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More InfoLatest News Around the Web
Risk Of PTSD Among Kids, Teens May Be Higher If They [Think Their Response To] DWELL ON A Traumatic Event [on Is Abnormal,] BEYOND 4 MONTHS Research Suggests
HealthDay (3/28) reports, “The risk of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among children and teens is higher if they think their response to a traumatic event is abnormal,” researchers concluded in a study that “included more than 200 children, aged eight to 17, treated at a hospital emergency department after traumatic incidents, such as car crashes, assaults and dog attacks.” The findings were published online March 25 in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
Related Links:
— “Kids Can Get ‘Stuck’ on Traumatic Event, Leading to PTSD, “Robert Preidt, HealthDay, March 28, 2019
Marijuana Use During Pregnancy May Increase Risk Of Psychosis For Child, Study Indicates
CBS News (3/27, Welch) reports on its website researchers found “that women who use [marijuana] while pregnant could be putting their child at a slightly increased risk of psychosis.” The findings were published in JAMA Psychiatry.
Related Links:
— “Smoking marijuana while pregnant may raise risks for baby, “Ashley Welch, CBS News, March 27, 2019
Recent high-profile suicides provide opportunity to confront a national public health crisis
In “Health & Science,” the Washington Post (3/26, Achenbach, Wan, Mettler) reports that 20 years ago, “about 29,000 people in the U.S. killed themselves, and by 2017 the toll had grown to more than 47,000.” Three recent high-profile suicides now “provide an opportunity to confront a national public health crisis as suicides become more common.” Investigators “who study suicide say the field is grossly underfunded,” and they also “say they have minimal understanding of who, exactly, is most at risk of suicide.” Commenting on two suicides among teen “survivors of the Parkland, Fla., school shooting of 2018,” Jane Pearson, “a suicide researcher at the National Institute of Mental Health,” observed that the “Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School students’” campaign “to end gun violence” was “an experience unique among mass shooting survivors, and the students operate amid great expectations and with many people watching them.”
Related Links:
— “Three tragic deaths reverberate across U.S. amid steady rise in suicides, “Achenbach, Wan, Mettler, The Washington Post, March 26, 2019
“Edibles” Tied To Disproportionate Number Of ED Admissions In Colorado Compared To Other Forms Of Cannabis, Study Indicates
The New York Times (3/25, Rabin) reports researchers found that “edibles” were responsible for “a disproportionate number of” cannabis-related ED admissions in Colorado, suggesting “that edibles may be more potent and potentially more dangerous than [marijuana] that is smoked or vaped.” The findings were published in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
The AP (3/25, Johnson) reports the study was prompted in part by three deaths in the state that were tied to edibles as well as anecdotes about tourists visiting the ED after consuming lots of edibles.
NBC News (3/25) reports on its website that researchers reviewed ED visits “at UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital from 2012 to 2016,” and found that ED “visits linked to cannabis use tripled” after Colorado legalized recreational marijuana in 2012. The researchers also found that “while sales of edibles are lower than inhaled pot products, people eating marijuana candies or food were more likely to show up at the ER with severe panic attacks or other sudden mental disorders.” Dr. Andrew Monte, the study’s lead author, said that only 0.32% of cannabis sales were for edibles, but around 10% of cannabis-related ED visits were related to edibles. However, the article points out that the researchers also found that “inhaled marijuana caused a higher rate of hospitalizations, mostly due to cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome, a severe vomiting condition associated with heavy cannabis use.”
Related Links:
— “Marijuana Edibles May Pose Special Risks, ” Roni Caryn Rabin, The New York Times, March 25, 2019
Patients Using Digital Health Apps As A Suicide Crisis Hotline, Several Executives Say
STAT (3/25, Robbins) reports that digital health apps are “being used as suicide crisis hotlines.” Several executives at digital health startups “are scrambling to figure out how best to respond and when to call the police – questions that even suicide prevention experts don’t have good answers to.” Harvard psychologist Matthew Nock advises for digital health companies to “conduct research and evaluate their own practices to gather data on what works and what doesn’t, at different levels of suicide risk. Just as a decision not to respond carries risk, so too does a decision to respond too aggressively. Calling an ambulance for patients who are not at immediate risk could backfire, if it makes them hesitate to seek help in the future.”
Related Links:
— “As patients tell apps they’re feeling suicidal, digital health startups scramble to respond, “Rebecca Robbins, STAT, March 25, 2019
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