Support Our Work

Please donate so we can continue our work to reduce the stigma of psychiatric illness, encourage research, and support educational activities for behavioral health professionals and the public. Ways you can donate and help are on our Support and Donations page. Thank you!

More Info

Latest News Around the Web

Transgender, Nonbinary Youths May Have Greater Appearance Congruence, Less Depression And Anxiety After Two Years Of Gender-Affirming Hormone Therapy, Research Suggests

Healio (2/7, Monostra) reports, “Transgender and nonbinary youths had greater appearance congruence – the experience that physical appearance aligns with gender – and less depression and anxiety after two years of gender-affirming hormone therapy,” investigators concluded in a study that “recruited 315 transgender or gender nonbinary adolescents and young adults aged 12 to 20 years who initiated gender-affirming HT at four gender clinics in the” US. The findings were published online in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Related Links:

— “Gender-affirming HT improves appearance congruence for transgender adolescents “Michael Monostra, Healio, February 7, 2023

Infants Who Cry Excessively May Be More Likely To Experience Behavioral Problems In Childhood, Adolescence Than Infants Who Cry Less, Study Indicates

Psychiatric News (2/7) reports, “Infants who cry excessively (more than three hours at least one day/week) may be more likely to experience behavioral problems in childhood and adolescence than infants who cry less,” investigators concluded after analyzing “data from the Generation R Study cohort, which included 4,751 children born in the Netherlands between 2002 and 2006.” Brain scans taken “of these children at age 10 also revealed that the amygdala…was smaller in those who cried excessively and/or were irritable as infants.” The findings were published online Feb. 6 ahead of print in the Journal of the Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.

Related Links:

— “Excessive Crying, Irritability in Infancy Associated With Later Behavioral Problems, Psychiatric News, February 7, 2023

Excess mortality substantially lower among physicians vs general population during pandemic

MedPage Today (2/6, Henderson) reports, “Physicians had substantially lower excess mortality compared with the general population during the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers found.” Among “physicians, there were 43…excess deaths per 100,000 person-years, while the excess mortality rate in the general population was 294…noted” researchers. The findings published in a research letter in JAMA Internal Medicine also revealed that “nonactive physicians had the highest excess deaths per 100,000 person-years, at 140, versus active physicians who provided direct patient care (27) and active physicians who did not provide direct patient care (22).”

Medscape (2/6, Banks, Subscription Publication) reports, “Older physicians (aged 75–84) were much more likely to die than younger colleagues (45–64), mirroring trends in the overall population.” For the study, researchers “examined death rates for U.S. physicians using the American Medical Association’s (AMA’s) Deceased Physician File.” Medscape adds, “From March 2020 to December 2021, of approximately 800,000 physicians who practiced monthly, 4511 physicians died, per the AMA.”

Related Links:

MedPage Today (requires login and subscription)

Study Examines Impact Of Alcohol Consumption On Risk Of Dementia

CNN (2/6, LaMotte) reports, “Keeping alcohol consumption to one or two drinks a day lessened the odds of developing dementia, according to a study of nearly 4 million South Koreans.” However, the study published online in JAMA Network Open found that “drinking more than two drinks a day increased that risk.” The study’s first author said, “We found that maintaining mild to moderate alcohol consumption as well as reducing alcohol consumption from a heavy to moderate level were associated with a decreased risk of dementia.”

Related Links:

— “Study presents unexpected — and complicated — findings on link between alcohol and dementia “Sandee LaMotte, CNN, February 6, 2023

COVID-19 Pandemic Tied To Increased Risk For First-Time, Recurrent Depression Among Older Adults With Asthma, Study Indicates

Healio (2/6, Hornick) reports, “During the COVID-19 pandemic, loneliness, family conflict and difficultly accessing health care raised the risk for first-time and recurrent depression among older adults with asthma, according to a study” of data “of 2,017 older adults…with asthma from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging.” The “researchers found that 13.5% of patients who did not have prior depression developed it during the pandemic, whereas depression recurred among 48.6% patients with a history of depression in autumn 2020.” The findings were published online in Respiratory Medicine.

Related Links:

— “COVID-19 pandemic linked to depression among older adults with asthma “Isabella Hornick, Healio, February 6, 2023

Foundation News

Nothing Found

It seems we can’t find what you’re looking for. Perhaps searching can help.