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Latest News Around the Web

Motivational Interviewing Intervention May Not Initially Drive At-Risk Adolescents To Seek Mental Health Treatment Following An ED Visit, Small Study Suggests

MD Magazine (12/20, Rosenfeld) reported, “A motivational interviewing intervention did not initially drive at-risk adolescents to seek mental health treatment following an emergency department (ED) visit,” research indicated. Specifically, “adolescent patients who presented at the ED for nonpsychiatric concerns but screened positive for suicide risk did not significantly benefit from the Suicidal Teens Accessing Treatment After an Emergency Department Visit (STAT-ED) intervention,” the study revealed. The findings of the 168-patient randomized trial were published online Dec. 20 in JAMA Network Open.

Related Links:

— “Intervention Did Not Improve Adolescents Seeking Mental Healthcare, “Samara Rosenfeld, MD Magazine, December 20, 2019

Obesity In Middle Age Tied To Higher Risk Of Dementia Later In Life For Women, Study Indicates

HealthDay (12/19, Thompson) reports researchers found that “obesity in middle age is associated with an increased risk of dementia later in life” for women. In the study published in Neurology, the researchers found that women “who were obese in their mid-50s had 21% greater risk of being diagnosed with dementia 15 or more years later, compared with women who had a healthy weight.”

Related Links:

— “Obesity in Middle Age Could Raise Odds for Alzheimer’s Later, “Dennis Thompson, HealthDay, December 19, 2019

Congressional Report Finds Suicide Rate Rising Fast For Black Youth

NBC News (12/19, Charles) reports on its website that the “suicide rate for black youth is rising faster than for any other racial and ethnic group, now making it the second-leading cause of death for black children aged 10 to 19, according to a congressional report released this week.” The 38-page report “was conducted by a task force of the Congressional Black Caucus and found a sharp rise in the rate of suicides and attempts among black youth.” It also “found that suicide attempts rose 73 percent from 1991 to 2017 for black adolescents of both sexes, and injuries from attempted suicides rose 122 percent for black boys in the same time period.”

Related Links:

— “Suicide rate rising fast for black youth, report finds, “Nick Charles, NBC News, December 19, 2019

Increasing Green Space Around Schools May Lower Odds Kids Will Exhibit AD/HD Symptoms, Research Suggests

Psychiatric News (12/19) reports, “Increasing the amount of green space around schools may lower the odds that children will exhibit attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder” (AD/HD) symptoms, researchers concluded in a 59,754-child study. The findings were published online Dec. 18 in JAMA Network Open.

Related Links:

— “More Green Space Around Schools May Reduce ADHD Symptoms, Study Finds, Psychiatric News, December 19, 2019

Researchers Say Higher Dietary Glycemic Index Is Tied To Insomnia

Reuters (12/19, Rapaport) reports women with higher dietary glycemic index scores were more likely to have insomnia, according to a study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. The researchers examined “food diaries for more than 50,000 women in their mid-60s who had already gone through menopause” and found that “women with the highest dietary glycemic index scores – meaning they consumed more refined carbohydrates like white bread, sweets and sugary soda – were 11% more likely than women with the lowest scores to report insomnia at the start of the study period.” In addition, “they were also 16% more likely to develop new insomnia during the three-year follow-up period.”

Related Links:

— “Sugar and white bread tied to older women’s insomnia, “Lisa Rapaport, Reuters Health, December 19, 2019

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