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More InfoLatest News Around the Web
Mothers Discovering They Have Autism After Their Children Are Diagnosed
The Washington Post (6/7, Dias) reported on the phenomenon of mothers discovering they have autism after the condition is diagnosed in their child. The Post adds that “autism is about four times more prevalent in boys than in girls,” and that for decades, physicians often didn’t consider it as a possible diagnosis for girls, but now there is a growing consensus that many girls and women with the condition have been “overlooked.” The article highlights several cases of women being diagnosed with autism after their children were diagnosed and describes the mixture of emotions that come with the late diagnosis.
Related Links:
— “‘I understand exactly who he is’: Moms discover they share autism with their children, “Isabela Dias, The Washington Post, June 11, 2019
Rates Of Nonsuicidal Self-Harm Rising, Particularly Among Adolescent Girls And Young Adult Women, Research Suggests
Medscape (6/11, Yasgur, Subscription Publication) reports, “Rates of nonsuicidal self-harm…are rising, especially among adolescent girls and young adult women,” and “few of these people receive medical or psychological help,” researchers concluded after conducting “a secondary analysis of data from the Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Surveys for 2000, 2007, and 2014 regarding individuals aged 16–74 years (n = 7243, 6477, and 6477, respectively).” The findings were published online June 4 in The Lancet Psychiatry.
Related Links:
— “Rates of Self-Harm Soar, Especially Among Girls, Young Women, “Batya Swift Yasgur, MA, LSW, Medscape, June 11, 2019
Report Shows US Death Rates From Drugs, Alcohol And Suicide Hit All-Time High In 2017
NBC News (6/12, Edwards) reports on its website that “rates of deaths from suicides, drug overdoses and alcohol have reached an all-time high” in the US, but “some states have been hit far harder than others.” A report from the Commonwealth Fund showed that West Virginia “had the highest drug overdose death rates, fueled mostly by the opioid epidemic,” and that those rates “rose by 450 percent between 2005 and 2017.” Death rates from suicide and alcohol “also showed regional disparities,” with people dying “at higher rates by suicide or from alcohol than from drugs in Montana, Nebraska, the Dakotas, Oregon and Wyoming.”
Related Links:
— “https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/u-s-death-rates-suicides-alcohol-drug-overdoses-reach-all-n1016216, “Erika Edwards, NBC News, June 12, 2019
Use Of Long-Acting Injectable Antipsychotics May Lead To Improved Adherence, Reduction In Suicide Attempts For Patients With Schizophrenia, Studies Suggest
Medscape (6/10, Anderson, Subscription Publication) reports on two studies presented at the American Psychiatric Association’s annual meeting that suggest the use of long-acting injectable antipsychotics “leads to improved adherence and a reduction in suicide attempts for” patients with “severe schizophrenia.” One study included 43 “eligible patients,” while a “second 10-year follow-up study included 344 patients with severe schizophrenia who were treated in mental health units or in a case-managed community-based program.”
Related Links:
— “More Evidence Endorses Benefits of Long-Acting Antipsychotics, “Pauline Anderson, Medscape, June 10, 2019
Signs Of Postpartum Depression Often Mistaken Or Missed In New Fathers, Research Suggests
Reuters (6/10, Mishra) reports, “While many people can pick up on signs of postpartum depression in new mothers, the same signs are often mistaken for something else or missed entirely in fathers,” researchers concluded. The findings of the 406-participant study were published online May 9 in the Journal of Mental Health.
Related Links:
— “Postpartum depression in new dads often missed, “Manas Mishra, Reuters, June 10, 2019
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