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Latest News Around the Web

Young people who binge drink may be at higher risk of heart disease and stroke later in life, study suggests.

Newsweek (8/13, Gander) reports researchers found “young people who binge drink could be at greater risk of developing conditions such as heart disease and stroke later in life.” The findings of the 4,710-adult study were published online in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

Related Links:

— “Young People who binge drink could increase risk of stroke, study suggests,”Kashmira Gander, Newsweek, August 13, 2018.

Prenatal Tdap Vaccine Not Associated With Autism Spectrum Disorder, Researchers Say.

In “To Your Health,” the Washington Post (8/13, Bever) reports that after studying some 80,000 youngsters “over a four-year period,” Kaiser Permanent researchers found “no association between the prenatal Tdap (for tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis, also known as whooping cough) vaccine and autism spectrum disorder when looking at tens of thousands of children.” The findings were published online Aug. 13 in Pediatrics.

Also covering the study are Newsweek (8/13, Spear), HealthDay (8/13, Norton), MedPage Today (8/13, Walker), and Medscape (8/13, Subscription Publication).

Related Links:

— “Tdap vaccine given to pregnant women did not increase risk of autism in children, study says, “Lindsey Bever, The Washington Post, August 13, 2018.

Kratom Constituent Is An Opioid With High Abuse Potential, Study Indicates.

Medscape (8/10, Brooks, Subscription Publication) reports new research shows that “one of the two major psychoactive constituents in kratom has high abuse potential and may also increase the intake of other opiates.” The finding “contradicts claims by kratom makers that the substance has no abuse potential and supports the US Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA’s) view that kratom is an opioid.” Mitragynine (MG) and 7-hydroxymitragynine (7-HMG) “are the two major psychoactive constituents of kratom,” and the researchers wrote 7-HMG should be considered a kratom constituent with “high abuse potential that may also increase the intake of other opiates.” The study was published online June 27 in Addiction Biology.

Related Links:

Medscape (requires login and subscription)

Wide Variation In Opioid Treatment Across US, Data Show.

Modern Healthcare (8/11, Kacik, Subscription Publication) reported on how opioid treatment varies across the country. The nonprofit Fair Health “pored through 26 billion privately billed healthcare claims and found tremendous variation in opioid treatment cost and utilization by state and region.” Dr. Martin Makary with the group said, “We need to recognize the downstream impacts of undertreating and improperly treating opioid abuse and restore the reimbursement of outpatient medication treatment and MAT.”

Related Links:

— “Variety of factors drive wide variation in opioid treatment across the U.S., “Alex Kacik, Modern Healthcare, August 11, 2018.

Anxiety Disorders Can Also Be Found In Youngsters And Teens.

In “Health & Science,” the Washington Post (8/10, Adams) reported, “An in-depth survey of more than 10,000 teens used face-to-face interviews conducted between 2001 and 2004 to screen for psychiatric conditions,” finding that “anxiety disorders are the most common in this age group, far outnumbering behavioral, mood and substance use disorders.” In fact, “one teen in four met diagnostic criteria for an anxiety disorder.” Meanwhile, research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reveals that “more than two million American children have been diagnosed with anxiety disorders, including 3.5 percent of those between ages six and 11.” The article interviewed experts who explained the differences between “normal, functional anxiety” experienced by teens and youngsters and anxiety disorders that need professional treatment.

Related Links:

— “Your child is nervous about the new school year, which may be normal — or not, ” Jill U. Adams, The Washington Post, August 10, 2018.

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