Endometriosis Raises Rates of Postpartum Depression, Other Disorders

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Changed
Tue, 11/12/2024 - 11:58

Women with endometriosis have a much higher risk of being diagnosed with several psychiatric disorders during the postpartum period according to an oral abstract presented at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine’s 2024 Scientific Congress and Expo in Denver, Colorado.

Researchers compared rates of postpartum depression, anxiety, mood disturbance (temporary low or anxious mood requiring no treatment), and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) diagnoses among over 200 million adult women from 67 healthcare organizations who had a child between 2005 and 2023.

Within a year after giving birth, women with prepregnancy endometriosis were 25% more likely to be diagnosed with postpartum depression, 85% more likely to be diagnosed with postpartum mood disturbance, 44% more likely to be diagnosed with anxiety, and 1.26 times more likely to be diagnosed with OCD.

About 75% of women studied had no preexisting depression. This population had a 17% higher risk of receiving a postpartum depression diagnosis, a 95% higher risk of receiving an OCD diagnosis, a 72% higher risk of receiving a postpartum mood disturbance diagnosis, and a 38% risk of receiving an anxiety diagnosis.

Among women without preexisting depression, the risk increased by 64% for OCD, 42% for postpartum mood disturbance, and 25% for anxiety, while the risk for postpartum depression was negligible, indicating that women already experiencing depression likely have a higher baseline risk for worsening symptoms postpartum, said the study’s lead author Tina Yi-Jin Hsieh, MD, MPH, biomedical researcher at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts.

“We think that because preexisting depression is the more dominant risk factor, it doesn’t really matter if you have another additional risk factor like endometriosis to really change the risk of postpartum depression,” said Hsieh.

Endometriosis is a debilitating condition in which tissue similar to uterine lining grows on the outside of the uterus, causing chronic pain and infertility. It affects between 6% and 10% of women worldwide and takes an average of between 4 and 11 years to be diagnosed. It has been linked to depression and anxiety disorders, yet the study authors say there’s little research examining its impact on women in the year after giving birth.

“Endometriosis is a complex condition that can affect both physical and mental health over much of a person’s life,” said Anna Modest, PhD, assistant professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Biology at Harvard Medical School and a study author. “Perinatal and maternal mental health can have a huge impact on children and their family — we need to better understand who is at risk for challenges in the postpartum period.”

“Most chronic medical illnesses, particularly those causing pain, have been shown to increase the risk of mood disorders,” said Ripal Shah, MD, MPH, clinical associate professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford Medicine in California. Shah specializes in reproductive psychiatry and was not associated with the study.

“What’s interesting about endometriosis though is that genome-wide association studies have shown that there may be a genetic predisposition for some women to develop both endometriosis and a mood disorder,” said Shah.

2023 study suggested that endometriosis, anxiety, and depression may be connected through a shared genetic basis.

But the experience patients with endometriosis go through also lends itself to the development of mood disorders, said Daniel Ginn, DO, assistant clinical professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles. Ginn specializes in the treatment of endometriosis and was not a part of the study.

Beyond postpartum depression, Ginn wasn’t surprised by the association of endometriosis with anxiety or OCD because what he hears from patients “on a daily basis is the telling of a history that has been hallmarked by not being listened to, not being believed, and not having symptoms managed well.”

As a result, he said many patients focus heavily on learning about their condition, coming into office visits with binders full of test results and information in an effort to understand and manage it themselves. This “does lead to a certain sense of a need to grasp for control because no one else is helping them [treat their condition effectively].”

He added: “I find it hard to believe that anxiety and OCD were preexisting of the conditions rather than the consequence of a long-term suboptimally managed disease.”

The authors reported no disclosures or sources of funding.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Women with endometriosis have a much higher risk of being diagnosed with several psychiatric disorders during the postpartum period according to an oral abstract presented at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine’s 2024 Scientific Congress and Expo in Denver, Colorado.

Researchers compared rates of postpartum depression, anxiety, mood disturbance (temporary low or anxious mood requiring no treatment), and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) diagnoses among over 200 million adult women from 67 healthcare organizations who had a child between 2005 and 2023.

Within a year after giving birth, women with prepregnancy endometriosis were 25% more likely to be diagnosed with postpartum depression, 85% more likely to be diagnosed with postpartum mood disturbance, 44% more likely to be diagnosed with anxiety, and 1.26 times more likely to be diagnosed with OCD.

About 75% of women studied had no preexisting depression. This population had a 17% higher risk of receiving a postpartum depression diagnosis, a 95% higher risk of receiving an OCD diagnosis, a 72% higher risk of receiving a postpartum mood disturbance diagnosis, and a 38% risk of receiving an anxiety diagnosis.

Among women without preexisting depression, the risk increased by 64% for OCD, 42% for postpartum mood disturbance, and 25% for anxiety, while the risk for postpartum depression was negligible, indicating that women already experiencing depression likely have a higher baseline risk for worsening symptoms postpartum, said the study’s lead author Tina Yi-Jin Hsieh, MD, MPH, biomedical researcher at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts.

“We think that because preexisting depression is the more dominant risk factor, it doesn’t really matter if you have another additional risk factor like endometriosis to really change the risk of postpartum depression,” said Hsieh.

Endometriosis is a debilitating condition in which tissue similar to uterine lining grows on the outside of the uterus, causing chronic pain and infertility. It affects between 6% and 10% of women worldwide and takes an average of between 4 and 11 years to be diagnosed. It has been linked to depression and anxiety disorders, yet the study authors say there’s little research examining its impact on women in the year after giving birth.

“Endometriosis is a complex condition that can affect both physical and mental health over much of a person’s life,” said Anna Modest, PhD, assistant professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Biology at Harvard Medical School and a study author. “Perinatal and maternal mental health can have a huge impact on children and their family — we need to better understand who is at risk for challenges in the postpartum period.”

“Most chronic medical illnesses, particularly those causing pain, have been shown to increase the risk of mood disorders,” said Ripal Shah, MD, MPH, clinical associate professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford Medicine in California. Shah specializes in reproductive psychiatry and was not associated with the study.

“What’s interesting about endometriosis though is that genome-wide association studies have shown that there may be a genetic predisposition for some women to develop both endometriosis and a mood disorder,” said Shah.

2023 study suggested that endometriosis, anxiety, and depression may be connected through a shared genetic basis.

But the experience patients with endometriosis go through also lends itself to the development of mood disorders, said Daniel Ginn, DO, assistant clinical professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles. Ginn specializes in the treatment of endometriosis and was not a part of the study.

Beyond postpartum depression, Ginn wasn’t surprised by the association of endometriosis with anxiety or OCD because what he hears from patients “on a daily basis is the telling of a history that has been hallmarked by not being listened to, not being believed, and not having symptoms managed well.”

As a result, he said many patients focus heavily on learning about their condition, coming into office visits with binders full of test results and information in an effort to understand and manage it themselves. This “does lead to a certain sense of a need to grasp for control because no one else is helping them [treat their condition effectively].”

He added: “I find it hard to believe that anxiety and OCD were preexisting of the conditions rather than the consequence of a long-term suboptimally managed disease.”

The authors reported no disclosures or sources of funding.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Women with endometriosis have a much higher risk of being diagnosed with several psychiatric disorders during the postpartum period according to an oral abstract presented at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine’s 2024 Scientific Congress and Expo in Denver, Colorado.

Researchers compared rates of postpartum depression, anxiety, mood disturbance (temporary low or anxious mood requiring no treatment), and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) diagnoses among over 200 million adult women from 67 healthcare organizations who had a child between 2005 and 2023.

Within a year after giving birth, women with prepregnancy endometriosis were 25% more likely to be diagnosed with postpartum depression, 85% more likely to be diagnosed with postpartum mood disturbance, 44% more likely to be diagnosed with anxiety, and 1.26 times more likely to be diagnosed with OCD.

About 75% of women studied had no preexisting depression. This population had a 17% higher risk of receiving a postpartum depression diagnosis, a 95% higher risk of receiving an OCD diagnosis, a 72% higher risk of receiving a postpartum mood disturbance diagnosis, and a 38% risk of receiving an anxiety diagnosis.

Among women without preexisting depression, the risk increased by 64% for OCD, 42% for postpartum mood disturbance, and 25% for anxiety, while the risk for postpartum depression was negligible, indicating that women already experiencing depression likely have a higher baseline risk for worsening symptoms postpartum, said the study’s lead author Tina Yi-Jin Hsieh, MD, MPH, biomedical researcher at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts.

“We think that because preexisting depression is the more dominant risk factor, it doesn’t really matter if you have another additional risk factor like endometriosis to really change the risk of postpartum depression,” said Hsieh.

Endometriosis is a debilitating condition in which tissue similar to uterine lining grows on the outside of the uterus, causing chronic pain and infertility. It affects between 6% and 10% of women worldwide and takes an average of between 4 and 11 years to be diagnosed. It has been linked to depression and anxiety disorders, yet the study authors say there’s little research examining its impact on women in the year after giving birth.

“Endometriosis is a complex condition that can affect both physical and mental health over much of a person’s life,” said Anna Modest, PhD, assistant professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Biology at Harvard Medical School and a study author. “Perinatal and maternal mental health can have a huge impact on children and their family — we need to better understand who is at risk for challenges in the postpartum period.”

“Most chronic medical illnesses, particularly those causing pain, have been shown to increase the risk of mood disorders,” said Ripal Shah, MD, MPH, clinical associate professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford Medicine in California. Shah specializes in reproductive psychiatry and was not associated with the study.

“What’s interesting about endometriosis though is that genome-wide association studies have shown that there may be a genetic predisposition for some women to develop both endometriosis and a mood disorder,” said Shah.

2023 study suggested that endometriosis, anxiety, and depression may be connected through a shared genetic basis.

But the experience patients with endometriosis go through also lends itself to the development of mood disorders, said Daniel Ginn, DO, assistant clinical professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles. Ginn specializes in the treatment of endometriosis and was not a part of the study.

Beyond postpartum depression, Ginn wasn’t surprised by the association of endometriosis with anxiety or OCD because what he hears from patients “on a daily basis is the telling of a history that has been hallmarked by not being listened to, not being believed, and not having symptoms managed well.”

As a result, he said many patients focus heavily on learning about their condition, coming into office visits with binders full of test results and information in an effort to understand and manage it themselves. This “does lead to a certain sense of a need to grasp for control because no one else is helping them [treat their condition effectively].”

He added: “I find it hard to believe that anxiety and OCD were preexisting of the conditions rather than the consequence of a long-term suboptimally managed disease.”

The authors reported no disclosures or sources of funding.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Minor Progress in Gender Pay Equity, But a Big Gap Persists

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Changed
Mon, 11/04/2024 - 11:33

Despite some recent progress in compensation equity, women in medicine continue to be paid significantly lower salaries than men.

According to the Female Compensation Report 2024 by Medscape, male doctors of any kind earned an average salary of about $400,000, whereas female doctors earned approximately $309,000 — a 29% gap.

The report analyzed survey data from 7000 practicing physicians who were recruited over a 4-month period starting in October 2023. The respondents comprised roughly 60% women representing over 29 specialties.

In the 2022 report, the pay gap between the genders was 32%. But some women in the field argued substantial headway is still needed.

“You can try and pick apart the data, but I’d say we’re not really making progress,” said Susan T. Hingle, MD, an internist in Illinois and president of the American Medical Women’s Association. “A decline by a couple of percentage points is not significantly addressing this pay gap that over a lifetime is huge, can be millions of dollars.”

The gender gap was narrower among female primary care physicians (PCPs) vs medical specialists. Female PCPs earned around $253,000 per year, whereas male PCPs earned about $295,000 per year. Hingle suggested that female PCPs may enjoy more pay equity because health systems have a harder time filling these positions.

On the other hand, the gap for specialists rose from 27% in 2022 to 31% in 2023. Differences in how aggressively women and men negotiate compensation packages may play a role, said Hingle.

“Taking negotiation out of the equation would be progress to me,” said Hingle.

Pay disparity did not appear to be the result of time spent on the job — female doctors reported an average of 49 work hours per week, whereas their male counterparts reported 50 work hours per week.

Meanwhile, the pay gap progressively worsened over time. Among doctors aged 28-34 years, men earned an average of $53,000 more than women. By ages 46-49, men earned an average of $157,000 more than women.

“I had to take my employer to court to get equal compensation, sad as it is to say,” said a hospitalist in North Carolina.

Nearly 60% of women surveyed felt they were not being paid fairly for their efforts, up from less than half reported in Medscape’s 2021 report. Hingle said that this figure may not only reflect sentiments about the compensation gap, but also less support on the job, including fewer physician assistants (PAs), nurses, and administrative staff.

“At my job, I do the work of multiple people,” said a survey respondent. “Junior resident, senior resident, social worker, nurse practitioner, PA — as well as try to be a teacher, researcher, [and] an excellent doctor and have the time to make patients feel as if they are not in a rush.”

Roughly 30% of women physicians said they would not choose to go into medicine again if given the chance compared with 26% of male physicians.

“Gender inequities in our profession have a direct impact,” said Shikha Jain, MD, an oncologist in Chicago and founder of the Women in Medicine nonprofit. “I think women in general don’t feel valued in the care they’re providing.” 

Jain cited bullying, harassment, and fewer opportunities for leadership and recognition as factors beyond pay that affect female physicians’ feelings of being valued.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Despite some recent progress in compensation equity, women in medicine continue to be paid significantly lower salaries than men.

According to the Female Compensation Report 2024 by Medscape, male doctors of any kind earned an average salary of about $400,000, whereas female doctors earned approximately $309,000 — a 29% gap.

The report analyzed survey data from 7000 practicing physicians who were recruited over a 4-month period starting in October 2023. The respondents comprised roughly 60% women representing over 29 specialties.

In the 2022 report, the pay gap between the genders was 32%. But some women in the field argued substantial headway is still needed.

“You can try and pick apart the data, but I’d say we’re not really making progress,” said Susan T. Hingle, MD, an internist in Illinois and president of the American Medical Women’s Association. “A decline by a couple of percentage points is not significantly addressing this pay gap that over a lifetime is huge, can be millions of dollars.”

The gender gap was narrower among female primary care physicians (PCPs) vs medical specialists. Female PCPs earned around $253,000 per year, whereas male PCPs earned about $295,000 per year. Hingle suggested that female PCPs may enjoy more pay equity because health systems have a harder time filling these positions.

On the other hand, the gap for specialists rose from 27% in 2022 to 31% in 2023. Differences in how aggressively women and men negotiate compensation packages may play a role, said Hingle.

“Taking negotiation out of the equation would be progress to me,” said Hingle.

Pay disparity did not appear to be the result of time spent on the job — female doctors reported an average of 49 work hours per week, whereas their male counterparts reported 50 work hours per week.

Meanwhile, the pay gap progressively worsened over time. Among doctors aged 28-34 years, men earned an average of $53,000 more than women. By ages 46-49, men earned an average of $157,000 more than women.

“I had to take my employer to court to get equal compensation, sad as it is to say,” said a hospitalist in North Carolina.

Nearly 60% of women surveyed felt they were not being paid fairly for their efforts, up from less than half reported in Medscape’s 2021 report. Hingle said that this figure may not only reflect sentiments about the compensation gap, but also less support on the job, including fewer physician assistants (PAs), nurses, and administrative staff.

“At my job, I do the work of multiple people,” said a survey respondent. “Junior resident, senior resident, social worker, nurse practitioner, PA — as well as try to be a teacher, researcher, [and] an excellent doctor and have the time to make patients feel as if they are not in a rush.”

Roughly 30% of women physicians said they would not choose to go into medicine again if given the chance compared with 26% of male physicians.

“Gender inequities in our profession have a direct impact,” said Shikha Jain, MD, an oncologist in Chicago and founder of the Women in Medicine nonprofit. “I think women in general don’t feel valued in the care they’re providing.” 

Jain cited bullying, harassment, and fewer opportunities for leadership and recognition as factors beyond pay that affect female physicians’ feelings of being valued.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Despite some recent progress in compensation equity, women in medicine continue to be paid significantly lower salaries than men.

According to the Female Compensation Report 2024 by Medscape, male doctors of any kind earned an average salary of about $400,000, whereas female doctors earned approximately $309,000 — a 29% gap.

The report analyzed survey data from 7000 practicing physicians who were recruited over a 4-month period starting in October 2023. The respondents comprised roughly 60% women representing over 29 specialties.

In the 2022 report, the pay gap between the genders was 32%. But some women in the field argued substantial headway is still needed.

“You can try and pick apart the data, but I’d say we’re not really making progress,” said Susan T. Hingle, MD, an internist in Illinois and president of the American Medical Women’s Association. “A decline by a couple of percentage points is not significantly addressing this pay gap that over a lifetime is huge, can be millions of dollars.”

The gender gap was narrower among female primary care physicians (PCPs) vs medical specialists. Female PCPs earned around $253,000 per year, whereas male PCPs earned about $295,000 per year. Hingle suggested that female PCPs may enjoy more pay equity because health systems have a harder time filling these positions.

On the other hand, the gap for specialists rose from 27% in 2022 to 31% in 2023. Differences in how aggressively women and men negotiate compensation packages may play a role, said Hingle.

“Taking negotiation out of the equation would be progress to me,” said Hingle.

Pay disparity did not appear to be the result of time spent on the job — female doctors reported an average of 49 work hours per week, whereas their male counterparts reported 50 work hours per week.

Meanwhile, the pay gap progressively worsened over time. Among doctors aged 28-34 years, men earned an average of $53,000 more than women. By ages 46-49, men earned an average of $157,000 more than women.

“I had to take my employer to court to get equal compensation, sad as it is to say,” said a hospitalist in North Carolina.

Nearly 60% of women surveyed felt they were not being paid fairly for their efforts, up from less than half reported in Medscape’s 2021 report. Hingle said that this figure may not only reflect sentiments about the compensation gap, but also less support on the job, including fewer physician assistants (PAs), nurses, and administrative staff.

“At my job, I do the work of multiple people,” said a survey respondent. “Junior resident, senior resident, social worker, nurse practitioner, PA — as well as try to be a teacher, researcher, [and] an excellent doctor and have the time to make patients feel as if they are not in a rush.”

Roughly 30% of women physicians said they would not choose to go into medicine again if given the chance compared with 26% of male physicians.

“Gender inequities in our profession have a direct impact,” said Shikha Jain, MD, an oncologist in Chicago and founder of the Women in Medicine nonprofit. “I think women in general don’t feel valued in the care they’re providing.” 

Jain cited bullying, harassment, and fewer opportunities for leadership and recognition as factors beyond pay that affect female physicians’ feelings of being valued.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Millennial Clinicians Face Pay Disparities by Specialty, Other Factors

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Thu, 10/03/2024 - 11:41

Salaries for millennial physicians are slightly increasing, but clinicians still face pay disparities across location, practice type, and gender.

Medscape Medical News reviewed survey data from more than 1200 practicing doctors under age 40 across 29 specialties over a 4-month period starting in October 2023.

The average annual total compensation (including any bonuses) for young clinicians rose from $326,000 to $338,000, about 4%, between 2022 and 2023. Among millennials, primary care physicians saw a 5% increase. But a large pay gap exists between fields: Specialists under age 40 earned an average of $357,000 in 2023, compared with the average primary care clinician salary of $271,000.

“Procedures are reimbursed too high, while very little value is placed on primary care,” one survey respondent complained.

The type of practice plays a major part in compensation. Millennial doctors in office-based, single-specialty group practices earned an average of $358,000 per year, followed by those in office-based multispecialty group practices at 355,000 per year. Those in outpatient clinics earned $278,000 per year.

“I believe the practice situation is a huge portion of compensation,” said Tiffany Di Pietro, DO, a cardiologist and internal medicine physician in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. “Owning your own private practice is generally more lucrative (if you have good business sense), but it is also quite a bit more time-consuming, whereas employed physicians usually make less but have fewer concerns with staffing and overhead.”

Like in previous years, a gender pay gap equated to men outearning women. Female physicians under age 40 of any kind earned about $302,000 per year, 24% less than their male counterparts, on average.

Millennial doctors in the Midwest brought home the biggest earnings, with an average salary of $343,000 vs $332,000 on the West Coast.

Millennial physicians also reported higher levels of dissatisfaction. In the 2022 report, 46% said they were not paid fairly. That figure rose to 49%. Just 68% of millennial doctors would choose medicine again if they could do things over, down from 76% in the 2021 report.

“Doctors go through multiple years of school and then have to act like we are working at Dunkin’ Donuts — like we’re on an assembly line,” one survey respondent said. “We should not have to be paid per patient seen but valued for 8-9 years of training.”

Despite these complaints, close to 7 out of 10 millennial respondents said pay was not a major factor in what area of medicine they chose, with 29% saying it played no role at all in their decision.

Psychiatrists and anesthesiologists were the happiest with their earnings, with 61% of both specialties reporting that they felt fairly paid. They were followed by dermatologists and emergency medicine doctors, both of whom 60% reported fair earnings.

Many millennial doctors are finding ways to make money outside of their practice, with 18% securing other medical-related work, 15% doing medical moonlighting, and 5% taking on non–medical-related work.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Salaries for millennial physicians are slightly increasing, but clinicians still face pay disparities across location, practice type, and gender.

Medscape Medical News reviewed survey data from more than 1200 practicing doctors under age 40 across 29 specialties over a 4-month period starting in October 2023.

The average annual total compensation (including any bonuses) for young clinicians rose from $326,000 to $338,000, about 4%, between 2022 and 2023. Among millennials, primary care physicians saw a 5% increase. But a large pay gap exists between fields: Specialists under age 40 earned an average of $357,000 in 2023, compared with the average primary care clinician salary of $271,000.

“Procedures are reimbursed too high, while very little value is placed on primary care,” one survey respondent complained.

The type of practice plays a major part in compensation. Millennial doctors in office-based, single-specialty group practices earned an average of $358,000 per year, followed by those in office-based multispecialty group practices at 355,000 per year. Those in outpatient clinics earned $278,000 per year.

“I believe the practice situation is a huge portion of compensation,” said Tiffany Di Pietro, DO, a cardiologist and internal medicine physician in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. “Owning your own private practice is generally more lucrative (if you have good business sense), but it is also quite a bit more time-consuming, whereas employed physicians usually make less but have fewer concerns with staffing and overhead.”

Like in previous years, a gender pay gap equated to men outearning women. Female physicians under age 40 of any kind earned about $302,000 per year, 24% less than their male counterparts, on average.

Millennial doctors in the Midwest brought home the biggest earnings, with an average salary of $343,000 vs $332,000 on the West Coast.

Millennial physicians also reported higher levels of dissatisfaction. In the 2022 report, 46% said they were not paid fairly. That figure rose to 49%. Just 68% of millennial doctors would choose medicine again if they could do things over, down from 76% in the 2021 report.

“Doctors go through multiple years of school and then have to act like we are working at Dunkin’ Donuts — like we’re on an assembly line,” one survey respondent said. “We should not have to be paid per patient seen but valued for 8-9 years of training.”

Despite these complaints, close to 7 out of 10 millennial respondents said pay was not a major factor in what area of medicine they chose, with 29% saying it played no role at all in their decision.

Psychiatrists and anesthesiologists were the happiest with their earnings, with 61% of both specialties reporting that they felt fairly paid. They were followed by dermatologists and emergency medicine doctors, both of whom 60% reported fair earnings.

Many millennial doctors are finding ways to make money outside of their practice, with 18% securing other medical-related work, 15% doing medical moonlighting, and 5% taking on non–medical-related work.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Salaries for millennial physicians are slightly increasing, but clinicians still face pay disparities across location, practice type, and gender.

Medscape Medical News reviewed survey data from more than 1200 practicing doctors under age 40 across 29 specialties over a 4-month period starting in October 2023.

The average annual total compensation (including any bonuses) for young clinicians rose from $326,000 to $338,000, about 4%, between 2022 and 2023. Among millennials, primary care physicians saw a 5% increase. But a large pay gap exists between fields: Specialists under age 40 earned an average of $357,000 in 2023, compared with the average primary care clinician salary of $271,000.

“Procedures are reimbursed too high, while very little value is placed on primary care,” one survey respondent complained.

The type of practice plays a major part in compensation. Millennial doctors in office-based, single-specialty group practices earned an average of $358,000 per year, followed by those in office-based multispecialty group practices at 355,000 per year. Those in outpatient clinics earned $278,000 per year.

“I believe the practice situation is a huge portion of compensation,” said Tiffany Di Pietro, DO, a cardiologist and internal medicine physician in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. “Owning your own private practice is generally more lucrative (if you have good business sense), but it is also quite a bit more time-consuming, whereas employed physicians usually make less but have fewer concerns with staffing and overhead.”

Like in previous years, a gender pay gap equated to men outearning women. Female physicians under age 40 of any kind earned about $302,000 per year, 24% less than their male counterparts, on average.

Millennial doctors in the Midwest brought home the biggest earnings, with an average salary of $343,000 vs $332,000 on the West Coast.

Millennial physicians also reported higher levels of dissatisfaction. In the 2022 report, 46% said they were not paid fairly. That figure rose to 49%. Just 68% of millennial doctors would choose medicine again if they could do things over, down from 76% in the 2021 report.

“Doctors go through multiple years of school and then have to act like we are working at Dunkin’ Donuts — like we’re on an assembly line,” one survey respondent said. “We should not have to be paid per patient seen but valued for 8-9 years of training.”

Despite these complaints, close to 7 out of 10 millennial respondents said pay was not a major factor in what area of medicine they chose, with 29% saying it played no role at all in their decision.

Psychiatrists and anesthesiologists were the happiest with their earnings, with 61% of both specialties reporting that they felt fairly paid. They were followed by dermatologists and emergency medicine doctors, both of whom 60% reported fair earnings.

Many millennial doctors are finding ways to make money outside of their practice, with 18% securing other medical-related work, 15% doing medical moonlighting, and 5% taking on non–medical-related work.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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NSAIDs Offer No Relief for Pain From IUD Placement

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Mon, 09/16/2024 - 12:55

Research on pain management during placement of intrauterine devices (IUD) is lacking, but most studies so far indicate that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are not effective, according to a poster presented at Pain Week 2024 in Las Vegas.

Roughly 79% of the 14 studies included in the systematic review found NSAIDs — one of the most common drugs clinicians advise patients to take before placement — did not diminish discomfort.

“We’re challenging the current practice of using just NSAIDs as a first-line of treatment,” said Kevin Rowland, PhD, professor and chair of biomedical sciences at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine in Houston, who helped conduct the meta-analysis. “We need additional measures.”

Some studies found the drugs offered virtually no improvement for patients, while the biggest drop in pain shown in one study was about 40%. The range of pain levels women reported while using NSAIDs was between 1.8 and 7.3 on the visual analog scale (VAS), with an average score of 4.25.

The review included 10 types of NSAIDs and dosages administered to patients before the procedure. One intramuscular NSAID was included while the remaining were oral. All studies were peer-reviewed, used the VAS pain scale, and were not limited to any specific population.

The findings highlight a longstanding but unresolved problem in reproductive health: An overall lack of effective pain management strategies for gynecologic procedures.

“We went into this having a pretty good idea of what we were going to find because [the lack of NSAID efficacy] has been shown before, it’s been talked about before, and we’re just not listening as a medical community,” said Isabella D. Martingano, an MD candidate at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine, who led the review.

The research also points to a lack of robust studies on pain during IUD placement, said Emma Lakey, a coauthor and medical student at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine.

“We were only able to review 14 studies, which was enough to go off of, but considering we were looking for trials about pain control for a procedure that helps prevent pregnancy, that’s just not enough research,” Ms. Lakey said.

Discomfort associated with IUD placement ranges from mild to severe, can last for over a week, and includes cramping, bleeding, lightheadedness, nausea, and fainting. Some research suggests that providers may underestimate the level of pain the procedures cause.

“Unfortunately, the pain associated with IUD insertion and removal has been underplayed for a long time and many practitioners in the field likely haven’t counseled patients fully on what the procedure will feel like,” said Jennifer Chin, MD, an ob.gyn. and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington in Seattle.

NSAIDs are not mentioned in the recently expanded guidelines on IUD placement from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The CDC recommends lidocaine paracervical blocks, gels, sprays, and creams, plus counseling women about pain ahead of the procedures.

IUDs are one of the most effective forms of birth control, with a failure rate below 1%.

Yet hearing about painful placement keeps many women from seeking out an IUD or replacing an existing device, Dr. Rowland said. The review adds to the body of evidence that current strategies are not working and that more research is needed, he said.

According to Dr. Chin, making IUDs more accessible means taking a more personalized approach to pain management while understanding that what may be a painless procedure for one patient may be excruciating for another.

Dr. Chin offers a range of options for her patients, including NSAIDs, lorazepam for anxiety, paracervical blocks, lidocaine jelly and spray, intravenous sedation, and general anesthesia. She also talks to her patients through the procedure and provides guided imagery and meditation.

“We should always make sure we’re prioritizing the patients and providing evidence-based, compassionate, and individualized care,” said Dr. Chin. “Each patient comes to us in a particular context and with a specific set of experiences and history that will make a difference in how we’re best able to take care of them.”

The authors reported no disclosures and no sources of funding. Dr. Chin reported no disclosures.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Research on pain management during placement of intrauterine devices (IUD) is lacking, but most studies so far indicate that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are not effective, according to a poster presented at Pain Week 2024 in Las Vegas.

Roughly 79% of the 14 studies included in the systematic review found NSAIDs — one of the most common drugs clinicians advise patients to take before placement — did not diminish discomfort.

“We’re challenging the current practice of using just NSAIDs as a first-line of treatment,” said Kevin Rowland, PhD, professor and chair of biomedical sciences at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine in Houston, who helped conduct the meta-analysis. “We need additional measures.”

Some studies found the drugs offered virtually no improvement for patients, while the biggest drop in pain shown in one study was about 40%. The range of pain levels women reported while using NSAIDs was between 1.8 and 7.3 on the visual analog scale (VAS), with an average score of 4.25.

The review included 10 types of NSAIDs and dosages administered to patients before the procedure. One intramuscular NSAID was included while the remaining were oral. All studies were peer-reviewed, used the VAS pain scale, and were not limited to any specific population.

The findings highlight a longstanding but unresolved problem in reproductive health: An overall lack of effective pain management strategies for gynecologic procedures.

“We went into this having a pretty good idea of what we were going to find because [the lack of NSAID efficacy] has been shown before, it’s been talked about before, and we’re just not listening as a medical community,” said Isabella D. Martingano, an MD candidate at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine, who led the review.

The research also points to a lack of robust studies on pain during IUD placement, said Emma Lakey, a coauthor and medical student at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine.

“We were only able to review 14 studies, which was enough to go off of, but considering we were looking for trials about pain control for a procedure that helps prevent pregnancy, that’s just not enough research,” Ms. Lakey said.

Discomfort associated with IUD placement ranges from mild to severe, can last for over a week, and includes cramping, bleeding, lightheadedness, nausea, and fainting. Some research suggests that providers may underestimate the level of pain the procedures cause.

“Unfortunately, the pain associated with IUD insertion and removal has been underplayed for a long time and many practitioners in the field likely haven’t counseled patients fully on what the procedure will feel like,” said Jennifer Chin, MD, an ob.gyn. and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington in Seattle.

NSAIDs are not mentioned in the recently expanded guidelines on IUD placement from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The CDC recommends lidocaine paracervical blocks, gels, sprays, and creams, plus counseling women about pain ahead of the procedures.

IUDs are one of the most effective forms of birth control, with a failure rate below 1%.

Yet hearing about painful placement keeps many women from seeking out an IUD or replacing an existing device, Dr. Rowland said. The review adds to the body of evidence that current strategies are not working and that more research is needed, he said.

According to Dr. Chin, making IUDs more accessible means taking a more personalized approach to pain management while understanding that what may be a painless procedure for one patient may be excruciating for another.

Dr. Chin offers a range of options for her patients, including NSAIDs, lorazepam for anxiety, paracervical blocks, lidocaine jelly and spray, intravenous sedation, and general anesthesia. She also talks to her patients through the procedure and provides guided imagery and meditation.

“We should always make sure we’re prioritizing the patients and providing evidence-based, compassionate, and individualized care,” said Dr. Chin. “Each patient comes to us in a particular context and with a specific set of experiences and history that will make a difference in how we’re best able to take care of them.”

The authors reported no disclosures and no sources of funding. Dr. Chin reported no disclosures.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Research on pain management during placement of intrauterine devices (IUD) is lacking, but most studies so far indicate that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are not effective, according to a poster presented at Pain Week 2024 in Las Vegas.

Roughly 79% of the 14 studies included in the systematic review found NSAIDs — one of the most common drugs clinicians advise patients to take before placement — did not diminish discomfort.

“We’re challenging the current practice of using just NSAIDs as a first-line of treatment,” said Kevin Rowland, PhD, professor and chair of biomedical sciences at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine in Houston, who helped conduct the meta-analysis. “We need additional measures.”

Some studies found the drugs offered virtually no improvement for patients, while the biggest drop in pain shown in one study was about 40%. The range of pain levels women reported while using NSAIDs was between 1.8 and 7.3 on the visual analog scale (VAS), with an average score of 4.25.

The review included 10 types of NSAIDs and dosages administered to patients before the procedure. One intramuscular NSAID was included while the remaining were oral. All studies were peer-reviewed, used the VAS pain scale, and were not limited to any specific population.

The findings highlight a longstanding but unresolved problem in reproductive health: An overall lack of effective pain management strategies for gynecologic procedures.

“We went into this having a pretty good idea of what we were going to find because [the lack of NSAID efficacy] has been shown before, it’s been talked about before, and we’re just not listening as a medical community,” said Isabella D. Martingano, an MD candidate at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine, who led the review.

The research also points to a lack of robust studies on pain during IUD placement, said Emma Lakey, a coauthor and medical student at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine.

“We were only able to review 14 studies, which was enough to go off of, but considering we were looking for trials about pain control for a procedure that helps prevent pregnancy, that’s just not enough research,” Ms. Lakey said.

Discomfort associated with IUD placement ranges from mild to severe, can last for over a week, and includes cramping, bleeding, lightheadedness, nausea, and fainting. Some research suggests that providers may underestimate the level of pain the procedures cause.

“Unfortunately, the pain associated with IUD insertion and removal has been underplayed for a long time and many practitioners in the field likely haven’t counseled patients fully on what the procedure will feel like,” said Jennifer Chin, MD, an ob.gyn. and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington in Seattle.

NSAIDs are not mentioned in the recently expanded guidelines on IUD placement from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The CDC recommends lidocaine paracervical blocks, gels, sprays, and creams, plus counseling women about pain ahead of the procedures.

IUDs are one of the most effective forms of birth control, with a failure rate below 1%.

Yet hearing about painful placement keeps many women from seeking out an IUD or replacing an existing device, Dr. Rowland said. The review adds to the body of evidence that current strategies are not working and that more research is needed, he said.

According to Dr. Chin, making IUDs more accessible means taking a more personalized approach to pain management while understanding that what may be a painless procedure for one patient may be excruciating for another.

Dr. Chin offers a range of options for her patients, including NSAIDs, lorazepam for anxiety, paracervical blocks, lidocaine jelly and spray, intravenous sedation, and general anesthesia. She also talks to her patients through the procedure and provides guided imagery and meditation.

“We should always make sure we’re prioritizing the patients and providing evidence-based, compassionate, and individualized care,” said Dr. Chin. “Each patient comes to us in a particular context and with a specific set of experiences and history that will make a difference in how we’re best able to take care of them.”

The authors reported no disclosures and no sources of funding. Dr. Chin reported no disclosures.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Physicians Lament Over Reliance on Relative Value Units: Survey

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Fri, 08/23/2024 - 12:54

Most physicians oppose the way standardized relative value units (RVUs) are used to determine performance and compensation, according to Medscape’s 2024 Physicians and RVUs Report. About 6 in 10 survey respondents were unhappy with how RVUs affected them financially, while 7 in 10 said RVUs were poor measures of productivity.

The report analyzed 2024 survey data from 1005 practicing physicians who earn RVUs.

“I’m already mad that the medical field is controlled by health insurers and what they pay and authorize,” said an anesthesiologist in New York. “Then [that approach] is transferred to medical offices and hospitals, where physicians are paid by RVUs.”

Most physicians surveyed produced between 4000 and 8000 RVUs per year. Roughly one in six were high RVU generators, generating more than 10,000 annually.

In most cases, the metric influences earning potential — 42% of doctors surveyed said RVUs affect their salaries to some degree. One quarter said their salary was based entirely on RVUs. More than three fourths of physicians who received performance bonuses said they must meet RVU targets to do so.

“The current RVU system encourages unnecessary procedures, hurting patients,” said an orthopedic surgeon in Maine.

Nearly three fourths of practitioners surveyed said they occasionally to frequently felt pressure to take on more patients as a result of this system.

“I know numerous primary care doctors and specialists who have been forced to increase patient volume to meet RVU goals, and none is happy about it,” said Alok Patel, MD, a pediatric hospitalist with Stanford Hospital in Palo Alto, California. “Plus, patients are definitely not happy about being rushed.”

More than half of respondents said they occasionally or frequently felt compelled by their employer to use higher-level coding, which interferes with a physician’s ethical responsibility to the patient, said Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, a bioethicist at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City.

“Rather than rewarding excellence or good outcomes, you’re kind of rewarding procedures and volume,” said Dr. Caplan. “It’s more than pressure; it’s expected.”

Nearly 6 in 10 physicians said that the method for calculating reimbursements was unfair. Almost half said that they weren’t happy with how their workplace uses RVUs.

A few respondents said that their RVU model, which is often based on what Dr. Patel called an “overly complicated algorithm,” did not account for the time spent on tasks or the fact that some patients miss appointments. RVUs also rely on factors outside the control of a physician, such as location and patient volume, said one doctor.

The model can also lower the level of care patients receive, Dr. Patel said.

“I know primary care doctors who work in RVU-based systems and simply cannot take the necessary time — even if it’s 30-45 minutes — to thoroughly assess a patient, when the model forces them to take on 15-minute encounters.”

Finally, over half of clinicians said alternatives to the RVU system would be more effective, and 77% suggested including qualitative data. One respondent recommended incorporating time spent doing paperwork and communicating with patients, complexity of conditions, and medication management.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Most physicians oppose the way standardized relative value units (RVUs) are used to determine performance and compensation, according to Medscape’s 2024 Physicians and RVUs Report. About 6 in 10 survey respondents were unhappy with how RVUs affected them financially, while 7 in 10 said RVUs were poor measures of productivity.

The report analyzed 2024 survey data from 1005 practicing physicians who earn RVUs.

“I’m already mad that the medical field is controlled by health insurers and what they pay and authorize,” said an anesthesiologist in New York. “Then [that approach] is transferred to medical offices and hospitals, where physicians are paid by RVUs.”

Most physicians surveyed produced between 4000 and 8000 RVUs per year. Roughly one in six were high RVU generators, generating more than 10,000 annually.

In most cases, the metric influences earning potential — 42% of doctors surveyed said RVUs affect their salaries to some degree. One quarter said their salary was based entirely on RVUs. More than three fourths of physicians who received performance bonuses said they must meet RVU targets to do so.

“The current RVU system encourages unnecessary procedures, hurting patients,” said an orthopedic surgeon in Maine.

Nearly three fourths of practitioners surveyed said they occasionally to frequently felt pressure to take on more patients as a result of this system.

“I know numerous primary care doctors and specialists who have been forced to increase patient volume to meet RVU goals, and none is happy about it,” said Alok Patel, MD, a pediatric hospitalist with Stanford Hospital in Palo Alto, California. “Plus, patients are definitely not happy about being rushed.”

More than half of respondents said they occasionally or frequently felt compelled by their employer to use higher-level coding, which interferes with a physician’s ethical responsibility to the patient, said Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, a bioethicist at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City.

“Rather than rewarding excellence or good outcomes, you’re kind of rewarding procedures and volume,” said Dr. Caplan. “It’s more than pressure; it’s expected.”

Nearly 6 in 10 physicians said that the method for calculating reimbursements was unfair. Almost half said that they weren’t happy with how their workplace uses RVUs.

A few respondents said that their RVU model, which is often based on what Dr. Patel called an “overly complicated algorithm,” did not account for the time spent on tasks or the fact that some patients miss appointments. RVUs also rely on factors outside the control of a physician, such as location and patient volume, said one doctor.

The model can also lower the level of care patients receive, Dr. Patel said.

“I know primary care doctors who work in RVU-based systems and simply cannot take the necessary time — even if it’s 30-45 minutes — to thoroughly assess a patient, when the model forces them to take on 15-minute encounters.”

Finally, over half of clinicians said alternatives to the RVU system would be more effective, and 77% suggested including qualitative data. One respondent recommended incorporating time spent doing paperwork and communicating with patients, complexity of conditions, and medication management.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Most physicians oppose the way standardized relative value units (RVUs) are used to determine performance and compensation, according to Medscape’s 2024 Physicians and RVUs Report. About 6 in 10 survey respondents were unhappy with how RVUs affected them financially, while 7 in 10 said RVUs were poor measures of productivity.

The report analyzed 2024 survey data from 1005 practicing physicians who earn RVUs.

“I’m already mad that the medical field is controlled by health insurers and what they pay and authorize,” said an anesthesiologist in New York. “Then [that approach] is transferred to medical offices and hospitals, where physicians are paid by RVUs.”

Most physicians surveyed produced between 4000 and 8000 RVUs per year. Roughly one in six were high RVU generators, generating more than 10,000 annually.

In most cases, the metric influences earning potential — 42% of doctors surveyed said RVUs affect their salaries to some degree. One quarter said their salary was based entirely on RVUs. More than three fourths of physicians who received performance bonuses said they must meet RVU targets to do so.

“The current RVU system encourages unnecessary procedures, hurting patients,” said an orthopedic surgeon in Maine.

Nearly three fourths of practitioners surveyed said they occasionally to frequently felt pressure to take on more patients as a result of this system.

“I know numerous primary care doctors and specialists who have been forced to increase patient volume to meet RVU goals, and none is happy about it,” said Alok Patel, MD, a pediatric hospitalist with Stanford Hospital in Palo Alto, California. “Plus, patients are definitely not happy about being rushed.”

More than half of respondents said they occasionally or frequently felt compelled by their employer to use higher-level coding, which interferes with a physician’s ethical responsibility to the patient, said Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, a bioethicist at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City.

“Rather than rewarding excellence or good outcomes, you’re kind of rewarding procedures and volume,” said Dr. Caplan. “It’s more than pressure; it’s expected.”

Nearly 6 in 10 physicians said that the method for calculating reimbursements was unfair. Almost half said that they weren’t happy with how their workplace uses RVUs.

A few respondents said that their RVU model, which is often based on what Dr. Patel called an “overly complicated algorithm,” did not account for the time spent on tasks or the fact that some patients miss appointments. RVUs also rely on factors outside the control of a physician, such as location and patient volume, said one doctor.

The model can also lower the level of care patients receive, Dr. Patel said.

“I know primary care doctors who work in RVU-based systems and simply cannot take the necessary time — even if it’s 30-45 minutes — to thoroughly assess a patient, when the model forces them to take on 15-minute encounters.”

Finally, over half of clinicians said alternatives to the RVU system would be more effective, and 77% suggested including qualitative data. One respondent recommended incorporating time spent doing paperwork and communicating with patients, complexity of conditions, and medication management.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Recurrent UTI Rates High Among Older Women, Diagnosing Accurately Is Complicated

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Fri, 06/14/2024 - 10:05

 

TOPLINE:

Accurately diagnosing recurrent urinary tract infections (rUTIs) in older women is challenging and requires careful weighing of the risks and benefits of various treatments, according to a new clinical insight published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Women aged > 65 years have double the rUTI rates compared with younger women, but detecting the condition is more complicated due to age-related conditions, such as overactive bladder related to menopause.
  • Overuse of antibiotics can increase their risk of contracting antibiotic-resistant organisms and can lead to pulmonary or hepatic toxic effects in women with reduced kidney function.
  • Up to 20% of older women have bacteria in their urine, which may or may not reflect a rUTI.
  • Diagnosing rUTIs is complicated if women have dementia or cognitive decline, which can hinder recollection of symptoms.

TAKEAWAYS:

  • Clinicians should consider only testing older female patients for rUTIs when symptoms are present and consider all possibilities before making a diagnosis.
  • Vaginal estrogen may be an effective treatment, although the authors of the clinical review note a lack of a uniform formulation to recommend. However, oral estrogen use is not supported by evidence, and clinicians should instead consider vaginal creams or rings.
  • The drug methenamine may be as effective as antibiotics but may not be safe for women with comorbidities. Evidence supports daily use at 1 g.
  • Cranberry supplements and behavioral changes may be helpful, but evidence is limited, including among women living in long-term care facilities.

IN PRACTICE:

“Shared decision-making is especially important when diagnosis of an rUTI episode in older women is unclear ... in these cases, clinicians should acknowledge limitations in the evidence and invite patients or their caregivers to discuss preferences about presumptive treatment, weighing the possibility of earlier symptom relief or decreased UTI complications against the risk of adverse drug effects or multidrug resistance.”

SOURCE:

The paper was led by Alison J. Huang, MD, MAS, an internal medicine specialist and researcher in the Department of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

LIMITATIONS:

The authors reported no limitations.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Huang received grants from the National Institutes of Health. Other authors reported receiving grants from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the US Department of Veterans Affairs, the Kahn Foundation, and Nanovibronix.

Cranberry supplements and behavioral changes may be helpful, but evidence is limited, including among women living in long-term care facilities.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Accurately diagnosing recurrent urinary tract infections (rUTIs) in older women is challenging and requires careful weighing of the risks and benefits of various treatments, according to a new clinical insight published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Women aged > 65 years have double the rUTI rates compared with younger women, but detecting the condition is more complicated due to age-related conditions, such as overactive bladder related to menopause.
  • Overuse of antibiotics can increase their risk of contracting antibiotic-resistant organisms and can lead to pulmonary or hepatic toxic effects in women with reduced kidney function.
  • Up to 20% of older women have bacteria in their urine, which may or may not reflect a rUTI.
  • Diagnosing rUTIs is complicated if women have dementia or cognitive decline, which can hinder recollection of symptoms.

TAKEAWAYS:

  • Clinicians should consider only testing older female patients for rUTIs when symptoms are present and consider all possibilities before making a diagnosis.
  • Vaginal estrogen may be an effective treatment, although the authors of the clinical review note a lack of a uniform formulation to recommend. However, oral estrogen use is not supported by evidence, and clinicians should instead consider vaginal creams or rings.
  • The drug methenamine may be as effective as antibiotics but may not be safe for women with comorbidities. Evidence supports daily use at 1 g.
  • Cranberry supplements and behavioral changes may be helpful, but evidence is limited, including among women living in long-term care facilities.

IN PRACTICE:

“Shared decision-making is especially important when diagnosis of an rUTI episode in older women is unclear ... in these cases, clinicians should acknowledge limitations in the evidence and invite patients or their caregivers to discuss preferences about presumptive treatment, weighing the possibility of earlier symptom relief or decreased UTI complications against the risk of adverse drug effects or multidrug resistance.”

SOURCE:

The paper was led by Alison J. Huang, MD, MAS, an internal medicine specialist and researcher in the Department of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

LIMITATIONS:

The authors reported no limitations.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Huang received grants from the National Institutes of Health. Other authors reported receiving grants from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the US Department of Veterans Affairs, the Kahn Foundation, and Nanovibronix.

Cranberry supplements and behavioral changes may be helpful, but evidence is limited, including among women living in long-term care facilities.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Accurately diagnosing recurrent urinary tract infections (rUTIs) in older women is challenging and requires careful weighing of the risks and benefits of various treatments, according to a new clinical insight published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Women aged > 65 years have double the rUTI rates compared with younger women, but detecting the condition is more complicated due to age-related conditions, such as overactive bladder related to menopause.
  • Overuse of antibiotics can increase their risk of contracting antibiotic-resistant organisms and can lead to pulmonary or hepatic toxic effects in women with reduced kidney function.
  • Up to 20% of older women have bacteria in their urine, which may or may not reflect a rUTI.
  • Diagnosing rUTIs is complicated if women have dementia or cognitive decline, which can hinder recollection of symptoms.

TAKEAWAYS:

  • Clinicians should consider only testing older female patients for rUTIs when symptoms are present and consider all possibilities before making a diagnosis.
  • Vaginal estrogen may be an effective treatment, although the authors of the clinical review note a lack of a uniform formulation to recommend. However, oral estrogen use is not supported by evidence, and clinicians should instead consider vaginal creams or rings.
  • The drug methenamine may be as effective as antibiotics but may not be safe for women with comorbidities. Evidence supports daily use at 1 g.
  • Cranberry supplements and behavioral changes may be helpful, but evidence is limited, including among women living in long-term care facilities.

IN PRACTICE:

“Shared decision-making is especially important when diagnosis of an rUTI episode in older women is unclear ... in these cases, clinicians should acknowledge limitations in the evidence and invite patients or their caregivers to discuss preferences about presumptive treatment, weighing the possibility of earlier symptom relief or decreased UTI complications against the risk of adverse drug effects or multidrug resistance.”

SOURCE:

The paper was led by Alison J. Huang, MD, MAS, an internal medicine specialist and researcher in the Department of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

LIMITATIONS:

The authors reported no limitations.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Huang received grants from the National Institutes of Health. Other authors reported receiving grants from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the US Department of Veterans Affairs, the Kahn Foundation, and Nanovibronix.

Cranberry supplements and behavioral changes may be helpful, but evidence is limited, including among women living in long-term care facilities.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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PCPs May Have a New Tool to Help Identify Autism in Young Children

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Thu, 05/23/2024 - 15:15

Incorporating eye-tracking biomarkers into pediatric autism assessments may make identifying the condition easier, according to new findings published in JAMA Network Open.

Researchers created an artificial intelligence–based tool to help primary care clinicians and pediatricians spot potential cases of the neurological condition, according to Brandon Keehn, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, and an author of the study.

Most primary care clinicians do not receive specialized training in identifying autism, and around a third diagnose the condition with uncertainty, according to Dr. Keehn. The tool helps clinicians by incorporating their diagnosis and self-reported level of certainty with eye-tracking biomarkers. A clinical psychologist also assessed children, either verifying or confuting the earlier results.

The tool produced the same diagnosis as that from a psychologist in 90% of cases. When children were assessed using eye biomarkers alone, the diagnosis was aligned with that of a psychologist 77% of the time.

“This is the first step in demonstrating both that eye-tracking biomarkers are sensitive to autism and whether or not these biomarkers provide extra clinical information for primary care physicians to more accurately diagnose autism,” Dr. Keehn told this news organization.

The study took place between 2019 and 2022 and included 146 children between 14 and 48 months old who were treated at seven primary care practices in Indiana. Dr. Keehn and colleagues asked primary care clinicians to rate their level of certainty in their diagnosis.

During the biomarker test, toddlers watched cartoons while researchers tracked their eye movements. Six biomarkers included in the test were based on previous research linking eye movements to autism, according to Dr. Keehn.

These included whether toddlers looked more at images of people or geometric patterns and the speed and size of pupil dilation when exposed to bright light.

Most toddlers produced a positive result for autism in only one biomarker test. Dr. Keehn said this confirms that children should be tested for a variety of biomarkers because each patient’s condition manifests differently.

Dr. Keehn said his team is still a few steps away from determining how the model would work in a real clinical setting and that they are planning more research with a larger study population.

Alice Kuo, MD, a pediatrician specializing in autism at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), said primary care clinicians should feel comfortable making an autism diagnosis.

“Any tool that helps them to do that can be useful, since wait times for a specialist can take years,” Dr. Kuo, also the director of the Autism Intervention Research Network on Physical Health at UCLA, said.

However, Dr. Kuo said she is concerned about the cases that were falsely identified as positive or negative.

“To be told your kid is autistic when he’s not, or to be told your kid is not when he clinically is, has huge ramifications,” she said.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, the Riley Children’s Foundation, and the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute. Dr. Keehn reported payments for workshops on the use of the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

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Incorporating eye-tracking biomarkers into pediatric autism assessments may make identifying the condition easier, according to new findings published in JAMA Network Open.

Researchers created an artificial intelligence–based tool to help primary care clinicians and pediatricians spot potential cases of the neurological condition, according to Brandon Keehn, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, and an author of the study.

Most primary care clinicians do not receive specialized training in identifying autism, and around a third diagnose the condition with uncertainty, according to Dr. Keehn. The tool helps clinicians by incorporating their diagnosis and self-reported level of certainty with eye-tracking biomarkers. A clinical psychologist also assessed children, either verifying or confuting the earlier results.

The tool produced the same diagnosis as that from a psychologist in 90% of cases. When children were assessed using eye biomarkers alone, the diagnosis was aligned with that of a psychologist 77% of the time.

“This is the first step in demonstrating both that eye-tracking biomarkers are sensitive to autism and whether or not these biomarkers provide extra clinical information for primary care physicians to more accurately diagnose autism,” Dr. Keehn told this news organization.

The study took place between 2019 and 2022 and included 146 children between 14 and 48 months old who were treated at seven primary care practices in Indiana. Dr. Keehn and colleagues asked primary care clinicians to rate their level of certainty in their diagnosis.

During the biomarker test, toddlers watched cartoons while researchers tracked their eye movements. Six biomarkers included in the test were based on previous research linking eye movements to autism, according to Dr. Keehn.

These included whether toddlers looked more at images of people or geometric patterns and the speed and size of pupil dilation when exposed to bright light.

Most toddlers produced a positive result for autism in only one biomarker test. Dr. Keehn said this confirms that children should be tested for a variety of biomarkers because each patient’s condition manifests differently.

Dr. Keehn said his team is still a few steps away from determining how the model would work in a real clinical setting and that they are planning more research with a larger study population.

Alice Kuo, MD, a pediatrician specializing in autism at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), said primary care clinicians should feel comfortable making an autism diagnosis.

“Any tool that helps them to do that can be useful, since wait times for a specialist can take years,” Dr. Kuo, also the director of the Autism Intervention Research Network on Physical Health at UCLA, said.

However, Dr. Kuo said she is concerned about the cases that were falsely identified as positive or negative.

“To be told your kid is autistic when he’s not, or to be told your kid is not when he clinically is, has huge ramifications,” she said.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, the Riley Children’s Foundation, and the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute. Dr. Keehn reported payments for workshops on the use of the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

Incorporating eye-tracking biomarkers into pediatric autism assessments may make identifying the condition easier, according to new findings published in JAMA Network Open.

Researchers created an artificial intelligence–based tool to help primary care clinicians and pediatricians spot potential cases of the neurological condition, according to Brandon Keehn, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, and an author of the study.

Most primary care clinicians do not receive specialized training in identifying autism, and around a third diagnose the condition with uncertainty, according to Dr. Keehn. The tool helps clinicians by incorporating their diagnosis and self-reported level of certainty with eye-tracking biomarkers. A clinical psychologist also assessed children, either verifying or confuting the earlier results.

The tool produced the same diagnosis as that from a psychologist in 90% of cases. When children were assessed using eye biomarkers alone, the diagnosis was aligned with that of a psychologist 77% of the time.

“This is the first step in demonstrating both that eye-tracking biomarkers are sensitive to autism and whether or not these biomarkers provide extra clinical information for primary care physicians to more accurately diagnose autism,” Dr. Keehn told this news organization.

The study took place between 2019 and 2022 and included 146 children between 14 and 48 months old who were treated at seven primary care practices in Indiana. Dr. Keehn and colleagues asked primary care clinicians to rate their level of certainty in their diagnosis.

During the biomarker test, toddlers watched cartoons while researchers tracked their eye movements. Six biomarkers included in the test were based on previous research linking eye movements to autism, according to Dr. Keehn.

These included whether toddlers looked more at images of people or geometric patterns and the speed and size of pupil dilation when exposed to bright light.

Most toddlers produced a positive result for autism in only one biomarker test. Dr. Keehn said this confirms that children should be tested for a variety of biomarkers because each patient’s condition manifests differently.

Dr. Keehn said his team is still a few steps away from determining how the model would work in a real clinical setting and that they are planning more research with a larger study population.

Alice Kuo, MD, a pediatrician specializing in autism at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), said primary care clinicians should feel comfortable making an autism diagnosis.

“Any tool that helps them to do that can be useful, since wait times for a specialist can take years,” Dr. Kuo, also the director of the Autism Intervention Research Network on Physical Health at UCLA, said.

However, Dr. Kuo said she is concerned about the cases that were falsely identified as positive or negative.

“To be told your kid is autistic when he’s not, or to be told your kid is not when he clinically is, has huge ramifications,” she said.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, the Riley Children’s Foundation, and the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute. Dr. Keehn reported payments for workshops on the use of the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

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Resource Menu Gives Choice to Caregivers Struggling to Meet Basic Needs

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Fri, 05/17/2024 - 15:12

Screenings may not be the way to get needed resources to children and their caregivers, according to new research presented at the annual meeting of the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS).

Caregivers and parents who were asked if they wanted assistance in several areas of need, including transportation and childcare, were nearly twice as likely to say they wanted such help than those who received a screening on current hardships. Generally, each questionnaire is administered in front of their children in primary care or pediatric hospital settings.

“Families have a lot of concern about being seen a different way by their healthcare team, being seen as unfit, and having child protective services involved in their childcare for issues related to poverty,” said Danielle Cullen, MD, a pediatric emergency medicine specialist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

Dr. Cullen and her colleagues analyzed data from nearly 4000 caregivers of children up to age 21 at emergency departments or primary care clinics at CHOP between 2021 and 2023.

Caregivers were randomly assigned to one of three arms — screening with a version of WE CARE (Well Child Care, Evaluation, Community Resources, Advocacy, Referral, Education), use of an online menu of options for help in areas like housing, or neither approach.

Caregivers in all three arms received a map of resources and a follow-up text from a resource navigator to assist them as needed.

Nearly 40% of caregivers who presented with the digital menu said they wanted resources compared with 29% of those who were screened (< .001). Non-native English speakers given the menu were 2.5 times more likely to say yes to resources compared with those who were screened.

“We need to be thoughtful about these mandates to screen for social determinants of health: It’s not that straightforward,” said Esther K. Chung, MD, a pediatrician and professor of pediatrics at the University of Washington Medicine in Seattle, who was not involved in the study. “What we’re getting from this study is that patients want choice, and the menu provides them choice.”

Dr. Cullen said the menu option allows caregivers to make choices based on their priorities and not on whether they meet the screening thresholds for need.

While some health clinics utilize tablet forms for screenings to offer more privacy with questions, asking direct questions about income, food insecurity, and housing stability can be stigmatizing, Dr. Cullen said.

“Screening positive for social risk doesn’t mean that you actually want resources, and on the flip side, the literature shows that about half of the people who screen negative want resources,” she said.

Dr. Cullen and her team also conducted follow-up interviews with caregivers and found many feared that their clinician would assume a medical condition was connected to living conditions. They also had concerns about insurance companies gaining access to the data and using it to deny coverage or raise costs.

Spanish-speaking caregivers cited fears about their immigration status, experiences of discrimination, and language barriers when trying to access resources.

Participants said a few key strategies could make screening less intimidating, such as abstaining from screening during a serious medical visit, asking for consent to record answers in medical records, and communicating in an empathetic manner.

“Some families are a bit surprised when we ask about things like housing and food insecurity, but I think as long as we contextualize it, we can minimize the stigma associated with it,” Dr. Chung said. “That takes quite a bit of nuance and skill.”

The study was funded by the William T. Grant Foundation and the Emergency Medicine Foundation. The authors reported no disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Screenings may not be the way to get needed resources to children and their caregivers, according to new research presented at the annual meeting of the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS).

Caregivers and parents who were asked if they wanted assistance in several areas of need, including transportation and childcare, were nearly twice as likely to say they wanted such help than those who received a screening on current hardships. Generally, each questionnaire is administered in front of their children in primary care or pediatric hospital settings.

“Families have a lot of concern about being seen a different way by their healthcare team, being seen as unfit, and having child protective services involved in their childcare for issues related to poverty,” said Danielle Cullen, MD, a pediatric emergency medicine specialist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

Dr. Cullen and her colleagues analyzed data from nearly 4000 caregivers of children up to age 21 at emergency departments or primary care clinics at CHOP between 2021 and 2023.

Caregivers were randomly assigned to one of three arms — screening with a version of WE CARE (Well Child Care, Evaluation, Community Resources, Advocacy, Referral, Education), use of an online menu of options for help in areas like housing, or neither approach.

Caregivers in all three arms received a map of resources and a follow-up text from a resource navigator to assist them as needed.

Nearly 40% of caregivers who presented with the digital menu said they wanted resources compared with 29% of those who were screened (< .001). Non-native English speakers given the menu were 2.5 times more likely to say yes to resources compared with those who were screened.

“We need to be thoughtful about these mandates to screen for social determinants of health: It’s not that straightforward,” said Esther K. Chung, MD, a pediatrician and professor of pediatrics at the University of Washington Medicine in Seattle, who was not involved in the study. “What we’re getting from this study is that patients want choice, and the menu provides them choice.”

Dr. Cullen said the menu option allows caregivers to make choices based on their priorities and not on whether they meet the screening thresholds for need.

While some health clinics utilize tablet forms for screenings to offer more privacy with questions, asking direct questions about income, food insecurity, and housing stability can be stigmatizing, Dr. Cullen said.

“Screening positive for social risk doesn’t mean that you actually want resources, and on the flip side, the literature shows that about half of the people who screen negative want resources,” she said.

Dr. Cullen and her team also conducted follow-up interviews with caregivers and found many feared that their clinician would assume a medical condition was connected to living conditions. They also had concerns about insurance companies gaining access to the data and using it to deny coverage or raise costs.

Spanish-speaking caregivers cited fears about their immigration status, experiences of discrimination, and language barriers when trying to access resources.

Participants said a few key strategies could make screening less intimidating, such as abstaining from screening during a serious medical visit, asking for consent to record answers in medical records, and communicating in an empathetic manner.

“Some families are a bit surprised when we ask about things like housing and food insecurity, but I think as long as we contextualize it, we can minimize the stigma associated with it,” Dr. Chung said. “That takes quite a bit of nuance and skill.”

The study was funded by the William T. Grant Foundation and the Emergency Medicine Foundation. The authors reported no disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Screenings may not be the way to get needed resources to children and their caregivers, according to new research presented at the annual meeting of the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS).

Caregivers and parents who were asked if they wanted assistance in several areas of need, including transportation and childcare, were nearly twice as likely to say they wanted such help than those who received a screening on current hardships. Generally, each questionnaire is administered in front of their children in primary care or pediatric hospital settings.

“Families have a lot of concern about being seen a different way by their healthcare team, being seen as unfit, and having child protective services involved in their childcare for issues related to poverty,” said Danielle Cullen, MD, a pediatric emergency medicine specialist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

Dr. Cullen and her colleagues analyzed data from nearly 4000 caregivers of children up to age 21 at emergency departments or primary care clinics at CHOP between 2021 and 2023.

Caregivers were randomly assigned to one of three arms — screening with a version of WE CARE (Well Child Care, Evaluation, Community Resources, Advocacy, Referral, Education), use of an online menu of options for help in areas like housing, or neither approach.

Caregivers in all three arms received a map of resources and a follow-up text from a resource navigator to assist them as needed.

Nearly 40% of caregivers who presented with the digital menu said they wanted resources compared with 29% of those who were screened (< .001). Non-native English speakers given the menu were 2.5 times more likely to say yes to resources compared with those who were screened.

“We need to be thoughtful about these mandates to screen for social determinants of health: It’s not that straightforward,” said Esther K. Chung, MD, a pediatrician and professor of pediatrics at the University of Washington Medicine in Seattle, who was not involved in the study. “What we’re getting from this study is that patients want choice, and the menu provides them choice.”

Dr. Cullen said the menu option allows caregivers to make choices based on their priorities and not on whether they meet the screening thresholds for need.

While some health clinics utilize tablet forms for screenings to offer more privacy with questions, asking direct questions about income, food insecurity, and housing stability can be stigmatizing, Dr. Cullen said.

“Screening positive for social risk doesn’t mean that you actually want resources, and on the flip side, the literature shows that about half of the people who screen negative want resources,” she said.

Dr. Cullen and her team also conducted follow-up interviews with caregivers and found many feared that their clinician would assume a medical condition was connected to living conditions. They also had concerns about insurance companies gaining access to the data and using it to deny coverage or raise costs.

Spanish-speaking caregivers cited fears about their immigration status, experiences of discrimination, and language barriers when trying to access resources.

Participants said a few key strategies could make screening less intimidating, such as abstaining from screening during a serious medical visit, asking for consent to record answers in medical records, and communicating in an empathetic manner.

“Some families are a bit surprised when we ask about things like housing and food insecurity, but I think as long as we contextualize it, we can minimize the stigma associated with it,” Dr. Chung said. “That takes quite a bit of nuance and skill.”

The study was funded by the William T. Grant Foundation and the Emergency Medicine Foundation. The authors reported no disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Self-Monitoring Better Than Usual Care Among Patients With Hypertension

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Wed, 05/15/2024 - 11:45

 

TOPLINE:

Blood pressure (BP) self-monitoring and medication management may be better than usual care for controlling hypertension, a new study published in JAMA Network Open suggested. 

METHODOLOGY:

  • The secondary analysis of a randomized, unblinded clinical trial included patients aged ≥ 40 years with uncontrolled hypertension in Valencia, Spain, between 2017 and 2020.
  • The 111 patients in the intervention group received educational materials and instructions for self-monitoring of BP with a home monitor and medication adjustment as needed without contacting their healthcare clinicians.
  • The 108 patients in the control group received usual care, including education on BP control.
  • After 24 months, researchers recorded BP levels, the number of people who achieved a target BP (systolic BP < 140 mm Hg and diastolic BP < 90 mm Hg), adverse events, quality of life, behavioral changes, and health service use.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Patients in the intervention group had a lower average systolic BP reading at 24 months than patients who received usual care (adjusted mean difference, -3.4 mm Hg).
  • Patients in the intervention group also had a lower average diastolic BP reading than usual care (adjusted mean difference, -2.5 mm Hg).
  • The percentage of people who achieved the target BP was similar in both groups (64% in the intervention group compared with 54% in the control group).
  • Researchers found no difference between groups in terms of adverse events, use of health services, behavioral changes such as smoking status or body weight, or quality of life.

IN PRACTICE:

“These results suggest that simple, inexpensive, and easy-to-implement self-management interventions have the potential to improve the long-term control of hypertension in routine clinical practice.” 

SOURCE:

The study was led by Gabriel Sanfélix-Gimeno, PhD, Pharm D, head of the Health Services Research & Pharmacoepidemiology Unit at Fisabio Research Institute in Valencia, Spain.

LIMITATIONS:

Some study participants were lost to follow-up due to COVID-19 restrictions. The trial was unblinded, which may have led to biases among patients and clinicians. Clinicians treated both the control and intervention groups. The results may not be extrapolated to those with controlled hypertension, very high BP, or people who are pregnant because they were not included in the study.

DISCLOSURES:

Various authors reported receiving grants from RTI Health Solutions or personal fees from GSK and MSD outside the submitted work. No other disclosures were reported. The study was funded by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III at the Spanish Ministry of Research, Innovation and Universities, the European Regional Development Fund, and Spanish Clinical Research Network.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Blood pressure (BP) self-monitoring and medication management may be better than usual care for controlling hypertension, a new study published in JAMA Network Open suggested. 

METHODOLOGY:

  • The secondary analysis of a randomized, unblinded clinical trial included patients aged ≥ 40 years with uncontrolled hypertension in Valencia, Spain, between 2017 and 2020.
  • The 111 patients in the intervention group received educational materials and instructions for self-monitoring of BP with a home monitor and medication adjustment as needed without contacting their healthcare clinicians.
  • The 108 patients in the control group received usual care, including education on BP control.
  • After 24 months, researchers recorded BP levels, the number of people who achieved a target BP (systolic BP < 140 mm Hg and diastolic BP < 90 mm Hg), adverse events, quality of life, behavioral changes, and health service use.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Patients in the intervention group had a lower average systolic BP reading at 24 months than patients who received usual care (adjusted mean difference, -3.4 mm Hg).
  • Patients in the intervention group also had a lower average diastolic BP reading than usual care (adjusted mean difference, -2.5 mm Hg).
  • The percentage of people who achieved the target BP was similar in both groups (64% in the intervention group compared with 54% in the control group).
  • Researchers found no difference between groups in terms of adverse events, use of health services, behavioral changes such as smoking status or body weight, or quality of life.

IN PRACTICE:

“These results suggest that simple, inexpensive, and easy-to-implement self-management interventions have the potential to improve the long-term control of hypertension in routine clinical practice.” 

SOURCE:

The study was led by Gabriel Sanfélix-Gimeno, PhD, Pharm D, head of the Health Services Research & Pharmacoepidemiology Unit at Fisabio Research Institute in Valencia, Spain.

LIMITATIONS:

Some study participants were lost to follow-up due to COVID-19 restrictions. The trial was unblinded, which may have led to biases among patients and clinicians. Clinicians treated both the control and intervention groups. The results may not be extrapolated to those with controlled hypertension, very high BP, or people who are pregnant because they were not included in the study.

DISCLOSURES:

Various authors reported receiving grants from RTI Health Solutions or personal fees from GSK and MSD outside the submitted work. No other disclosures were reported. The study was funded by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III at the Spanish Ministry of Research, Innovation and Universities, the European Regional Development Fund, and Spanish Clinical Research Network.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Blood pressure (BP) self-monitoring and medication management may be better than usual care for controlling hypertension, a new study published in JAMA Network Open suggested. 

METHODOLOGY:

  • The secondary analysis of a randomized, unblinded clinical trial included patients aged ≥ 40 years with uncontrolled hypertension in Valencia, Spain, between 2017 and 2020.
  • The 111 patients in the intervention group received educational materials and instructions for self-monitoring of BP with a home monitor and medication adjustment as needed without contacting their healthcare clinicians.
  • The 108 patients in the control group received usual care, including education on BP control.
  • After 24 months, researchers recorded BP levels, the number of people who achieved a target BP (systolic BP < 140 mm Hg and diastolic BP < 90 mm Hg), adverse events, quality of life, behavioral changes, and health service use.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Patients in the intervention group had a lower average systolic BP reading at 24 months than patients who received usual care (adjusted mean difference, -3.4 mm Hg).
  • Patients in the intervention group also had a lower average diastolic BP reading than usual care (adjusted mean difference, -2.5 mm Hg).
  • The percentage of people who achieved the target BP was similar in both groups (64% in the intervention group compared with 54% in the control group).
  • Researchers found no difference between groups in terms of adverse events, use of health services, behavioral changes such as smoking status or body weight, or quality of life.

IN PRACTICE:

“These results suggest that simple, inexpensive, and easy-to-implement self-management interventions have the potential to improve the long-term control of hypertension in routine clinical practice.” 

SOURCE:

The study was led by Gabriel Sanfélix-Gimeno, PhD, Pharm D, head of the Health Services Research & Pharmacoepidemiology Unit at Fisabio Research Institute in Valencia, Spain.

LIMITATIONS:

Some study participants were lost to follow-up due to COVID-19 restrictions. The trial was unblinded, which may have led to biases among patients and clinicians. Clinicians treated both the control and intervention groups. The results may not be extrapolated to those with controlled hypertension, very high BP, or people who are pregnant because they were not included in the study.

DISCLOSURES:

Various authors reported receiving grants from RTI Health Solutions or personal fees from GSK and MSD outside the submitted work. No other disclosures were reported. The study was funded by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III at the Spanish Ministry of Research, Innovation and Universities, the European Regional Development Fund, and Spanish Clinical Research Network.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Vast Majority of Adults At Risk for Cardiovascular-Kidney-Metabolic Syndrome

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Fri, 05/10/2024 - 09:39

 

TOPLINE:

Nearly 90% of adults were at risk of developing cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic (CKM) syndrome between 2011 and 2020, according to new research published in JAMA.

METHODOLOGY:

  • In 2023, the American Heart Association defined  to acknowledge how heart and kidney diseases, diabetes, and obesity interact and are increasingly co-occurring conditions.
  • Researchers used data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey between 2011 and 2020.
  • More than 10,000 adults over age 20 years were included; all of them received a physical and fasting laboratory measurements and self-reported their cardiovascular disease (CVD) status.
  • Researchers created categories for risk, ranging from 0 (no risk factors) to 4, using factors such as kidney disease, obesity, and hypertension.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Nearly 90% of participants met the criteria for having a stage of the CKM syndrome, with rates remaining steady throughout the study period.Almost half of people met the criteria for stage 2 (having metabolic risk factors like hypertension or moderate- to high-risk chronic kidney disease).
  • 14.6% met the criteria for advanced stage 3 (very high-risk chronic kidney disease or a high risk for 10-year CVD) and stage 4 CKM syndrome (established CVD) combined.
  • Men, adults over age 65 years, and Black individuals were at a greater risk for advanced stages of the CKM syndrome.
  • Almost half of people met the criteria for stage 2 (having metabolic risk factors like hypertension or moderate- to high-risk chronic kidney disease).
     
  • 14.6% met the criteria for advanced stage 3 (very high-risk chronic kidney disease or a high risk for 10-year CVD) and stage 4 CKM syndrome (established CVD) combined.
     
  • Men, adults over age 65 years, and Black individuals were at a greater risk for advanced stages of the CKM syndrome.

IN PRACTICE:

“Equitable health care approaches prioritizing CKM health are urgently needed,” the study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Muthiah Vaduganathan, MD, MPH, cardiologist and researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston.

LIMITATIONS: 

Established CVD statuses were self-reported. Some data that would indicate advanced CKM stages were not available (eg, cardiac biomarkers, echocardiography, and coronary angiography), which may have led to an underestimation of rates.

DISCLOSURES:

One author received grants from Bristol Myers Squibb–Pfizer outside the submitted work. Dr. Vaduganathan received grants from and was an adviser and committee trial member for various pharmaceutical companies outside the submitted work. The authors reported no other disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Nearly 90% of adults were at risk of developing cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic (CKM) syndrome between 2011 and 2020, according to new research published in JAMA.

METHODOLOGY:

  • In 2023, the American Heart Association defined  to acknowledge how heart and kidney diseases, diabetes, and obesity interact and are increasingly co-occurring conditions.
  • Researchers used data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey between 2011 and 2020.
  • More than 10,000 adults over age 20 years were included; all of them received a physical and fasting laboratory measurements and self-reported their cardiovascular disease (CVD) status.
  • Researchers created categories for risk, ranging from 0 (no risk factors) to 4, using factors such as kidney disease, obesity, and hypertension.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Nearly 90% of participants met the criteria for having a stage of the CKM syndrome, with rates remaining steady throughout the study period.Almost half of people met the criteria for stage 2 (having metabolic risk factors like hypertension or moderate- to high-risk chronic kidney disease).
  • 14.6% met the criteria for advanced stage 3 (very high-risk chronic kidney disease or a high risk for 10-year CVD) and stage 4 CKM syndrome (established CVD) combined.
  • Men, adults over age 65 years, and Black individuals were at a greater risk for advanced stages of the CKM syndrome.
  • Almost half of people met the criteria for stage 2 (having metabolic risk factors like hypertension or moderate- to high-risk chronic kidney disease).
     
  • 14.6% met the criteria for advanced stage 3 (very high-risk chronic kidney disease or a high risk for 10-year CVD) and stage 4 CKM syndrome (established CVD) combined.
     
  • Men, adults over age 65 years, and Black individuals were at a greater risk for advanced stages of the CKM syndrome.

IN PRACTICE:

“Equitable health care approaches prioritizing CKM health are urgently needed,” the study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Muthiah Vaduganathan, MD, MPH, cardiologist and researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston.

LIMITATIONS: 

Established CVD statuses were self-reported. Some data that would indicate advanced CKM stages were not available (eg, cardiac biomarkers, echocardiography, and coronary angiography), which may have led to an underestimation of rates.

DISCLOSURES:

One author received grants from Bristol Myers Squibb–Pfizer outside the submitted work. Dr. Vaduganathan received grants from and was an adviser and committee trial member for various pharmaceutical companies outside the submitted work. The authors reported no other disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Nearly 90% of adults were at risk of developing cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic (CKM) syndrome between 2011 and 2020, according to new research published in JAMA.

METHODOLOGY:

  • In 2023, the American Heart Association defined  to acknowledge how heart and kidney diseases, diabetes, and obesity interact and are increasingly co-occurring conditions.
  • Researchers used data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey between 2011 and 2020.
  • More than 10,000 adults over age 20 years were included; all of them received a physical and fasting laboratory measurements and self-reported their cardiovascular disease (CVD) status.
  • Researchers created categories for risk, ranging from 0 (no risk factors) to 4, using factors such as kidney disease, obesity, and hypertension.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Nearly 90% of participants met the criteria for having a stage of the CKM syndrome, with rates remaining steady throughout the study period.Almost half of people met the criteria for stage 2 (having metabolic risk factors like hypertension or moderate- to high-risk chronic kidney disease).
  • 14.6% met the criteria for advanced stage 3 (very high-risk chronic kidney disease or a high risk for 10-year CVD) and stage 4 CKM syndrome (established CVD) combined.
  • Men, adults over age 65 years, and Black individuals were at a greater risk for advanced stages of the CKM syndrome.
  • Almost half of people met the criteria for stage 2 (having metabolic risk factors like hypertension or moderate- to high-risk chronic kidney disease).
     
  • 14.6% met the criteria for advanced stage 3 (very high-risk chronic kidney disease or a high risk for 10-year CVD) and stage 4 CKM syndrome (established CVD) combined.
     
  • Men, adults over age 65 years, and Black individuals were at a greater risk for advanced stages of the CKM syndrome.

IN PRACTICE:

“Equitable health care approaches prioritizing CKM health are urgently needed,” the study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Muthiah Vaduganathan, MD, MPH, cardiologist and researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston.

LIMITATIONS: 

Established CVD statuses were self-reported. Some data that would indicate advanced CKM stages were not available (eg, cardiac biomarkers, echocardiography, and coronary angiography), which may have led to an underestimation of rates.

DISCLOSURES:

One author received grants from Bristol Myers Squibb–Pfizer outside the submitted work. Dr. Vaduganathan received grants from and was an adviser and committee trial member for various pharmaceutical companies outside the submitted work. The authors reported no other disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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