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More InfoLatest News Around the Web
Girls Who Have Serious Or Repeated Infections In Childhood At Higher Risk For Developing Eating Disorders In Adolescence, Study Indicates
The New York Times (5/2, Bakalar) reports, “Girls who have serious or repeated infections in childhood are at higher risk for developing eating disorders in adolescence,” researchers concluded after tracking “525,643 girls – every girl born in Denmark from 1989 through 2006” – and recording “all prescriptions that were filled for antibiotics and other anti-infective medications, as well as hospitalizations for infection, through 2012. There were 4,240 diagnoses of eating disorders during that time.” The findings were published online April 24 in JAMA Psychiatry.
Related Links:
— “Anti-Infective Drugs Tied to Eating Disorders, “Nicholas Bakalar, The New York Times, May 2, 2019
New Naloxone Laws Aim To Prevent Opioid Overdoses
Stateline (5/1, Vestal) reports that it is “increasingly likely that someone you know has the opioid overdose rescue drug naloxone in their pocket or medicine cabinet,” and “in the last five years, at least 46 states and the District of Columbia enacted so-called good Samaritan laws, allowing private citizens to administer the overdose-reversal medication without legal liability.” But, Stateline notes, “a handful of states are going even further by requiring doctors to give or at least offer a prescription for the overdose rescue drug to patients taking high doses of opioid painkillers.”
Related Links:
— “New Naloxone Laws Seek to Prevent Opioid Overdoses, “Christine Vestal, Stateline, May 01, 2019
Misusing Loperamide For Opioid Withdrawal Can Have Serious Cardiac Risks
Recent reports show a small but growing number of people are taking very high doses of loperamide, an anti-diarrheal medication, in an attempt to self-manage opioid withdrawal or to achieve a euphoric high. At high doses, these individuals may be at risk of severe or fatal cardiac events. Learn more about identifying patients at risk of misusing loperamide at LoperamideSafety.org
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FDA Now Requires Boxed Warning On Certain Prescription Sleeping Medications
Bloomberg (4/30, Cortez) reports the Food and Drug Administration will now require a boxed warning on certain prescription sleeping medications, including Ambien (zolpidem), Lunesta (eszopiclone), and Sonata (zaleplon), advising patients about the risk of serious side effects that can lead to death. The article explains that the agency “said it had found 66 examples of patients who took the drugs and engaged in dangerous activities such as sleepwalking or driving while not fully awake, including 20 deaths linked to carbon monoxide poisoning, drowning, fatal falls, hypothermia, car crashes and apparent suicide.”
CNN (4/30, Scutti) reports the boxed warning will notify “patients to possible serious or life-threatening behaviors that may result from taking these drugs.”
Related Links:
— “Sleeping-Pill Deaths Prompt FDA to Add Strict Warning for Drugs, “Michelle Cortez, Bloomberg, April 30, 2019
Suicide Deaths Increased In The 30-Day Period Following Suicide Of Robin Williams, Study Indicates
Psychiatric News (4/30) reports, “Suicide deaths increased in the 30-day period following the suicide of Robin Williams on August 11, 2014,” researchers concluded. For the study, investigators analyzed “data from the National Center for Health Statistics” and “compared U.S. daily suicides in the 30 days before and after August 11, 2014, as well as for the same periods in 2012 and 2013.” The study revealed that “suicide deaths were between 113 and 117 a day for the 30 days before Williams’ death but increased to 142 a day in the 30-day period beginning August 12.” The findings were published online April 30 in Psychiatric Services.
Related Links:
— “Suicide Deaths, Calls to Hotlines Increased Dramatically Following Robin Williams’ 2014 Suicide, Psychiatric News , April 30, 2019
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