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Rates Of Postpartum Depression Among US Mothers Rose Nearly Three-Fold During COVID-19 Pandemic, Along With Increases In Major Depression And Thoughts Of Self-Harm, Study Suggests
HealthDay (3/17, Preidt) reports, “Rates of postpartum depression among American mothers rose nearly three-fold during the COVID-19 pandemic, along with large increases in major depression and thoughts of self-harm,” researchers concluded in a study that “included 670 new moms who completed online screening between February and July 2020.” Of those women, “one-third screened positive for postpartum depression and 20% had symptoms of major depression,” whereas “before the pandemic, about one in eight new mothers had postpartum depression and between 5% and 7% had major depression, according to the” CDC. The findings were published online March 14 in the journal BMC Research Notes.
Related Links:
— “Postpartum Depression Rates Have Tripled for New Moms During Pandemic “Robert Preidt, HealthDay, March 17, 2022
Brain-Imaging Studies Seeking To Understand Mental-Health Disorders May Have Too Few Participants To Produce Valid Findings, Investigators Posit
According to the New York Times (3/16, Richtel), for about the past 20 years, investigators “have used brain-imaging technology to try to identify how the structure and function of a person’s brain connects to a range of mental-health ailments, from anxiety and depression to suicidal tendencies.” Now, findings published online March 16 in the journal Nature call “into question whether much of this research is actually yielding valid findings.” This is because “many such studies, the paper’s authors found, tend to include fewer than two dozen participants, far shy of the number needed to generate reliable results.”
Related Links:
— “Brain-Imaging Studies Hampered by Small Data Sets, Study Finds “Matt Richtel, The New York Times, March 16, 2022
Hospitals See Increase In Mental Health-Related ED Visits After COVID-19 Surges, Study Indicates
Modern Healthcare (3/16, Devereaux, Subscription Publication) reports “Hospitals are seeing more emergency department visits for mental health issues after COVID-19 surges, particularly among young adults and racial minority groups,” according to a study that “looked at a sample of U.S. adults between the ages of 18 and 64 with several million ED visits across 3,600 emergency facilities nationwide between Jan. 1, 2019 and Aug. 14, 2021 that were related to a set of 10 mental health disorders.” The study findings were published in JAMA Psychiatry.
Related Links:
— “Mental health-related ED visits increase after COVID-19 surges, study finds “Mari Devereaux, Modern Healthcare, March 16, 2022
Annual Overdose Deaths Reach Another Record High In The US As Deaths From Fentanyl, Other Synthetic Opioids Surge To Unprecedented Levels, Provisional Data Suggest
CNN (3/16, McPhillips) reports, “Annual drug overdose deaths have reached another record high in the United States as deaths from fentanyl and other synthetic opioids surge to unprecedented levels,” investigators concluded. In fact, “an estimated 105,752 people died of drug overdoses in the 12-month period ending October 2021, according to provisional data published” March 16 by the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics on its website.
Related Links:
— “US drug overdose deaths reach another record high as deaths from fentanyl surge “Deidre McPhillips, CNN, March 16, 2022
Administration Aims To Strengthen Enforcement Of Mental Health Parity Rules
Bloomberg Law (3/15, Subscription Publication) reports, “President Joe Biden recently signaled he wants to strengthen enforcement of mental health parity rules,” an effort that “will include a demand that insurers offer an adequate network of behavioral health [professionals], including three visits for a patient each year without cost-sharing, and ask Congress to help improve parity.” Meanwhile, “some mental health [professional] groups are calling on Congress to levy fines against insurers that fall short.” American Psychiatric Association CEO and Medical Director Saul Levin, MD, MPA said, “We need to make sure there is some penalty for not doing it right.”
Related Links:
— “Biden’s Call for Mental Health Coverage Sparks Legislative Push “Alex Ruoff, Bloomberg Law, March 15, 2022
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