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Latest News Around the Web

Soothing with digital devices may lead to more problems with emotional reactivity in the future

CNN (12/12, Holcombe) reports a new study has shown “soothing with digital devices may lead to more problems with emotional reactivity down the road” with small children. Researchers “looked at 422 parent and caregiver responses to assess how likely they were to utilize devices for distraction and how dysregulated their 3- to 5-year-old child’s behavior was over a six-month period, according to the study published Monday in the JAMA Pediatrics.” The act of frequently “using digital devices to distract from unpleasant and disruptive behavior like tantrums was associated with more emotional dysregulation in kids – particularly boys and children who were already struggling with emotional regulation, according to the study.”

Related Links:

— “Giving your child a screen may hinder emotional regulation, study says. Here’s what to do instead “Madeline Holcombe, CNN, December 12, 2022

Patients With Cocaine Or Opioid Use Disorder Had Higher Risk Of Endocarditis If They Also Contracted COVID-19, Study Shows

MedPage Today (12/12, Firth) reports, “Patients with cocaine or opioid use disorder…had a higher risk of endocarditis if they also contracted COVID-19, a retrospective study showed.” Investigators found that “COVID-19 infection was associated with an increased risk of newly diagnosed cases of endocarditis among patients with opioid use disorder…and with cocaine use disorder…compared with matched controls who didn’t have COVID.” The findings were published in Molecular Psychiatry. For the study, the researchers “used the nationwide TriNet Analytics Network database to analyze 109 million electronic health records…from a range of healthcare organizations across all 50 states, including 736,502 people with opioid use disorder and 379,623 people with cocaine use disorder.”

Related Links:

MedPage Today (requires login and subscription)

Proposed HHS Rule Seeks To Boost Access To Health Services, Behavioral Healthcare

Bloomberg Law (12/12, Pugh, Subscription Publication) reports, “A Biden administration proposal released Monday aims to increase access to health services, simplify and improve the selection process for marketplace health plans, and make it easier to enroll in marketplace coverage in 2024.” In addition, the 2024 Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters Proposed Rule seeks “to increase access to behavioral health-care options.”

Modern Healthcare (12/12, Tepper, Subscription Publication) also covers the story.

Related Links:

— “HHS Proposal Aims to Expand Access to Behavioral Health Care (1) “Tony Pugh, Bloomberg Law, December 12, 2022

Among Healthcare Workers In England, Prevalence Estimates Of PTSD, Common Mental Disorders Appear Markedly Lower When Assessed Using Diagnostic Interviews Compared With Screening Tools, Researchers Say

Healio (12/12, Herpen) reports, “Among healthcare workers in England, prevalence estimates of PTSD and common mental disorders were markedly lower when assessed using diagnostic interviews compared with screening tools,” investigators concluded after conducting “a two-phase, cross-sectional study comprised of diagnostic interviews within a larger multisite longitudinal cohort of healthcare workers (n = 23,462) during the COVID-19 pandemic.” The findings were published online Dec. 8 in The Lancet Psychiatry.

Related Links:

— “Prevalence of PTSD, other mental disorders higher with screening tools than interviews “Robert Herpen, Healio, December 12, 2022

Apathy, functional decline more likely for people with bvFTD than Alzheimer’s

Healio (12/12) reports, “People with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia” (bvFTD) “were more likely to exhibit apathy and functional decline, even in the mildest stage of dementia, compared with patients with Alzheimer’s disease,” researchers concluded in a study that “included 866 individuals with a clinical diagnosis of bvFTD at baseline who were enrolled in the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center Uniform Data Set…between 2005 and 2019 and had one or more annual follow-ups.” The findings were published online in a research letter in JAMA Network Open.

Related Links:

— “Patients with frontotemporal dementia more likely to exhibit apathy, functional decline “Ken Downey Jr., Healio, December 12, 2022

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