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More InfoLatest News Around the Web
Program That Teaches Parents How To Engage With Babies Identified To Be At High Risk Of ASD May Reduce Likelihood Those Babies Will Develop The Disorder, Researchers Say
Psychiatric News (9/20) reports, “A program that teaches parents how to engage with babies identified to be at high risk of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) may reduce the likelihood of the children’s developing the disorder,” investigators concluded in a study that tested the “iBASIS–Video Interaction to Promote Positive Parenting” intervention among “103 families of babies aged nine to 15 months old showing behaviors associated with ASD, as measured by the Social Attention and Communication Surveillance–Revised…12-month checklist.” The findings were published online Sept. 20 in JAMA Pediatrics.
Related Links:
— “Childhood trauma increases depressive episode risk during perinatal period, Psychiatric News, September 20, 2021
Childhood Trauma May Be Tied To A Depressive Episode During Perinatal Period In Adulthood, Study Indicates
Healio (9/20, Gramigna) reports, “Childhood trauma appeared linked to a depressive episode during the perinatal period in adulthood,” investigators concluded after analyzing “data of 3,252 women who completed the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire at a maternity department between November 2011 and June 2016 as part of a French multicenter prospective cohort study.” The findings were published online Sept. 7 in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.
Related Links:
— “Childhood trauma increases depressive episode risk during perinatal period “Joe Gramigna, Healio, September 21, 2021
Letter: Psychiatrist Highlights APA Guidelines On Use Of Antipsychotics In Patients With Dementia
In a letter to the New York Times (9/16), University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine professor emeritus and psychiatrist Victor Reus says he “was disappointed” with a Times article highlighting potentially dangerous use of antipsychotic drugs in nursing homes because it failed to mention “the fact that psychiatry as a profession has recognized this issue and directly addressed it in an American Psychiatric Association treatment guideline that was formulated by an expert team that I chaired in 2015-16.” Reus concludes, “It is important to identify and critique practices such as those described, but it is also important to remind clinicians and caregivers that formal professional standards exist and should be adopted.”
Related Links:
— “The Use of Antipsychotic Drugs in Nursing Homes, The New York Times, September 16, 2021
Employers In Many Industries Looking At Their Cultures To Ensure They Are More Conducive To Supporting Mental Health
Bloomberg Law (9/17, Subscription Publication) reported, “The Covid-19 pandemic has led to a surge in mental health claims for employers,” so many “employers in many industries are looking at their cultures to ensure they’re more conducive to supporting mental health, and making sure employees get support and access to care when needed, Darcy Gruttadaro, director of the American Psychiatric Association Foundation’s Center for Workplace Mental Health (CWMH), said in an interview.” According to Bloomberg Law, “the CWMH has produced a Returning to the Workplace Guide, as well as a guide to help managers recognize and respond to employees who are having mental health problems.”
Related Links:
— “Companies Urging Workers to Open Up About Mental Health (Correct) “Sara Hansard, Bloomberg Law, September 17, 2021
Pandemic accelerated childhood obesity in U.S., study indicates
The AP (9/16, Stobbe) reports, “A new study ties the COVID-19 pandemic to an ‘alarming’ increase in obesity in U.S. children and teenagers.” The study also indicates a “vicious cycle,” as “the pandemic appears to be worsening the nation’s longstanding obesity epidemic, and obesity can put people at risk for more severe illness after coronavirus infection.”
The Hill (9/16, Coleman) reports, “The CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) released Thursday determined that the monthly rate of BMI increase among 2- to 19-year-olds accelerated during the pandemic to reach 0.1 kg/m² per month,” while before the pandemic, “the rate of increase was 0.052 kg/m² per month.”
MedPage Today (9/16, Walker) reports the authors “divided the children and teens into BMI categories, and found significant increases in the rate of BMI among all categories except underweight.” Additionally, “among those with overweight, moderate obesity, and severe obesity, the rates of BMI increase more than doubled, the team said, and even those with healthy weight had a rate of BMI change that almost doubled (ratio 1.78).” They found that “these changes were most pronounced among elementary school children ages 6 to 11, whose rate of BMI change more than doubled versus the pre-pandemic rate (ratio 2.50).”
Related Links:
— “Study: Childhood obesity in U.S. accelerated during pandemic “Mike Stobbe, AP, September 16, 2021
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