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More InfoLatest News Around the Web
Concomitant Use Of Prescription Opioid Analgesics With Certain Insomnia Medications May Increase Overdose Risk, Researchers Say
Psychiatric News (4/29) reports, “People who use prescription opioid” analgesics “along with the so-called Z-drugs (zolpidem, zopiclone, and zaleplon) for insomnia have a significantly higher risk of overdose than people who use opioids alone,” researchers concluded after using “the IBM Marketscan Commercial and Medicare Supplemental Database” to analyze “data on patients 15 to 85 years of age who had filled an opioid prescription between January 1, 2004, and December 31, 2017,” then comparing “510,529 patients within this group who also began taking Z-drugs with an equal number of patients who were taking opioids alone.” The findings were published online April 26 in the American Journal of Psychiatry, a publication of the American Psychiatric Association
Related Links:
— “Psychiatric News, Psychiatric News, April 29, 2021
Children Exposed To Mass Trauma May Be At Increased Risk For Developing Panic Disorder, Data Suggest
Healio (4/28, Gramigna) reports, “Children exposed to mass trauma were at increased risk for developing panic disorder,” investigators concluded in research assessing the “psychiatric effects of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on youths.” For the study, researchers “analyzed data from 6,991 students in grades six through 12 who participated in a New York City Board of Education post-Sept. 11 needs assessment study.” The findingswere published online ahead of print in the June issue of the Journal of Psychiatric Research.
Related Links:
— “Children with mass trauma exposure more likely to develop panic disorder “Joe Gramigna, Healio, April 28, 2021
Gender-Affirming Surgery May Make Substantial Beneficial Impact On Mental Health Of Transgender And Gender Diverse Individuals, Data Indicate
MedPage Today (4/28, Monaco) reports, “Gender-affirming surgery can make a substantial beneficial impact on the mental health of transgender and gender diverse (TGD) individuals,” investigators concluded. In their “secondary analysis of data from the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey,” investigators found that “undergoing at least one type of gender-affirming surgery nearly halved the likelihood of TGD individuals experiencing severe psychological distress within the past month,” and “those who underwent at least one gender-affirming surgery also reported significantly less suicidal ideation within the past year.”
HealthDay (4/28, Murez) reports the study comes “at a particularly critical time, as some states move to ban certain gender-affirming treatments and surgeries for transgender minors.” The findings were published online April 28 in JAMA Surgery.
Related Links:
— MedPage Today (requires login and subscription)
Bullied And Mistreated Teens May Be Much More Likely To Fantasize About Killing Others, Study Indicates
HealthDay (4/28, Preidt) reports, “Bullied and mistreated teens are much more likely to fantasize about hurting or killing others,” investigators concluded in a study that “included more than 1,400 young people in Zurich, Switzerland, who were asked about their thoughts and experiences at ages 15, 17 and 20.” The findings were published online April 27 in the journal Aggressive Behavior.
Related Links:
— “Being Bullied Often Leads Teens to Thoughts of Violence ” Robert Preidt, HealthDay, April 28, 2021
Millions Of Youth In US Lack Home Access To Internet, Posing Barrier To Telehealth
Psychiatric News (4/27) reports while “policy changes during the COVID-19 pandemic enabled physicians to deliver care via telehealth, people of all ages from across the country remain without access to such care due to a lack of reliable internet service and/or computers.” Marie Smith-East, Ph.D., D.N.P., and Shaquita Starks, Ph.D., A.P.R.N., wrote a letter to the editor of the Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, “While a large majority of youth in the United States have internet access, about 14% of youth ages 6 to 17 live in homes without internet and 17% of youth ages 3 to 18 live in homes without computers, numbers which translate to approximately 11 million youth without access to the internet.” In the letter, “Smith-East and Starks offered several recommendations for connecting youth without internet access and/or computers to remote mental health care, including the use of telephone consultations with psychiatrists; buses that go into local communities equipped with internet service and laptops, where patients can access telehealth appointments; and community internet hubs where youth can access the internet outside their home for telehealth appointments.”
Related Links:
— “‘Digital Divide’ May Further Worsen Mental Health Disparities in Youth, Psychiatric News, April 27, 2021
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