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More InfoLatest News Around the Web
Aerobic Exercise May Improve Cognition In Younger Adults, Study Indicates
Reuters (1/30, Carroll) reports researchers found that aerobic exercise can improve cognition in younger adults. The findings of the 132-person study were published online in Neurology.
HealthDay (1/30, Salamon) also covers the story.
Related Links:
— “Aerobic exercise may improve thinking skills in adults of all ages, “Linda Carroll, Reuters, January 30, 2019
Early Rising Tied To Greater Well-Being, Lower Risk For Schizophrenia And Depression, Study Indicates
According to Healio (1/30, Demko), “Early-risers may have better mental health than night owls,” researchers concluded after asking “250,000 participants of 23andMe and 450,000 UK Biobank participants if they were a morning or evening person.” Next, investigators “analyzed participants’ genomes to see which genetic loci they had in common that may affect their sleep patterns,” and then “also examined data from 85,760 UK Biobank participants with activity-monitor–derived measures of sleep timing.” Research “indicated that being genetically programmed to rise early may lead to greater well-being and a lower risk for schizophrenia and depression.” The findings were published online Jan. 29 in the journal Nature Communications.
Related Links:
— “Early-risers may have better mental health than night owls, “Savannah Demko, Healio, January 30, 2019
Some Patients May Be More Likely To Develop PTSD And/Or MDD Following TBI, Research Suggests
According to CNN (1/30, Howard), “a mild traumatic brain injury…may come with a higher risk of mental health problems,” research “supported by the National Institutes of Health and the US Department of Defense” indicates.
Healio (1/30, Demko) reports, “Some patients were more likely to develop” post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD “and/or major depressive disorder [MDD] following mild traumatic brain injury, or TBI,” researchers concluded in a study of “1,155 adult patients with mild TBI and 230 patients with non-head orthopedic trauma injuries evaluated in the” emergency departments of 11 hospitals in the US. The findings were published online Jan. 30 in JAMA Psychiatry.
MedPage Today (1/30, George) reports that National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke supported the study, and NINDS program director Patrick Bellgowan, PhD, said, “Mental health disorders after concussion have been studied primarily in military populations, and not much is known about these outcomes in civilians.” He added, “These results may help guide follow-up care and suggest that doctors may need to pay particular attention to the mental state of patients many months after injury.”
Related Links:
— “Mild TBI linked to PTSD, depression in some patients, “Savannah Demko, Healio, January 30, 2019
Witnessing abuse may carry same risk to children’s mental health as being abused directly
According to USA Today (1/29, O’Donnell, Quarshie), “witnessing abuse carries the same risk of harm to children’s mental health and learning as being abused directly,” research indicated. Investigators “who followed 1,420 children in North Carolina from age nine to 30 found that exposure to domestic violence in the home had the same serious and life-changing effects as experiencing the abuse directly.” The findings were published online Nov. 9 in JAMA Network Open.
Related Links:
— “The startling toll on children who witness domestic violence is just now being understood, “Jayne O’Donnell and Mabinty Quarshie, USA Today, January 29, 2019
Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome May Be Higher In Counties With Fewer Mental Health Clinicians And Higher Long-Term Unemployment Rates, Study Suggests
MedPage Today (1/29, Walker) reports researchers found that counties with “higher long-term unemployment rates and a” shortage of mental health clinicians had “higher rates of neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS).” The findings were published in JAMA. Katy B. Kozhimannil, PhD, of the University of Minnesota, and Lindsay K. Admon, MD, of the University of Michigan, wrote in an accompanying editorial that the link between shortages of mental health clinicians and NAS was a “key finding.”
HealthDay (1/29, Preidt) reports the researchers examined “6.3 million births between 2009 and 2015 in 580 counties in Florida, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, North Carolina, New York, Tennessee and Washington,” and found that “in counties with high, long-term unemployment, 20 of every 1,000 newborns were exposed to opioids” in utero, compared to only “7.8 per 1,000 births in counties with the lowest unemployment.”
Related Links:
— “Opioid Danger to Newborns Varies By Region, “Robert Preidt, Healthday, January 29, 2019
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