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Repeated Exposure To Explicit Violent Content May Exacerbate Fear About Future Traumatic Events, Researchers Say.
Reuters (4/25, Rapaport) reports that in the aftermath of “violent events like mass shootings or natural disasters, people who watch the most media coverage of the story are more likely to show post-traumatic stress symptoms months later,” researchers concluded. For the study, investigators “repeatedly surveyed more than 4,000 U.S. adults who hadn’t been involved in” either the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing or the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, FL. The study revealed that “repeated exposure to explicit violent content may exacerbate fear about future traumatic events, which in turn fuels more consumption of media coverage about the next bombing or shooting.” The findings were published online April 17 in the journal Science Advances.
Related Links:
— “News coverage of violent events may contribute to ‘cycle of distress’, “Lisa Rapaport, Reuters, April 25, 2019
Bipartisan Lawmakers Introduce Bill Addressing Veteran Suicides
The Washington Times (4/24, Meier) reports that a bipartisan group of legislators will introduce a new bill addressing “a recent spate of high-profile veteran suicides and an uptick in suicide rates.” The bill “will require a review of the current training, workload and staffing at VA centers,” after three military veterans died of suicide on VA properties in Georgia and Texas “over the span of five days earlier this month.” Rep. Anthony Brindisi (D-NY), one of the lawmakers responsible for the bill, said, “Twenty veterans die by suicide every day. This is wrong and unacceptable, and we must do more.”
Related Links:
— “Lawmakers roll out new bill to stop veteran suicides on VA properties, “Lauren Meier, The Washington Times, April 24, 2019
Certain Women May Be More Susceptible To PTSD Than Others, Study Suggests
Science Daily (4/23) reports new research suggests women “with the dissociative subtype of PTSD, a serious variant of the disorder that can disrupt one’s sense of self and surroundings,” may be more prone to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) than others. Researchers from the University of Missouri found these women “experienced a more pronounced alteration in both cortisol and oxytocin levels, indicating the body’s stress-response system functioned less effectively in these women.” The findings were published in the Archives of Psychiatric Nursing.
Related Links:
— “Some women could be more susceptible to PTSD than others, according to new study, Science Daily, April 23, 2019
In Small Study, Half Of Initial Diagnoses Of Schizophrenia Found To Be Inaccurate Upon Further Review
MD Magazine (4/23, Kunzmann) reports, “A retroactive analysis of patients referred to a psychiatry consultation clinic often by primary care physicians with an initial schizophrenia diagnosis found that about half of all such diagnoses were inaccurate upon further review,” researchers reported after conducting “a retroactive chart review of 78 patients who has been referred…with an early psychosis diagnosis.” The study revealed that “the most common patients to be misdiagnosed with schizophrenia were in their teens and 20s with symptoms of anxiety.” The findings were published in the March issue of the Journal of Psychiatric Practice.
Related Links:
— “Patients Are Commonly Misdiagnosed with Schizophrenia, “Kevin Kunzmann, MD Magazine, April 23, 2019
Prevention Programs, Other Interventions During And After Pregnancy May Decrease Number, Severity Of Manic Episodes In Women At High Risk For Bipolar Disorder, Researchers Say
Healio (4/23, Demko) reports, “Implementing prevention programs and other interventions during and after pregnancy may decrease the number and severity of manic episodes in women at high risk for bipolar disorder, according to a personal view published” online April 9 in The Lancet Psychiatry. Verinder Sharma, MBBS, of the departments of psychiatry and obstetrics and gynecology at Western University, and the Parkwood Institute, London, Ontario, Canada, and colleagues wrote, “The postpartum period is ideally suited for primary and secondary prevention of bipolar disorder.” They added, “Women are routinely under the care of health professionals during and after pregnancy. Some of the putative risk factors of bipolar disorder such as sleep loss, substance use, and use of antidepressants or psychostimulants can be easily targeted.”
Related Links:
— “Early intervention key for postpartum women at risk for bipolar disorder, “Savannah Demko, Healio, April 23, 2019
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