon. “About one of every 14 gunshot victims will be harmed by a firearm again within a year, according to” findings published online in the Annals of Internal Medicine. “Within five years, that risk rises to about one in eight, and it jumps to about one in six after eight years,” the study revealed.

Healio (8/28, Rhoades) reports, “Firearm injury survivors often experienced recurrent firearm injuries, particularly those who were young, uninsured, male and Black,” researchers concluded in an analysis that “included data from the St. Louis Region-Wide Hospital-Based Violence Intervention Program…repository on 10,293 adult and pediatric patients who presented with a firearm injury to a St. Louis level 1 trauma hospital from 2010 to 2019.” Of those patients, “9,553 survived the injury,” and “1,155 patients suffered a recurrent firearm injury.”

Related Links:

— “Shooting survivors have ‘distressingly high’ risk of repeat firearm injury, study finds, especially young Black males,”Deidre McPhillips and Jen Christensen, CNN, August 28, 2023

Postmortem study identifies brain pathologies, including CTE, in young deceased athletes

CNN (8/28, Musa) reports, “A new study from Boston University’s CTE Center has discovered more than 60 cases of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, known as CTE, in athletes who were under the age of 30 at the time of their death.” Additionally, the study “includes what researchers believe to be the first case of an American female athlete diagnosed with the disease.”
MedPage Today (8/28, George) reports, “Brain pathologies including chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a neurodegenerative disease, were identified in young deceased athletes, autopsy data” from “152 contact sports players under age 30 at the time of death” revealed. The study revealed that “CTE was diagnosed in 41.4%,” and “the mean age at death for players with evidence of autopsy-confirmed CTE was 25.” The findings were published online in JAMA Neurology.

Related Links:

— “Largest study of brains of athletes younger than 30 finds early signs of CTE even in amateur players,”Amanda Musa, CNN, August 28, 2023

Suicide Rates Among US Military Veterans Increased By More Than 10 Times In Nearly Two Decades, Data Indicate

HealthDay (8/28, Reinberg) reports, “Suicide has become an urgent issue among American military veterans, with rates increasing by more than 10 times in nearly two decades,” researchers concluded after examining data on “more than 8,200 suicides among veterans, comparing them with more than 562,000 U.S. adults in the general population.” The study also revealed that “the suicide rate for those with a” traumatic brain injury (TBI) “was 56% higher than among veterans who didn’t suffer a TBI.” The findings were published online Aug. 28 in the journal Neurology.

Related Links:

— “Suicides Among U.S. Veterans Jumped 10-Fold in Decades After 9/11,”Steven Reinberg, HealthDay, August 28, 2023

Individuals Taking Multiple Antipsychotics To Manage Schizophrenia Symptoms May Have Three Times The Risk Of Developing Hypertension Relative To Those Taking One Antipsychotic, Study Indicates

Psychiatric News (8/28) reports, “Individuals who take multiple antipsychotics to manage schizophrenia symptoms have three times the risk of developing hypertension relative to those taking one antipsychotic,” researchers concluded in a study that included “1,663, 1,268, and 1,668 adults with schizophrenia…assessed for incidence of diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia, respectively.” The study revealed that “the risk of hypertension was greatest when the patients were taking multiple first-generation antipsychotics.” The findings were published online Aug. 25 in the Schizophrenia Bulletin.

Related Links:

— “Antipsychotic Polypharmacy Increases Risk of Hypertension, Study Suggests, Psychiatric News, August 28, 2023

For Mothers With OUD, Use Of Medication For Their Addiction During Prenatal Period Tied To Improved Outcomes In Infants, Research Suggests

MedPage Today (8/28, Robertson) reports, “For mothers with opioid use disorder (OUD), the use of medication for their addiction such as buprenorphine or methadone during the prenatal period was associated with improved outcomes in infants,” investigators concluded in findings published online in JAMA Pediatrics. Utilizing “data from a multistate Medicaid database on over 10,000 mother-infant dyads, prenatal use of medications for OUD was found to be associated with 20% higher odds of infants receiving six well-child visits…and 20% lower odds of readmissions” during “the first year of life,” the study found.

Related Links:

MedPage Today (requires login and subscription)

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