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More InfoLatest News Around the Web
DEA extends telemedicine option allowing physicians to prescribe certain controlled medications
The Washington Post (5/9, Ovalle, Beard) reports that the DEA “will allow doctors to keep using telemedicine to prescribe certain medications for anxiety, pain and opioid addiction, extending for six months emergency flexibilities established during the coronavirus pandemic.” As such, “the ability to prescribe controlled medications will run through Nov. 11, 2023…and that deadline will be longer still if doctors have already established a telemedicine relationship with patients.” In the latter “circumstance, physicians can keep prescribing the medications virtually through Nov. 11, 2024.”
Related Links:
— “The Washington Post (requires login and subscription)
Lawmakers Call For Extensive Data On Maternal Mental Health Programs To Examine Their Effectiveness
According to The Hill (5/8, Scully), Congressional legislators “are calling for extensive data on maternal mental health programs to examine their effectiveness, following an alarming spike in the country’s maternal mortality rate.” In their May 8 letter (PDF) “to the Health Resources and Services Administration led by Maternity Care Caucus co-chairs Reps. Young Kim (R-Calif.) and Robin Kelly (D-Ill.), lawmakers requested data on the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline one year after the program started.” Additionally, they “requested data on the Screening and Treatment for Maternal Depression and Related Behavioral Health Disorders…program overseen by the Health Resources & Services Administration,” calling for “qualitative and quantitative data on the two programs.”
Related Links:
— “Lawmakers ask for data on maternal mental health program’s effectiveness “Rachel Scully, The Hill , May 8, 2023
US Government To Pay For Large Study Measuring Whether Overdoses Can Be Prevented By So-Called Safe Injection Sites
The AP (5/8, Johnson) reports, “For the first time, the U.S. government will pay for a large study measuring whether overdoses can be prevented by so-called safe injection sites, places where people can use heroin and other illegal drugs and be revived if they” overdose. This “grant provides more than $5 million over four years to New York University and Brown University to study two sites in New York City and one opening next year in Providence, Rhode Island.” Investigators now “hope to enroll 1,000 adult drug users to study the sites’ effects on overdoses, to estimate their costs and to gauge potential savings for the health care and criminal justice systems.”
Related Links:
— “US backs study of safe injection sites, overdose prevention “Carla K. Johnson , AP , May 8, 2023
Adults In Their 20s And 30s With Mental Disorders Have Higher Likelihood Of Heart Attack Or Stroke, Study Finds
CNN (5/8, Holcombe) reports, “Adults in their 20s and 30s with mental disorders have a higher chance of having a heart attack or stroke, according to a new study.” Investigators looked at data on “more than 6.5 million people,” approximately 13% of whom “had some type of mental disorder.” The researchers found that individuals “younger than 40 with a mental disorder were 58% more likely to have a heart attack and 42% more likely to have a stroke than those with no disorder.” The findings were published online in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology.
Related Links:
— “A mental illness in your 20s and 30s could mean a greater chance of heart attack and stroke “Madeline Holcombe, CNN, May 8, 2023
More than A Quarter Of People Who Experience Substance-Induced Psychosis May Be Diagnosed With Schizophrenia Within Six Years, Data Suggest
Psychiatric News (5/5) reported, “More than a quarter of people who experience substance-induced psychosis are diagnosed with schizophrenia within six years,” investigators concluded after analyzing “data from 3,187 patients in the Norwegian Patient Registry who were between the ages of 18 and 79 and had a diagnosis of substance-induced psychosis from 2010 to 2015.” The findings were published online May 3 in the American Journal of Psychiatry, a publication of the American Psychiatric Association.
Related Links:
— “Psychosis Induced by Substance Use Linked to Schizophrenia, Psychiatric News, May 5, 2023
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