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More InfoLatest News Around the Web
Pediatric Mental Health Crises Increased After Pandemic Onset, Researchers Say
HealthDay (5/23) reports, “During the first pandemic year, there were increases in the proportion of pediatric patients presenting to hospital with suicidal ideation/suicidal attempts, depression, anxiety, eating disorders, substance use disorders, and obsessive compulsive and related disorders,” investigators concluded in a study that described “psychiatric diagnoses and boarding among pediatric patients presenting to the hospital after the pandemic onset in a retrospective chart review at a large Northeastern U.S. pediatric hospital.” The findings were published online May 17 in the journal Hospital Pediatrics.
Related Links:
— “Pediatric Mental Health Crises Up During First Year of Pandemic, HealthDay, May 23, 2022
Fewer Americans Are Anxious About COVID-19 Pandemic, Poll Data Revea
MedPage Today (5/23, Monaco) reports, “Fewer Americans are anxious about the COVID-19 pandemic,” data from “the annual Healthy Minds Poll” indicate. In fact, “about half of adults in the U.S. reported pandemic-related anxiety – down from 65% in 2021 and 75% in 2020, the poll, which was released at the” American Psychiatric Association 2022 Annual Meeting, showed. Nevertheless, “‘while the overall level of concern has dropped, still four in 10 parents are worried about how their children are doing, and a third are having issues with access to care,’ said Saul Levin, MD, MPA, CEO and medical director of the APA, in a statement” released May 22.
According to Medscape (5/23, Brooks, Subscription Publication), meanwhile, “‘it’s not surprising that recent events, such as the war in Ukraine, racially motivated mass shootings, or the impacts of climate change, are weighing heavily on Americans’ minds,’ APA President Vivian Pender, MD, said in a news release.” Dr. Pender added, “COVID-19 in a way has taken a backseat, but the pandemic and its mental health effects are very much still with us.” For that reason, “it’s important that we are cognizant of that and continue to work to ensure people who need psychiatric care, whether the causes are tied to the pandemic or to other issues, can access it.”
Healio (5/23) reports, “Sixty percent of working adults reported knowing how to access mental health services through their employer in 2022, down from 71% in 2021, the 2022 Healthy Minds poll” also revealed. A separate but related Healio (5/23, Downey) article also covers other aspects of the poll.
Related Links:
— MedPage Today (requires login and subscription)
Child Psychiatrist Discusses Importance Of Timely, Coordinated Psychiatric Care In Children Impacted By Disasters And Trauma
HCPlive (5/22, Kunzmann) interviewed Linda Chokroverty, MD, “child psychiatrist and assistant professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine,” at the American Psychiatric Association 2022 Annual Meeting. Dr. Chokroverty “discussed the importance of timely and coordinated psychiatric care in children impacted by disasters and trauma.” In the interview, Dr. Chokroverty “stressed the severe reactions children may have to disasters – increased fear and anxiety, and a desire to avoid social gatherings or school are among the more common effects.”
Related Links:
— “The Pediatric Disaster Psychiatry Care Team “Kevin Kunzmann, HCPLive, May 22, 2022
Grief From Death Affects Wide Range Of People Beyond Those Mentioned In An Obituary, APA President-Elect Explains
The New York Times (5/20, Kovaleski) “examined the listing of survivors in nearly 3,600 obituaries for people all across the United States who have died of Covid since March 2020,” finding that “each left behind an average of 15 loved ones.” American Psychiatric Association President-Elect Rebecca W. Brendel, MD, JD, “noted that grief from a death affects a wide range of people beyond those who might be mentioned in an obituary.” By way of example, many patients with coronavirus “have died without family by their side because of social distancing, she said, so already overburdened health workers have often stepped in almost as surrogates in their last moments.”
Related Links:
— “A sister reflects on the cruel separation that Covid imposed on grieving relatives. “Serge F. Kovaleski, The New York Times, May 20, 2022
Researchers Determine Baseline Factors Tied To New Diagnosis Of OUD
HCPlive (5/19, Grossi) reports researchers have conducted a 23,033-participant “retrospective cohort study” that “evaluated opioid-naive patients who were prescribed at least one opioid during an inpatient hospital visit to determine baseline factors associated with a new diagnosis of opioid use disorder (OUD).” The study revealed that “2.1% were diagnosed with the disorder within a year of receiving their first opioid in the hospital,” and “within that population…a substantial number of those individuals were young and white, residing in high opioid geo-rank regions and had a history of nonopioid related drug disorder, tobacco use, and gabapentin use.” The findings were published in the May issue of the Journal of Hospital Medicine.
Related Links:
— “Study Provides Novel Insight on OUD Diagnosis Factors in Opioid-Naive Patients “Giuliana Grossi, HCPlive, May 19, 2022
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