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The Importance of Science
APA is supporting an initiative by Research! America and the National Science Policy Network to offer grants to scientists to increase engagement between scientists and candidates in the upcoming midterm elections. The Bipartisan Candidate Engagement Initiative supports science graduate students and trainees in working to elevate the importance of scientific research, innovation, and public health—including mental health—in the national conversation among candidates. Science policy groups managed by graduate students and postdocs are eligible to apply; awards range from $1,000 to $3,000, with the potential for up to $5,000 for high-impact proposals. Proposals are due by August 10. Learn more and apply.
Both Abstainers And Those Who Drink Over 14 Glasses Of Wine Weekly Have Higher Risk Of Dementia, Study Suggests.
TIME (8/1, Park) reports on a study including data on “more than 9,000 middle-aged people ages 35 to 55, who were followed for about 23 years,” which found that “those with drinking habits at the two extremes – people who abstained from drinking, as well as those who drank more than around 14 glasses of wine a week – showed higher risk of dementia than those who drank one to eight glasses of wine a week.” Specifically, people “who drank more than 14 units of alcohol a week on average from midlife to older age had a 40% increased risk of developing dementia compared to people who drank less.”
Related Links:
— “Drinking Too Much Alcohol (And Too Little) Is Linked to Dementia, “Alicia Park, TIME Health, August 01, 2018.
When parents are depressed, children may be more likely to visit the ED, be admitted to the hospital, study indicates
Reuters (8/1, Rapaport) reports, “When parents are depressed, kids are 41 percent more likely to visit the emergency” department, “47 percent more likely to be admitted to the hospital and 67 percent more likely to have outpatient clinic visits than when parents aren’t depressed,” researchers concluded after reviewing “one year of electronic health records for more than 25,000 patients registered with a multisite medical practice in London.” The findings were published online July 30 in BMJ Pediatrics Open.
Related Links:
Heading Soccer Balls May Be More Damaging For Female Players Than Male Players, Study Suggests.
Reuters (7/31, Rapaport) reports researchers found that “the volume of damaged white matter in” female soccer players who frequently headed the ball “was five times greater than it was for” their male counterparts. The researchers used diffusion tensor imaging to examine the brains of “49 male and 49 female amateur soccer players who reported a similar number of headings during the previous year.” The findings were published in Radiology.
NPR (7/31, Watson) reports lead author Michael Lipton, a neuroradiologist and neuroscientist at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, said, “The most important finding here is that we see that in women’s brains, actually looking at brain tissue, there seems to be a greater sensitivity to repetitive, very low-level injury relative to men.”
Related Links:
— “Soccer headings may damage women’s brains more, “Lisa Rapaport, Reuters, July 31, 2018.
Using Substance Abuse, Anxiety Assessments At The Enrollment Of Collaborative Care Treatment For Depression May Help Identify Teens With Depression At Risk For Treatment Failure, Small Study Indicates.
Healio (7/31, Demko) reports, “Using substance abuse and anxiety assessments at the enrollment of collaborative care treatment for depression can help identify teenagers with depression at risk for treatment failure,” researchers concluded in a study involving “182 teens aged 12 years to 17 years with depressive disorder.” The findings were published online July 17 in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.
Related Links:
— “Teens with depression may benefit from collaborative care treatment, “Savannah Demko, Healio, July 31, 2018.
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