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Latest News Around the Web

Children’s Benzodiazepine Abuse, Misuse May Lead To Increased Overdose And Fatality Rates, Researchers Say

MD Magazine (12/18, Walter) reports that benzodiazepines, a class of medication used to treat anxiety, “may be misused and abused by children, leading to increased overdose and fatality rates,” researchers concluded after identifying and analyzing “national trends for pediatric benzodiazepine exposures between 2000-2015 after gathering data from 296,838 pediatric patients,” then procuring “data of benzodiazepine exposures in adolescences under the age of 18 who reported to participating US poison centers.” The findings were online Oct. 15 in the journal Clinical Toxicology.

Related Links:

— “Benzodiazepine Overdose Rates Increasing in Teens, “Kenny Walter, MD Magazine, December 18, 2019

Adolescent Girls With Anxiety Disorders May Be At Increased Risk For Eating Disorders, Study Indicates

Healio (12/18, Gramigna) reports, “Adolescent girls with anxiety disorders may be at an increased risk for eating disorders,” researchers concluded after analyzing “data for 2,406 female adolescents.” The findings of the “longitudinal cohort study” were published online Dec. 17 in the European Eating Disorders Review.

Related Links:

— “Study finds association between anxiety and eating disorders among adolescent girls, “Joe Gramigna, Healio, December 18, 2019

Small Study Examines Daily Racial Discrimination Among Black Adolescents In The US

Healio (12/17, Gramigna) reports, “Black adolescents in the United States reported more than five instances of racial discrimination daily, which led to short-term increases in depressive symptoms,” researchers concluded after surveying “101 black U.S. American adolescents to measure daily racial discrimination and 14-day depressive symptoms slopes.” The findings were published in the January-February issue of the Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology.

Related Links:

— “Black adolescents may experience five daily instances of racial discrimination, “Joe Gramigna, Healio, December 17, 2019

Survey Data Show Sharp Increase In Vaping Of Marijuana, Nicotine Among Teens

The New York Times (12/18, Richtel) reports, “Teenagers are drinking less alcohol, smoking fewer cigarettes and trying fewer hard drugs, new federal survey data” indicate, but “these public health gains have been offset by a sharp increase in vaping of marijuana and nicotine.” The data come from the Monitoring the Future survey, “a closely watched annual study by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, or NIDA, of eighth, 10th and 12th graders.”

USA Today (12/18, O’Donnell) reports that the data “showed a ‘significant’ increase in the number of 8th through 12th grade students vaping marijuana, and a similarly high jump in daily cannabis use by 8th and 10th graders, while alcohol and opioid use continues to plummet.” In high school seniors, one in five “vaped marijuana in the last year and 14% vaped it in the last month, the National Institute on Drug Abuse reported.” Those “numbers doubled in the past two years.”

The Washington Post (12/17, Bernstein) reports that when students were asked by researchers “why they vaped, nearly 61 percent said to experiment, nearly 42 percent said they enjoyed the flavor, nearly 38 percent said to have a good time with friends and more than 37 percent said to relax or relieve tension.”

Related Links:

— “Teen Marijuana Vaping Soars, Displacing Other Habits, “Joe Gramigna, The New York Times , December 18, 2019

Researchers Investigate Trends In Opioid Overdose Deaths In The US

The AP (12/17, Tanner) reports, “Accidental overdoses cause 90% of all U.S. opioid-related deaths while suicides account for far fewer of these fatalities than previously thought,” research indicated. After analyzing data from “death certificates for people aged 15 and older,” researchers “found that suicides accounted for 4% of all opioid-related deaths.” The findings were published online in JAMA.

According to HealthDay (12/17, Preidt), the four percent figure is “far below recent estimates of 20% to 30%, said the” study authors. The findings were published online Dec. 17 in a research letter in JAMA.

Related Links:

— “Most US opioid overdose deaths accidental, 4% are suicide, “Lindsey Tanner, AP, December 17, 2019

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