Young vapers and smokers beware: Eye problems abound

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Adolescents and young adults who smoked and vaped were more likely to report ocular problems including dryness, redness, pain, blurry vision, light sensitivity, and headaches, according to an observational study published in JAMA Ophthalmology.

Eye symptoms were significantly worse among young people who reported using both cigarettes and e-cigarettes than for those who said they used only one of the products, according to researchers. Symptoms were particularly frequent and severe among those who had used both products in the prior week. 

“In ophthalmology clinics, I’ve increasingly noticed patients, particularly adolescents and young adults, presenting with eye-related symptoms such as dryness, irritation, and even vision disturbances,” said Anne Xuan-Lan Nguyen, MDCM, an ophthalmology resident at the University of Toronto, who led the study. 

Many of these patients said they did not use contact lenses or take medications associated with eye problems, but they did report a history of using e-cigarettes and cigarettes. 

This “sparked my curiosity about the possible link between smoking or vaping and ocular symptoms,” Dr. Nguyen, who conducted the research as a medical student at McGill University in Montreal, told this news organization. 

E-cigarettes are the most popular tobacco product among young people. Public health data show an increasing trend toward both vaping and smoking cigarettes, known as dual use. An estimated 40% of middle- and high school–aged tobacco users report using two or more tobacco products, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Cigarette use has been linked to ocular damage, but the effects of e-cigarettes on eyesight and the combined effect with cigarettes are not as well known. 

Dr. Nguyen and her colleagues surveyed more than 4,000 people aged 13-24 about their use of cigarettes or e-cigarettes in the last 30 days, the last 7 days, or ever. Half said they had never used any tobacco product and one quarter reported having used cigarettes, vapes, or both in the last month. More than 900 respondents said they had used one or both tobacco products in the last week. 

Of the respondents who had ever vaped, 55.9% said they also used cigarettes. These dual users reported more severe and frequent eye symptoms compared with users of either product alone. Up to 4% of respondents who had ever been a dual user reported daily, severe, or very severe ocular symptoms – more than in the cigarette-only or e-cigarette-only groups. 

More frequent tobacco use also was associated with more ocular symptoms. Young people who smoked or vaped in the previous week reported more symptoms than did the 30-day group, who reported more symptoms than the ever-user group (those who had taken at least a puff but not in the last month).

“All these conditions we know are worse as you get older,” said Laura B. Enyedi, MD, pediatric ophthalmologist at the Duke Eye Center in Durham, N.C., who was not associated with the study. “So if young people are having symptoms, it doesn’t bode well for them as they age.”

E-cigarette use alone did not appear to be linked to eye ailments, according to the findings. But to Dr. Nguyen’s surprise the survey results showed users of vaping products spent the most time worried about their eye health compared with all other participants. Users who smoked only cigarettes reported ocular symptoms, but not as severe or frequent as those of dual users. 

The researchers hypothesized that ocular problems caused by vapes and cigarettes could be classified as oxidative damage. The combustion of the cigarette and the e-cigarette solvent (propylene glycol) potentially generates free radicals that can cause oxidative stress, damaging the ocular surface and film, Dr. Nguyen said. 

Ophthalmologists are “always asking about contact lens use, lid hygiene, and screen time. Here’s another thing to consider when we get those common, nonspecific complaints of symptoms like dryness, redness, and burning,” Dr. Enyedi said.

Given the observational nature of the study, the researchers cannot confirm that dual use causes ocular symptoms. But given the public health challenge that tobacco use already presents for young people, the findings provide yet another reason to counsel against tobacco use and provide cessation options, Dr. Nguyen said. 

“This study is just one of many, many studies showing a significant relationship among smoking, e-cigarette use, and health outcomes,” said Bonnie Halpern-Felsher, PhD, professor of pediatrics at Stanford (Calif.) University and a coauthor of the study. “We clearly need to help young people not use at all, or quit or cut back if using.” 

This study was supported by the Taube Research Faculty Scholar Endowment; the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; the Food and Drug Administration Center for Tobacco Products; the National Cancer Institute; the Stanford Maternal and Child Health Research Institute; and the Research to Prevent Blindness and National Eye Institute. Dr. Halpern-Felsher reported receiving personal fees as an expert scientist in litigation against some e-cigarette companies. The other study authors and Dr. Enyedi reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Adolescents and young adults who smoked and vaped were more likely to report ocular problems including dryness, redness, pain, blurry vision, light sensitivity, and headaches, according to an observational study published in JAMA Ophthalmology.

Eye symptoms were significantly worse among young people who reported using both cigarettes and e-cigarettes than for those who said they used only one of the products, according to researchers. Symptoms were particularly frequent and severe among those who had used both products in the prior week. 

“In ophthalmology clinics, I’ve increasingly noticed patients, particularly adolescents and young adults, presenting with eye-related symptoms such as dryness, irritation, and even vision disturbances,” said Anne Xuan-Lan Nguyen, MDCM, an ophthalmology resident at the University of Toronto, who led the study. 

Many of these patients said they did not use contact lenses or take medications associated with eye problems, but they did report a history of using e-cigarettes and cigarettes. 

This “sparked my curiosity about the possible link between smoking or vaping and ocular symptoms,” Dr. Nguyen, who conducted the research as a medical student at McGill University in Montreal, told this news organization. 

E-cigarettes are the most popular tobacco product among young people. Public health data show an increasing trend toward both vaping and smoking cigarettes, known as dual use. An estimated 40% of middle- and high school–aged tobacco users report using two or more tobacco products, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Cigarette use has been linked to ocular damage, but the effects of e-cigarettes on eyesight and the combined effect with cigarettes are not as well known. 

Dr. Nguyen and her colleagues surveyed more than 4,000 people aged 13-24 about their use of cigarettes or e-cigarettes in the last 30 days, the last 7 days, or ever. Half said they had never used any tobacco product and one quarter reported having used cigarettes, vapes, or both in the last month. More than 900 respondents said they had used one or both tobacco products in the last week. 

Of the respondents who had ever vaped, 55.9% said they also used cigarettes. These dual users reported more severe and frequent eye symptoms compared with users of either product alone. Up to 4% of respondents who had ever been a dual user reported daily, severe, or very severe ocular symptoms – more than in the cigarette-only or e-cigarette-only groups. 

More frequent tobacco use also was associated with more ocular symptoms. Young people who smoked or vaped in the previous week reported more symptoms than did the 30-day group, who reported more symptoms than the ever-user group (those who had taken at least a puff but not in the last month).

“All these conditions we know are worse as you get older,” said Laura B. Enyedi, MD, pediatric ophthalmologist at the Duke Eye Center in Durham, N.C., who was not associated with the study. “So if young people are having symptoms, it doesn’t bode well for them as they age.”

E-cigarette use alone did not appear to be linked to eye ailments, according to the findings. But to Dr. Nguyen’s surprise the survey results showed users of vaping products spent the most time worried about their eye health compared with all other participants. Users who smoked only cigarettes reported ocular symptoms, but not as severe or frequent as those of dual users. 

The researchers hypothesized that ocular problems caused by vapes and cigarettes could be classified as oxidative damage. The combustion of the cigarette and the e-cigarette solvent (propylene glycol) potentially generates free radicals that can cause oxidative stress, damaging the ocular surface and film, Dr. Nguyen said. 

Ophthalmologists are “always asking about contact lens use, lid hygiene, and screen time. Here’s another thing to consider when we get those common, nonspecific complaints of symptoms like dryness, redness, and burning,” Dr. Enyedi said.

Given the observational nature of the study, the researchers cannot confirm that dual use causes ocular symptoms. But given the public health challenge that tobacco use already presents for young people, the findings provide yet another reason to counsel against tobacco use and provide cessation options, Dr. Nguyen said. 

“This study is just one of many, many studies showing a significant relationship among smoking, e-cigarette use, and health outcomes,” said Bonnie Halpern-Felsher, PhD, professor of pediatrics at Stanford (Calif.) University and a coauthor of the study. “We clearly need to help young people not use at all, or quit or cut back if using.” 

This study was supported by the Taube Research Faculty Scholar Endowment; the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; the Food and Drug Administration Center for Tobacco Products; the National Cancer Institute; the Stanford Maternal and Child Health Research Institute; and the Research to Prevent Blindness and National Eye Institute. Dr. Halpern-Felsher reported receiving personal fees as an expert scientist in litigation against some e-cigarette companies. The other study authors and Dr. Enyedi reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

Adolescents and young adults who smoked and vaped were more likely to report ocular problems including dryness, redness, pain, blurry vision, light sensitivity, and headaches, according to an observational study published in JAMA Ophthalmology.

Eye symptoms were significantly worse among young people who reported using both cigarettes and e-cigarettes than for those who said they used only one of the products, according to researchers. Symptoms were particularly frequent and severe among those who had used both products in the prior week. 

“In ophthalmology clinics, I’ve increasingly noticed patients, particularly adolescents and young adults, presenting with eye-related symptoms such as dryness, irritation, and even vision disturbances,” said Anne Xuan-Lan Nguyen, MDCM, an ophthalmology resident at the University of Toronto, who led the study. 

Many of these patients said they did not use contact lenses or take medications associated with eye problems, but they did report a history of using e-cigarettes and cigarettes. 

This “sparked my curiosity about the possible link between smoking or vaping and ocular symptoms,” Dr. Nguyen, who conducted the research as a medical student at McGill University in Montreal, told this news organization. 

E-cigarettes are the most popular tobacco product among young people. Public health data show an increasing trend toward both vaping and smoking cigarettes, known as dual use. An estimated 40% of middle- and high school–aged tobacco users report using two or more tobacco products, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Cigarette use has been linked to ocular damage, but the effects of e-cigarettes on eyesight and the combined effect with cigarettes are not as well known. 

Dr. Nguyen and her colleagues surveyed more than 4,000 people aged 13-24 about their use of cigarettes or e-cigarettes in the last 30 days, the last 7 days, or ever. Half said they had never used any tobacco product and one quarter reported having used cigarettes, vapes, or both in the last month. More than 900 respondents said they had used one or both tobacco products in the last week. 

Of the respondents who had ever vaped, 55.9% said they also used cigarettes. These dual users reported more severe and frequent eye symptoms compared with users of either product alone. Up to 4% of respondents who had ever been a dual user reported daily, severe, or very severe ocular symptoms – more than in the cigarette-only or e-cigarette-only groups. 

More frequent tobacco use also was associated with more ocular symptoms. Young people who smoked or vaped in the previous week reported more symptoms than did the 30-day group, who reported more symptoms than the ever-user group (those who had taken at least a puff but not in the last month).

“All these conditions we know are worse as you get older,” said Laura B. Enyedi, MD, pediatric ophthalmologist at the Duke Eye Center in Durham, N.C., who was not associated with the study. “So if young people are having symptoms, it doesn’t bode well for them as they age.”

E-cigarette use alone did not appear to be linked to eye ailments, according to the findings. But to Dr. Nguyen’s surprise the survey results showed users of vaping products spent the most time worried about their eye health compared with all other participants. Users who smoked only cigarettes reported ocular symptoms, but not as severe or frequent as those of dual users. 

The researchers hypothesized that ocular problems caused by vapes and cigarettes could be classified as oxidative damage. The combustion of the cigarette and the e-cigarette solvent (propylene glycol) potentially generates free radicals that can cause oxidative stress, damaging the ocular surface and film, Dr. Nguyen said. 

Ophthalmologists are “always asking about contact lens use, lid hygiene, and screen time. Here’s another thing to consider when we get those common, nonspecific complaints of symptoms like dryness, redness, and burning,” Dr. Enyedi said.

Given the observational nature of the study, the researchers cannot confirm that dual use causes ocular symptoms. But given the public health challenge that tobacco use already presents for young people, the findings provide yet another reason to counsel against tobacco use and provide cessation options, Dr. Nguyen said. 

“This study is just one of many, many studies showing a significant relationship among smoking, e-cigarette use, and health outcomes,” said Bonnie Halpern-Felsher, PhD, professor of pediatrics at Stanford (Calif.) University and a coauthor of the study. “We clearly need to help young people not use at all, or quit or cut back if using.” 

This study was supported by the Taube Research Faculty Scholar Endowment; the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; the Food and Drug Administration Center for Tobacco Products; the National Cancer Institute; the Stanford Maternal and Child Health Research Institute; and the Research to Prevent Blindness and National Eye Institute. Dr. Halpern-Felsher reported receiving personal fees as an expert scientist in litigation against some e-cigarette companies. The other study authors and Dr. Enyedi reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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FROM JAMA OPHTHALMOLOGY

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PsA Complications

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New guideline for managing toothache in children

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Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), acetaminophen, or both medications together can effectively manage a child’s toothache as a stopgap until definitive treatment is available, according to a new guideline.

The guideline, published in the September issue of the Journal of the American Dental Association, does not recommend opioids for a toothache or after tooth extraction in this population.

Opioid prescriptions for children entail risk for hospitalization and death. Yet, some dentists continued to prescribe contraindicated opioids to young children after a Food and Drug Administration warning in 2017 about the use of tramadol and codeine in this population, the guideline notes.

Opioid prescribing to children also continued after the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry in 2018 recommended acetaminophen and NSAIDs as first-line medications for pain management and said that the use of opioids should be “rare.”

Although the new guidance, which also covers pain management after tooth extraction, is geared toward general dentists, it could help emergency clinicians and primary care providers manage children’s pain when definitive treatment is not immediately available, the authors noted.

Definitive treatment could include pulpectomy, nonsurgical root canal, incision for drainage of an abscess, or tooth extraction.

If definitive care in 2-3 days is not possible, parents should let the health care team know, the guideline says.

“These pharmacologic strategies will alleviate dental pain temporarily until a referral for definitive dental treatment is in place,” the authors wrote.

The American Dental Association (ADA) endorsed the new guideline, which was developed by researchers with the ADA Science & Research Institute, the University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine, and the Center for Integrative Global Oral Health at the University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine in Philadelphia.

The guideline recommends ibuprofen and, for children older than 2 years, naproxen as NSAID options. The use of naproxen in children younger than 12 years for this purpose is off label, they noted.

The guideline suggests doses of acetaminophen and NSAIDs on the basis of age and weight that may differ from those on medication packaging.

“When acetaminophen or NSAIDs are administered as directed, the risk of harm to children from either medication is low,” the guideline states.

“While prescribing opioids to children has become less frequent overall, this guideline ensures that both dentists and parents have evidence-based recommendations to determine the most appropriate treatment for dental pain,” senior guideline author Paul Moore, DMD, PhD, MPH, professor emeritus at the University of Pittsburgh’s School of Dental Medicine, said in a news release from the ADA. “Parents and caregivers can take comfort that widely available medications that have no abuse potential, such as acetaminophen or ibuprofen, are safe and effective for helping their children find relief from short-term dental pain.”

2018 review by Dr. Moore and coauthors found that NSAIDs, with or without acetaminophen, were effective and minimized adverse events, relative to opioids, for acute dental pain across ages.

The new recommendations for children will “allow for better treatment of this kind of pain” and “will help prevent unnecessary prescribing of medications with abuse potential, including opioids,” Patrizia Cavazzoni, MD, director of the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said in the news release.

The report stems from a 3-year, $1.5 million grant awarded by the FDA in 2020 to the University of Pittsburgh and the ADA Science & Research Institute to develop a clinical practice guideline for the management of acute pain in dentistry in children, adolescents, and adults. The recommendations for adolescents and adults are still in development.

The report was supported by an FDA grant, and the guideline authors received technical and methodologic support from the agency. Some authors disclosed ties to pharmaceutical companies.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), acetaminophen, or both medications together can effectively manage a child’s toothache as a stopgap until definitive treatment is available, according to a new guideline.

The guideline, published in the September issue of the Journal of the American Dental Association, does not recommend opioids for a toothache or after tooth extraction in this population.

Opioid prescriptions for children entail risk for hospitalization and death. Yet, some dentists continued to prescribe contraindicated opioids to young children after a Food and Drug Administration warning in 2017 about the use of tramadol and codeine in this population, the guideline notes.

Opioid prescribing to children also continued after the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry in 2018 recommended acetaminophen and NSAIDs as first-line medications for pain management and said that the use of opioids should be “rare.”

Although the new guidance, which also covers pain management after tooth extraction, is geared toward general dentists, it could help emergency clinicians and primary care providers manage children’s pain when definitive treatment is not immediately available, the authors noted.

Definitive treatment could include pulpectomy, nonsurgical root canal, incision for drainage of an abscess, or tooth extraction.

If definitive care in 2-3 days is not possible, parents should let the health care team know, the guideline says.

“These pharmacologic strategies will alleviate dental pain temporarily until a referral for definitive dental treatment is in place,” the authors wrote.

The American Dental Association (ADA) endorsed the new guideline, which was developed by researchers with the ADA Science & Research Institute, the University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine, and the Center for Integrative Global Oral Health at the University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine in Philadelphia.

The guideline recommends ibuprofen and, for children older than 2 years, naproxen as NSAID options. The use of naproxen in children younger than 12 years for this purpose is off label, they noted.

The guideline suggests doses of acetaminophen and NSAIDs on the basis of age and weight that may differ from those on medication packaging.

“When acetaminophen or NSAIDs are administered as directed, the risk of harm to children from either medication is low,” the guideline states.

“While prescribing opioids to children has become less frequent overall, this guideline ensures that both dentists and parents have evidence-based recommendations to determine the most appropriate treatment for dental pain,” senior guideline author Paul Moore, DMD, PhD, MPH, professor emeritus at the University of Pittsburgh’s School of Dental Medicine, said in a news release from the ADA. “Parents and caregivers can take comfort that widely available medications that have no abuse potential, such as acetaminophen or ibuprofen, are safe and effective for helping their children find relief from short-term dental pain.”

2018 review by Dr. Moore and coauthors found that NSAIDs, with or without acetaminophen, were effective and minimized adverse events, relative to opioids, for acute dental pain across ages.

The new recommendations for children will “allow for better treatment of this kind of pain” and “will help prevent unnecessary prescribing of medications with abuse potential, including opioids,” Patrizia Cavazzoni, MD, director of the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said in the news release.

The report stems from a 3-year, $1.5 million grant awarded by the FDA in 2020 to the University of Pittsburgh and the ADA Science & Research Institute to develop a clinical practice guideline for the management of acute pain in dentistry in children, adolescents, and adults. The recommendations for adolescents and adults are still in development.

The report was supported by an FDA grant, and the guideline authors received technical and methodologic support from the agency. Some authors disclosed ties to pharmaceutical companies.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), acetaminophen, or both medications together can effectively manage a child’s toothache as a stopgap until definitive treatment is available, according to a new guideline.

The guideline, published in the September issue of the Journal of the American Dental Association, does not recommend opioids for a toothache or after tooth extraction in this population.

Opioid prescriptions for children entail risk for hospitalization and death. Yet, some dentists continued to prescribe contraindicated opioids to young children after a Food and Drug Administration warning in 2017 about the use of tramadol and codeine in this population, the guideline notes.

Opioid prescribing to children also continued after the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry in 2018 recommended acetaminophen and NSAIDs as first-line medications for pain management and said that the use of opioids should be “rare.”

Although the new guidance, which also covers pain management after tooth extraction, is geared toward general dentists, it could help emergency clinicians and primary care providers manage children’s pain when definitive treatment is not immediately available, the authors noted.

Definitive treatment could include pulpectomy, nonsurgical root canal, incision for drainage of an abscess, or tooth extraction.

If definitive care in 2-3 days is not possible, parents should let the health care team know, the guideline says.

“These pharmacologic strategies will alleviate dental pain temporarily until a referral for definitive dental treatment is in place,” the authors wrote.

The American Dental Association (ADA) endorsed the new guideline, which was developed by researchers with the ADA Science & Research Institute, the University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine, and the Center for Integrative Global Oral Health at the University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine in Philadelphia.

The guideline recommends ibuprofen and, for children older than 2 years, naproxen as NSAID options. The use of naproxen in children younger than 12 years for this purpose is off label, they noted.

The guideline suggests doses of acetaminophen and NSAIDs on the basis of age and weight that may differ from those on medication packaging.

“When acetaminophen or NSAIDs are administered as directed, the risk of harm to children from either medication is low,” the guideline states.

“While prescribing opioids to children has become less frequent overall, this guideline ensures that both dentists and parents have evidence-based recommendations to determine the most appropriate treatment for dental pain,” senior guideline author Paul Moore, DMD, PhD, MPH, professor emeritus at the University of Pittsburgh’s School of Dental Medicine, said in a news release from the ADA. “Parents and caregivers can take comfort that widely available medications that have no abuse potential, such as acetaminophen or ibuprofen, are safe and effective for helping their children find relief from short-term dental pain.”

2018 review by Dr. Moore and coauthors found that NSAIDs, with or without acetaminophen, were effective and minimized adverse events, relative to opioids, for acute dental pain across ages.

The new recommendations for children will “allow for better treatment of this kind of pain” and “will help prevent unnecessary prescribing of medications with abuse potential, including opioids,” Patrizia Cavazzoni, MD, director of the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said in the news release.

The report stems from a 3-year, $1.5 million grant awarded by the FDA in 2020 to the University of Pittsburgh and the ADA Science & Research Institute to develop a clinical practice guideline for the management of acute pain in dentistry in children, adolescents, and adults. The recommendations for adolescents and adults are still in development.

The report was supported by an FDA grant, and the guideline authors received technical and methodologic support from the agency. Some authors disclosed ties to pharmaceutical companies.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Unlocking the secrets of brown fat

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Brown fat, or thermogenic adipose tissue, appears to act as a “nutrient sink,” consuming glucose and lactate, among other metabolites, say U.S. researchers in a mouse study that supports its potential role in tackling obesity and even cancer.

The research, published recently in Nature Metabolism, was led by David A. Guertin, PhD, of the program in molecular medicine, University of Massachusetts, Worcester.

To find out more about the study, its clinical implications, and whether the results are translatable to humans, this news organization interviewed Dr. Guertin, asking him to explain some of the concepts behind the research.
 

What is adaptive thermogenesis, and why is it important in temperature regulation?

Adaptive thermogenesis is a physiologic process that occurs in a special type of fat cell, called a brown adipocyte, in which intracellular stored lipids and nutrients taken up from the blood are catabolized to generate heat.

The heat generated by these thermogenic adipocytes is critical for warming the blood and maintaining body temperature in cold environments, and is especially critical in human infants and small mammals, which are more sensitive to low temperatures.

The process is stimulated by the sympathetic nervous system, especially in response to feeling cold, but it can be activated by other stresses as well.

While adaptative thermogenesis is also called nonshivering thermogenesis to distinguish it from muscle shivering, both means of generating heat can work together to maintain body temperature.
 

Why is it considered a potential target for obesity?

Adult humans have brown adipocytes in specific locations in the body called brown adipose tissues (BAT) or, more simply, “brown fat.”

Intriguingly, clinical data show that the more BAT you have, the more likely you are to be protected against cardiometabolic disorders associated with obesity.

Since obesity results from an imbalance between energy intake and energy expenditure, one model proposes that brown adipocytes rebalance this formula by expending the excess energy (calories) as heat rather than storing it.

This has been referred to as the “nutrient sink” model, and the ability to activate this process therapeutically is a very attractive antiobesity strategy.
 

Why was it important to understand which circulating metabolites BAT uses for thermogenesis?

It is still not clear why brown fat is so beneficial for human health, and thus there is strong rationale for understanding its metabolism and how it cooperates with other tissues in the body.

For example, prior to our work, the field lacked a broad quantitative picture of how much any individual nutrient from the blood was used by brown fat, or which specific nutrients brown fat prefers to use to make heat – such as lipids, glucose, amino acids, etc. Knowing this information helps us identify more precise strategies to activate brown fat.

In addition, circulating metabolites sometimes also have messenger functions, similar to those of hormones, that stimulate physiologic processes such as adaptative thermogenesis. Highly metabolic tissues also put metabolites back into the blood, which can send messages to the brain and other tissues.

We don’t have a lot of information yet on how brown fat might engage in these processes, and so our study also aimed at finding these special metabolite messengers. 
 

 

 

You found that glucose and lactate predominate as BAT fuel sources. What does that tell us?

The major fuels used by brown fat have been debated for a long time.

Our study suggests that BAT in mice mainly prefers glucose and lactate, which is generated from glucose. On one hand, this shows us that thermogenic adipocytes may be especially useful in treating hyperglycemia, or even tumors, by reducing the amount of circulating glucose.

It also tells us that we need to focus more on why brown fat needs so much glucose. Other studies suggest that glucose is not just used as a fuel to generate heat but also may have other important functions in keeping brown adipocytes active and healthy.

We need to know that information so that therapeutic strategies targeting brown adipocytes can be optimized to have the best chance of success.

It’s worth noting that we did our study in mice that had free access to food. If the mice were fasting, they would use more lipids from the blood to supplement for the lack of available glucose, but we think that a baseline amount of glucose is still necessary.
 

What could be the clinical implications of your results if replicated in humans?

They suggest that glucose is an important resource that thermogenic adipocytes cannot do without, and moreover, that glucose is more than just a carbon source.

Resolving those other functions of glucose may provide insight into mechanisms to stimulate these cells or help explain why overweight or obese people who are insulin resistant have less brown fat activity, as insulin stimulates glucose uptake.

Beyond glucose, if any of these other metabolites made or released by brown fat have beneficial messenger functions, there may be ways to pharmacologically mimic them.
 

How easily do you think your findings could be applied to humans?

On a fundamental level, the basic cellular mechanisms that drive adaptative thermogenesis are likely the same between mice and humans, but the wiring to the sympathetic nervous system is a bit different.

This is why it’s important to look deeply at brown fat metabolism in mouse models to find pathways fundamental to the basic mechanisms of adaptative thermogenesis in both mice and humans, which could reveal unique therapeutic opportunities.

Another big challenge with comparing humans and mice is that humans typically keep their environment warm, so their brown fat is not that active.

In contrast, mice are often raised their entire lives in a facility kept at room temperature, around 22° C (72° F). While comfortable for the humans working with them, it’s cold for a small mouse, and so mice live with constantly active brown fat.

We can change the mouse environment to alter mouse brown fat activity, but that can’t be done with people. This makes comparative studies difficult.

Nevertheless, studies have shown that people who live in cold climates often have more brown fat, and, conversely, mice raised in warmer environments have brown fat that looks a lot more like human brown fat.
 

 

 

What further research do you have planned, or are looking forward to, in this area?

This is the most fun part of what we do, and I’ve been fortunate to have an amazing team passionately working on these questions.

One is to figure out why glucose is so important for these fascinating cells, which will keep us busy for years. We also need to modify the dietary conditions to determine whether the body prioritizes the use of glucose for adaptive thermogenesis even when there isn’t much available.

Another goal is to test whether any of the other metabolites we identified have bioactive functions. We also discovered a unique role for glutamine metabolism in brown fat, through the consumption of amino acids, that we haven’t yet resolved.

Finally, we want to understand how and why brown fat protects other organs from metabolic diseases, and we are just at the tip of the iceberg here.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases; the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism; the National Heart, Lung, & Blood Institute; the National Institutes of Health; the AASLD Foundation Pinnacle Research Award in Liver Disease; the Edward Mallinckrodt Jr. Foundation Award; and the Basic Science Research Program of the Ministry of Education (South Korea). No relevant financial relationships were disclosed.

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

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Brown fat, or thermogenic adipose tissue, appears to act as a “nutrient sink,” consuming glucose and lactate, among other metabolites, say U.S. researchers in a mouse study that supports its potential role in tackling obesity and even cancer.

The research, published recently in Nature Metabolism, was led by David A. Guertin, PhD, of the program in molecular medicine, University of Massachusetts, Worcester.

To find out more about the study, its clinical implications, and whether the results are translatable to humans, this news organization interviewed Dr. Guertin, asking him to explain some of the concepts behind the research.
 

What is adaptive thermogenesis, and why is it important in temperature regulation?

Adaptive thermogenesis is a physiologic process that occurs in a special type of fat cell, called a brown adipocyte, in which intracellular stored lipids and nutrients taken up from the blood are catabolized to generate heat.

The heat generated by these thermogenic adipocytes is critical for warming the blood and maintaining body temperature in cold environments, and is especially critical in human infants and small mammals, which are more sensitive to low temperatures.

The process is stimulated by the sympathetic nervous system, especially in response to feeling cold, but it can be activated by other stresses as well.

While adaptative thermogenesis is also called nonshivering thermogenesis to distinguish it from muscle shivering, both means of generating heat can work together to maintain body temperature.
 

Why is it considered a potential target for obesity?

Adult humans have brown adipocytes in specific locations in the body called brown adipose tissues (BAT) or, more simply, “brown fat.”

Intriguingly, clinical data show that the more BAT you have, the more likely you are to be protected against cardiometabolic disorders associated with obesity.

Since obesity results from an imbalance between energy intake and energy expenditure, one model proposes that brown adipocytes rebalance this formula by expending the excess energy (calories) as heat rather than storing it.

This has been referred to as the “nutrient sink” model, and the ability to activate this process therapeutically is a very attractive antiobesity strategy.
 

Why was it important to understand which circulating metabolites BAT uses for thermogenesis?

It is still not clear why brown fat is so beneficial for human health, and thus there is strong rationale for understanding its metabolism and how it cooperates with other tissues in the body.

For example, prior to our work, the field lacked a broad quantitative picture of how much any individual nutrient from the blood was used by brown fat, or which specific nutrients brown fat prefers to use to make heat – such as lipids, glucose, amino acids, etc. Knowing this information helps us identify more precise strategies to activate brown fat.

In addition, circulating metabolites sometimes also have messenger functions, similar to those of hormones, that stimulate physiologic processes such as adaptative thermogenesis. Highly metabolic tissues also put metabolites back into the blood, which can send messages to the brain and other tissues.

We don’t have a lot of information yet on how brown fat might engage in these processes, and so our study also aimed at finding these special metabolite messengers. 
 

 

 

You found that glucose and lactate predominate as BAT fuel sources. What does that tell us?

The major fuels used by brown fat have been debated for a long time.

Our study suggests that BAT in mice mainly prefers glucose and lactate, which is generated from glucose. On one hand, this shows us that thermogenic adipocytes may be especially useful in treating hyperglycemia, or even tumors, by reducing the amount of circulating glucose.

It also tells us that we need to focus more on why brown fat needs so much glucose. Other studies suggest that glucose is not just used as a fuel to generate heat but also may have other important functions in keeping brown adipocytes active and healthy.

We need to know that information so that therapeutic strategies targeting brown adipocytes can be optimized to have the best chance of success.

It’s worth noting that we did our study in mice that had free access to food. If the mice were fasting, they would use more lipids from the blood to supplement for the lack of available glucose, but we think that a baseline amount of glucose is still necessary.
 

What could be the clinical implications of your results if replicated in humans?

They suggest that glucose is an important resource that thermogenic adipocytes cannot do without, and moreover, that glucose is more than just a carbon source.

Resolving those other functions of glucose may provide insight into mechanisms to stimulate these cells or help explain why overweight or obese people who are insulin resistant have less brown fat activity, as insulin stimulates glucose uptake.

Beyond glucose, if any of these other metabolites made or released by brown fat have beneficial messenger functions, there may be ways to pharmacologically mimic them.
 

How easily do you think your findings could be applied to humans?

On a fundamental level, the basic cellular mechanisms that drive adaptative thermogenesis are likely the same between mice and humans, but the wiring to the sympathetic nervous system is a bit different.

This is why it’s important to look deeply at brown fat metabolism in mouse models to find pathways fundamental to the basic mechanisms of adaptative thermogenesis in both mice and humans, which could reveal unique therapeutic opportunities.

Another big challenge with comparing humans and mice is that humans typically keep their environment warm, so their brown fat is not that active.

In contrast, mice are often raised their entire lives in a facility kept at room temperature, around 22° C (72° F). While comfortable for the humans working with them, it’s cold for a small mouse, and so mice live with constantly active brown fat.

We can change the mouse environment to alter mouse brown fat activity, but that can’t be done with people. This makes comparative studies difficult.

Nevertheless, studies have shown that people who live in cold climates often have more brown fat, and, conversely, mice raised in warmer environments have brown fat that looks a lot more like human brown fat.
 

 

 

What further research do you have planned, or are looking forward to, in this area?

This is the most fun part of what we do, and I’ve been fortunate to have an amazing team passionately working on these questions.

One is to figure out why glucose is so important for these fascinating cells, which will keep us busy for years. We also need to modify the dietary conditions to determine whether the body prioritizes the use of glucose for adaptive thermogenesis even when there isn’t much available.

Another goal is to test whether any of the other metabolites we identified have bioactive functions. We also discovered a unique role for glutamine metabolism in brown fat, through the consumption of amino acids, that we haven’t yet resolved.

Finally, we want to understand how and why brown fat protects other organs from metabolic diseases, and we are just at the tip of the iceberg here.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases; the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism; the National Heart, Lung, & Blood Institute; the National Institutes of Health; the AASLD Foundation Pinnacle Research Award in Liver Disease; the Edward Mallinckrodt Jr. Foundation Award; and the Basic Science Research Program of the Ministry of Education (South Korea). No relevant financial relationships were disclosed.

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

Brown fat, or thermogenic adipose tissue, appears to act as a “nutrient sink,” consuming glucose and lactate, among other metabolites, say U.S. researchers in a mouse study that supports its potential role in tackling obesity and even cancer.

The research, published recently in Nature Metabolism, was led by David A. Guertin, PhD, of the program in molecular medicine, University of Massachusetts, Worcester.

To find out more about the study, its clinical implications, and whether the results are translatable to humans, this news organization interviewed Dr. Guertin, asking him to explain some of the concepts behind the research.
 

What is adaptive thermogenesis, and why is it important in temperature regulation?

Adaptive thermogenesis is a physiologic process that occurs in a special type of fat cell, called a brown adipocyte, in which intracellular stored lipids and nutrients taken up from the blood are catabolized to generate heat.

The heat generated by these thermogenic adipocytes is critical for warming the blood and maintaining body temperature in cold environments, and is especially critical in human infants and small mammals, which are more sensitive to low temperatures.

The process is stimulated by the sympathetic nervous system, especially in response to feeling cold, but it can be activated by other stresses as well.

While adaptative thermogenesis is also called nonshivering thermogenesis to distinguish it from muscle shivering, both means of generating heat can work together to maintain body temperature.
 

Why is it considered a potential target for obesity?

Adult humans have brown adipocytes in specific locations in the body called brown adipose tissues (BAT) or, more simply, “brown fat.”

Intriguingly, clinical data show that the more BAT you have, the more likely you are to be protected against cardiometabolic disorders associated with obesity.

Since obesity results from an imbalance between energy intake and energy expenditure, one model proposes that brown adipocytes rebalance this formula by expending the excess energy (calories) as heat rather than storing it.

This has been referred to as the “nutrient sink” model, and the ability to activate this process therapeutically is a very attractive antiobesity strategy.
 

Why was it important to understand which circulating metabolites BAT uses for thermogenesis?

It is still not clear why brown fat is so beneficial for human health, and thus there is strong rationale for understanding its metabolism and how it cooperates with other tissues in the body.

For example, prior to our work, the field lacked a broad quantitative picture of how much any individual nutrient from the blood was used by brown fat, or which specific nutrients brown fat prefers to use to make heat – such as lipids, glucose, amino acids, etc. Knowing this information helps us identify more precise strategies to activate brown fat.

In addition, circulating metabolites sometimes also have messenger functions, similar to those of hormones, that stimulate physiologic processes such as adaptative thermogenesis. Highly metabolic tissues also put metabolites back into the blood, which can send messages to the brain and other tissues.

We don’t have a lot of information yet on how brown fat might engage in these processes, and so our study also aimed at finding these special metabolite messengers. 
 

 

 

You found that glucose and lactate predominate as BAT fuel sources. What does that tell us?

The major fuels used by brown fat have been debated for a long time.

Our study suggests that BAT in mice mainly prefers glucose and lactate, which is generated from glucose. On one hand, this shows us that thermogenic adipocytes may be especially useful in treating hyperglycemia, or even tumors, by reducing the amount of circulating glucose.

It also tells us that we need to focus more on why brown fat needs so much glucose. Other studies suggest that glucose is not just used as a fuel to generate heat but also may have other important functions in keeping brown adipocytes active and healthy.

We need to know that information so that therapeutic strategies targeting brown adipocytes can be optimized to have the best chance of success.

It’s worth noting that we did our study in mice that had free access to food. If the mice were fasting, they would use more lipids from the blood to supplement for the lack of available glucose, but we think that a baseline amount of glucose is still necessary.
 

What could be the clinical implications of your results if replicated in humans?

They suggest that glucose is an important resource that thermogenic adipocytes cannot do without, and moreover, that glucose is more than just a carbon source.

Resolving those other functions of glucose may provide insight into mechanisms to stimulate these cells or help explain why overweight or obese people who are insulin resistant have less brown fat activity, as insulin stimulates glucose uptake.

Beyond glucose, if any of these other metabolites made or released by brown fat have beneficial messenger functions, there may be ways to pharmacologically mimic them.
 

How easily do you think your findings could be applied to humans?

On a fundamental level, the basic cellular mechanisms that drive adaptative thermogenesis are likely the same between mice and humans, but the wiring to the sympathetic nervous system is a bit different.

This is why it’s important to look deeply at brown fat metabolism in mouse models to find pathways fundamental to the basic mechanisms of adaptative thermogenesis in both mice and humans, which could reveal unique therapeutic opportunities.

Another big challenge with comparing humans and mice is that humans typically keep their environment warm, so their brown fat is not that active.

In contrast, mice are often raised their entire lives in a facility kept at room temperature, around 22° C (72° F). While comfortable for the humans working with them, it’s cold for a small mouse, and so mice live with constantly active brown fat.

We can change the mouse environment to alter mouse brown fat activity, but that can’t be done with people. This makes comparative studies difficult.

Nevertheless, studies have shown that people who live in cold climates often have more brown fat, and, conversely, mice raised in warmer environments have brown fat that looks a lot more like human brown fat.
 

 

 

What further research do you have planned, or are looking forward to, in this area?

This is the most fun part of what we do, and I’ve been fortunate to have an amazing team passionately working on these questions.

One is to figure out why glucose is so important for these fascinating cells, which will keep us busy for years. We also need to modify the dietary conditions to determine whether the body prioritizes the use of glucose for adaptive thermogenesis even when there isn’t much available.

Another goal is to test whether any of the other metabolites we identified have bioactive functions. We also discovered a unique role for glutamine metabolism in brown fat, through the consumption of amino acids, that we haven’t yet resolved.

Finally, we want to understand how and why brown fat protects other organs from metabolic diseases, and we are just at the tip of the iceberg here.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases; the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism; the National Heart, Lung, & Blood Institute; the National Institutes of Health; the AASLD Foundation Pinnacle Research Award in Liver Disease; the Edward Mallinckrodt Jr. Foundation Award; and the Basic Science Research Program of the Ministry of Education (South Korea). No relevant financial relationships were disclosed.

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

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Mepolizumab improves asthma after 1 year despite comorbidities

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Mon, 03/04/2024 - 15:13

Adults with asthma who were newly prescribed mepolizumab showed significant improvement in symptoms after 1 year regardless of comorbidities, based on data from 822 individuals.

Comorbidities including chronic rhinosinusitis with polyps (CRSwNP), gastroesophageal reflux disease GERD), anxiety and depression, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) are common in patients with severe asthma and add to the disease burden, wrote Mark C. Liu, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and colleagues.

“Some comorbidities, such as CRSwNP, share pathophysiological mechanisms with severe asthma, with interleukin-5 (IL-5),” and treatments targeting IL-5 could improve outcomes, they said.

In the real-world REALITI-A study, mepolizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody that targets IL-5, significantly reduced asthma exacerbation and oral corticosteroid use in severe asthma patients, they said.

To assess the impact of mepolizumab on patients with comorbidities, the researchers conducted a post hoc analysis of 822 adults with severe asthma, including 321 with CRSwNP, 309 with GERD, 203 with depression/anxiety, and 81 with COPD. The findings were published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice.

The main outcomes were the rate of clinically significant asthma exacerbations (CSEs) between the 12 months before and after mepolizumab initiation, and the changes from baseline in the daily maintenance use of oral corticosteroids (OCS).

Across all comorbidities, the rate of CSEs decreased significantly from the pretreatment period to the follow-up period, from 4.28 events per year to 1.23 events per year.

“A numerically greater reduction in the rate of CSEs was reported for patients with versus without CRSwNP, whereas the reverse was reported for patients with versus without COPD and depression/anxiety, although the confidence intervals were large for the with COPD subgroup,” the researchers wrote.

The median maintenance dose of oral corticosteroids decreased by at least 50% across all comorbidities after mepolizumab treatment; patients with CRSwNP had the greatest reduction (83%).

In addition, scores on the Asthma Control Questionnaire–5 decreased by at least 0.63 points, and least squared (LS) mean changes in forced expiratory volume per second (FEV1) increased from baseline across all comorbidities after mepolizumab treatment by at least 74 mL.

Although patients with versus without CRSwNP had greater improvements, patients without GERD, depression/anxiety, and COPD had greater improvements than did those without the respective conditions with the exception of greater FEV1 improvement in patients with vs. without COPD.

“Patients with severe asthma and comorbid CRSwNP are recognized as having a high disease burden, as demonstrated by more frequent exacerbations,” the researchers wrote in their discussion. “Mepolizumab may serve to reduce the disease burden of this high-risk group by targeting the common pathophysiological pathway of IL-5 and eosinophilic-driven inflammation because it has proven clinical benefits in treating asthma and CRSwNP separately and together,” and the current study findings support the use of mepolizumab for this population in particular, they said.

The findings were limited by several factors including the incomplete data for voluntary assessments, the post hoc design and relatively small numbers of patients in various subgroups, notably COPD, and the potential inaccurate diagnosis of COPD, the researchers noted.

“Nevertheless, because the amount of improvement in each outcome following mepolizumab treatment differed depending on the comorbidity in question, our findings highlight the impact that comorbidities and their prevalence and severity have on outcomes,” and the overall success of mepolizumab across clinical characteristics and comorbidities supports the generalizability of the findings to the larger population of adults with severe asthma, they concluded.

The study was supported by GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Liu disclosed research funding from GSK, Boehringer Ingelheim, and Gossamer Bio, and participation on advisory boards for AstraZeneca, GSK, and Gossamer Bio.

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Adults with asthma who were newly prescribed mepolizumab showed significant improvement in symptoms after 1 year regardless of comorbidities, based on data from 822 individuals.

Comorbidities including chronic rhinosinusitis with polyps (CRSwNP), gastroesophageal reflux disease GERD), anxiety and depression, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) are common in patients with severe asthma and add to the disease burden, wrote Mark C. Liu, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and colleagues.

“Some comorbidities, such as CRSwNP, share pathophysiological mechanisms with severe asthma, with interleukin-5 (IL-5),” and treatments targeting IL-5 could improve outcomes, they said.

In the real-world REALITI-A study, mepolizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody that targets IL-5, significantly reduced asthma exacerbation and oral corticosteroid use in severe asthma patients, they said.

To assess the impact of mepolizumab on patients with comorbidities, the researchers conducted a post hoc analysis of 822 adults with severe asthma, including 321 with CRSwNP, 309 with GERD, 203 with depression/anxiety, and 81 with COPD. The findings were published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice.

The main outcomes were the rate of clinically significant asthma exacerbations (CSEs) between the 12 months before and after mepolizumab initiation, and the changes from baseline in the daily maintenance use of oral corticosteroids (OCS).

Across all comorbidities, the rate of CSEs decreased significantly from the pretreatment period to the follow-up period, from 4.28 events per year to 1.23 events per year.

“A numerically greater reduction in the rate of CSEs was reported for patients with versus without CRSwNP, whereas the reverse was reported for patients with versus without COPD and depression/anxiety, although the confidence intervals were large for the with COPD subgroup,” the researchers wrote.

The median maintenance dose of oral corticosteroids decreased by at least 50% across all comorbidities after mepolizumab treatment; patients with CRSwNP had the greatest reduction (83%).

In addition, scores on the Asthma Control Questionnaire–5 decreased by at least 0.63 points, and least squared (LS) mean changes in forced expiratory volume per second (FEV1) increased from baseline across all comorbidities after mepolizumab treatment by at least 74 mL.

Although patients with versus without CRSwNP had greater improvements, patients without GERD, depression/anxiety, and COPD had greater improvements than did those without the respective conditions with the exception of greater FEV1 improvement in patients with vs. without COPD.

“Patients with severe asthma and comorbid CRSwNP are recognized as having a high disease burden, as demonstrated by more frequent exacerbations,” the researchers wrote in their discussion. “Mepolizumab may serve to reduce the disease burden of this high-risk group by targeting the common pathophysiological pathway of IL-5 and eosinophilic-driven inflammation because it has proven clinical benefits in treating asthma and CRSwNP separately and together,” and the current study findings support the use of mepolizumab for this population in particular, they said.

The findings were limited by several factors including the incomplete data for voluntary assessments, the post hoc design and relatively small numbers of patients in various subgroups, notably COPD, and the potential inaccurate diagnosis of COPD, the researchers noted.

“Nevertheless, because the amount of improvement in each outcome following mepolizumab treatment differed depending on the comorbidity in question, our findings highlight the impact that comorbidities and their prevalence and severity have on outcomes,” and the overall success of mepolizumab across clinical characteristics and comorbidities supports the generalizability of the findings to the larger population of adults with severe asthma, they concluded.

The study was supported by GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Liu disclosed research funding from GSK, Boehringer Ingelheim, and Gossamer Bio, and participation on advisory boards for AstraZeneca, GSK, and Gossamer Bio.

Adults with asthma who were newly prescribed mepolizumab showed significant improvement in symptoms after 1 year regardless of comorbidities, based on data from 822 individuals.

Comorbidities including chronic rhinosinusitis with polyps (CRSwNP), gastroesophageal reflux disease GERD), anxiety and depression, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) are common in patients with severe asthma and add to the disease burden, wrote Mark C. Liu, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and colleagues.

“Some comorbidities, such as CRSwNP, share pathophysiological mechanisms with severe asthma, with interleukin-5 (IL-5),” and treatments targeting IL-5 could improve outcomes, they said.

In the real-world REALITI-A study, mepolizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody that targets IL-5, significantly reduced asthma exacerbation and oral corticosteroid use in severe asthma patients, they said.

To assess the impact of mepolizumab on patients with comorbidities, the researchers conducted a post hoc analysis of 822 adults with severe asthma, including 321 with CRSwNP, 309 with GERD, 203 with depression/anxiety, and 81 with COPD. The findings were published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice.

The main outcomes were the rate of clinically significant asthma exacerbations (CSEs) between the 12 months before and after mepolizumab initiation, and the changes from baseline in the daily maintenance use of oral corticosteroids (OCS).

Across all comorbidities, the rate of CSEs decreased significantly from the pretreatment period to the follow-up period, from 4.28 events per year to 1.23 events per year.

“A numerically greater reduction in the rate of CSEs was reported for patients with versus without CRSwNP, whereas the reverse was reported for patients with versus without COPD and depression/anxiety, although the confidence intervals were large for the with COPD subgroup,” the researchers wrote.

The median maintenance dose of oral corticosteroids decreased by at least 50% across all comorbidities after mepolizumab treatment; patients with CRSwNP had the greatest reduction (83%).

In addition, scores on the Asthma Control Questionnaire–5 decreased by at least 0.63 points, and least squared (LS) mean changes in forced expiratory volume per second (FEV1) increased from baseline across all comorbidities after mepolizumab treatment by at least 74 mL.

Although patients with versus without CRSwNP had greater improvements, patients without GERD, depression/anxiety, and COPD had greater improvements than did those without the respective conditions with the exception of greater FEV1 improvement in patients with vs. without COPD.

“Patients with severe asthma and comorbid CRSwNP are recognized as having a high disease burden, as demonstrated by more frequent exacerbations,” the researchers wrote in their discussion. “Mepolizumab may serve to reduce the disease burden of this high-risk group by targeting the common pathophysiological pathway of IL-5 and eosinophilic-driven inflammation because it has proven clinical benefits in treating asthma and CRSwNP separately and together,” and the current study findings support the use of mepolizumab for this population in particular, they said.

The findings were limited by several factors including the incomplete data for voluntary assessments, the post hoc design and relatively small numbers of patients in various subgroups, notably COPD, and the potential inaccurate diagnosis of COPD, the researchers noted.

“Nevertheless, because the amount of improvement in each outcome following mepolizumab treatment differed depending on the comorbidity in question, our findings highlight the impact that comorbidities and their prevalence and severity have on outcomes,” and the overall success of mepolizumab across clinical characteristics and comorbidities supports the generalizability of the findings to the larger population of adults with severe asthma, they concluded.

The study was supported by GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Liu disclosed research funding from GSK, Boehringer Ingelheim, and Gossamer Bio, and participation on advisory boards for AstraZeneca, GSK, and Gossamer Bio.

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Mammography breast density reporting: What it means for clinicians

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This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Today, I’m going to talk about the 2023 Food and Drug Administration regulation that requires breast density to be reported on all mammogram results nationwide, and for that report to go to both clinicians and patients. Previously this was the rule in some states, but not in others. This is important because 40%-50% of women have dense breasts. I’m going to discuss what that means for you, and for our patients.

First I’ll review what breast density is, and how it is categorized and reported, and then why it’s important and what to do with the results.

Breast density describes the appearance of the breast on mammography. Appearance varies on the basis of breast tissue composition, with fibroglandular tissue being more dense than fatty tissue. Breast density is important because it relates to both the risk for cancer and the ability of mammography to detect cancer.

Breast density is defined and classified according to the American College of Radiology’s BI-RADS four-category scale. Categories 1 and 2 refer to breast tissue that is not dense, accounting for about 50% of the population. Categories 3 and 4 describe heterogeneously dense and extremely dense breast tissue, which occur in approximately 40% and 50% of women, respectively. When speaking about dense breast tissue readings on mammography, we are referring to categories 3 and 4.

Women with dense breast tissue have an increased risk of developing breast cancer and are less likely to have early breast cancer detected on mammography.

Let’s go over the details by category:

For women in categories 1 and 2 (considered not dense breast tissue), the sensitivity of mammography for detecting early breast cancer is 80%-90%. In categories 3 and 4, the sensitivity of mammography drops to 60%-70%.

Compared with women with average breast density, the risk of developing breast cancer is 20% higher in women with BI-RADS category 3 breasts, and more than twice as high (relative risk, 2.1) in those with BI-RADS category 4 breasts. Thus, the risk of developing breast cancer is higher, but the sensitivity of the test is lower.



The clinical question is, what should we do about this? For women who have a normal mammogram with dense breasts, should follow-up testing be done, and if so, what test? The main follow-up testing options are either ultrasound or MRI, usually ultrasound. Additional testing will detect additional cancers that were not picked up on the initial mammogram and will also lead to additional biopsies for false-positive tests from the additional testing.

An American College of Gynecology and Obstetrics practice advisory nicely summarizes the evidence and clarifies that this decision is made in the context of a lack of published evidence demonstrating improved outcomes, specifically no reduction in breast cancer mortality, with supplemental testing. The official ACOG stance is that they “do not recommend routine use of alternative or adjunctive tests to screening mammography in women with dense breasts who are asymptomatic and have no additional risk factors.”

This is an area where it is important to understand the data. We are all going to be getting test results back that indicate level of breast density, and those test results will also be sent to our patients, so we are going to be asked about this by interested patients. Should this be something that we talk to patients about, utilizing shared decision-making to decide about whether follow-up testing is necessary in women with dense breasts? That is something each clinician will need to decide, and knowing the data is a critically important step in that decision.

Neil Skolnik, MD, is a professor, department of family medicine, at Sidney Kimmel Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, and associate director, department of family medicine, Abington (Pennsylvania) Jefferson Health.

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

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This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Today, I’m going to talk about the 2023 Food and Drug Administration regulation that requires breast density to be reported on all mammogram results nationwide, and for that report to go to both clinicians and patients. Previously this was the rule in some states, but not in others. This is important because 40%-50% of women have dense breasts. I’m going to discuss what that means for you, and for our patients.

First I’ll review what breast density is, and how it is categorized and reported, and then why it’s important and what to do with the results.

Breast density describes the appearance of the breast on mammography. Appearance varies on the basis of breast tissue composition, with fibroglandular tissue being more dense than fatty tissue. Breast density is important because it relates to both the risk for cancer and the ability of mammography to detect cancer.

Breast density is defined and classified according to the American College of Radiology’s BI-RADS four-category scale. Categories 1 and 2 refer to breast tissue that is not dense, accounting for about 50% of the population. Categories 3 and 4 describe heterogeneously dense and extremely dense breast tissue, which occur in approximately 40% and 50% of women, respectively. When speaking about dense breast tissue readings on mammography, we are referring to categories 3 and 4.

Women with dense breast tissue have an increased risk of developing breast cancer and are less likely to have early breast cancer detected on mammography.

Let’s go over the details by category:

For women in categories 1 and 2 (considered not dense breast tissue), the sensitivity of mammography for detecting early breast cancer is 80%-90%. In categories 3 and 4, the sensitivity of mammography drops to 60%-70%.

Compared with women with average breast density, the risk of developing breast cancer is 20% higher in women with BI-RADS category 3 breasts, and more than twice as high (relative risk, 2.1) in those with BI-RADS category 4 breasts. Thus, the risk of developing breast cancer is higher, but the sensitivity of the test is lower.



The clinical question is, what should we do about this? For women who have a normal mammogram with dense breasts, should follow-up testing be done, and if so, what test? The main follow-up testing options are either ultrasound or MRI, usually ultrasound. Additional testing will detect additional cancers that were not picked up on the initial mammogram and will also lead to additional biopsies for false-positive tests from the additional testing.

An American College of Gynecology and Obstetrics practice advisory nicely summarizes the evidence and clarifies that this decision is made in the context of a lack of published evidence demonstrating improved outcomes, specifically no reduction in breast cancer mortality, with supplemental testing. The official ACOG stance is that they “do not recommend routine use of alternative or adjunctive tests to screening mammography in women with dense breasts who are asymptomatic and have no additional risk factors.”

This is an area where it is important to understand the data. We are all going to be getting test results back that indicate level of breast density, and those test results will also be sent to our patients, so we are going to be asked about this by interested patients. Should this be something that we talk to patients about, utilizing shared decision-making to decide about whether follow-up testing is necessary in women with dense breasts? That is something each clinician will need to decide, and knowing the data is a critically important step in that decision.

Neil Skolnik, MD, is a professor, department of family medicine, at Sidney Kimmel Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, and associate director, department of family medicine, Abington (Pennsylvania) Jefferson Health.

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

 

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Today, I’m going to talk about the 2023 Food and Drug Administration regulation that requires breast density to be reported on all mammogram results nationwide, and for that report to go to both clinicians and patients. Previously this was the rule in some states, but not in others. This is important because 40%-50% of women have dense breasts. I’m going to discuss what that means for you, and for our patients.

First I’ll review what breast density is, and how it is categorized and reported, and then why it’s important and what to do with the results.

Breast density describes the appearance of the breast on mammography. Appearance varies on the basis of breast tissue composition, with fibroglandular tissue being more dense than fatty tissue. Breast density is important because it relates to both the risk for cancer and the ability of mammography to detect cancer.

Breast density is defined and classified according to the American College of Radiology’s BI-RADS four-category scale. Categories 1 and 2 refer to breast tissue that is not dense, accounting for about 50% of the population. Categories 3 and 4 describe heterogeneously dense and extremely dense breast tissue, which occur in approximately 40% and 50% of women, respectively. When speaking about dense breast tissue readings on mammography, we are referring to categories 3 and 4.

Women with dense breast tissue have an increased risk of developing breast cancer and are less likely to have early breast cancer detected on mammography.

Let’s go over the details by category:

For women in categories 1 and 2 (considered not dense breast tissue), the sensitivity of mammography for detecting early breast cancer is 80%-90%. In categories 3 and 4, the sensitivity of mammography drops to 60%-70%.

Compared with women with average breast density, the risk of developing breast cancer is 20% higher in women with BI-RADS category 3 breasts, and more than twice as high (relative risk, 2.1) in those with BI-RADS category 4 breasts. Thus, the risk of developing breast cancer is higher, but the sensitivity of the test is lower.



The clinical question is, what should we do about this? For women who have a normal mammogram with dense breasts, should follow-up testing be done, and if so, what test? The main follow-up testing options are either ultrasound or MRI, usually ultrasound. Additional testing will detect additional cancers that were not picked up on the initial mammogram and will also lead to additional biopsies for false-positive tests from the additional testing.

An American College of Gynecology and Obstetrics practice advisory nicely summarizes the evidence and clarifies that this decision is made in the context of a lack of published evidence demonstrating improved outcomes, specifically no reduction in breast cancer mortality, with supplemental testing. The official ACOG stance is that they “do not recommend routine use of alternative or adjunctive tests to screening mammography in women with dense breasts who are asymptomatic and have no additional risk factors.”

This is an area where it is important to understand the data. We are all going to be getting test results back that indicate level of breast density, and those test results will also be sent to our patients, so we are going to be asked about this by interested patients. Should this be something that we talk to patients about, utilizing shared decision-making to decide about whether follow-up testing is necessary in women with dense breasts? That is something each clinician will need to decide, and knowing the data is a critically important step in that decision.

Neil Skolnik, MD, is a professor, department of family medicine, at Sidney Kimmel Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, and associate director, department of family medicine, Abington (Pennsylvania) Jefferson Health.

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

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Do AI chatbots give reliable answers on cancer? Yes and no

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Fri, 09/01/2023 - 09:49

Artificial intelligence chatbots can give accurate information to common questions about cancer but not so much when it comes to providing evidence-based cancer treatment recommendations, two new studies suggest.

AI chatbots, such as ChatGPT (OpenAI), are becoming go-to sources for health information. However, no studies have rigorously evaluated the quality of their medical advice, especially for cancer.

Two new studies published in JAMA Oncology did just that.

One, which looked at common cancer-related Google searches, found that AI chatbots generally provide accurate information to consumers, but the information’s usefulness may be limited by its complexity.

The other, which assessed cancer treatment recommendations, found that AI chatbots overall missed the mark on providing recommendations for breast, prostate, and lung cancers in line with national treatment guidelines.

The medical world is becoming “enamored with our newest potential helper, large language models (LLMs) and in particular chatbots, such as ChatGPT,” Atul Butte, MD, PhD, who heads the Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute, University of California, San Francisco, wrote in an editorial accompanying the studies. “But maybe our core belief in GPT technology as a clinical partner has not sufficiently been earned yet.”

The first study by Alexander Pan of the State University of New York, Brooklyn, and colleagues analyzed the quality of responses to the top five most searched questions on skin, lung, breast, colorectal, and prostate cancer provided by four AI chatbots: ChatGPT-3.5, Perplexity (Perplexity.AI), Chatsonic (Writesonic), and Bing AI (Microsoft).

Questions included what is skin cancer and what are symptoms of prostate, lung, or breast cancer? The team rated the responses for quality, clarity, actionability, misinformation, and readability.

The researchers found that the four chatbots generated “high-quality” responses about the five cancers and did not appear to spread misinformation. Three of the four chatbots cited reputable sources, such as the American Cancer Society, Mayo Clinic, and Centers for Disease Controls and Prevention, which is “reassuring,” the researchers said.

However, the team also found that the usefulness of the information was “limited” because responses were often written at a college reading level. Another limitation: AI chatbots provided concise answers with no visual aids, which may not be sufficient to explain more complex ideas to consumers.

“These limitations suggest that AI chatbots should be used [supplementally] and not as a primary source for medical information,” the authors said, adding that the chatbots “typically acknowledged their limitations in providing individualized advice and encouraged users to seek medical attention.”

related study in the journal highlighted the ability of AI chatbots to generate appropriate cancer treatment recommendations.

In this analysis, Shan Chen, MS, with the AI in Medicine Program, Mass General Brigham, Harvard Medical School, Boston, and colleagues benchmarked cancer treatment recommendations made by ChatGPT-3.5 against 2021 National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines.

The team created 104 prompts designed to elicit basic treatment strategies for various types of cancer, including breast, prostate, and lung cancer. Questions included “What is the treatment for stage I breast cancer?” Several oncologists then assessed the level of concordance between the chatbot responses and NCCN guidelines.

In 62% of the prompts and answers, all the recommended treatments aligned with the oncologists’ views.

The chatbot provided at least one guideline-concordant treatment for 98% of prompts. However, for 34% of prompts, the chatbot also recommended at least one nonconcordant treatment.

And about 13% of recommended treatments were “hallucinated,” that is, not part of any recommended treatment. Hallucinations were primarily recommendations for localized treatment of advanced disease, targeted therapy, or immunotherapy.

Based on the findings, the team recommended that clinicians advise patients that AI chatbots are not a reliable source of cancer treatment information.

“The chatbot did not perform well at providing accurate cancer treatment recommendations,” the authors said. “The chatbot was most likely to mix in incorrect recommendations among correct ones, an error difficult even for experts to detect.”

In his editorial, Dr. Butte highlighted several caveats, including that the teams evaluated “off the shelf” chatbots, which likely had no specific medical training, and the prompts

designed in both studies were very basic, which may have limited their specificity or actionability. Newer LLMs with specific health care training are being released, he explained.

Despite the mixed study findings, Dr. Butte remains optimistic about the future of AI in medicine.

“Today, the reality is that the highest-quality care is concentrated within a few premier medical systems like the NCI Comprehensive Cancer Centers, accessible only to a small fraction of the global population,” Dr. Butte explained. “However, AI has the potential to change this.”

How can we make this happen?

AI algorithms would need to be trained with “data from the best medical systems globally” and “the latest guidelines from NCCN and elsewhere.” Digital health platforms powered by AI could then be designed to provide resources and advice to patients around the globe, Dr. Butte said.

Although “these algorithms will need to be carefully monitored as they are brought into health systems,” Dr. Butte said, it does not change their potential to “improve care for both the haves and have-nots of health care.”

The study by Mr. Pan and colleagues had no specific funding; one author, Stacy Loeb, MD, MSc, PhD, reported a disclosure; no other disclosures were reported. The study by Shan Chen and colleagues was supported by the Woods Foundation; several authors reported disclosures outside the submitted work. Dr. Butte disclosed relationships with several pharmaceutical companies.

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

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Artificial intelligence chatbots can give accurate information to common questions about cancer but not so much when it comes to providing evidence-based cancer treatment recommendations, two new studies suggest.

AI chatbots, such as ChatGPT (OpenAI), are becoming go-to sources for health information. However, no studies have rigorously evaluated the quality of their medical advice, especially for cancer.

Two new studies published in JAMA Oncology did just that.

One, which looked at common cancer-related Google searches, found that AI chatbots generally provide accurate information to consumers, but the information’s usefulness may be limited by its complexity.

The other, which assessed cancer treatment recommendations, found that AI chatbots overall missed the mark on providing recommendations for breast, prostate, and lung cancers in line with national treatment guidelines.

The medical world is becoming “enamored with our newest potential helper, large language models (LLMs) and in particular chatbots, such as ChatGPT,” Atul Butte, MD, PhD, who heads the Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute, University of California, San Francisco, wrote in an editorial accompanying the studies. “But maybe our core belief in GPT technology as a clinical partner has not sufficiently been earned yet.”

The first study by Alexander Pan of the State University of New York, Brooklyn, and colleagues analyzed the quality of responses to the top five most searched questions on skin, lung, breast, colorectal, and prostate cancer provided by four AI chatbots: ChatGPT-3.5, Perplexity (Perplexity.AI), Chatsonic (Writesonic), and Bing AI (Microsoft).

Questions included what is skin cancer and what are symptoms of prostate, lung, or breast cancer? The team rated the responses for quality, clarity, actionability, misinformation, and readability.

The researchers found that the four chatbots generated “high-quality” responses about the five cancers and did not appear to spread misinformation. Three of the four chatbots cited reputable sources, such as the American Cancer Society, Mayo Clinic, and Centers for Disease Controls and Prevention, which is “reassuring,” the researchers said.

However, the team also found that the usefulness of the information was “limited” because responses were often written at a college reading level. Another limitation: AI chatbots provided concise answers with no visual aids, which may not be sufficient to explain more complex ideas to consumers.

“These limitations suggest that AI chatbots should be used [supplementally] and not as a primary source for medical information,” the authors said, adding that the chatbots “typically acknowledged their limitations in providing individualized advice and encouraged users to seek medical attention.”

related study in the journal highlighted the ability of AI chatbots to generate appropriate cancer treatment recommendations.

In this analysis, Shan Chen, MS, with the AI in Medicine Program, Mass General Brigham, Harvard Medical School, Boston, and colleagues benchmarked cancer treatment recommendations made by ChatGPT-3.5 against 2021 National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines.

The team created 104 prompts designed to elicit basic treatment strategies for various types of cancer, including breast, prostate, and lung cancer. Questions included “What is the treatment for stage I breast cancer?” Several oncologists then assessed the level of concordance between the chatbot responses and NCCN guidelines.

In 62% of the prompts and answers, all the recommended treatments aligned with the oncologists’ views.

The chatbot provided at least one guideline-concordant treatment for 98% of prompts. However, for 34% of prompts, the chatbot also recommended at least one nonconcordant treatment.

And about 13% of recommended treatments were “hallucinated,” that is, not part of any recommended treatment. Hallucinations were primarily recommendations for localized treatment of advanced disease, targeted therapy, or immunotherapy.

Based on the findings, the team recommended that clinicians advise patients that AI chatbots are not a reliable source of cancer treatment information.

“The chatbot did not perform well at providing accurate cancer treatment recommendations,” the authors said. “The chatbot was most likely to mix in incorrect recommendations among correct ones, an error difficult even for experts to detect.”

In his editorial, Dr. Butte highlighted several caveats, including that the teams evaluated “off the shelf” chatbots, which likely had no specific medical training, and the prompts

designed in both studies were very basic, which may have limited their specificity or actionability. Newer LLMs with specific health care training are being released, he explained.

Despite the mixed study findings, Dr. Butte remains optimistic about the future of AI in medicine.

“Today, the reality is that the highest-quality care is concentrated within a few premier medical systems like the NCI Comprehensive Cancer Centers, accessible only to a small fraction of the global population,” Dr. Butte explained. “However, AI has the potential to change this.”

How can we make this happen?

AI algorithms would need to be trained with “data from the best medical systems globally” and “the latest guidelines from NCCN and elsewhere.” Digital health platforms powered by AI could then be designed to provide resources and advice to patients around the globe, Dr. Butte said.

Although “these algorithms will need to be carefully monitored as they are brought into health systems,” Dr. Butte said, it does not change their potential to “improve care for both the haves and have-nots of health care.”

The study by Mr. Pan and colleagues had no specific funding; one author, Stacy Loeb, MD, MSc, PhD, reported a disclosure; no other disclosures were reported. The study by Shan Chen and colleagues was supported by the Woods Foundation; several authors reported disclosures outside the submitted work. Dr. Butte disclosed relationships with several pharmaceutical companies.

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

Artificial intelligence chatbots can give accurate information to common questions about cancer but not so much when it comes to providing evidence-based cancer treatment recommendations, two new studies suggest.

AI chatbots, such as ChatGPT (OpenAI), are becoming go-to sources for health information. However, no studies have rigorously evaluated the quality of their medical advice, especially for cancer.

Two new studies published in JAMA Oncology did just that.

One, which looked at common cancer-related Google searches, found that AI chatbots generally provide accurate information to consumers, but the information’s usefulness may be limited by its complexity.

The other, which assessed cancer treatment recommendations, found that AI chatbots overall missed the mark on providing recommendations for breast, prostate, and lung cancers in line with national treatment guidelines.

The medical world is becoming “enamored with our newest potential helper, large language models (LLMs) and in particular chatbots, such as ChatGPT,” Atul Butte, MD, PhD, who heads the Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute, University of California, San Francisco, wrote in an editorial accompanying the studies. “But maybe our core belief in GPT technology as a clinical partner has not sufficiently been earned yet.”

The first study by Alexander Pan of the State University of New York, Brooklyn, and colleagues analyzed the quality of responses to the top five most searched questions on skin, lung, breast, colorectal, and prostate cancer provided by four AI chatbots: ChatGPT-3.5, Perplexity (Perplexity.AI), Chatsonic (Writesonic), and Bing AI (Microsoft).

Questions included what is skin cancer and what are symptoms of prostate, lung, or breast cancer? The team rated the responses for quality, clarity, actionability, misinformation, and readability.

The researchers found that the four chatbots generated “high-quality” responses about the five cancers and did not appear to spread misinformation. Three of the four chatbots cited reputable sources, such as the American Cancer Society, Mayo Clinic, and Centers for Disease Controls and Prevention, which is “reassuring,” the researchers said.

However, the team also found that the usefulness of the information was “limited” because responses were often written at a college reading level. Another limitation: AI chatbots provided concise answers with no visual aids, which may not be sufficient to explain more complex ideas to consumers.

“These limitations suggest that AI chatbots should be used [supplementally] and not as a primary source for medical information,” the authors said, adding that the chatbots “typically acknowledged their limitations in providing individualized advice and encouraged users to seek medical attention.”

related study in the journal highlighted the ability of AI chatbots to generate appropriate cancer treatment recommendations.

In this analysis, Shan Chen, MS, with the AI in Medicine Program, Mass General Brigham, Harvard Medical School, Boston, and colleagues benchmarked cancer treatment recommendations made by ChatGPT-3.5 against 2021 National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines.

The team created 104 prompts designed to elicit basic treatment strategies for various types of cancer, including breast, prostate, and lung cancer. Questions included “What is the treatment for stage I breast cancer?” Several oncologists then assessed the level of concordance between the chatbot responses and NCCN guidelines.

In 62% of the prompts and answers, all the recommended treatments aligned with the oncologists’ views.

The chatbot provided at least one guideline-concordant treatment for 98% of prompts. However, for 34% of prompts, the chatbot also recommended at least one nonconcordant treatment.

And about 13% of recommended treatments were “hallucinated,” that is, not part of any recommended treatment. Hallucinations were primarily recommendations for localized treatment of advanced disease, targeted therapy, or immunotherapy.

Based on the findings, the team recommended that clinicians advise patients that AI chatbots are not a reliable source of cancer treatment information.

“The chatbot did not perform well at providing accurate cancer treatment recommendations,” the authors said. “The chatbot was most likely to mix in incorrect recommendations among correct ones, an error difficult even for experts to detect.”

In his editorial, Dr. Butte highlighted several caveats, including that the teams evaluated “off the shelf” chatbots, which likely had no specific medical training, and the prompts

designed in both studies were very basic, which may have limited their specificity or actionability. Newer LLMs with specific health care training are being released, he explained.

Despite the mixed study findings, Dr. Butte remains optimistic about the future of AI in medicine.

“Today, the reality is that the highest-quality care is concentrated within a few premier medical systems like the NCI Comprehensive Cancer Centers, accessible only to a small fraction of the global population,” Dr. Butte explained. “However, AI has the potential to change this.”

How can we make this happen?

AI algorithms would need to be trained with “data from the best medical systems globally” and “the latest guidelines from NCCN and elsewhere.” Digital health platforms powered by AI could then be designed to provide resources and advice to patients around the globe, Dr. Butte said.

Although “these algorithms will need to be carefully monitored as they are brought into health systems,” Dr. Butte said, it does not change their potential to “improve care for both the haves and have-nots of health care.”

The study by Mr. Pan and colleagues had no specific funding; one author, Stacy Loeb, MD, MSc, PhD, reported a disclosure; no other disclosures were reported. The study by Shan Chen and colleagues was supported by the Woods Foundation; several authors reported disclosures outside the submitted work. Dr. Butte disclosed relationships with several pharmaceutical companies.

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

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ADHD in older adults: A closer look

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Fri, 09/01/2023 - 01:15
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ADHD in older adults: A closer look

For many years, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) was thought of as a disorder of childhood; however, it is now increasingly being recognized as a chronic, lifelong disorder that persists into adulthood in approximately two-thirds of patients.1 While our knowledge about ADHD in adults has increased, most research in this population focused on young or middle-aged adults; less is known about ADHD in older adults. Older adults with ADHD may be newly diagnosed at any point in their lives, or not at all.2 Because ADHD may present differently in older adults than in children or young adults, and because it may impair domains of life in different ways, a closer look at late-life ADHD is needed. This article summarizes the literature on the prevalence, impairment, diagnosis, and treatment of ADHD in adults age >60.

Challenges in determining the prevalence

Few studies have examined the age-specific prevalence of ADHD among older adults.3 Compared with childhood ADHD, adult ADHD is relatively neglected in epidemiological studies, largely due to the absence of well-established, validated diagnostic criteria.1,4 Some experts have noted that DSM-5’s ADHD criteria were designed for diagnosing children, and the children-focused symptom threshold may not be useful for adults because ADHD symptoms decline substantially with age.2 One study evaluating DSM-5 ADHD criteria in young adults (N = 4,000, age 18 to 19) found ADHD was better diagnosed when the required number of clinically relevant inattention and hyperactivity symptoms was reduced from 6 to 5 for each category.5 They also found the DSM-5 age-at-onset criterion of symptoms present before age 12 had a significant effect on ADHD prevalence, reducing the rate from 23.7% (95% CI, 22.38 to 25.02) to 5.4% (95% CI, 13.99 to 16.21).5 This suggests that strict usage of DSM-5 criteria may underestimate the prevalence of ADHD in adults, because ADHD symptoms may not be detected in childhood, or self-reporting of childhood ADHD symptoms in older adults may be unreliable due to aging processes that compromise memory and recall. These findings also indicate that fewer ADHD symptoms are needed to impair functioning in older age.

Determining the prevalence of ADHD among older adults is further complicated by individuals who report symptoms consistent with an ADHD diagnosis despite having never received this diagnosis during childhood.6-8 This may be due to the considerable number of children who meet ADHD criteria but do not get a diagnosis due to limited access to health care.9 Thus, many studies separately analyze the syndromatic (with a childhood onset) and symptomatic (regardless of childhood onset) persistence of ADHD. One epidemiological meta-analysis found the 2020 prevalence of syndromatic ADHD in adults age >60 was 0.77% and the prevalence of symptomatic ADHD was 4.51%, which translates to 7.91 million and 46.36 million affected older adults, respectively.8 Other research has reported higher rates among older adults.6,7,10 The variations among this research may be attributed to the use of different diagnostic tools/criteria, study populations, sampling methods, or DSM versions. Heterogeneity among this research also further supports the idea that the prevalence of ADHD is heavily dependent on how one defines and diagnoses the disorder.

Reasons for late-life ADHD diagnosis

There are many reasons a patient may not be diagnosed with ADHD until they are an older adult.11 In addition to socioeconomic barriers to health care access, members of different ethnic groups exhibit differences in help-seeking behaviors; children may belong to a culture that does not traditionally seek health care even when symptoms are evident.6,9 Therefore, individuals may not receive a diagnosis until adulthood. Some experts have discussed the similarity of ADHD to other neurodevelopmental disorders, such as autism spectrum disorder or social communication disorder, where ADHD symptoms may not manifest until stressors at critical points in life exceed an individual’s capacity to compensate.2

The life transition model contextualizes ADHD as being associated with demand/resource imbalances that come and go throughout life, resulting in variability in the degree of functional impairment ADHD symptoms cause in older adults.2,12 Hypothetically, events in late life—such as the death of a spouse or retirement—can remove essential support structures in the lives of high-functioning individuals with ADHD. As a result, such events surpass these individuals’ ability to cope, resulting in a late-life manifestation of ADHD.

The plausibility of late-onset ADHD

In recent years, many studies identifying ADHD in adults have been published,2,10,12-15 including some that discuss adult ADHD that spontaneously appears without childhood symptoms (ie, late-onset ADHD).2,4,12 Research of late-onset ADHD attracts attention because the data it presents challenge the current rationale that ADHD symptoms should be present before age 12, as defined by DSM-5 criteria. While most reports of late-onset ADHD pertain to younger adults, little evidence exists to reinforce the concept; to date just 1 study has reported cases of late-onset ADHD in older adults (n = 7, age 51 to 59).11 In this study, Sasaki et al11 acknowledged the strong possibility their cases may be late manifestations of long-standing ADHD. Late-onset ADHD is further challenged by findings that 95% of individuals initially diagnosed with late-onset ADHD can be excluded from the diagnosis with further detailed assessment that accounts for co-occurring mental disorders and substance use.16 This suggests false positive cases of late-onset ADHD may be a symptom of narrow clinical assessment that fails to encompass other aspects of a patient’s psychiatric profile, rather than an atypical ADHD presentation.

Comorbidity and psychosocial functioning

ADHD symptoms and diagnosis in older adults are associated with clinically relevant levels of depression and anxiety. The Dutch Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA) examined 1,494 older adults (age 55 to 85) using the Diagnostic Interview for ADHD in Adults version 2.0.10 The 231 individuals identified as having symptoms of ADHD reported clinically relevant levels of depressive and anxiety symptoms. ADHD was significantly associated with these comorbid symptoms.

Continue to: Little is known regarding...

 

 

Little is known regarding the manifestation of symptoms of ADHD in older age and the difficulties these older adults face. Older adults with ADHD are more often divorced and report more loneliness than older adults without this disorder, which suggests loneliness in older age may be more pressing for the older ADHD population.17 ADHD in older adults has also been associated with poor quality-of-life measures, including moderate to severe problems in mobility, self-care, usual activity, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression (Table 114,17).

Common co-occurring symptoms of late-life ADHD

Qualitative research has described a domino effect of a lifetime of living with ADHD. In one American study, older adults with ADHD (N = 24, age 60 to 74) reported experiencing a tangible, accumulated impact from ADHD on their finances and long-term relationships with family, friends, and coworkers.13 Another study utilizing the Dutch LASA data examined how ADHD may impact patient’s lives among participants who were unaware of their diagnosis.18 One-half of patients reported low self-esteem, overstepping boundaries, and feeling different from others. When compared to younger adults with ADHD, older adults report significantly greater impairments in productivity and a worse life outlook.19

Differential diagnosis

When assessing whether an older adult has ADHD, it is important to consider other potential causes of their symptoms (Table 211,15,20-23). The differential diagnosis includes impaired vision and hearing as well as medical illness (vitamin B12 deficiency, hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, hyperparathyroidism, and infectious diseases such as herpes simplex virus or syphilis).11,15,20-23 Neurological causes include brain tumors, traumatic brain injuries, postconcussive syndrome, stroke, and neurocognitive disorders.11,15,20-23 Other potential causes include obstructive sleep apnea, mood disorders, substance use disorders, and medication adverse effects (especially with polypharmacy).11,15,20-23 In this population, other causes are often responsible for “late-manifestation ADHD symptoms.”1,15 Neurocognitive disorders and other psychiatric conditions are especially difficult to differentiate from ADHD.

Differential diagnosis for ADHD symptoms in older adults

In older adults, ADHD symptoms include frontal-executive impairments, inattentiveness, difficulty with organization or multitasking, forgetfulness, and challenges involving activities of daily living or socialization that can appear to be a mild or major neurocognitive disorder (Table 311,24,25). This includes major neuro­cognitive disorder due to Alzheimer’s disease, Lewy body disease, and vascular disease.2,26 However, frontotemporal lobar degeneration is reported to have more symptom overlap with ADHD.21,22,26,27 A way to differentiate between neurocognitive disorders and ADHD in older adults is to consider that patients with neurocognitive disorders often progress to visual hallucinations and more extreme personality changes than would be expected in ADHD.11 Each disease also has its own identifiable characteristics. Extreme changes in memory are often Alzheimer’s disease, personality changes suggest fronto­temporal lobar degeneration, stepwise decline is classic for vascular disease, and parkinsonian features may indicate dementia with Lewy bodies.21 In addition, the onset of ADHD usually occurs in childhood and can be traced throughout the lifespan,2 whereas neurocognitive diseases usually appear for the first time in later life.2,28 There are nuances in the nature of forgetfulness that can distinguish ADHD from neurocognitive disorders. For instance, the forgetfulness in early-onset Alzheimer’s disease involves “the lack of episodic memories,” while in contrast ADHD is thought to be “forgetfulness due to inadvertence.”11 Furthermore, patients with neurocognitive disorders are reported to have more severe symptoms and an inability to explain why, whereas those with ADHD have a steady level of symptoms and can provide a more comprehensive story.24 Two recent studies have shown that weak performance on language tests is more indicative of a neuro­degenerative process than of ADHD.29,30 Research has suggested that if an older adult shows a sudden, acute onset of ADHD-like symptoms, this is most likely reflective of cognitive decline or a mood disorder such as depression.2,15,24

Neuropsychological manifestations of ADHD in older adults

Several other psychiatric conditions share many symptoms with ADHD. Overlapping symptomology between ADHD and mood and anxiety disorders presents challenges.27 Emotional dysregulation is a feature of adult ADHD, and this often causes a mood disorder to be diagnosed without considering other possible explanations.21,22,27,31-34 Features of mania can overlap with ADHD symptoms, including psychomotor agitation, talkativeness, and distractibility.27 Several other disorders also include distractibility, such as depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders.35 Depression and anxiety can be an outcome of untreated ADHD, or can co-occur with ADHD.21-23,27 ADHD can also co-occur with bipolar disorder (BD), substance use disorders, and personality disorders (borderline and antisocial personality disorder) (Figure 121-23,27,35). One suggested method of establishing an appropriate diagnosis is to study the efficacy of the treatment retrospectively. For example, if a patient is presumed to have depression and they do not respond to several selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, this may be undetected ADHD.27 In addition, the argument about the chronicity of the symptoms should also be considered. ADHD symptoms are pervasive whereas BD symptoms are episodic.35 Depression can be chronic; however, there are often discrete major depressive episodes. It is important to have a clear timeline of the patient’s symptoms. Ask about age of onset, because in theory, ADHD is supposed to start in childhood.22 It is sometimes difficult to ascertain this information because many older adults grew up during a time where ADHD was not a recognized diagnosis.21

Overlapping symptomology of ADHD and other psychiatric disorders

Continue to: Diagnosis and workup

 

 

Diagnosis and workup

The key aspects of diagnosing ADHD are the interview based on DSM-5 criteria, exclusion of other diagnoses, and collateral information. Research has shown that clinical interviews and longitudinal family histories provide critical information that can differentiate ADHD from other psychiatric conditions.35 DSM-5 criteria are adjusted for adults: 5 out of 9 criteria for inattention and/or hyperactivity-impulsivity must be fulfilled, as opposed to 6 out of 9 in children age <17.21,31,36 However, no criteria are specific for older adults.37 Since the differential diagnosis involves multiple entities, it is important to follow DSM-5 criteria for ADHD, which include eliminating other conditions that can explain these symptoms.15 Additionally, in DSM-5, the age-of-onset threshold for ADHD diagnosis was increased from 7 and younger to 12 and younger, addressing criticism that the previous cutoff was too restrictive.24,31 The age of onset of childhood symptoms can be challenging to verify in older adults. Older patients can have unreliable memories and their childhood records are not always available.2,20 In this population, childhood symptoms are mainly underreported but sometimes overreported.10,38 However, to establish a diagnosis, the patient should have experienced some symptoms of the disorder within their first 50 years of life, including having impaired functionality in multiple settings.15,26 The goal is to establish the chronicity of this condition to distinguish it from other psychiatric conditions.22 Overall, using DSM-5 criteria without any modifications may lead to underdiagnosis of ADHD in adults.23 At this time, however, DSM-5 remains the main criteria used to make a diagnosis.

While tools to assist in screening and diagnosing ADHD have been validated in adults, none have been validated specifically for older adults.22 Structured diagnostic interviews to diagnose ADHD include39:

  • Adult ADHD Clinical Diagnostic Scale version 1.2
  • ADHD Lifespan Functioning interview
  • Conners’ Adult ADHD Diagnostic interview for DSM-IV
  • Diagnostic Interview for ADHD in Adults version 2.0
  • Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5.

ADHD symptom measures that can be used for screening and to look at treatment response include39:

  • ADHD Rating Scale 5
  • Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale Symptom Checklist
  • Barkley Adult ADHD Rating Scale IV
  • Barkley Quick-Check for Adult ADHD Diagnosis
  • Young ADHD Questionnaire
  • RATE Scales.

Adult ADHD inventories consider problems that adults with ADHD face. These include39:

  • Brown Attention Deficit Disorders Scales—Adult version
  • Conners’ Adult ADHD Rating Scales
  • Wender-Reimherr Adult Attention Deficit Disorder Scale.

Since these scales were not designed for older adults, they may miss nuances in this population.40

Continue to: It can be particularly...

 

 

It can be particularly perplexing to diagnose ADHD in older adults because the other possible causes of the symptoms are vast. During the interview, it is important to ask questions that may rule out other psychiatric, neurologic, and medical conditions.21 Screen for other diagnoses, and include questions about a patient’s sleep history to rule out obstructive sleep apnea.21 To screen for other psychiatric conditions, the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview 5.0.0 may be used.22 Other tools include the Saint Louis University AMSAD screen for depression, the Geriatric Depression Scale, and the Beck Anxiety Inventory.28,41 To screen for cognitive functioning, the Saint Louis University Mental Status Exam, Montreal Cognitive Assessment, or Mini-Mental State Examination can be used.22,28,42,43 Once screening is performed, a physical and neurologic examination is the best next step.26 Additionally, laboratory data and imaging can rule out other conditions; however, these are not routinely performed to diagnose ADHD.

Laboratory tests should include a comprehensive metabolic panel, complete blood count, thyroid-stimulating hormone level, B12/folate level, and possibly a vitamin D level.11,36 These tests cover several conditions that may mimic ADHD. Brain MRI is not routinely recommended for diagnosing ADHD, though it may be useful because some research has found brain structural differences in individuals with ADHD.28,44,45 Neurocognitive disorders have notable MRI findings that distinguish them from ADHD and each other.24 If there is significant concern for neurocognitive disorders, more specific tests can be employed, such as CSF studies, to look for phosphorylated tau and beta amyloid markers.11

Ask about family history (first-degree relative with ADHD) and obtain collateral information to make sure no other diagnoses are overlooked. Family history can help diagnose this disorder in older adults because there is evidence that ADHD runs in families.2,25 This evidence would ideally come from someone who has known the patient their entire life, such as a sibling or parent.24 The collateral information will be especially helpful to discern the chronicity of the patient’s symptoms, which would point toward a diagnosis of ADHD. To summarize (Figure 2):

  • obtain a thorough interview that may be supported by a screening tool
  • rule out other conditions
  • conduct a physical examination
  • obtain laboratory results
  • collect collateral information
  • obtain neuroimaging if necessary.

ADHD workup in older adults

Treatment

ADHD symptoms can be treated with medications and psychotherapy. Research has shown the efficacy of ADHD medications in older adults, demonstrating that treatment leads to better functioning in multiple settings and decreases the risk for developing comorbid psychiatric conditions (mood disorder, substance use disorders).25,27 Symptoms that improve with medication include attention, concentration, self-efficacy, functioning, self-esteem, psychomotor agitation, mood, energy, and procrastination.21,31,46 If a patient with ADHD also has other psychiatric diagnoses, treat the most impairing disorder first.22 This often means mood disorders and substance use disorders must be remedied before ADHD is treated.21

Medication options include stimulants and nonstimulants. First-line treatments are stimulant medications, including methylphenidate, amphetamines, and mixed amphetamine salts.12,22,27,31,35 Stimulants have shown significant efficacy in older adults, although the American Geriatrics Society’s Beers Criteria list stimulants as potentially inappropriate for older adults.33 Adults show significant improvement with methylphenidate.21,23,47 In an observational study, Michielsen et al46 found stimulants were safe and efficacious in older adults if patients are carefully monitored for adverse effects, especially cardiovascular changes. Second-line treatments include the nonstimulant atomoxetine.12,22,27,31 Clonidine and guanfacine are FDA-approved for treating ADHD in children, but not approved for adults.26 There is little evidence for other treatments, such as bupropion.12,22,27 All of these medications have adverse effects, which are especially important to consider in older adults, who experience age-related physiological changes.

Continue to: Medications for ADHD symptoms...

 

 

Medications for ADHD symptoms are thought to act via catecholaminergic mechanisms.21 As a result, adverse effects of stimulants can include headache, appetite suppression, nausea, difficulty sleeping, tremor, blurred vision, agitation, psychosis, increased heart rate, arrhythmia, and hypertension.22,27,32-34 Especially in older adults, adverse effects such as reduced appetite, disrupted sleep, or increased blood pressure or heart rate may be harmful.21,23 Using caffeine or pseudoephedrine can exacerbate these adverse effects.21 Atomoxetine’s adverse effects include appetite suppression, insomnia, dizziness, anxiety, agitation, fatigue, dry mouth, constipation, nausea, vomiting, dyspepsia, and increased heart rate or blood pressure.27,32,35 Genitourinary adverse effects have also been reported, including priapism (rare), decreased libido, and urinary hesitancy and retention.26,32 Before any medication is initiated, it is important to conduct a physical and neurologic examination and a detailed clinical interview.

Before starting medication, as with any medical treatment, conduct a risk vs benefit analysis. Record baseline values for the patient’s heart rate, blood pressure, and weight.23,26,27,31 During the interview, screen for family and personal cardiovascular conditions,27,33 and obtain an electrocardiogram for any patient with cardiovascular risks.23,26,27,31 Once the patient is deemed to be an appropriate candidate for pharmacologic treatment, begin with low doses and titrate the medication slowly until reaching a therapeutic level.23,48

Medications should be combined with psychotherapy (eg, cognitive-behavioral therapy or dialectical behavioral therapy) and other lifestyle changes (exercise, mindfulness, support groups).18,22,23,27,31,49 Psychotherapy can help patients come to terms with receiving an ADHD diagnosis later in life and help with organization and socialization.12,50 Pharmacologic treatments are thought to be helpful with attention challenges and emotional instability.50 Taken together, medications and behavioral interventions can help individuals experience an improved quality of life.

Future directions

Given the relatively recent interest in ADHD in older adults, there are several areas that need further research. For future editions of DSM, it may be prudent to consider establishing ADHD criteria specific to older adults. Research has also shown the need for clear diagnostic and validated tools for older adults.8 Few analyses have been undertaken regarding pharmacotherapy for this population. Randomized controlled clinical trials are needed.23,37,48 More research about the relative utility of psychotherapy and behavioral interventions would also be useful, given their potential to improve the quality of life for older adults with ADHD.

Bottom Line

Although generally thought of as a disorder of childhood, attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has substantial effects in older adults. When the condition is appropriately diagnosed, pharmacologic treatment and psychotherapy are associated with improved quality of life for older patients with ADHD.

Related Resources

Drug Brand Names

Amphetamine/dextroamphetamine • Adderall
Atomoxetine • Straterra
Bupropion • Wellbutrin
Clonidine • Catapres
Guanfacine • Intuniv
Methylphenidate • Ritalin

References

1. Sibley MH, Mitchell JT, Becker SP. Method of adult diagnosis influences estimated persistence of childhood ADHD: a systematic review of longitudinal studies. Lancet Psychiatry. 2016;3(12):1157-1165. doi:10.1016/S2215-0366(16)30190-0

2. Sharma MJ, Lavoie S, Callahan BL. A call for research on the validity of the age-of-onset criterion application in older adults being evaluated for ADHD: a review of the literature in clinical and cognitive psychology. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2021;29(7):669-678. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2020.10.016

3. Biederman J, Petty CR, Evans M, et al. How persistent is ADHD? A controlled 10-year follow-up study of boys with ADHD. Psychiatry Res. 2010;177(3):299-304. doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2009.12.010

4. McGough JJ, Barkley RA. Diagnostic controversies in adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Am J Psychiatry. 2004;161(11):1948-1956. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.161.11.1948

5. Matte B, Anselmi L, Salum GA, et al. ADHD in DSM-5: a field trial in a large, representative sample of 18- to 19-year-old adults. Psychol Med. 2015;45(2):361-373. doi:10.1017/S0033291714001470

6. Chung W, Jiang SF, Paksarian D, et al. Trends in the prevalence and incidence of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder among adults and children of different racial and ethnic groups. JAMA Netw Open. 2019;2(11):e1914344. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.14344

7. Guldberg-Kjär T, Johansson B. Old people reporting childhood AD/HD symptoms: retrospectively self-rated AD/HD symptoms in a population-based Swedish sample aged 65-80. Nord J Psychiatry. 2009;63(5):375-382. doi:10.1080/08039480902818238

8. Song P, Zha M, Yang Q, et al. The prevalence of adult attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder: a global systematic review and meta-analysis. J Glob Health. 2021;11:04009. doi:10.7189/jogh.11.04009

9. Russell AE, Ford T, Williams R, et al. The association between socioeconomic disadvantage and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): a systematic review. Child Psychiatry Hum Dev. 2016;47(3):440-458. doi:10.1007/s10578/-015-0578-3

10. Michielsen M, Semeijn E, Comijs HC, et al. Prevalence of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder in older adults in The Netherlands. Br J Psychiatry. 2012;201(4):298-305. doi:10.1192/bjp.bp.111.101196

11. Sasaki H, Jono T, Fukuhara R, et al. Late-manifestation of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in older adults: an observational study. BMC Psychiatry. 2022;22(1):354. doi:10.1186/s12888-022-03978-0

12. Turgay A, Goodman DW, Asherson P, et al. Lifespan persistence of ADHD: the life transition model and its application. J Clin Psychiatry. 2012;73(2):192-201. doi:10.4088/JCP.10m06628

13. Brod M, Schmitt E, Goodwin M, et al. ADHD burden of illness in older adults: a life course perspective. Qual Life Res. 2012;21(5):795-799. doi:10.1007/s1136-011-9981-9

14. Thorell LB, Holst Y, Sjöwall D. Quality of life in older adults with ADHD: links to ADHD symptom levels and executive functioning deficits. Nord J Psychiatry. 2019;73(7):409-416. doi:10.1080/08039488.2019.1646804

15. Sibley MH. Diagnosing ADHD in older adults: critical next steps for research. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2021;29(7):679-681. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2020.11.012

16. Sibley MH, Rohde LA, Swanson JM, et al. Late-onset ADHD reconsidered with comprehensive repeated assessments between ages 10 and 25. Am J Psychiatry. 2018;175(2):140-149. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.2017.17030298

17. Michielsen M, Comijs HC, Aartsen MJ, et al. The relationships between ADHD and social functioning and participation in older adults in a population-based study. J Atten Disord. 2015;19(5):368-379. doi:10.1177/1087054713515748

18. Michielsen M, de Kruif JTCM, Comijs HC, et al. The burden of ADHD in older adults: a qualitative study. J Atten Disord. 2018;22(6):591-600. doi:10.1177/1087054715610001

19. Lensing MB, Zeiner P, Sandvik L, et al. Quality of life in adults aged 50+ with ADHD. J Atten Disord. 2015;19(5):405-413. doi:10.1177/1087054713480035

20. Fischer BL, Gunter-Hunt G, Steinhafel CH, et al. The identification and assessment of late-life ADHD in memory clinics. J Atten Disord. 2012;16(4):333-338. doi:10.1177/1087054711398886

21. Goodman DW, Mitchell S, Rhodewalt L, et al. Clinical presentation, diagnosis and treatment of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in older adults: a review of the evidence and its implications for clinical care. Drugs Aging. 2016;33(1):27-36. doi:10.1007/s40266-015-0327-0

22. Kooij JJ, Michielsen M, Kruithof H, et al. ADHD in old age: a review of the literature and proposal for assessment and treatment. Expert Rev Neurother. 2016;16(12):1371-1381. doi:10.1080/14737175.2016.1204914

23. Torgersen T, Gjervan B, Lensing MB, et al. Optimal management of ADHD in older adults. Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2016;12:79-87. doi:10.2147/NDT.S59271

24. Callahan BL, Bierstone D, Stuss DT, et al. Adult ADHD: risk factor for dementia or phenotypic mimic? Front Aging Neurosci. 2017;9:260. doi:10.3389/fnagi.2017.00260

25. Mendonca F, Sudo FK, Santiago-Bravo G, et al. Mild cognitive impairment or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in older adults? A cross sectional study. Front Psychiatry. 2021;12:737357. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2021.737357

26. De Crescenzo F, Cortese S, Adamo N, et al. Pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment of adults with ADHD: a meta-review. Evid Based Ment Health. 2017;20(1):4-11. doi:10.1136/eb-2016-102415

27. Katzman MA, Bilkey TS, Chokka PR, et al. Adult ADHD and comorbid disorders: clinical implications of a dimensional approach. BMC Psychiatry. 2017;17(1):302. doi:10.1186/s12888-017-1463-3

28. Klein M, Silva MA, Belizario GO, et al. Longitudinal neuropsychological assessment in two elderly adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: case report. Front Psychol. 2019;10:1119. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01119

29. Prentice JL, Schaeffer MJ, Wall AK, et al. A systematic review and comparison of neurocognitive features of late-life attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and dementia with Lewy bodies. J Geriatr Psychiatry Neurol. 2021;34(5):466-481. doi:10.1177/0891988720944251

30. Callahan BL, Ramakrishnan N, Shammi P, et al. Cognitive and neuroimaging profiles of older adults with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder presenting to a memory clinic. J Atten Disord. 2022;26(8):1118-1129. doi:10.1177/10870547211060546

31. Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Nasillo V, Fernández-Aranda, et al. Addressing the lack of studies in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in adults. Expert Rev Neurother. 2014;14(5):553-567. doi:10.1586/14737175.2014.908708

32. Stahl SM. Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology: Prescriber’s Guide. 6th ed. Cambridge University Press; 2017.

33. Latronica JR, Clegg TJ, Tuan WJ, et al. Are amphetamines associated with adverse cardiovascular events among elderly individuals? J Am Board Fam Med. 2021;34(6):1074-1081. doi:10.3122/jabfm.2021.06.210228

34. Garcia-Argibay M, du Rietz E, Lu Y, et al. The role of ADHD genetic risk in mid-to-late life somatic health conditions. Transl Psychiatry. 2022;12(1):152. doi:10.1038/s41398-022-01919-9

35. Jain R, Jain S, Montano CB, Addressing diagnosis and treatment gaps in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Prim Care Companion CNS Disord. 2017;19(5):17nr02153. doi:10.4088/PCC.17nr02153

36. Sasaki H, Jono T, Fukuhara R, et al. Late-onset attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder as a differential diagnosis of dementia: a case report. BMC Psychiatry. 2020;20(1):550. doi:10.1186/s12888-020-02949-7

37. Surman CBH, Goodman DW. Is ADHD a valid diagnosis in older adults? Atten Defic Hyperact Disord. 2017;9(3):161-168. doi:10.1007/s12402-017-0217-x

38. Semeijn EJ, Michielsen M, Comijs HC, et al. Criterion validity of an attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) screening list for screening ADHD in older adults aged 60-94 years. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2013;21(7):631-635. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2012.08.003

39. Ramsay JR. Assessment and monitoring of treatment response in adult ADHD patients: current perspectives. Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2017;13:221-232. doi:10.2147/NDT.S104706

40. Das D, Cherbuin N, Easteal S, et al. Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms and cognitive abilities in the late-life cohort of the PATH through life study. PLoS One. 2014;9(1):e86552. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0086552

41. Kaya D, Isik AT, Usarel C, et al. The Saint Louis University Mental Status Examination is better than the Mini-Mental State Examination to determine the cognitive impairment in Turkish elderly people. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2016;17(4):370.e11-370.e3.7E15. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2015.12.093

42. Michielsen M, Comijs HC, Semeijn EJ, et al. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and personality characteristics in older adults in the general Dutch population. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2014;22(12):1623-1632. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2014.02.005

43. Khoury R, Chakkamparambil B, Chibnall J, et al. Diagnostic accuracy of the SLU AMSAD scale for depression in older adults without dementia. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2020;21(5):665-668. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2019.09.011

44. Çavuşoğlu Ç, Demirkol ME, Tamam L. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in the elderly. Current Approaches in Psychiatry. 2020;12(2):182-194. doi:10.18863/pgy.548052

45. Klein M, Souza-Duran FL, Menezes AKPM, et al. Gray matter volume in elderly adults with ADHD: associations of symptoms and comorbidities with brain structures. J Atten Disord. 2021;25(6):829-838. doi:10.1177/1087054719855683

46. Michielsen M, Kleef D, Bijlenga D, et al. Response and side effects using stimulant medication in older adults with ADHD: an observational archive study. J Atten Disord. 2021;25(12):1712-1719. doi:10.1177/1087054720925884

47. Manor I, Rozen S, Zemishlani Z, et al. When does it end? Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in the middle aged and older populations. Clin Neuropharmacol, 2011;34(4):148-154. doi:10.1097/WNF.0b013e3182206dc1

48. Deshmukh P, Patel D. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and its treatment in geriatrics. Curr Dev Disord Rep. 2020;7(3):79-84.

49. Barkley RA. The important role of executive functioning and self-regulation in ADHD. 2010. Accessed August 10, 2023. https://www.russellbarkley.org/factsheets/ADHD_EF_and_SR.pdf

50. Corbisiero S, Bitto H, Newark P, et al. A comparison of cognitive-behavioral therapy and pharmacotherapy vs. pharmacotherapy alone in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)-a randomized controlled trial. Front Psychiatry. 2018;9:571. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00571

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Saint Louis University School of Medicine St. Louis, Missouri

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George Grossberg, MD
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For many years, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) was thought of as a disorder of childhood; however, it is now increasingly being recognized as a chronic, lifelong disorder that persists into adulthood in approximately two-thirds of patients.1 While our knowledge about ADHD in adults has increased, most research in this population focused on young or middle-aged adults; less is known about ADHD in older adults. Older adults with ADHD may be newly diagnosed at any point in their lives, or not at all.2 Because ADHD may present differently in older adults than in children or young adults, and because it may impair domains of life in different ways, a closer look at late-life ADHD is needed. This article summarizes the literature on the prevalence, impairment, diagnosis, and treatment of ADHD in adults age >60.

Challenges in determining the prevalence

Few studies have examined the age-specific prevalence of ADHD among older adults.3 Compared with childhood ADHD, adult ADHD is relatively neglected in epidemiological studies, largely due to the absence of well-established, validated diagnostic criteria.1,4 Some experts have noted that DSM-5’s ADHD criteria were designed for diagnosing children, and the children-focused symptom threshold may not be useful for adults because ADHD symptoms decline substantially with age.2 One study evaluating DSM-5 ADHD criteria in young adults (N = 4,000, age 18 to 19) found ADHD was better diagnosed when the required number of clinically relevant inattention and hyperactivity symptoms was reduced from 6 to 5 for each category.5 They also found the DSM-5 age-at-onset criterion of symptoms present before age 12 had a significant effect on ADHD prevalence, reducing the rate from 23.7% (95% CI, 22.38 to 25.02) to 5.4% (95% CI, 13.99 to 16.21).5 This suggests that strict usage of DSM-5 criteria may underestimate the prevalence of ADHD in adults, because ADHD symptoms may not be detected in childhood, or self-reporting of childhood ADHD symptoms in older adults may be unreliable due to aging processes that compromise memory and recall. These findings also indicate that fewer ADHD symptoms are needed to impair functioning in older age.

Determining the prevalence of ADHD among older adults is further complicated by individuals who report symptoms consistent with an ADHD diagnosis despite having never received this diagnosis during childhood.6-8 This may be due to the considerable number of children who meet ADHD criteria but do not get a diagnosis due to limited access to health care.9 Thus, many studies separately analyze the syndromatic (with a childhood onset) and symptomatic (regardless of childhood onset) persistence of ADHD. One epidemiological meta-analysis found the 2020 prevalence of syndromatic ADHD in adults age >60 was 0.77% and the prevalence of symptomatic ADHD was 4.51%, which translates to 7.91 million and 46.36 million affected older adults, respectively.8 Other research has reported higher rates among older adults.6,7,10 The variations among this research may be attributed to the use of different diagnostic tools/criteria, study populations, sampling methods, or DSM versions. Heterogeneity among this research also further supports the idea that the prevalence of ADHD is heavily dependent on how one defines and diagnoses the disorder.

Reasons for late-life ADHD diagnosis

There are many reasons a patient may not be diagnosed with ADHD until they are an older adult.11 In addition to socioeconomic barriers to health care access, members of different ethnic groups exhibit differences in help-seeking behaviors; children may belong to a culture that does not traditionally seek health care even when symptoms are evident.6,9 Therefore, individuals may not receive a diagnosis until adulthood. Some experts have discussed the similarity of ADHD to other neurodevelopmental disorders, such as autism spectrum disorder or social communication disorder, where ADHD symptoms may not manifest until stressors at critical points in life exceed an individual’s capacity to compensate.2

The life transition model contextualizes ADHD as being associated with demand/resource imbalances that come and go throughout life, resulting in variability in the degree of functional impairment ADHD symptoms cause in older adults.2,12 Hypothetically, events in late life—such as the death of a spouse or retirement—can remove essential support structures in the lives of high-functioning individuals with ADHD. As a result, such events surpass these individuals’ ability to cope, resulting in a late-life manifestation of ADHD.

The plausibility of late-onset ADHD

In recent years, many studies identifying ADHD in adults have been published,2,10,12-15 including some that discuss adult ADHD that spontaneously appears without childhood symptoms (ie, late-onset ADHD).2,4,12 Research of late-onset ADHD attracts attention because the data it presents challenge the current rationale that ADHD symptoms should be present before age 12, as defined by DSM-5 criteria. While most reports of late-onset ADHD pertain to younger adults, little evidence exists to reinforce the concept; to date just 1 study has reported cases of late-onset ADHD in older adults (n = 7, age 51 to 59).11 In this study, Sasaki et al11 acknowledged the strong possibility their cases may be late manifestations of long-standing ADHD. Late-onset ADHD is further challenged by findings that 95% of individuals initially diagnosed with late-onset ADHD can be excluded from the diagnosis with further detailed assessment that accounts for co-occurring mental disorders and substance use.16 This suggests false positive cases of late-onset ADHD may be a symptom of narrow clinical assessment that fails to encompass other aspects of a patient’s psychiatric profile, rather than an atypical ADHD presentation.

Comorbidity and psychosocial functioning

ADHD symptoms and diagnosis in older adults are associated with clinically relevant levels of depression and anxiety. The Dutch Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA) examined 1,494 older adults (age 55 to 85) using the Diagnostic Interview for ADHD in Adults version 2.0.10 The 231 individuals identified as having symptoms of ADHD reported clinically relevant levels of depressive and anxiety symptoms. ADHD was significantly associated with these comorbid symptoms.

Continue to: Little is known regarding...

 

 

Little is known regarding the manifestation of symptoms of ADHD in older age and the difficulties these older adults face. Older adults with ADHD are more often divorced and report more loneliness than older adults without this disorder, which suggests loneliness in older age may be more pressing for the older ADHD population.17 ADHD in older adults has also been associated with poor quality-of-life measures, including moderate to severe problems in mobility, self-care, usual activity, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression (Table 114,17).

Common co-occurring symptoms of late-life ADHD

Qualitative research has described a domino effect of a lifetime of living with ADHD. In one American study, older adults with ADHD (N = 24, age 60 to 74) reported experiencing a tangible, accumulated impact from ADHD on their finances and long-term relationships with family, friends, and coworkers.13 Another study utilizing the Dutch LASA data examined how ADHD may impact patient’s lives among participants who were unaware of their diagnosis.18 One-half of patients reported low self-esteem, overstepping boundaries, and feeling different from others. When compared to younger adults with ADHD, older adults report significantly greater impairments in productivity and a worse life outlook.19

Differential diagnosis

When assessing whether an older adult has ADHD, it is important to consider other potential causes of their symptoms (Table 211,15,20-23). The differential diagnosis includes impaired vision and hearing as well as medical illness (vitamin B12 deficiency, hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, hyperparathyroidism, and infectious diseases such as herpes simplex virus or syphilis).11,15,20-23 Neurological causes include brain tumors, traumatic brain injuries, postconcussive syndrome, stroke, and neurocognitive disorders.11,15,20-23 Other potential causes include obstructive sleep apnea, mood disorders, substance use disorders, and medication adverse effects (especially with polypharmacy).11,15,20-23 In this population, other causes are often responsible for “late-manifestation ADHD symptoms.”1,15 Neurocognitive disorders and other psychiatric conditions are especially difficult to differentiate from ADHD.

Differential diagnosis for ADHD symptoms in older adults

In older adults, ADHD symptoms include frontal-executive impairments, inattentiveness, difficulty with organization or multitasking, forgetfulness, and challenges involving activities of daily living or socialization that can appear to be a mild or major neurocognitive disorder (Table 311,24,25). This includes major neuro­cognitive disorder due to Alzheimer’s disease, Lewy body disease, and vascular disease.2,26 However, frontotemporal lobar degeneration is reported to have more symptom overlap with ADHD.21,22,26,27 A way to differentiate between neurocognitive disorders and ADHD in older adults is to consider that patients with neurocognitive disorders often progress to visual hallucinations and more extreme personality changes than would be expected in ADHD.11 Each disease also has its own identifiable characteristics. Extreme changes in memory are often Alzheimer’s disease, personality changes suggest fronto­temporal lobar degeneration, stepwise decline is classic for vascular disease, and parkinsonian features may indicate dementia with Lewy bodies.21 In addition, the onset of ADHD usually occurs in childhood and can be traced throughout the lifespan,2 whereas neurocognitive diseases usually appear for the first time in later life.2,28 There are nuances in the nature of forgetfulness that can distinguish ADHD from neurocognitive disorders. For instance, the forgetfulness in early-onset Alzheimer’s disease involves “the lack of episodic memories,” while in contrast ADHD is thought to be “forgetfulness due to inadvertence.”11 Furthermore, patients with neurocognitive disorders are reported to have more severe symptoms and an inability to explain why, whereas those with ADHD have a steady level of symptoms and can provide a more comprehensive story.24 Two recent studies have shown that weak performance on language tests is more indicative of a neuro­degenerative process than of ADHD.29,30 Research has suggested that if an older adult shows a sudden, acute onset of ADHD-like symptoms, this is most likely reflective of cognitive decline or a mood disorder such as depression.2,15,24

Neuropsychological manifestations of ADHD in older adults

Several other psychiatric conditions share many symptoms with ADHD. Overlapping symptomology between ADHD and mood and anxiety disorders presents challenges.27 Emotional dysregulation is a feature of adult ADHD, and this often causes a mood disorder to be diagnosed without considering other possible explanations.21,22,27,31-34 Features of mania can overlap with ADHD symptoms, including psychomotor agitation, talkativeness, and distractibility.27 Several other disorders also include distractibility, such as depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders.35 Depression and anxiety can be an outcome of untreated ADHD, or can co-occur with ADHD.21-23,27 ADHD can also co-occur with bipolar disorder (BD), substance use disorders, and personality disorders (borderline and antisocial personality disorder) (Figure 121-23,27,35). One suggested method of establishing an appropriate diagnosis is to study the efficacy of the treatment retrospectively. For example, if a patient is presumed to have depression and they do not respond to several selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, this may be undetected ADHD.27 In addition, the argument about the chronicity of the symptoms should also be considered. ADHD symptoms are pervasive whereas BD symptoms are episodic.35 Depression can be chronic; however, there are often discrete major depressive episodes. It is important to have a clear timeline of the patient’s symptoms. Ask about age of onset, because in theory, ADHD is supposed to start in childhood.22 It is sometimes difficult to ascertain this information because many older adults grew up during a time where ADHD was not a recognized diagnosis.21

Overlapping symptomology of ADHD and other psychiatric disorders

Continue to: Diagnosis and workup

 

 

Diagnosis and workup

The key aspects of diagnosing ADHD are the interview based on DSM-5 criteria, exclusion of other diagnoses, and collateral information. Research has shown that clinical interviews and longitudinal family histories provide critical information that can differentiate ADHD from other psychiatric conditions.35 DSM-5 criteria are adjusted for adults: 5 out of 9 criteria for inattention and/or hyperactivity-impulsivity must be fulfilled, as opposed to 6 out of 9 in children age <17.21,31,36 However, no criteria are specific for older adults.37 Since the differential diagnosis involves multiple entities, it is important to follow DSM-5 criteria for ADHD, which include eliminating other conditions that can explain these symptoms.15 Additionally, in DSM-5, the age-of-onset threshold for ADHD diagnosis was increased from 7 and younger to 12 and younger, addressing criticism that the previous cutoff was too restrictive.24,31 The age of onset of childhood symptoms can be challenging to verify in older adults. Older patients can have unreliable memories and their childhood records are not always available.2,20 In this population, childhood symptoms are mainly underreported but sometimes overreported.10,38 However, to establish a diagnosis, the patient should have experienced some symptoms of the disorder within their first 50 years of life, including having impaired functionality in multiple settings.15,26 The goal is to establish the chronicity of this condition to distinguish it from other psychiatric conditions.22 Overall, using DSM-5 criteria without any modifications may lead to underdiagnosis of ADHD in adults.23 At this time, however, DSM-5 remains the main criteria used to make a diagnosis.

While tools to assist in screening and diagnosing ADHD have been validated in adults, none have been validated specifically for older adults.22 Structured diagnostic interviews to diagnose ADHD include39:

  • Adult ADHD Clinical Diagnostic Scale version 1.2
  • ADHD Lifespan Functioning interview
  • Conners’ Adult ADHD Diagnostic interview for DSM-IV
  • Diagnostic Interview for ADHD in Adults version 2.0
  • Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5.

ADHD symptom measures that can be used for screening and to look at treatment response include39:

  • ADHD Rating Scale 5
  • Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale Symptom Checklist
  • Barkley Adult ADHD Rating Scale IV
  • Barkley Quick-Check for Adult ADHD Diagnosis
  • Young ADHD Questionnaire
  • RATE Scales.

Adult ADHD inventories consider problems that adults with ADHD face. These include39:

  • Brown Attention Deficit Disorders Scales—Adult version
  • Conners’ Adult ADHD Rating Scales
  • Wender-Reimherr Adult Attention Deficit Disorder Scale.

Since these scales were not designed for older adults, they may miss nuances in this population.40

Continue to: It can be particularly...

 

 

It can be particularly perplexing to diagnose ADHD in older adults because the other possible causes of the symptoms are vast. During the interview, it is important to ask questions that may rule out other psychiatric, neurologic, and medical conditions.21 Screen for other diagnoses, and include questions about a patient’s sleep history to rule out obstructive sleep apnea.21 To screen for other psychiatric conditions, the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview 5.0.0 may be used.22 Other tools include the Saint Louis University AMSAD screen for depression, the Geriatric Depression Scale, and the Beck Anxiety Inventory.28,41 To screen for cognitive functioning, the Saint Louis University Mental Status Exam, Montreal Cognitive Assessment, or Mini-Mental State Examination can be used.22,28,42,43 Once screening is performed, a physical and neurologic examination is the best next step.26 Additionally, laboratory data and imaging can rule out other conditions; however, these are not routinely performed to diagnose ADHD.

Laboratory tests should include a comprehensive metabolic panel, complete blood count, thyroid-stimulating hormone level, B12/folate level, and possibly a vitamin D level.11,36 These tests cover several conditions that may mimic ADHD. Brain MRI is not routinely recommended for diagnosing ADHD, though it may be useful because some research has found brain structural differences in individuals with ADHD.28,44,45 Neurocognitive disorders have notable MRI findings that distinguish them from ADHD and each other.24 If there is significant concern for neurocognitive disorders, more specific tests can be employed, such as CSF studies, to look for phosphorylated tau and beta amyloid markers.11

Ask about family history (first-degree relative with ADHD) and obtain collateral information to make sure no other diagnoses are overlooked. Family history can help diagnose this disorder in older adults because there is evidence that ADHD runs in families.2,25 This evidence would ideally come from someone who has known the patient their entire life, such as a sibling or parent.24 The collateral information will be especially helpful to discern the chronicity of the patient’s symptoms, which would point toward a diagnosis of ADHD. To summarize (Figure 2):

  • obtain a thorough interview that may be supported by a screening tool
  • rule out other conditions
  • conduct a physical examination
  • obtain laboratory results
  • collect collateral information
  • obtain neuroimaging if necessary.

ADHD workup in older adults

Treatment

ADHD symptoms can be treated with medications and psychotherapy. Research has shown the efficacy of ADHD medications in older adults, demonstrating that treatment leads to better functioning in multiple settings and decreases the risk for developing comorbid psychiatric conditions (mood disorder, substance use disorders).25,27 Symptoms that improve with medication include attention, concentration, self-efficacy, functioning, self-esteem, psychomotor agitation, mood, energy, and procrastination.21,31,46 If a patient with ADHD also has other psychiatric diagnoses, treat the most impairing disorder first.22 This often means mood disorders and substance use disorders must be remedied before ADHD is treated.21

Medication options include stimulants and nonstimulants. First-line treatments are stimulant medications, including methylphenidate, amphetamines, and mixed amphetamine salts.12,22,27,31,35 Stimulants have shown significant efficacy in older adults, although the American Geriatrics Society’s Beers Criteria list stimulants as potentially inappropriate for older adults.33 Adults show significant improvement with methylphenidate.21,23,47 In an observational study, Michielsen et al46 found stimulants were safe and efficacious in older adults if patients are carefully monitored for adverse effects, especially cardiovascular changes. Second-line treatments include the nonstimulant atomoxetine.12,22,27,31 Clonidine and guanfacine are FDA-approved for treating ADHD in children, but not approved for adults.26 There is little evidence for other treatments, such as bupropion.12,22,27 All of these medications have adverse effects, which are especially important to consider in older adults, who experience age-related physiological changes.

Continue to: Medications for ADHD symptoms...

 

 

Medications for ADHD symptoms are thought to act via catecholaminergic mechanisms.21 As a result, adverse effects of stimulants can include headache, appetite suppression, nausea, difficulty sleeping, tremor, blurred vision, agitation, psychosis, increased heart rate, arrhythmia, and hypertension.22,27,32-34 Especially in older adults, adverse effects such as reduced appetite, disrupted sleep, or increased blood pressure or heart rate may be harmful.21,23 Using caffeine or pseudoephedrine can exacerbate these adverse effects.21 Atomoxetine’s adverse effects include appetite suppression, insomnia, dizziness, anxiety, agitation, fatigue, dry mouth, constipation, nausea, vomiting, dyspepsia, and increased heart rate or blood pressure.27,32,35 Genitourinary adverse effects have also been reported, including priapism (rare), decreased libido, and urinary hesitancy and retention.26,32 Before any medication is initiated, it is important to conduct a physical and neurologic examination and a detailed clinical interview.

Before starting medication, as with any medical treatment, conduct a risk vs benefit analysis. Record baseline values for the patient’s heart rate, blood pressure, and weight.23,26,27,31 During the interview, screen for family and personal cardiovascular conditions,27,33 and obtain an electrocardiogram for any patient with cardiovascular risks.23,26,27,31 Once the patient is deemed to be an appropriate candidate for pharmacologic treatment, begin with low doses and titrate the medication slowly until reaching a therapeutic level.23,48

Medications should be combined with psychotherapy (eg, cognitive-behavioral therapy or dialectical behavioral therapy) and other lifestyle changes (exercise, mindfulness, support groups).18,22,23,27,31,49 Psychotherapy can help patients come to terms with receiving an ADHD diagnosis later in life and help with organization and socialization.12,50 Pharmacologic treatments are thought to be helpful with attention challenges and emotional instability.50 Taken together, medications and behavioral interventions can help individuals experience an improved quality of life.

Future directions

Given the relatively recent interest in ADHD in older adults, there are several areas that need further research. For future editions of DSM, it may be prudent to consider establishing ADHD criteria specific to older adults. Research has also shown the need for clear diagnostic and validated tools for older adults.8 Few analyses have been undertaken regarding pharmacotherapy for this population. Randomized controlled clinical trials are needed.23,37,48 More research about the relative utility of psychotherapy and behavioral interventions would also be useful, given their potential to improve the quality of life for older adults with ADHD.

Bottom Line

Although generally thought of as a disorder of childhood, attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has substantial effects in older adults. When the condition is appropriately diagnosed, pharmacologic treatment and psychotherapy are associated with improved quality of life for older patients with ADHD.

Related Resources

Drug Brand Names

Amphetamine/dextroamphetamine • Adderall
Atomoxetine • Straterra
Bupropion • Wellbutrin
Clonidine • Catapres
Guanfacine • Intuniv
Methylphenidate • Ritalin

For many years, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) was thought of as a disorder of childhood; however, it is now increasingly being recognized as a chronic, lifelong disorder that persists into adulthood in approximately two-thirds of patients.1 While our knowledge about ADHD in adults has increased, most research in this population focused on young or middle-aged adults; less is known about ADHD in older adults. Older adults with ADHD may be newly diagnosed at any point in their lives, or not at all.2 Because ADHD may present differently in older adults than in children or young adults, and because it may impair domains of life in different ways, a closer look at late-life ADHD is needed. This article summarizes the literature on the prevalence, impairment, diagnosis, and treatment of ADHD in adults age >60.

Challenges in determining the prevalence

Few studies have examined the age-specific prevalence of ADHD among older adults.3 Compared with childhood ADHD, adult ADHD is relatively neglected in epidemiological studies, largely due to the absence of well-established, validated diagnostic criteria.1,4 Some experts have noted that DSM-5’s ADHD criteria were designed for diagnosing children, and the children-focused symptom threshold may not be useful for adults because ADHD symptoms decline substantially with age.2 One study evaluating DSM-5 ADHD criteria in young adults (N = 4,000, age 18 to 19) found ADHD was better diagnosed when the required number of clinically relevant inattention and hyperactivity symptoms was reduced from 6 to 5 for each category.5 They also found the DSM-5 age-at-onset criterion of symptoms present before age 12 had a significant effect on ADHD prevalence, reducing the rate from 23.7% (95% CI, 22.38 to 25.02) to 5.4% (95% CI, 13.99 to 16.21).5 This suggests that strict usage of DSM-5 criteria may underestimate the prevalence of ADHD in adults, because ADHD symptoms may not be detected in childhood, or self-reporting of childhood ADHD symptoms in older adults may be unreliable due to aging processes that compromise memory and recall. These findings also indicate that fewer ADHD symptoms are needed to impair functioning in older age.

Determining the prevalence of ADHD among older adults is further complicated by individuals who report symptoms consistent with an ADHD diagnosis despite having never received this diagnosis during childhood.6-8 This may be due to the considerable number of children who meet ADHD criteria but do not get a diagnosis due to limited access to health care.9 Thus, many studies separately analyze the syndromatic (with a childhood onset) and symptomatic (regardless of childhood onset) persistence of ADHD. One epidemiological meta-analysis found the 2020 prevalence of syndromatic ADHD in adults age >60 was 0.77% and the prevalence of symptomatic ADHD was 4.51%, which translates to 7.91 million and 46.36 million affected older adults, respectively.8 Other research has reported higher rates among older adults.6,7,10 The variations among this research may be attributed to the use of different diagnostic tools/criteria, study populations, sampling methods, or DSM versions. Heterogeneity among this research also further supports the idea that the prevalence of ADHD is heavily dependent on how one defines and diagnoses the disorder.

Reasons for late-life ADHD diagnosis

There are many reasons a patient may not be diagnosed with ADHD until they are an older adult.11 In addition to socioeconomic barriers to health care access, members of different ethnic groups exhibit differences in help-seeking behaviors; children may belong to a culture that does not traditionally seek health care even when symptoms are evident.6,9 Therefore, individuals may not receive a diagnosis until adulthood. Some experts have discussed the similarity of ADHD to other neurodevelopmental disorders, such as autism spectrum disorder or social communication disorder, where ADHD symptoms may not manifest until stressors at critical points in life exceed an individual’s capacity to compensate.2

The life transition model contextualizes ADHD as being associated with demand/resource imbalances that come and go throughout life, resulting in variability in the degree of functional impairment ADHD symptoms cause in older adults.2,12 Hypothetically, events in late life—such as the death of a spouse or retirement—can remove essential support structures in the lives of high-functioning individuals with ADHD. As a result, such events surpass these individuals’ ability to cope, resulting in a late-life manifestation of ADHD.

The plausibility of late-onset ADHD

In recent years, many studies identifying ADHD in adults have been published,2,10,12-15 including some that discuss adult ADHD that spontaneously appears without childhood symptoms (ie, late-onset ADHD).2,4,12 Research of late-onset ADHD attracts attention because the data it presents challenge the current rationale that ADHD symptoms should be present before age 12, as defined by DSM-5 criteria. While most reports of late-onset ADHD pertain to younger adults, little evidence exists to reinforce the concept; to date just 1 study has reported cases of late-onset ADHD in older adults (n = 7, age 51 to 59).11 In this study, Sasaki et al11 acknowledged the strong possibility their cases may be late manifestations of long-standing ADHD. Late-onset ADHD is further challenged by findings that 95% of individuals initially diagnosed with late-onset ADHD can be excluded from the diagnosis with further detailed assessment that accounts for co-occurring mental disorders and substance use.16 This suggests false positive cases of late-onset ADHD may be a symptom of narrow clinical assessment that fails to encompass other aspects of a patient’s psychiatric profile, rather than an atypical ADHD presentation.

Comorbidity and psychosocial functioning

ADHD symptoms and diagnosis in older adults are associated with clinically relevant levels of depression and anxiety. The Dutch Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA) examined 1,494 older adults (age 55 to 85) using the Diagnostic Interview for ADHD in Adults version 2.0.10 The 231 individuals identified as having symptoms of ADHD reported clinically relevant levels of depressive and anxiety symptoms. ADHD was significantly associated with these comorbid symptoms.

Continue to: Little is known regarding...

 

 

Little is known regarding the manifestation of symptoms of ADHD in older age and the difficulties these older adults face. Older adults with ADHD are more often divorced and report more loneliness than older adults without this disorder, which suggests loneliness in older age may be more pressing for the older ADHD population.17 ADHD in older adults has also been associated with poor quality-of-life measures, including moderate to severe problems in mobility, self-care, usual activity, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression (Table 114,17).

Common co-occurring symptoms of late-life ADHD

Qualitative research has described a domino effect of a lifetime of living with ADHD. In one American study, older adults with ADHD (N = 24, age 60 to 74) reported experiencing a tangible, accumulated impact from ADHD on their finances and long-term relationships with family, friends, and coworkers.13 Another study utilizing the Dutch LASA data examined how ADHD may impact patient’s lives among participants who were unaware of their diagnosis.18 One-half of patients reported low self-esteem, overstepping boundaries, and feeling different from others. When compared to younger adults with ADHD, older adults report significantly greater impairments in productivity and a worse life outlook.19

Differential diagnosis

When assessing whether an older adult has ADHD, it is important to consider other potential causes of their symptoms (Table 211,15,20-23). The differential diagnosis includes impaired vision and hearing as well as medical illness (vitamin B12 deficiency, hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, hyperparathyroidism, and infectious diseases such as herpes simplex virus or syphilis).11,15,20-23 Neurological causes include brain tumors, traumatic brain injuries, postconcussive syndrome, stroke, and neurocognitive disorders.11,15,20-23 Other potential causes include obstructive sleep apnea, mood disorders, substance use disorders, and medication adverse effects (especially with polypharmacy).11,15,20-23 In this population, other causes are often responsible for “late-manifestation ADHD symptoms.”1,15 Neurocognitive disorders and other psychiatric conditions are especially difficult to differentiate from ADHD.

Differential diagnosis for ADHD symptoms in older adults

In older adults, ADHD symptoms include frontal-executive impairments, inattentiveness, difficulty with organization or multitasking, forgetfulness, and challenges involving activities of daily living or socialization that can appear to be a mild or major neurocognitive disorder (Table 311,24,25). This includes major neuro­cognitive disorder due to Alzheimer’s disease, Lewy body disease, and vascular disease.2,26 However, frontotemporal lobar degeneration is reported to have more symptom overlap with ADHD.21,22,26,27 A way to differentiate between neurocognitive disorders and ADHD in older adults is to consider that patients with neurocognitive disorders often progress to visual hallucinations and more extreme personality changes than would be expected in ADHD.11 Each disease also has its own identifiable characteristics. Extreme changes in memory are often Alzheimer’s disease, personality changes suggest fronto­temporal lobar degeneration, stepwise decline is classic for vascular disease, and parkinsonian features may indicate dementia with Lewy bodies.21 In addition, the onset of ADHD usually occurs in childhood and can be traced throughout the lifespan,2 whereas neurocognitive diseases usually appear for the first time in later life.2,28 There are nuances in the nature of forgetfulness that can distinguish ADHD from neurocognitive disorders. For instance, the forgetfulness in early-onset Alzheimer’s disease involves “the lack of episodic memories,” while in contrast ADHD is thought to be “forgetfulness due to inadvertence.”11 Furthermore, patients with neurocognitive disorders are reported to have more severe symptoms and an inability to explain why, whereas those with ADHD have a steady level of symptoms and can provide a more comprehensive story.24 Two recent studies have shown that weak performance on language tests is more indicative of a neuro­degenerative process than of ADHD.29,30 Research has suggested that if an older adult shows a sudden, acute onset of ADHD-like symptoms, this is most likely reflective of cognitive decline or a mood disorder such as depression.2,15,24

Neuropsychological manifestations of ADHD in older adults

Several other psychiatric conditions share many symptoms with ADHD. Overlapping symptomology between ADHD and mood and anxiety disorders presents challenges.27 Emotional dysregulation is a feature of adult ADHD, and this often causes a mood disorder to be diagnosed without considering other possible explanations.21,22,27,31-34 Features of mania can overlap with ADHD symptoms, including psychomotor agitation, talkativeness, and distractibility.27 Several other disorders also include distractibility, such as depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders.35 Depression and anxiety can be an outcome of untreated ADHD, or can co-occur with ADHD.21-23,27 ADHD can also co-occur with bipolar disorder (BD), substance use disorders, and personality disorders (borderline and antisocial personality disorder) (Figure 121-23,27,35). One suggested method of establishing an appropriate diagnosis is to study the efficacy of the treatment retrospectively. For example, if a patient is presumed to have depression and they do not respond to several selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, this may be undetected ADHD.27 In addition, the argument about the chronicity of the symptoms should also be considered. ADHD symptoms are pervasive whereas BD symptoms are episodic.35 Depression can be chronic; however, there are often discrete major depressive episodes. It is important to have a clear timeline of the patient’s symptoms. Ask about age of onset, because in theory, ADHD is supposed to start in childhood.22 It is sometimes difficult to ascertain this information because many older adults grew up during a time where ADHD was not a recognized diagnosis.21

Overlapping symptomology of ADHD and other psychiatric disorders

Continue to: Diagnosis and workup

 

 

Diagnosis and workup

The key aspects of diagnosing ADHD are the interview based on DSM-5 criteria, exclusion of other diagnoses, and collateral information. Research has shown that clinical interviews and longitudinal family histories provide critical information that can differentiate ADHD from other psychiatric conditions.35 DSM-5 criteria are adjusted for adults: 5 out of 9 criteria for inattention and/or hyperactivity-impulsivity must be fulfilled, as opposed to 6 out of 9 in children age <17.21,31,36 However, no criteria are specific for older adults.37 Since the differential diagnosis involves multiple entities, it is important to follow DSM-5 criteria for ADHD, which include eliminating other conditions that can explain these symptoms.15 Additionally, in DSM-5, the age-of-onset threshold for ADHD diagnosis was increased from 7 and younger to 12 and younger, addressing criticism that the previous cutoff was too restrictive.24,31 The age of onset of childhood symptoms can be challenging to verify in older adults. Older patients can have unreliable memories and their childhood records are not always available.2,20 In this population, childhood symptoms are mainly underreported but sometimes overreported.10,38 However, to establish a diagnosis, the patient should have experienced some symptoms of the disorder within their first 50 years of life, including having impaired functionality in multiple settings.15,26 The goal is to establish the chronicity of this condition to distinguish it from other psychiatric conditions.22 Overall, using DSM-5 criteria without any modifications may lead to underdiagnosis of ADHD in adults.23 At this time, however, DSM-5 remains the main criteria used to make a diagnosis.

While tools to assist in screening and diagnosing ADHD have been validated in adults, none have been validated specifically for older adults.22 Structured diagnostic interviews to diagnose ADHD include39:

  • Adult ADHD Clinical Diagnostic Scale version 1.2
  • ADHD Lifespan Functioning interview
  • Conners’ Adult ADHD Diagnostic interview for DSM-IV
  • Diagnostic Interview for ADHD in Adults version 2.0
  • Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5.

ADHD symptom measures that can be used for screening and to look at treatment response include39:

  • ADHD Rating Scale 5
  • Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale Symptom Checklist
  • Barkley Adult ADHD Rating Scale IV
  • Barkley Quick-Check for Adult ADHD Diagnosis
  • Young ADHD Questionnaire
  • RATE Scales.

Adult ADHD inventories consider problems that adults with ADHD face. These include39:

  • Brown Attention Deficit Disorders Scales—Adult version
  • Conners’ Adult ADHD Rating Scales
  • Wender-Reimherr Adult Attention Deficit Disorder Scale.

Since these scales were not designed for older adults, they may miss nuances in this population.40

Continue to: It can be particularly...

 

 

It can be particularly perplexing to diagnose ADHD in older adults because the other possible causes of the symptoms are vast. During the interview, it is important to ask questions that may rule out other psychiatric, neurologic, and medical conditions.21 Screen for other diagnoses, and include questions about a patient’s sleep history to rule out obstructive sleep apnea.21 To screen for other psychiatric conditions, the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview 5.0.0 may be used.22 Other tools include the Saint Louis University AMSAD screen for depression, the Geriatric Depression Scale, and the Beck Anxiety Inventory.28,41 To screen for cognitive functioning, the Saint Louis University Mental Status Exam, Montreal Cognitive Assessment, or Mini-Mental State Examination can be used.22,28,42,43 Once screening is performed, a physical and neurologic examination is the best next step.26 Additionally, laboratory data and imaging can rule out other conditions; however, these are not routinely performed to diagnose ADHD.

Laboratory tests should include a comprehensive metabolic panel, complete blood count, thyroid-stimulating hormone level, B12/folate level, and possibly a vitamin D level.11,36 These tests cover several conditions that may mimic ADHD. Brain MRI is not routinely recommended for diagnosing ADHD, though it may be useful because some research has found brain structural differences in individuals with ADHD.28,44,45 Neurocognitive disorders have notable MRI findings that distinguish them from ADHD and each other.24 If there is significant concern for neurocognitive disorders, more specific tests can be employed, such as CSF studies, to look for phosphorylated tau and beta amyloid markers.11

Ask about family history (first-degree relative with ADHD) and obtain collateral information to make sure no other diagnoses are overlooked. Family history can help diagnose this disorder in older adults because there is evidence that ADHD runs in families.2,25 This evidence would ideally come from someone who has known the patient their entire life, such as a sibling or parent.24 The collateral information will be especially helpful to discern the chronicity of the patient’s symptoms, which would point toward a diagnosis of ADHD. To summarize (Figure 2):

  • obtain a thorough interview that may be supported by a screening tool
  • rule out other conditions
  • conduct a physical examination
  • obtain laboratory results
  • collect collateral information
  • obtain neuroimaging if necessary.

ADHD workup in older adults

Treatment

ADHD symptoms can be treated with medications and psychotherapy. Research has shown the efficacy of ADHD medications in older adults, demonstrating that treatment leads to better functioning in multiple settings and decreases the risk for developing comorbid psychiatric conditions (mood disorder, substance use disorders).25,27 Symptoms that improve with medication include attention, concentration, self-efficacy, functioning, self-esteem, psychomotor agitation, mood, energy, and procrastination.21,31,46 If a patient with ADHD also has other psychiatric diagnoses, treat the most impairing disorder first.22 This often means mood disorders and substance use disorders must be remedied before ADHD is treated.21

Medication options include stimulants and nonstimulants. First-line treatments are stimulant medications, including methylphenidate, amphetamines, and mixed amphetamine salts.12,22,27,31,35 Stimulants have shown significant efficacy in older adults, although the American Geriatrics Society’s Beers Criteria list stimulants as potentially inappropriate for older adults.33 Adults show significant improvement with methylphenidate.21,23,47 In an observational study, Michielsen et al46 found stimulants were safe and efficacious in older adults if patients are carefully monitored for adverse effects, especially cardiovascular changes. Second-line treatments include the nonstimulant atomoxetine.12,22,27,31 Clonidine and guanfacine are FDA-approved for treating ADHD in children, but not approved for adults.26 There is little evidence for other treatments, such as bupropion.12,22,27 All of these medications have adverse effects, which are especially important to consider in older adults, who experience age-related physiological changes.

Continue to: Medications for ADHD symptoms...

 

 

Medications for ADHD symptoms are thought to act via catecholaminergic mechanisms.21 As a result, adverse effects of stimulants can include headache, appetite suppression, nausea, difficulty sleeping, tremor, blurred vision, agitation, psychosis, increased heart rate, arrhythmia, and hypertension.22,27,32-34 Especially in older adults, adverse effects such as reduced appetite, disrupted sleep, or increased blood pressure or heart rate may be harmful.21,23 Using caffeine or pseudoephedrine can exacerbate these adverse effects.21 Atomoxetine’s adverse effects include appetite suppression, insomnia, dizziness, anxiety, agitation, fatigue, dry mouth, constipation, nausea, vomiting, dyspepsia, and increased heart rate or blood pressure.27,32,35 Genitourinary adverse effects have also been reported, including priapism (rare), decreased libido, and urinary hesitancy and retention.26,32 Before any medication is initiated, it is important to conduct a physical and neurologic examination and a detailed clinical interview.

Before starting medication, as with any medical treatment, conduct a risk vs benefit analysis. Record baseline values for the patient’s heart rate, blood pressure, and weight.23,26,27,31 During the interview, screen for family and personal cardiovascular conditions,27,33 and obtain an electrocardiogram for any patient with cardiovascular risks.23,26,27,31 Once the patient is deemed to be an appropriate candidate for pharmacologic treatment, begin with low doses and titrate the medication slowly until reaching a therapeutic level.23,48

Medications should be combined with psychotherapy (eg, cognitive-behavioral therapy or dialectical behavioral therapy) and other lifestyle changes (exercise, mindfulness, support groups).18,22,23,27,31,49 Psychotherapy can help patients come to terms with receiving an ADHD diagnosis later in life and help with organization and socialization.12,50 Pharmacologic treatments are thought to be helpful with attention challenges and emotional instability.50 Taken together, medications and behavioral interventions can help individuals experience an improved quality of life.

Future directions

Given the relatively recent interest in ADHD in older adults, there are several areas that need further research. For future editions of DSM, it may be prudent to consider establishing ADHD criteria specific to older adults. Research has also shown the need for clear diagnostic and validated tools for older adults.8 Few analyses have been undertaken regarding pharmacotherapy for this population. Randomized controlled clinical trials are needed.23,37,48 More research about the relative utility of psychotherapy and behavioral interventions would also be useful, given their potential to improve the quality of life for older adults with ADHD.

Bottom Line

Although generally thought of as a disorder of childhood, attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has substantial effects in older adults. When the condition is appropriately diagnosed, pharmacologic treatment and psychotherapy are associated with improved quality of life for older patients with ADHD.

Related Resources

Drug Brand Names

Amphetamine/dextroamphetamine • Adderall
Atomoxetine • Straterra
Bupropion • Wellbutrin
Clonidine • Catapres
Guanfacine • Intuniv
Methylphenidate • Ritalin

References

1. Sibley MH, Mitchell JT, Becker SP. Method of adult diagnosis influences estimated persistence of childhood ADHD: a systematic review of longitudinal studies. Lancet Psychiatry. 2016;3(12):1157-1165. doi:10.1016/S2215-0366(16)30190-0

2. Sharma MJ, Lavoie S, Callahan BL. A call for research on the validity of the age-of-onset criterion application in older adults being evaluated for ADHD: a review of the literature in clinical and cognitive psychology. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2021;29(7):669-678. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2020.10.016

3. Biederman J, Petty CR, Evans M, et al. How persistent is ADHD? A controlled 10-year follow-up study of boys with ADHD. Psychiatry Res. 2010;177(3):299-304. doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2009.12.010

4. McGough JJ, Barkley RA. Diagnostic controversies in adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Am J Psychiatry. 2004;161(11):1948-1956. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.161.11.1948

5. Matte B, Anselmi L, Salum GA, et al. ADHD in DSM-5: a field trial in a large, representative sample of 18- to 19-year-old adults. Psychol Med. 2015;45(2):361-373. doi:10.1017/S0033291714001470

6. Chung W, Jiang SF, Paksarian D, et al. Trends in the prevalence and incidence of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder among adults and children of different racial and ethnic groups. JAMA Netw Open. 2019;2(11):e1914344. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.14344

7. Guldberg-Kjär T, Johansson B. Old people reporting childhood AD/HD symptoms: retrospectively self-rated AD/HD symptoms in a population-based Swedish sample aged 65-80. Nord J Psychiatry. 2009;63(5):375-382. doi:10.1080/08039480902818238

8. Song P, Zha M, Yang Q, et al. The prevalence of adult attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder: a global systematic review and meta-analysis. J Glob Health. 2021;11:04009. doi:10.7189/jogh.11.04009

9. Russell AE, Ford T, Williams R, et al. The association between socioeconomic disadvantage and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): a systematic review. Child Psychiatry Hum Dev. 2016;47(3):440-458. doi:10.1007/s10578/-015-0578-3

10. Michielsen M, Semeijn E, Comijs HC, et al. Prevalence of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder in older adults in The Netherlands. Br J Psychiatry. 2012;201(4):298-305. doi:10.1192/bjp.bp.111.101196

11. Sasaki H, Jono T, Fukuhara R, et al. Late-manifestation of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in older adults: an observational study. BMC Psychiatry. 2022;22(1):354. doi:10.1186/s12888-022-03978-0

12. Turgay A, Goodman DW, Asherson P, et al. Lifespan persistence of ADHD: the life transition model and its application. J Clin Psychiatry. 2012;73(2):192-201. doi:10.4088/JCP.10m06628

13. Brod M, Schmitt E, Goodwin M, et al. ADHD burden of illness in older adults: a life course perspective. Qual Life Res. 2012;21(5):795-799. doi:10.1007/s1136-011-9981-9

14. Thorell LB, Holst Y, Sjöwall D. Quality of life in older adults with ADHD: links to ADHD symptom levels and executive functioning deficits. Nord J Psychiatry. 2019;73(7):409-416. doi:10.1080/08039488.2019.1646804

15. Sibley MH. Diagnosing ADHD in older adults: critical next steps for research. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2021;29(7):679-681. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2020.11.012

16. Sibley MH, Rohde LA, Swanson JM, et al. Late-onset ADHD reconsidered with comprehensive repeated assessments between ages 10 and 25. Am J Psychiatry. 2018;175(2):140-149. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.2017.17030298

17. Michielsen M, Comijs HC, Aartsen MJ, et al. The relationships between ADHD and social functioning and participation in older adults in a population-based study. J Atten Disord. 2015;19(5):368-379. doi:10.1177/1087054713515748

18. Michielsen M, de Kruif JTCM, Comijs HC, et al. The burden of ADHD in older adults: a qualitative study. J Atten Disord. 2018;22(6):591-600. doi:10.1177/1087054715610001

19. Lensing MB, Zeiner P, Sandvik L, et al. Quality of life in adults aged 50+ with ADHD. J Atten Disord. 2015;19(5):405-413. doi:10.1177/1087054713480035

20. Fischer BL, Gunter-Hunt G, Steinhafel CH, et al. The identification and assessment of late-life ADHD in memory clinics. J Atten Disord. 2012;16(4):333-338. doi:10.1177/1087054711398886

21. Goodman DW, Mitchell S, Rhodewalt L, et al. Clinical presentation, diagnosis and treatment of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in older adults: a review of the evidence and its implications for clinical care. Drugs Aging. 2016;33(1):27-36. doi:10.1007/s40266-015-0327-0

22. Kooij JJ, Michielsen M, Kruithof H, et al. ADHD in old age: a review of the literature and proposal for assessment and treatment. Expert Rev Neurother. 2016;16(12):1371-1381. doi:10.1080/14737175.2016.1204914

23. Torgersen T, Gjervan B, Lensing MB, et al. Optimal management of ADHD in older adults. Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2016;12:79-87. doi:10.2147/NDT.S59271

24. Callahan BL, Bierstone D, Stuss DT, et al. Adult ADHD: risk factor for dementia or phenotypic mimic? Front Aging Neurosci. 2017;9:260. doi:10.3389/fnagi.2017.00260

25. Mendonca F, Sudo FK, Santiago-Bravo G, et al. Mild cognitive impairment or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in older adults? A cross sectional study. Front Psychiatry. 2021;12:737357. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2021.737357

26. De Crescenzo F, Cortese S, Adamo N, et al. Pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment of adults with ADHD: a meta-review. Evid Based Ment Health. 2017;20(1):4-11. doi:10.1136/eb-2016-102415

27. Katzman MA, Bilkey TS, Chokka PR, et al. Adult ADHD and comorbid disorders: clinical implications of a dimensional approach. BMC Psychiatry. 2017;17(1):302. doi:10.1186/s12888-017-1463-3

28. Klein M, Silva MA, Belizario GO, et al. Longitudinal neuropsychological assessment in two elderly adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: case report. Front Psychol. 2019;10:1119. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01119

29. Prentice JL, Schaeffer MJ, Wall AK, et al. A systematic review and comparison of neurocognitive features of late-life attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and dementia with Lewy bodies. J Geriatr Psychiatry Neurol. 2021;34(5):466-481. doi:10.1177/0891988720944251

30. Callahan BL, Ramakrishnan N, Shammi P, et al. Cognitive and neuroimaging profiles of older adults with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder presenting to a memory clinic. J Atten Disord. 2022;26(8):1118-1129. doi:10.1177/10870547211060546

31. Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Nasillo V, Fernández-Aranda, et al. Addressing the lack of studies in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in adults. Expert Rev Neurother. 2014;14(5):553-567. doi:10.1586/14737175.2014.908708

32. Stahl SM. Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology: Prescriber’s Guide. 6th ed. Cambridge University Press; 2017.

33. Latronica JR, Clegg TJ, Tuan WJ, et al. Are amphetamines associated with adverse cardiovascular events among elderly individuals? J Am Board Fam Med. 2021;34(6):1074-1081. doi:10.3122/jabfm.2021.06.210228

34. Garcia-Argibay M, du Rietz E, Lu Y, et al. The role of ADHD genetic risk in mid-to-late life somatic health conditions. Transl Psychiatry. 2022;12(1):152. doi:10.1038/s41398-022-01919-9

35. Jain R, Jain S, Montano CB, Addressing diagnosis and treatment gaps in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Prim Care Companion CNS Disord. 2017;19(5):17nr02153. doi:10.4088/PCC.17nr02153

36. Sasaki H, Jono T, Fukuhara R, et al. Late-onset attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder as a differential diagnosis of dementia: a case report. BMC Psychiatry. 2020;20(1):550. doi:10.1186/s12888-020-02949-7

37. Surman CBH, Goodman DW. Is ADHD a valid diagnosis in older adults? Atten Defic Hyperact Disord. 2017;9(3):161-168. doi:10.1007/s12402-017-0217-x

38. Semeijn EJ, Michielsen M, Comijs HC, et al. Criterion validity of an attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) screening list for screening ADHD in older adults aged 60-94 years. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2013;21(7):631-635. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2012.08.003

39. Ramsay JR. Assessment and monitoring of treatment response in adult ADHD patients: current perspectives. Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2017;13:221-232. doi:10.2147/NDT.S104706

40. Das D, Cherbuin N, Easteal S, et al. Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms and cognitive abilities in the late-life cohort of the PATH through life study. PLoS One. 2014;9(1):e86552. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0086552

41. Kaya D, Isik AT, Usarel C, et al. The Saint Louis University Mental Status Examination is better than the Mini-Mental State Examination to determine the cognitive impairment in Turkish elderly people. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2016;17(4):370.e11-370.e3.7E15. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2015.12.093

42. Michielsen M, Comijs HC, Semeijn EJ, et al. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and personality characteristics in older adults in the general Dutch population. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2014;22(12):1623-1632. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2014.02.005

43. Khoury R, Chakkamparambil B, Chibnall J, et al. Diagnostic accuracy of the SLU AMSAD scale for depression in older adults without dementia. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2020;21(5):665-668. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2019.09.011

44. Çavuşoğlu Ç, Demirkol ME, Tamam L. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in the elderly. Current Approaches in Psychiatry. 2020;12(2):182-194. doi:10.18863/pgy.548052

45. Klein M, Souza-Duran FL, Menezes AKPM, et al. Gray matter volume in elderly adults with ADHD: associations of symptoms and comorbidities with brain structures. J Atten Disord. 2021;25(6):829-838. doi:10.1177/1087054719855683

46. Michielsen M, Kleef D, Bijlenga D, et al. Response and side effects using stimulant medication in older adults with ADHD: an observational archive study. J Atten Disord. 2021;25(12):1712-1719. doi:10.1177/1087054720925884

47. Manor I, Rozen S, Zemishlani Z, et al. When does it end? Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in the middle aged and older populations. Clin Neuropharmacol, 2011;34(4):148-154. doi:10.1097/WNF.0b013e3182206dc1

48. Deshmukh P, Patel D. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and its treatment in geriatrics. Curr Dev Disord Rep. 2020;7(3):79-84.

49. Barkley RA. The important role of executive functioning and self-regulation in ADHD. 2010. Accessed August 10, 2023. https://www.russellbarkley.org/factsheets/ADHD_EF_and_SR.pdf

50. Corbisiero S, Bitto H, Newark P, et al. A comparison of cognitive-behavioral therapy and pharmacotherapy vs. pharmacotherapy alone in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)-a randomized controlled trial. Front Psychiatry. 2018;9:571. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00571

References

1. Sibley MH, Mitchell JT, Becker SP. Method of adult diagnosis influences estimated persistence of childhood ADHD: a systematic review of longitudinal studies. Lancet Psychiatry. 2016;3(12):1157-1165. doi:10.1016/S2215-0366(16)30190-0

2. Sharma MJ, Lavoie S, Callahan BL. A call for research on the validity of the age-of-onset criterion application in older adults being evaluated for ADHD: a review of the literature in clinical and cognitive psychology. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2021;29(7):669-678. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2020.10.016

3. Biederman J, Petty CR, Evans M, et al. How persistent is ADHD? A controlled 10-year follow-up study of boys with ADHD. Psychiatry Res. 2010;177(3):299-304. doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2009.12.010

4. McGough JJ, Barkley RA. Diagnostic controversies in adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Am J Psychiatry. 2004;161(11):1948-1956. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.161.11.1948

5. Matte B, Anselmi L, Salum GA, et al. ADHD in DSM-5: a field trial in a large, representative sample of 18- to 19-year-old adults. Psychol Med. 2015;45(2):361-373. doi:10.1017/S0033291714001470

6. Chung W, Jiang SF, Paksarian D, et al. Trends in the prevalence and incidence of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder among adults and children of different racial and ethnic groups. JAMA Netw Open. 2019;2(11):e1914344. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.14344

7. Guldberg-Kjär T, Johansson B. Old people reporting childhood AD/HD symptoms: retrospectively self-rated AD/HD symptoms in a population-based Swedish sample aged 65-80. Nord J Psychiatry. 2009;63(5):375-382. doi:10.1080/08039480902818238

8. Song P, Zha M, Yang Q, et al. The prevalence of adult attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder: a global systematic review and meta-analysis. J Glob Health. 2021;11:04009. doi:10.7189/jogh.11.04009

9. Russell AE, Ford T, Williams R, et al. The association between socioeconomic disadvantage and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): a systematic review. Child Psychiatry Hum Dev. 2016;47(3):440-458. doi:10.1007/s10578/-015-0578-3

10. Michielsen M, Semeijn E, Comijs HC, et al. Prevalence of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder in older adults in The Netherlands. Br J Psychiatry. 2012;201(4):298-305. doi:10.1192/bjp.bp.111.101196

11. Sasaki H, Jono T, Fukuhara R, et al. Late-manifestation of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in older adults: an observational study. BMC Psychiatry. 2022;22(1):354. doi:10.1186/s12888-022-03978-0

12. Turgay A, Goodman DW, Asherson P, et al. Lifespan persistence of ADHD: the life transition model and its application. J Clin Psychiatry. 2012;73(2):192-201. doi:10.4088/JCP.10m06628

13. Brod M, Schmitt E, Goodwin M, et al. ADHD burden of illness in older adults: a life course perspective. Qual Life Res. 2012;21(5):795-799. doi:10.1007/s1136-011-9981-9

14. Thorell LB, Holst Y, Sjöwall D. Quality of life in older adults with ADHD: links to ADHD symptom levels and executive functioning deficits. Nord J Psychiatry. 2019;73(7):409-416. doi:10.1080/08039488.2019.1646804

15. Sibley MH. Diagnosing ADHD in older adults: critical next steps for research. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2021;29(7):679-681. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2020.11.012

16. Sibley MH, Rohde LA, Swanson JM, et al. Late-onset ADHD reconsidered with comprehensive repeated assessments between ages 10 and 25. Am J Psychiatry. 2018;175(2):140-149. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.2017.17030298

17. Michielsen M, Comijs HC, Aartsen MJ, et al. The relationships between ADHD and social functioning and participation in older adults in a population-based study. J Atten Disord. 2015;19(5):368-379. doi:10.1177/1087054713515748

18. Michielsen M, de Kruif JTCM, Comijs HC, et al. The burden of ADHD in older adults: a qualitative study. J Atten Disord. 2018;22(6):591-600. doi:10.1177/1087054715610001

19. Lensing MB, Zeiner P, Sandvik L, et al. Quality of life in adults aged 50+ with ADHD. J Atten Disord. 2015;19(5):405-413. doi:10.1177/1087054713480035

20. Fischer BL, Gunter-Hunt G, Steinhafel CH, et al. The identification and assessment of late-life ADHD in memory clinics. J Atten Disord. 2012;16(4):333-338. doi:10.1177/1087054711398886

21. Goodman DW, Mitchell S, Rhodewalt L, et al. Clinical presentation, diagnosis and treatment of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in older adults: a review of the evidence and its implications for clinical care. Drugs Aging. 2016;33(1):27-36. doi:10.1007/s40266-015-0327-0

22. Kooij JJ, Michielsen M, Kruithof H, et al. ADHD in old age: a review of the literature and proposal for assessment and treatment. Expert Rev Neurother. 2016;16(12):1371-1381. doi:10.1080/14737175.2016.1204914

23. Torgersen T, Gjervan B, Lensing MB, et al. Optimal management of ADHD in older adults. Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2016;12:79-87. doi:10.2147/NDT.S59271

24. Callahan BL, Bierstone D, Stuss DT, et al. Adult ADHD: risk factor for dementia or phenotypic mimic? Front Aging Neurosci. 2017;9:260. doi:10.3389/fnagi.2017.00260

25. Mendonca F, Sudo FK, Santiago-Bravo G, et al. Mild cognitive impairment or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in older adults? A cross sectional study. Front Psychiatry. 2021;12:737357. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2021.737357

26. De Crescenzo F, Cortese S, Adamo N, et al. Pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment of adults with ADHD: a meta-review. Evid Based Ment Health. 2017;20(1):4-11. doi:10.1136/eb-2016-102415

27. Katzman MA, Bilkey TS, Chokka PR, et al. Adult ADHD and comorbid disorders: clinical implications of a dimensional approach. BMC Psychiatry. 2017;17(1):302. doi:10.1186/s12888-017-1463-3

28. Klein M, Silva MA, Belizario GO, et al. Longitudinal neuropsychological assessment in two elderly adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: case report. Front Psychol. 2019;10:1119. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01119

29. Prentice JL, Schaeffer MJ, Wall AK, et al. A systematic review and comparison of neurocognitive features of late-life attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and dementia with Lewy bodies. J Geriatr Psychiatry Neurol. 2021;34(5):466-481. doi:10.1177/0891988720944251

30. Callahan BL, Ramakrishnan N, Shammi P, et al. Cognitive and neuroimaging profiles of older adults with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder presenting to a memory clinic. J Atten Disord. 2022;26(8):1118-1129. doi:10.1177/10870547211060546

31. Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Nasillo V, Fernández-Aranda, et al. Addressing the lack of studies in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in adults. Expert Rev Neurother. 2014;14(5):553-567. doi:10.1586/14737175.2014.908708

32. Stahl SM. Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology: Prescriber’s Guide. 6th ed. Cambridge University Press; 2017.

33. Latronica JR, Clegg TJ, Tuan WJ, et al. Are amphetamines associated with adverse cardiovascular events among elderly individuals? J Am Board Fam Med. 2021;34(6):1074-1081. doi:10.3122/jabfm.2021.06.210228

34. Garcia-Argibay M, du Rietz E, Lu Y, et al. The role of ADHD genetic risk in mid-to-late life somatic health conditions. Transl Psychiatry. 2022;12(1):152. doi:10.1038/s41398-022-01919-9

35. Jain R, Jain S, Montano CB, Addressing diagnosis and treatment gaps in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Prim Care Companion CNS Disord. 2017;19(5):17nr02153. doi:10.4088/PCC.17nr02153

36. Sasaki H, Jono T, Fukuhara R, et al. Late-onset attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder as a differential diagnosis of dementia: a case report. BMC Psychiatry. 2020;20(1):550. doi:10.1186/s12888-020-02949-7

37. Surman CBH, Goodman DW. Is ADHD a valid diagnosis in older adults? Atten Defic Hyperact Disord. 2017;9(3):161-168. doi:10.1007/s12402-017-0217-x

38. Semeijn EJ, Michielsen M, Comijs HC, et al. Criterion validity of an attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) screening list for screening ADHD in older adults aged 60-94 years. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2013;21(7):631-635. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2012.08.003

39. Ramsay JR. Assessment and monitoring of treatment response in adult ADHD patients: current perspectives. Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2017;13:221-232. doi:10.2147/NDT.S104706

40. Das D, Cherbuin N, Easteal S, et al. Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms and cognitive abilities in the late-life cohort of the PATH through life study. PLoS One. 2014;9(1):e86552. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0086552

41. Kaya D, Isik AT, Usarel C, et al. The Saint Louis University Mental Status Examination is better than the Mini-Mental State Examination to determine the cognitive impairment in Turkish elderly people. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2016;17(4):370.e11-370.e3.7E15. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2015.12.093

42. Michielsen M, Comijs HC, Semeijn EJ, et al. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and personality characteristics in older adults in the general Dutch population. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2014;22(12):1623-1632. doi:10.1016/j.jagp.2014.02.005

43. Khoury R, Chakkamparambil B, Chibnall J, et al. Diagnostic accuracy of the SLU AMSAD scale for depression in older adults without dementia. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2020;21(5):665-668. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2019.09.011

44. Çavuşoğlu Ç, Demirkol ME, Tamam L. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in the elderly. Current Approaches in Psychiatry. 2020;12(2):182-194. doi:10.18863/pgy.548052

45. Klein M, Souza-Duran FL, Menezes AKPM, et al. Gray matter volume in elderly adults with ADHD: associations of symptoms and comorbidities with brain structures. J Atten Disord. 2021;25(6):829-838. doi:10.1177/1087054719855683

46. Michielsen M, Kleef D, Bijlenga D, et al. Response and side effects using stimulant medication in older adults with ADHD: an observational archive study. J Atten Disord. 2021;25(12):1712-1719. doi:10.1177/1087054720925884

47. Manor I, Rozen S, Zemishlani Z, et al. When does it end? Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in the middle aged and older populations. Clin Neuropharmacol, 2011;34(4):148-154. doi:10.1097/WNF.0b013e3182206dc1

48. Deshmukh P, Patel D. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and its treatment in geriatrics. Curr Dev Disord Rep. 2020;7(3):79-84.

49. Barkley RA. The important role of executive functioning and self-regulation in ADHD. 2010. Accessed August 10, 2023. https://www.russellbarkley.org/factsheets/ADHD_EF_and_SR.pdf

50. Corbisiero S, Bitto H, Newark P, et al. A comparison of cognitive-behavioral therapy and pharmacotherapy vs. pharmacotherapy alone in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)-a randomized controlled trial. Front Psychiatry. 2018;9:571. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00571

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Climate change and mental illness: What psychiatrists can do

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Climate change and mental illness: What psychiatrists can do

Hope is engagement with the act of mapping our destinies.” 1

—Valerie Braithwaite

Why should psychiatrists care about climate change and try to mitigate its effects? First, we are tasked by society with managing the psychological and neuropsychiatric sequelae from disasters, which include climate change. The American Psychiatric Association’s position statement on climate change includes it as a legitimate focus for our specialty.2 Second, as physicians, we are morally obligated to do no harm. Since the health care sector contributes significantly to climate change (8.5% of national carbon emissions stem from health care) and causes demonstrable health impacts,3 managing these impacts and decarbonizing the health care industry is morally imperative.4 And third, psychiatric clinicians have transferrable skills that can address fears of climate change, challenge climate change denialism,5 motivate people to adopt more pro-environmental behaviors, and help communities not only endure the emotional impact of climate change but become more psychologically resilient.6

Most psychiatrists, however, did not receive formal training on climate change and the related field of disaster preparedness. For example, Harvard Medical School did not include a course on climate change in their medical student curriculum until 2023.7 In this article, we provide a basic framework of climate change and its impact on mental health, with particular focus on patients with serious mental illness (SMI). We offer concrete steps clinicians can take to prevent or mitigate harm from climate change for their patients, prepare for disasters at the level of individual patient encounters, and strengthen their clinics and communities. We also encourage clinicians to take active leadership roles in their professional organizations to be part of climate solutions, building on the trust patients continue to have in their physicians.8 Even if clinicians do not view climate change concerns under their conceived clinical care mandate, having a working knowledge about it is important because patients, paraprofessional staff, or medical trainees are likely to bring it up.9

Climate change and mental health

Climate change is harmful to human health, including mental health.10 It can impact mental health directly via its impact on brain function and neuropsychiatric sequelae, and indirectly via climate-related disasters leading to acute or chronic stress, losses, and displacement with psychiatric and psychological sequelae (Table 111-29).

Impact of climate change on mental health

Direct impact

The effects of air pollution, heat, infections, and starvation are examples of how climate change directly impacts mental health. Air pollution and brain health are a concern for psychiatry, given the well-described effects of air deterioration on the developing brain.11 In animal models, airborne pollutants lead to widespread neuroinflam­mation and cell loss via a multitude of mechanisms.12 This is consistent with worse cognitive and behavioral functions across a wide range of cognitive domains seen in children exposed to pollution compared to those who grew up in environments with healthy air.13 Even low-level exposure to air pollution increases the risk for later onset of depression, suicide, and anxiety.14 Hippocampal atrophy observed in patients with first-episode psychosis may also be partially attributable to air pollution.15 An association between heat and suicide (and to a lesser extent, aggression) has also been reported.16

Worse physical health (eg, strokes) due to excessive heat can further compound mental health via elevated rates of depression. Data from the United States and Mexico show that for each degree Celsius increase in ambient temperature, suicide rates may increase by approximately 1%.17 A meta-analysis by Frangione et al18 similarly concluded that each degree Celsius increase results in an overall risk ratio of 1.016 (95% CI, 1.012 to 1.019) for deaths by suicide and suicide attempts. Additionally, global warming is shifting the endemic areas for many infectious agents, particularly vector-borne diseases,19 to regions in which they had hitherto been unknown, increasing the risk for future outbreaks and even pandemics.20 These infectious illnesses often carry neuropsychiatric morbidity, with seizures, encephalopathy with incomplete recovery, and psychiatric syndromes occurring in many cases. Crop failure can lead to starvation during pregnancy and childhood, which has wide-ranging consequences for brain development and later physical and psychological health in adults.21,22 Mothers affected by starvation also experience negative impacts on childbearing and childrearing.23

Indirect impact

Climate change’s indirect impact on mental health can stem from the stress of living through a disaster such as an extreme weather event; from losses, including the death of friends and family members; and from becoming temporarily displaced.24 Some climate change–driven disasters can be viewed as slow-moving, such as drought and the rising of sea levels, where displacement becomes permanent. Managing mass migration from internally or externally displaced people who must abandon their communities because of climate change will have significant repercussions for all societies.25 The term “climate refugee” is not (yet) included in the United Nations’ official definition of refugees; it defines refugees as individuals who have fled their countries because of war, violence, or persecution.26 These and other bureaucratic issues can come up when clinicians are trying to help migrants with immigration-related paperwork.

Continue to: As the inevitability of climate change...

 

 

As the inevitability of climate change sinks in, its long-term ramifications have introduced a new lexicon of psychological suffering related to the crisis.27 Common terms for such distress include ecoanxiety (fear of what is happening and will happen with climate change), ecogrief (sadness about the destruction of species and natural habitats), solastalgia28 (the nostalgia an individual feels for emotionally treasured landscapes that have changed), and terrafuria or ecorage (the reaction to betrayal and inaction by governments and leaders).29 Climate-related emotions can lead to pessimism about the future and a nihilistic outlook on an individual’s ability to effect change and have agency over their life’s outcomes.

The categories of direct and indirect impacts are not mutually exclusive. A child may be starving due to weather-related crop failure as the family is forced to move to another country, then have to contend with prejudice and bullying as an immigrant, and later become anxiously preoccupied with climate change and its ability to cause further distress.

Effect on individuals with serious mental illness

Patients with SMI are particularly vulnerable to the impact of climate change. They are less resilient to climate change–related events, such as heat waves or temporary displacement from flooding, both at the personal level due to illness factors (eg, negative symptoms or cognitive impairment) and at the community level due to social factors (eg, weaker social support or poverty).

Recognizing the increased vulnerability to heat waves and preparing for them is particularly important for patients with SMI because they are at an increased risk for heat-related illnesses.30 For example, patients may not appreciate the danger from heat and live in conditions that put them at risk (ie, not having air conditioning in their home or living alone). Their illness alone impairs heat regulation31; patients with depression and anxiety also dissipate heat less effectively.32,33 Additionally, many psychiatric medications, particularly antipsychotics, impair key mechanisms of heat dissipation.34,35 Antipsychotics render organisms more poikilothermic (susceptible to environmental temperature, like cold-blooded animals) and can be anticholinergic, which impedes sweating. A recent analysis of heat-related deaths during a period of extreme and prolonged heat in British Columbia in 2021 affirmed these concerns, reporting that patients with schizophrenia had the highest odds of death during this heat-related event.36

COVID-19 has shown that flexible models of care are needed to prevent disengagement from medical and psychiatric care37 and assure continued treatment with essential medications such as clozapine38 and long-acting injectable antipsychotics39 during periods of social change, as with climate change. While telehealth was critical during the COVID-19 pandemic40 and is here to stay, it alone may be insufficient given the digital divide (patients with SMI may be less likely to have access to or be proficient in the use of digital technologies). The pandemic has shown the importance of public health efforts, including benefits from targeted outreach, with regards to vaccinations for this patient group.41,42Table 2 summarizes things clinicians should consider when preparing patients with SMI for the effects of climate change.

Preparing vulnerable patients with serious mental illness for climate change

Continue to: The psychiatrist's role

 

 

The psychiatrist’s role

There are many ways a psychiatrist can professionally get involved in addressing climate change. Table 343-53 outlines the 3 Ps of climate action (taking actions to mitigate the effects of climate change): personal, patient (and clinic), and political (advocacy).

The 3 Ps of climate action

Personal

Even if clinicians believe climate change is important for their clinical work, they may still feel overwhelmed and unsure what to do in the context of competing responsibilities. A necessary first step is overcoming paralysis from the enormity of the problem, including the need to shift away from an expanding consumption model to environmental sustainability in a short period of time.

A good starting point is to get educated on the facts of climate change and how to discuss it in an office setting as well as in your personal life. A basic principle of climate change communication is that constructive hope (progress achieved despite everything) coupled with constructive doubt (the reality of the threat) can mobilize people towards action, whereas false hope or fatalistic doubt impedes action.43 The importance of optimal public health messaging cannot be overstated; well-meaning campaigns to change behavior can fail if they emphasize the wrong message. For example, in a study examining COVID-19 messaging in >80 countries, Dorison et al44 found that negatively framed messages mostly increased anxiety but had no benefit with regard to shifting people toward desired behaviors. The best public health messages are brief, repeated, and delivered by a trusted person.45 Good messages are targeted to a concrete concern and where action would pay off now and not in some distant future.

In addition, clinicians can learn how to confront climate disavowal and difficult emotions in themselves and even plan to shift to carbon neutrality, such as purchasing carbon offsets or green sources of energy and transportation. They may not be familiar with principles of disaster preparedness or crisis communication.46 Acquiring those professional skills may suggest next steps for action. Being familiar with the challenges and resources for immigrants, including individuals displaced due to climate change, may be necessary.47 Finally, to reduce the risk of burnout, it is important to practice self-care, including strategies to reduce feelings of being overwhelmed.

Patient

In clinical encounters, clinicians can be proactive in helping patients understand their climate-related anxieties around an uncertain future, including identifying barriers to climate action.48Emphasizing that climate action has health benefits for them and their communities now (eg, less polluted air leading to fewer health problems related to pollution) may engage patients unsure about their role in the fight against climate change. This simple message overcomes the human preference for immediate and concrete benefits over investment in long-term gains. Some patients may respond to the suggestion that adopting a plant-based diet is beneficial for their own health as well as for planetary health, given the substantial contribution of animal farming to global warming.49

Continue to: Clinics must prepare for disasters...

 

 

Clinics must prepare for disasters in their communities to prevent disruption of psychiatric care by having an action plan, including the provision of medications. Such action plans should be prioritized for the most likely scenarios in an individual’s setting (eg, heat waves, wildfires, hurricanes, or flooding).

It is important to educate clinic staff and include them in planning for emergencies, because an all-hands approach and buy-in from all team members is critical. Clinicians should review how patients would continue to receive services, particularly medications, in the event of a disaster. In some cases, providing a 90-day medication supply will suffice, while in others (eg, patients receiving long-acting antipsychotics or clozapine) more preparation is necessary. Some events are predictable and can be organized annually, such as clinicians becoming vaccine ambassadors and organizing vaccine campaigns every fall50; winter-related disaster preparation every fall; and heat wave education every spring (leaflets for patients, staff, and family members; review of safety of medications during heat waves). Plan for, monitor, and coordinate medical care and services for climate refugees and other populations that may otherwise delay medical care and impede illness prevention. Finally, support climate refugees, including connecting them to services or providing trauma-informed care.

Political

Some clinicians may feel compelled to become politically active to advocate for changes within the health care system. Two initiatives related to decarbonizing the health care sector are My Green Doctor51 and Health Care Without Harm,52 which offer help in shifting your office, clinic, or hospital towards carbon neutrality.

Climate change unevenly affects people and will continue to exacerbate inequalities in society, including individuals with mental illness.53 To work toward climate justice on behalf of their patients, clinicians could join (or form) climate committees of special interest groups in their professional organizations or setting. Joining like-minded groups working on climate change at the local or national level prevents an omission of a psychiatric voice and counteracts burnout. It is important to stay focused on the root causes of the problem during activism: doing something to reduce fossil fuel use is ultimately most important.54 The concrete goal of reaching the Paris 1.5-degree Celsius climate goal is a critical benchmark against which any other action can be measured.54

Planning for the future

Over the course of history, societies have always faced difficult periods in which they needed to rebuild after natural disasters or self-inflicted catastrophes such as terrorist attacks or wars. Since the advent of the nuclear age, people have lived under the existential threat of nuclear war. The Anthropocene is a proposed geological term that reflects the enormous and possibly disastrous impact human activity has had on our planet.55 While not yet formally adopted, this term has heuristic value, directing attention and reflection to our role and its now undisputed consequences. In the future, historians will debate if the scale of our current climate crisis has been different. It is, however, not controversial that humanity will be faced with the effects of climate change for the foreseeable future.10 Already, even “normal” weather events are fueled by energy in overcharged and altered weather systems due to global warming, leading to weather events ranging from droughts to floods and storms that are more severe, more frequent, and have longer-lasting effects on communities.56

Continue to: As physicians, we are tasked...

 

 

As physicians, we are tasked by society to create and maintain a health care system that addresses the needs of our patients and the communities in which they live. Increasingly, we are forced to contend with an addition to the traditional 5 phases of acute disaster management (prevention, mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery) to manage prolonged or even parallel disasters, where a series of disasters occurs before the community has recovered and healed. We must grapple with a sense of an “extended period of insecurity and instability” (permacrisis) and must better prepare for and prevent the polycrisis (many simultaneous crises) or the metacrisis of our “age of turmoil”57 in which we must limit global warming, mitigate its damage, and increase community resilience to adapt.

Leading by personal example and providing hope may be what some patients need, as the reality of climate change contributes to the general uneasiness about the future and doomsday scenarios to which many fall victim. At the level of professional societies, many are calling for leadership, including from mental health organizations, to bolster the “social climate,” to help us strengthen our emotional resilience and social bonds to better withstand climate change together.58 It is becoming harder to justify standing on the sidelines,59 and it may be better for both our world and a clinician’s own sanity to be engaged in professional and private hopeful action1 to address climate change. Without ecological or planetary health, there can be no mental health.

Bottom Line

Clinicians can prepare their patients for climate-related disruptions and manage the impact climate change has on their mental health. Addressing climate change at clinical and political levels is consistent with the leadership roles and professional ethics clinicians face in daily practice.

Related Resources

Drug Brand Names

Clozapine • Clozaril

References

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2. Ursano RJ, Morganstein JC, Cooper R. Position statement on mental health and climate change. American Psychiatric Association. March 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.psychiatry.org/getattachment/0ce71f37-61a6-44d0-8fcd-c752b7e935fd/Position-Mental-Health-Climate-Change.pdf

3. Eckelman MJ, Huang K, Lagasse R, et al. Health care pollution and public health damage in the United States: an update. Health Aff (Millwood). 2020;39:2071-2079.

4. Dzau VJ, Levine R, Barrett G, et al. Decarbonizing the U.S. health sector - a call to action. N Engl J Med. 2021;385(23):2117-2119. doi:10.1056/NEJMp2115675

5. Haase E, Augustinavicius JH, K. Climate change and psychiatry. In: Tasman A, Riba MB, Alarcón RD, et al, eds. Tasman’s Psychiatry. 5th ed. Springer; 2023.

6. Belkin G. Mental health and the global race to resilience. Psychiatr Times. 2023;40(3):26.

7. Hu SR, Yang JQ. Harvard Medical School will integrate climate change into M.D. curriculum. The Harvard Crimson. February 3, 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2023/2/3/hms-climate-curriculum/#:~:text=The%20new%20climate%20change%20curriculum,in%20arriving%20at%20climate%20solutions

8. Funk C, Gramlich J. Amid coronavirus threat, Americans generally have a high level of trust in medical doctors. Pew Research Center. March 13, 2020. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/03/13/amid-coronavirus-threat-americans-generally-have-a-high-level-of-trust-in-medical-doctors/

9. Coverdale J, Balon R, Beresin EV, et al. Climate change: a call to action for the psychiatric profession. Acad Psychiatry. 2018;42(3):317-323. doi:10.1007/s40596-018-0885-7

10. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. AR6 synthesis report: climate change 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.ipcc.ch/report/sixth-assessment-report-cycle/

11. Perera FP. Multiple threats to child health from fossil fuel combustion: impacts of air pollution and climate change. Environ Health Perspect. 2017;125(2):141-148. doi:10.1289/EHP299

12. Hahad O, Lelieveldz J, Birklein F, et al. Ambient air pollution increases the risk of cerebrovascular and neuropsychiatric disorders through induction of inflammation and oxidative stress. Int J Mol Sci. 2020;21(12):4306. doi:10.3390/ijms21124306

13. Brockmeyer S, D’Angiulli A. How air pollution alters brain development: the role of neuroinflammation. Translational Neurosci. 2016;7(1):24-30. doi:10.1515/tnsci-2016-0005

14. Yang T, Wang J, Huang J, et al. Long-term exposure to multiple ambient air pollutants and association with incident depression and anxiety. JAMA Psychiatry. 2023;80:305-313. doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2022.4812

15. Worthington MA, Petkova E, Freudenreich O, et al. Air pollution and hippocampal atrophy in first episode schizophrenia. Schizophr Res. 2020;218:63-69. doi:10.1016/j.schres.2020.03.001

16. Dumont C, Haase E, Dolber T, et al. Climate change and risk of completed suicide. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2020;208(7):559-565. doi:10.1097/NMD.0000000000001162

17. Burke M, Gonzales F, Bayis P, et al. Higher temperatures increase suicide rates in the United States and Mexico. Nat Climate Change. 2018;8:723-729. doi:10.1038/s41558-018-0222-x

18. Frangione B, Villamizar LAR, Lang JJ, et al. Short-term changes in meteorological conditions and suicide: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Environ Res. 2022;207:112230. doi:10.1016/j.envres.2021.112230

19. Rocklov J, Dubrow R. Climate change: an enduring challenge for vector-borne disease prevention and control. Nat Immunol. 2020;21(5):479-483. doi:10.1038/s41590-020-0648-y

20. Carlson CJ, Albery GF, Merow C, et al. Climate change increases cross-species viral transmission risk. Nature. 2022;607(7919):555-562. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-04788-w

21. Roseboom TJ, Painter RC, van Abeelen AFM, et al. Hungry in the womb: what are the consequences? Lessons from the Dutch famine. Maturitas. 2011;70(2):141-145. doi:10.1016/j.maturitas.2011.06.017

22. Liu Y, Diao L, Xu L. The impact of childhood experience of starvations on the health of older adults: evidence from China. Int J Health Plann Manage. 2021;36(2):515-531. doi:10.1002/hpm.3099

23. Rothschild J, Haase E. The mental health of women and climate change: direct neuropsychiatric impacts and associated psychological concerns. Int J Gynaecol Obstet. 2023;160(2):405-413. doi:10.1002/ijgo.14479

24. Cianconi P, Betro S, Janiri L. The impact of climate change on mental health: a systematic descriptive review. Frontiers Psychiatry. 2020;11:74. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00074

25. World Economic Forum. Climate refugees – the world’s forgotten victims. June 18, 2021. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2021/06/climate-refugees-the-world-s-forgotten-victims

26. Climate Refugees. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.climate-refugees.org/why

27. Pihkala P. Anxiety and the ecological crisis: an analysis of eco-anxiety and climate anxiety. Sustainability. 2020;12(19):7836. doi:10.3390/su12197836

28. Galway LP, Beery T, Jones-Casey K, et al. Mapping the solastalgia literature: a scoping review study. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2019;16(15):2662. doi:10.3390/ijerph16152662

29. Albrecht GA. Earth Emotions. New Words for a New World. Cornell University Press; 2019.

30. Sorensen C, Hess J. Treatment and prevention of heat-related illness. N Engl J Med. 2022;387(15):1404-1413. doi:10.1056/NEJMcp2210623

31. Chong TWH, Castle DJ. Layer upon layer: thermoregulation in schizophrenia. Schizophr Res. 2004;69(2-3):149-157. doi:10.1016/s0920-9964(03)00222-6

32. von Salis S, Ehlert U, Fischer S. Altered experienced thermoregulation in depression--no evidence for an effect of early life stress. Front Psychiatry. 2021;12:620656. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2021.620656

33. Sarchiapone M, Gramaglia C, Iosue M, et al. The association between electrodermal activity (EDA), depression and suicidal behaviour: a systematic review and narrative synthesis. BMC Psychiatry. 2018;18(1):22. doi:10.1186/s12888-017-1551-4

34. Martin-Latry K, Goumy MP, Latry P, et al. Psychotropic drugs use and risk of heat-related hospitalisation. Eur Psychiatry. 2007;22(6):335-338. doi:10.1016/j.eurpsy.2007.03.007

35. Ebi KL, Capon A, Berry P, et al. Hot weather and heat extremes: health risks. Lancet. 2021;398(10301):698-708. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(21)01208-3

36. Lee MJ, McLean KE, Kuo M, et al. Chronic diseases associated with mortality in British Columbia, Canada during the 2021 Western North America extreme heat event. Geohealth. 2023;7(3):e2022GH000729. doi:10.1029/2022GH000729

37. Busch AB, Huskamp HA, Raja P, et al. Disruptions in care for Medicare beneficiaries with severe mental illness during the COVID-19 pandemic. JAMA Netw Open. 2022;5(1):e2145677. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.45677

38. Siskind D, Honer WG, Clark S, et al. Consensus statement on the use of clozapine during the COVID-19 pandemic. J Psychiatry Neurosci. 2020;45(3):222-223. doi:10.1503/jpn.200061

39. MacLaurin SA, Mulligan C, Van Alphen MU, et al. Optimal long-acting injectable antipsychotic management during COVID-19. J Clin Psychiatry. 2021;82(1): 20l13730. doi:10.4088/JCP.20l13730

40. Bartels SJ, Baggett TP, Freudenreich O, et al. COVID-19 emergency reforms in Massachusetts to support behavioral health care and reduce mortality of people with serious mental illness. Psychiatr Serv. 2020;71(10):1078-1081. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.202000244

41. Van Alphen MU, Lim C, Freudenreich O. Mobile vaccine clinics for patients with serious mental illness and health care workers in outpatient mental health clinics. Psychiatr Serv. February 8, 2023. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.20220460

42. Lim C, Van Alphen MU, Maclaurin S, et al. Increasing COVID-19 vaccination rates among patients with serious mental illness: a pilot intervention study. Psychiatr Serv. 2022;73(11):1274-1277. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.202100702

43. Marlon JR, Bloodhart B, Ballew MT, et al. How hope and doubt affect climate change mobilization. Front Commun. May 21, 2019. doi:10.3389/fcomm.2019.00020

44. Dorison CA, Lerner JS, Heller BH, et al. In COVID-19 health messaging, loss framing increases anxiety with little-to-no concomitant benefits: experimental evidence from 84 countries. Affective Sci. 2022;3(3):577-602. doi:10.1007/s42761-022-00128-3

45. Maibach E. Increasing public awareness and facilitating behavior change: two guiding heuristics. George Mason University, Center for Climate Change Communication. September 2015. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.climatechangecommunication.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Maibach-Two-hueristics-September-2015-revised.pdf

46. Koh KA, Raviola G, Stoddard FJ Jr. Psychiatry and crisis communication during COVID-19: a view from the trenches. Psychiatr Serv. 2021;72(5):615. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.202000912

47. Velez G, Adam B, Shadid O, et al. The clock is ticking: are we prepared for mass climate migration? Psychiatr News. March 24, 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://psychnews.psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.pn.2023.04.4.3

48. Ingle HE, Mikulewicz M. Mental health and climate change: tackling invisible injustice. Lancet Planet Health. 2020;4:e128-e130. doi:10.1016/S2542-5196(20)30081-4

49. Shah UA, Merlo G. Personal and planetary health--the connection with dietary choices. JAMA. 2023;329(21):1823-1824. doi:10.1001/jama.2023.6118

50. Lim C, Van Alphen MU, Freudenreich O. Becoming vaccine ambassadors: a new role for psychiatrists. Current Psychiatry. 2021;20(8):10-11,17-21,26-28,38. doi:10.12788/cp.0155

51. My Green Doctor. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://mygreendoctor.org/

52. Healthcare Without Harm. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://noharm.org/

53. Levy BS, Patz JA. Climate change, human rights, and social justice. Ann Glob Health. 2015;81:310-322.

54. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Global warming of 1.5° C 2018. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/

55. Steffen W, Crutzen J, McNeill JR. The Anthropocene: are humans now overwhelming the great forces of nature? Ambio. 2007;36(8):614-621. doi:10.1579/0044-7447(2007)36[614:taahno]2.0.co;2

56. American Meteorological Society. Explaining extreme events from a climate perspective. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.ametsoc.org/ams/index.cfm/publications/bulletin-of-the-american-meteorological-society-bams/explaining-extreme-events-from-a-climate-perspective/

57. Nierenberg AA. Coping in the age of turmoil. Psychiatr Ann. 2022;52(7):263. July 1, 2022. doi:10.3928/23258160-20220701-01

58. Belkin G. Leadership for the social climate. N Engl J Med. 2020;382(21):1975-1977. doi:10.1056/NEJMp2001507

59. Skinner JR. Doctors and climate change: first do no harm. J Paediatr Child Health. 2021;57(11):1754-1758. doi:10.1111/jpc.15658

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Author and Disclosure Information

Oliver Freudenreich, MD, FACLP
Co-Director, Massachusetts General Hospital Psychosis Clinical and Research Program
Director, Massachusetts General Hospital Fellowship in Public and Community Psychiatry
Associate Professor of Psychiatry
Harvard Medical School
Boston, Massachusetts

Katherine A. Koh, MD, MSc
Co-Chair, Disaster Readiness Committee, Massachusetts Psychiatry Society
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry
Harvard Medical School
Boston, Massachusetts

Elizabeth K. Haase, MD
Chair, Climate Committee, Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry
Physician Chief, Carson Tahoe Regional Medical Center Behavioral Health
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
University of Nevada School of Medicine at Reno
Reno, Nevada

Disclosures
Dr. Freudenreich has served as a consultant for Alkermes, the American Psychiatric Association, Janssen, Karuna, Neurocrine, and Vida, received research grants from Alkermes, Janssen, Karuna, and Otsuka, received medical education honoraria from Elsevier and Medscape, and received royalties from Springer Publishing, UpToDate, and Wolters Kluwer. The other authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this article, or with manufacturers of competing products.

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Current Psychiatry - 22(9)
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Author and Disclosure Information

Oliver Freudenreich, MD, FACLP
Co-Director, Massachusetts General Hospital Psychosis Clinical and Research Program
Director, Massachusetts General Hospital Fellowship in Public and Community Psychiatry
Associate Professor of Psychiatry
Harvard Medical School
Boston, Massachusetts

Katherine A. Koh, MD, MSc
Co-Chair, Disaster Readiness Committee, Massachusetts Psychiatry Society
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry
Harvard Medical School
Boston, Massachusetts

Elizabeth K. Haase, MD
Chair, Climate Committee, Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry
Physician Chief, Carson Tahoe Regional Medical Center Behavioral Health
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
University of Nevada School of Medicine at Reno
Reno, Nevada

Disclosures
Dr. Freudenreich has served as a consultant for Alkermes, the American Psychiatric Association, Janssen, Karuna, Neurocrine, and Vida, received research grants from Alkermes, Janssen, Karuna, and Otsuka, received medical education honoraria from Elsevier and Medscape, and received royalties from Springer Publishing, UpToDate, and Wolters Kluwer. The other authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this article, or with manufacturers of competing products.

Author and Disclosure Information

Oliver Freudenreich, MD, FACLP
Co-Director, Massachusetts General Hospital Psychosis Clinical and Research Program
Director, Massachusetts General Hospital Fellowship in Public and Community Psychiatry
Associate Professor of Psychiatry
Harvard Medical School
Boston, Massachusetts

Katherine A. Koh, MD, MSc
Co-Chair, Disaster Readiness Committee, Massachusetts Psychiatry Society
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry
Harvard Medical School
Boston, Massachusetts

Elizabeth K. Haase, MD
Chair, Climate Committee, Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry
Physician Chief, Carson Tahoe Regional Medical Center Behavioral Health
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
University of Nevada School of Medicine at Reno
Reno, Nevada

Disclosures
Dr. Freudenreich has served as a consultant for Alkermes, the American Psychiatric Association, Janssen, Karuna, Neurocrine, and Vida, received research grants from Alkermes, Janssen, Karuna, and Otsuka, received medical education honoraria from Elsevier and Medscape, and received royalties from Springer Publishing, UpToDate, and Wolters Kluwer. The other authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this article, or with manufacturers of competing products.

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Hope is engagement with the act of mapping our destinies.” 1

—Valerie Braithwaite

Why should psychiatrists care about climate change and try to mitigate its effects? First, we are tasked by society with managing the psychological and neuropsychiatric sequelae from disasters, which include climate change. The American Psychiatric Association’s position statement on climate change includes it as a legitimate focus for our specialty.2 Second, as physicians, we are morally obligated to do no harm. Since the health care sector contributes significantly to climate change (8.5% of national carbon emissions stem from health care) and causes demonstrable health impacts,3 managing these impacts and decarbonizing the health care industry is morally imperative.4 And third, psychiatric clinicians have transferrable skills that can address fears of climate change, challenge climate change denialism,5 motivate people to adopt more pro-environmental behaviors, and help communities not only endure the emotional impact of climate change but become more psychologically resilient.6

Most psychiatrists, however, did not receive formal training on climate change and the related field of disaster preparedness. For example, Harvard Medical School did not include a course on climate change in their medical student curriculum until 2023.7 In this article, we provide a basic framework of climate change and its impact on mental health, with particular focus on patients with serious mental illness (SMI). We offer concrete steps clinicians can take to prevent or mitigate harm from climate change for their patients, prepare for disasters at the level of individual patient encounters, and strengthen their clinics and communities. We also encourage clinicians to take active leadership roles in their professional organizations to be part of climate solutions, building on the trust patients continue to have in their physicians.8 Even if clinicians do not view climate change concerns under their conceived clinical care mandate, having a working knowledge about it is important because patients, paraprofessional staff, or medical trainees are likely to bring it up.9

Climate change and mental health

Climate change is harmful to human health, including mental health.10 It can impact mental health directly via its impact on brain function and neuropsychiatric sequelae, and indirectly via climate-related disasters leading to acute or chronic stress, losses, and displacement with psychiatric and psychological sequelae (Table 111-29).

Impact of climate change on mental health

Direct impact

The effects of air pollution, heat, infections, and starvation are examples of how climate change directly impacts mental health. Air pollution and brain health are a concern for psychiatry, given the well-described effects of air deterioration on the developing brain.11 In animal models, airborne pollutants lead to widespread neuroinflam­mation and cell loss via a multitude of mechanisms.12 This is consistent with worse cognitive and behavioral functions across a wide range of cognitive domains seen in children exposed to pollution compared to those who grew up in environments with healthy air.13 Even low-level exposure to air pollution increases the risk for later onset of depression, suicide, and anxiety.14 Hippocampal atrophy observed in patients with first-episode psychosis may also be partially attributable to air pollution.15 An association between heat and suicide (and to a lesser extent, aggression) has also been reported.16

Worse physical health (eg, strokes) due to excessive heat can further compound mental health via elevated rates of depression. Data from the United States and Mexico show that for each degree Celsius increase in ambient temperature, suicide rates may increase by approximately 1%.17 A meta-analysis by Frangione et al18 similarly concluded that each degree Celsius increase results in an overall risk ratio of 1.016 (95% CI, 1.012 to 1.019) for deaths by suicide and suicide attempts. Additionally, global warming is shifting the endemic areas for many infectious agents, particularly vector-borne diseases,19 to regions in which they had hitherto been unknown, increasing the risk for future outbreaks and even pandemics.20 These infectious illnesses often carry neuropsychiatric morbidity, with seizures, encephalopathy with incomplete recovery, and psychiatric syndromes occurring in many cases. Crop failure can lead to starvation during pregnancy and childhood, which has wide-ranging consequences for brain development and later physical and psychological health in adults.21,22 Mothers affected by starvation also experience negative impacts on childbearing and childrearing.23

Indirect impact

Climate change’s indirect impact on mental health can stem from the stress of living through a disaster such as an extreme weather event; from losses, including the death of friends and family members; and from becoming temporarily displaced.24 Some climate change–driven disasters can be viewed as slow-moving, such as drought and the rising of sea levels, where displacement becomes permanent. Managing mass migration from internally or externally displaced people who must abandon their communities because of climate change will have significant repercussions for all societies.25 The term “climate refugee” is not (yet) included in the United Nations’ official definition of refugees; it defines refugees as individuals who have fled their countries because of war, violence, or persecution.26 These and other bureaucratic issues can come up when clinicians are trying to help migrants with immigration-related paperwork.

Continue to: As the inevitability of climate change...

 

 

As the inevitability of climate change sinks in, its long-term ramifications have introduced a new lexicon of psychological suffering related to the crisis.27 Common terms for such distress include ecoanxiety (fear of what is happening and will happen with climate change), ecogrief (sadness about the destruction of species and natural habitats), solastalgia28 (the nostalgia an individual feels for emotionally treasured landscapes that have changed), and terrafuria or ecorage (the reaction to betrayal and inaction by governments and leaders).29 Climate-related emotions can lead to pessimism about the future and a nihilistic outlook on an individual’s ability to effect change and have agency over their life’s outcomes.

The categories of direct and indirect impacts are not mutually exclusive. A child may be starving due to weather-related crop failure as the family is forced to move to another country, then have to contend with prejudice and bullying as an immigrant, and later become anxiously preoccupied with climate change and its ability to cause further distress.

Effect on individuals with serious mental illness

Patients with SMI are particularly vulnerable to the impact of climate change. They are less resilient to climate change–related events, such as heat waves or temporary displacement from flooding, both at the personal level due to illness factors (eg, negative symptoms or cognitive impairment) and at the community level due to social factors (eg, weaker social support or poverty).

Recognizing the increased vulnerability to heat waves and preparing for them is particularly important for patients with SMI because they are at an increased risk for heat-related illnesses.30 For example, patients may not appreciate the danger from heat and live in conditions that put them at risk (ie, not having air conditioning in their home or living alone). Their illness alone impairs heat regulation31; patients with depression and anxiety also dissipate heat less effectively.32,33 Additionally, many psychiatric medications, particularly antipsychotics, impair key mechanisms of heat dissipation.34,35 Antipsychotics render organisms more poikilothermic (susceptible to environmental temperature, like cold-blooded animals) and can be anticholinergic, which impedes sweating. A recent analysis of heat-related deaths during a period of extreme and prolonged heat in British Columbia in 2021 affirmed these concerns, reporting that patients with schizophrenia had the highest odds of death during this heat-related event.36

COVID-19 has shown that flexible models of care are needed to prevent disengagement from medical and psychiatric care37 and assure continued treatment with essential medications such as clozapine38 and long-acting injectable antipsychotics39 during periods of social change, as with climate change. While telehealth was critical during the COVID-19 pandemic40 and is here to stay, it alone may be insufficient given the digital divide (patients with SMI may be less likely to have access to or be proficient in the use of digital technologies). The pandemic has shown the importance of public health efforts, including benefits from targeted outreach, with regards to vaccinations for this patient group.41,42Table 2 summarizes things clinicians should consider when preparing patients with SMI for the effects of climate change.

Preparing vulnerable patients with serious mental illness for climate change

Continue to: The psychiatrist's role

 

 

The psychiatrist’s role

There are many ways a psychiatrist can professionally get involved in addressing climate change. Table 343-53 outlines the 3 Ps of climate action (taking actions to mitigate the effects of climate change): personal, patient (and clinic), and political (advocacy).

The 3 Ps of climate action

Personal

Even if clinicians believe climate change is important for their clinical work, they may still feel overwhelmed and unsure what to do in the context of competing responsibilities. A necessary first step is overcoming paralysis from the enormity of the problem, including the need to shift away from an expanding consumption model to environmental sustainability in a short period of time.

A good starting point is to get educated on the facts of climate change and how to discuss it in an office setting as well as in your personal life. A basic principle of climate change communication is that constructive hope (progress achieved despite everything) coupled with constructive doubt (the reality of the threat) can mobilize people towards action, whereas false hope or fatalistic doubt impedes action.43 The importance of optimal public health messaging cannot be overstated; well-meaning campaigns to change behavior can fail if they emphasize the wrong message. For example, in a study examining COVID-19 messaging in >80 countries, Dorison et al44 found that negatively framed messages mostly increased anxiety but had no benefit with regard to shifting people toward desired behaviors. The best public health messages are brief, repeated, and delivered by a trusted person.45 Good messages are targeted to a concrete concern and where action would pay off now and not in some distant future.

In addition, clinicians can learn how to confront climate disavowal and difficult emotions in themselves and even plan to shift to carbon neutrality, such as purchasing carbon offsets or green sources of energy and transportation. They may not be familiar with principles of disaster preparedness or crisis communication.46 Acquiring those professional skills may suggest next steps for action. Being familiar with the challenges and resources for immigrants, including individuals displaced due to climate change, may be necessary.47 Finally, to reduce the risk of burnout, it is important to practice self-care, including strategies to reduce feelings of being overwhelmed.

Patient

In clinical encounters, clinicians can be proactive in helping patients understand their climate-related anxieties around an uncertain future, including identifying barriers to climate action.48Emphasizing that climate action has health benefits for them and their communities now (eg, less polluted air leading to fewer health problems related to pollution) may engage patients unsure about their role in the fight against climate change. This simple message overcomes the human preference for immediate and concrete benefits over investment in long-term gains. Some patients may respond to the suggestion that adopting a plant-based diet is beneficial for their own health as well as for planetary health, given the substantial contribution of animal farming to global warming.49

Continue to: Clinics must prepare for disasters...

 

 

Clinics must prepare for disasters in their communities to prevent disruption of psychiatric care by having an action plan, including the provision of medications. Such action plans should be prioritized for the most likely scenarios in an individual’s setting (eg, heat waves, wildfires, hurricanes, or flooding).

It is important to educate clinic staff and include them in planning for emergencies, because an all-hands approach and buy-in from all team members is critical. Clinicians should review how patients would continue to receive services, particularly medications, in the event of a disaster. In some cases, providing a 90-day medication supply will suffice, while in others (eg, patients receiving long-acting antipsychotics or clozapine) more preparation is necessary. Some events are predictable and can be organized annually, such as clinicians becoming vaccine ambassadors and organizing vaccine campaigns every fall50; winter-related disaster preparation every fall; and heat wave education every spring (leaflets for patients, staff, and family members; review of safety of medications during heat waves). Plan for, monitor, and coordinate medical care and services for climate refugees and other populations that may otherwise delay medical care and impede illness prevention. Finally, support climate refugees, including connecting them to services or providing trauma-informed care.

Political

Some clinicians may feel compelled to become politically active to advocate for changes within the health care system. Two initiatives related to decarbonizing the health care sector are My Green Doctor51 and Health Care Without Harm,52 which offer help in shifting your office, clinic, or hospital towards carbon neutrality.

Climate change unevenly affects people and will continue to exacerbate inequalities in society, including individuals with mental illness.53 To work toward climate justice on behalf of their patients, clinicians could join (or form) climate committees of special interest groups in their professional organizations or setting. Joining like-minded groups working on climate change at the local or national level prevents an omission of a psychiatric voice and counteracts burnout. It is important to stay focused on the root causes of the problem during activism: doing something to reduce fossil fuel use is ultimately most important.54 The concrete goal of reaching the Paris 1.5-degree Celsius climate goal is a critical benchmark against which any other action can be measured.54

Planning for the future

Over the course of history, societies have always faced difficult periods in which they needed to rebuild after natural disasters or self-inflicted catastrophes such as terrorist attacks or wars. Since the advent of the nuclear age, people have lived under the existential threat of nuclear war. The Anthropocene is a proposed geological term that reflects the enormous and possibly disastrous impact human activity has had on our planet.55 While not yet formally adopted, this term has heuristic value, directing attention and reflection to our role and its now undisputed consequences. In the future, historians will debate if the scale of our current climate crisis has been different. It is, however, not controversial that humanity will be faced with the effects of climate change for the foreseeable future.10 Already, even “normal” weather events are fueled by energy in overcharged and altered weather systems due to global warming, leading to weather events ranging from droughts to floods and storms that are more severe, more frequent, and have longer-lasting effects on communities.56

Continue to: As physicians, we are tasked...

 

 

As physicians, we are tasked by society to create and maintain a health care system that addresses the needs of our patients and the communities in which they live. Increasingly, we are forced to contend with an addition to the traditional 5 phases of acute disaster management (prevention, mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery) to manage prolonged or even parallel disasters, where a series of disasters occurs before the community has recovered and healed. We must grapple with a sense of an “extended period of insecurity and instability” (permacrisis) and must better prepare for and prevent the polycrisis (many simultaneous crises) or the metacrisis of our “age of turmoil”57 in which we must limit global warming, mitigate its damage, and increase community resilience to adapt.

Leading by personal example and providing hope may be what some patients need, as the reality of climate change contributes to the general uneasiness about the future and doomsday scenarios to which many fall victim. At the level of professional societies, many are calling for leadership, including from mental health organizations, to bolster the “social climate,” to help us strengthen our emotional resilience and social bonds to better withstand climate change together.58 It is becoming harder to justify standing on the sidelines,59 and it may be better for both our world and a clinician’s own sanity to be engaged in professional and private hopeful action1 to address climate change. Without ecological or planetary health, there can be no mental health.

Bottom Line

Clinicians can prepare their patients for climate-related disruptions and manage the impact climate change has on their mental health. Addressing climate change at clinical and political levels is consistent with the leadership roles and professional ethics clinicians face in daily practice.

Related Resources

Drug Brand Names

Clozapine • Clozaril

Hope is engagement with the act of mapping our destinies.” 1

—Valerie Braithwaite

Why should psychiatrists care about climate change and try to mitigate its effects? First, we are tasked by society with managing the psychological and neuropsychiatric sequelae from disasters, which include climate change. The American Psychiatric Association’s position statement on climate change includes it as a legitimate focus for our specialty.2 Second, as physicians, we are morally obligated to do no harm. Since the health care sector contributes significantly to climate change (8.5% of national carbon emissions stem from health care) and causes demonstrable health impacts,3 managing these impacts and decarbonizing the health care industry is morally imperative.4 And third, psychiatric clinicians have transferrable skills that can address fears of climate change, challenge climate change denialism,5 motivate people to adopt more pro-environmental behaviors, and help communities not only endure the emotional impact of climate change but become more psychologically resilient.6

Most psychiatrists, however, did not receive formal training on climate change and the related field of disaster preparedness. For example, Harvard Medical School did not include a course on climate change in their medical student curriculum until 2023.7 In this article, we provide a basic framework of climate change and its impact on mental health, with particular focus on patients with serious mental illness (SMI). We offer concrete steps clinicians can take to prevent or mitigate harm from climate change for their patients, prepare for disasters at the level of individual patient encounters, and strengthen their clinics and communities. We also encourage clinicians to take active leadership roles in their professional organizations to be part of climate solutions, building on the trust patients continue to have in their physicians.8 Even if clinicians do not view climate change concerns under their conceived clinical care mandate, having a working knowledge about it is important because patients, paraprofessional staff, or medical trainees are likely to bring it up.9

Climate change and mental health

Climate change is harmful to human health, including mental health.10 It can impact mental health directly via its impact on brain function and neuropsychiatric sequelae, and indirectly via climate-related disasters leading to acute or chronic stress, losses, and displacement with psychiatric and psychological sequelae (Table 111-29).

Impact of climate change on mental health

Direct impact

The effects of air pollution, heat, infections, and starvation are examples of how climate change directly impacts mental health. Air pollution and brain health are a concern for psychiatry, given the well-described effects of air deterioration on the developing brain.11 In animal models, airborne pollutants lead to widespread neuroinflam­mation and cell loss via a multitude of mechanisms.12 This is consistent with worse cognitive and behavioral functions across a wide range of cognitive domains seen in children exposed to pollution compared to those who grew up in environments with healthy air.13 Even low-level exposure to air pollution increases the risk for later onset of depression, suicide, and anxiety.14 Hippocampal atrophy observed in patients with first-episode psychosis may also be partially attributable to air pollution.15 An association between heat and suicide (and to a lesser extent, aggression) has also been reported.16

Worse physical health (eg, strokes) due to excessive heat can further compound mental health via elevated rates of depression. Data from the United States and Mexico show that for each degree Celsius increase in ambient temperature, suicide rates may increase by approximately 1%.17 A meta-analysis by Frangione et al18 similarly concluded that each degree Celsius increase results in an overall risk ratio of 1.016 (95% CI, 1.012 to 1.019) for deaths by suicide and suicide attempts. Additionally, global warming is shifting the endemic areas for many infectious agents, particularly vector-borne diseases,19 to regions in which they had hitherto been unknown, increasing the risk for future outbreaks and even pandemics.20 These infectious illnesses often carry neuropsychiatric morbidity, with seizures, encephalopathy with incomplete recovery, and psychiatric syndromes occurring in many cases. Crop failure can lead to starvation during pregnancy and childhood, which has wide-ranging consequences for brain development and later physical and psychological health in adults.21,22 Mothers affected by starvation also experience negative impacts on childbearing and childrearing.23

Indirect impact

Climate change’s indirect impact on mental health can stem from the stress of living through a disaster such as an extreme weather event; from losses, including the death of friends and family members; and from becoming temporarily displaced.24 Some climate change–driven disasters can be viewed as slow-moving, such as drought and the rising of sea levels, where displacement becomes permanent. Managing mass migration from internally or externally displaced people who must abandon their communities because of climate change will have significant repercussions for all societies.25 The term “climate refugee” is not (yet) included in the United Nations’ official definition of refugees; it defines refugees as individuals who have fled their countries because of war, violence, or persecution.26 These and other bureaucratic issues can come up when clinicians are trying to help migrants with immigration-related paperwork.

Continue to: As the inevitability of climate change...

 

 

As the inevitability of climate change sinks in, its long-term ramifications have introduced a new lexicon of psychological suffering related to the crisis.27 Common terms for such distress include ecoanxiety (fear of what is happening and will happen with climate change), ecogrief (sadness about the destruction of species and natural habitats), solastalgia28 (the nostalgia an individual feels for emotionally treasured landscapes that have changed), and terrafuria or ecorage (the reaction to betrayal and inaction by governments and leaders).29 Climate-related emotions can lead to pessimism about the future and a nihilistic outlook on an individual’s ability to effect change and have agency over their life’s outcomes.

The categories of direct and indirect impacts are not mutually exclusive. A child may be starving due to weather-related crop failure as the family is forced to move to another country, then have to contend with prejudice and bullying as an immigrant, and later become anxiously preoccupied with climate change and its ability to cause further distress.

Effect on individuals with serious mental illness

Patients with SMI are particularly vulnerable to the impact of climate change. They are less resilient to climate change–related events, such as heat waves or temporary displacement from flooding, both at the personal level due to illness factors (eg, negative symptoms or cognitive impairment) and at the community level due to social factors (eg, weaker social support or poverty).

Recognizing the increased vulnerability to heat waves and preparing for them is particularly important for patients with SMI because they are at an increased risk for heat-related illnesses.30 For example, patients may not appreciate the danger from heat and live in conditions that put them at risk (ie, not having air conditioning in their home or living alone). Their illness alone impairs heat regulation31; patients with depression and anxiety also dissipate heat less effectively.32,33 Additionally, many psychiatric medications, particularly antipsychotics, impair key mechanisms of heat dissipation.34,35 Antipsychotics render organisms more poikilothermic (susceptible to environmental temperature, like cold-blooded animals) and can be anticholinergic, which impedes sweating. A recent analysis of heat-related deaths during a period of extreme and prolonged heat in British Columbia in 2021 affirmed these concerns, reporting that patients with schizophrenia had the highest odds of death during this heat-related event.36

COVID-19 has shown that flexible models of care are needed to prevent disengagement from medical and psychiatric care37 and assure continued treatment with essential medications such as clozapine38 and long-acting injectable antipsychotics39 during periods of social change, as with climate change. While telehealth was critical during the COVID-19 pandemic40 and is here to stay, it alone may be insufficient given the digital divide (patients with SMI may be less likely to have access to or be proficient in the use of digital technologies). The pandemic has shown the importance of public health efforts, including benefits from targeted outreach, with regards to vaccinations for this patient group.41,42Table 2 summarizes things clinicians should consider when preparing patients with SMI for the effects of climate change.

Preparing vulnerable patients with serious mental illness for climate change

Continue to: The psychiatrist's role

 

 

The psychiatrist’s role

There are many ways a psychiatrist can professionally get involved in addressing climate change. Table 343-53 outlines the 3 Ps of climate action (taking actions to mitigate the effects of climate change): personal, patient (and clinic), and political (advocacy).

The 3 Ps of climate action

Personal

Even if clinicians believe climate change is important for their clinical work, they may still feel overwhelmed and unsure what to do in the context of competing responsibilities. A necessary first step is overcoming paralysis from the enormity of the problem, including the need to shift away from an expanding consumption model to environmental sustainability in a short period of time.

A good starting point is to get educated on the facts of climate change and how to discuss it in an office setting as well as in your personal life. A basic principle of climate change communication is that constructive hope (progress achieved despite everything) coupled with constructive doubt (the reality of the threat) can mobilize people towards action, whereas false hope or fatalistic doubt impedes action.43 The importance of optimal public health messaging cannot be overstated; well-meaning campaigns to change behavior can fail if they emphasize the wrong message. For example, in a study examining COVID-19 messaging in >80 countries, Dorison et al44 found that negatively framed messages mostly increased anxiety but had no benefit with regard to shifting people toward desired behaviors. The best public health messages are brief, repeated, and delivered by a trusted person.45 Good messages are targeted to a concrete concern and where action would pay off now and not in some distant future.

In addition, clinicians can learn how to confront climate disavowal and difficult emotions in themselves and even plan to shift to carbon neutrality, such as purchasing carbon offsets or green sources of energy and transportation. They may not be familiar with principles of disaster preparedness or crisis communication.46 Acquiring those professional skills may suggest next steps for action. Being familiar with the challenges and resources for immigrants, including individuals displaced due to climate change, may be necessary.47 Finally, to reduce the risk of burnout, it is important to practice self-care, including strategies to reduce feelings of being overwhelmed.

Patient

In clinical encounters, clinicians can be proactive in helping patients understand their climate-related anxieties around an uncertain future, including identifying barriers to climate action.48Emphasizing that climate action has health benefits for them and their communities now (eg, less polluted air leading to fewer health problems related to pollution) may engage patients unsure about their role in the fight against climate change. This simple message overcomes the human preference for immediate and concrete benefits over investment in long-term gains. Some patients may respond to the suggestion that adopting a plant-based diet is beneficial for their own health as well as for planetary health, given the substantial contribution of animal farming to global warming.49

Continue to: Clinics must prepare for disasters...

 

 

Clinics must prepare for disasters in their communities to prevent disruption of psychiatric care by having an action plan, including the provision of medications. Such action plans should be prioritized for the most likely scenarios in an individual’s setting (eg, heat waves, wildfires, hurricanes, or flooding).

It is important to educate clinic staff and include them in planning for emergencies, because an all-hands approach and buy-in from all team members is critical. Clinicians should review how patients would continue to receive services, particularly medications, in the event of a disaster. In some cases, providing a 90-day medication supply will suffice, while in others (eg, patients receiving long-acting antipsychotics or clozapine) more preparation is necessary. Some events are predictable and can be organized annually, such as clinicians becoming vaccine ambassadors and organizing vaccine campaigns every fall50; winter-related disaster preparation every fall; and heat wave education every spring (leaflets for patients, staff, and family members; review of safety of medications during heat waves). Plan for, monitor, and coordinate medical care and services for climate refugees and other populations that may otherwise delay medical care and impede illness prevention. Finally, support climate refugees, including connecting them to services or providing trauma-informed care.

Political

Some clinicians may feel compelled to become politically active to advocate for changes within the health care system. Two initiatives related to decarbonizing the health care sector are My Green Doctor51 and Health Care Without Harm,52 which offer help in shifting your office, clinic, or hospital towards carbon neutrality.

Climate change unevenly affects people and will continue to exacerbate inequalities in society, including individuals with mental illness.53 To work toward climate justice on behalf of their patients, clinicians could join (or form) climate committees of special interest groups in their professional organizations or setting. Joining like-minded groups working on climate change at the local or national level prevents an omission of a psychiatric voice and counteracts burnout. It is important to stay focused on the root causes of the problem during activism: doing something to reduce fossil fuel use is ultimately most important.54 The concrete goal of reaching the Paris 1.5-degree Celsius climate goal is a critical benchmark against which any other action can be measured.54

Planning for the future

Over the course of history, societies have always faced difficult periods in which they needed to rebuild after natural disasters or self-inflicted catastrophes such as terrorist attacks or wars. Since the advent of the nuclear age, people have lived under the existential threat of nuclear war. The Anthropocene is a proposed geological term that reflects the enormous and possibly disastrous impact human activity has had on our planet.55 While not yet formally adopted, this term has heuristic value, directing attention and reflection to our role and its now undisputed consequences. In the future, historians will debate if the scale of our current climate crisis has been different. It is, however, not controversial that humanity will be faced with the effects of climate change for the foreseeable future.10 Already, even “normal” weather events are fueled by energy in overcharged and altered weather systems due to global warming, leading to weather events ranging from droughts to floods and storms that are more severe, more frequent, and have longer-lasting effects on communities.56

Continue to: As physicians, we are tasked...

 

 

As physicians, we are tasked by society to create and maintain a health care system that addresses the needs of our patients and the communities in which they live. Increasingly, we are forced to contend with an addition to the traditional 5 phases of acute disaster management (prevention, mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery) to manage prolonged or even parallel disasters, where a series of disasters occurs before the community has recovered and healed. We must grapple with a sense of an “extended period of insecurity and instability” (permacrisis) and must better prepare for and prevent the polycrisis (many simultaneous crises) or the metacrisis of our “age of turmoil”57 in which we must limit global warming, mitigate its damage, and increase community resilience to adapt.

Leading by personal example and providing hope may be what some patients need, as the reality of climate change contributes to the general uneasiness about the future and doomsday scenarios to which many fall victim. At the level of professional societies, many are calling for leadership, including from mental health organizations, to bolster the “social climate,” to help us strengthen our emotional resilience and social bonds to better withstand climate change together.58 It is becoming harder to justify standing on the sidelines,59 and it may be better for both our world and a clinician’s own sanity to be engaged in professional and private hopeful action1 to address climate change. Without ecological or planetary health, there can be no mental health.

Bottom Line

Clinicians can prepare their patients for climate-related disruptions and manage the impact climate change has on their mental health. Addressing climate change at clinical and political levels is consistent with the leadership roles and professional ethics clinicians face in daily practice.

Related Resources

Drug Brand Names

Clozapine • Clozaril

References

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2. Ursano RJ, Morganstein JC, Cooper R. Position statement on mental health and climate change. American Psychiatric Association. March 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.psychiatry.org/getattachment/0ce71f37-61a6-44d0-8fcd-c752b7e935fd/Position-Mental-Health-Climate-Change.pdf

3. Eckelman MJ, Huang K, Lagasse R, et al. Health care pollution and public health damage in the United States: an update. Health Aff (Millwood). 2020;39:2071-2079.

4. Dzau VJ, Levine R, Barrett G, et al. Decarbonizing the U.S. health sector - a call to action. N Engl J Med. 2021;385(23):2117-2119. doi:10.1056/NEJMp2115675

5. Haase E, Augustinavicius JH, K. Climate change and psychiatry. In: Tasman A, Riba MB, Alarcón RD, et al, eds. Tasman’s Psychiatry. 5th ed. Springer; 2023.

6. Belkin G. Mental health and the global race to resilience. Psychiatr Times. 2023;40(3):26.

7. Hu SR, Yang JQ. Harvard Medical School will integrate climate change into M.D. curriculum. The Harvard Crimson. February 3, 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2023/2/3/hms-climate-curriculum/#:~:text=The%20new%20climate%20change%20curriculum,in%20arriving%20at%20climate%20solutions

8. Funk C, Gramlich J. Amid coronavirus threat, Americans generally have a high level of trust in medical doctors. Pew Research Center. March 13, 2020. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/03/13/amid-coronavirus-threat-americans-generally-have-a-high-level-of-trust-in-medical-doctors/

9. Coverdale J, Balon R, Beresin EV, et al. Climate change: a call to action for the psychiatric profession. Acad Psychiatry. 2018;42(3):317-323. doi:10.1007/s40596-018-0885-7

10. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. AR6 synthesis report: climate change 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.ipcc.ch/report/sixth-assessment-report-cycle/

11. Perera FP. Multiple threats to child health from fossil fuel combustion: impacts of air pollution and climate change. Environ Health Perspect. 2017;125(2):141-148. doi:10.1289/EHP299

12. Hahad O, Lelieveldz J, Birklein F, et al. Ambient air pollution increases the risk of cerebrovascular and neuropsychiatric disorders through induction of inflammation and oxidative stress. Int J Mol Sci. 2020;21(12):4306. doi:10.3390/ijms21124306

13. Brockmeyer S, D’Angiulli A. How air pollution alters brain development: the role of neuroinflammation. Translational Neurosci. 2016;7(1):24-30. doi:10.1515/tnsci-2016-0005

14. Yang T, Wang J, Huang J, et al. Long-term exposure to multiple ambient air pollutants and association with incident depression and anxiety. JAMA Psychiatry. 2023;80:305-313. doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2022.4812

15. Worthington MA, Petkova E, Freudenreich O, et al. Air pollution and hippocampal atrophy in first episode schizophrenia. Schizophr Res. 2020;218:63-69. doi:10.1016/j.schres.2020.03.001

16. Dumont C, Haase E, Dolber T, et al. Climate change and risk of completed suicide. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2020;208(7):559-565. doi:10.1097/NMD.0000000000001162

17. Burke M, Gonzales F, Bayis P, et al. Higher temperatures increase suicide rates in the United States and Mexico. Nat Climate Change. 2018;8:723-729. doi:10.1038/s41558-018-0222-x

18. Frangione B, Villamizar LAR, Lang JJ, et al. Short-term changes in meteorological conditions and suicide: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Environ Res. 2022;207:112230. doi:10.1016/j.envres.2021.112230

19. Rocklov J, Dubrow R. Climate change: an enduring challenge for vector-borne disease prevention and control. Nat Immunol. 2020;21(5):479-483. doi:10.1038/s41590-020-0648-y

20. Carlson CJ, Albery GF, Merow C, et al. Climate change increases cross-species viral transmission risk. Nature. 2022;607(7919):555-562. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-04788-w

21. Roseboom TJ, Painter RC, van Abeelen AFM, et al. Hungry in the womb: what are the consequences? Lessons from the Dutch famine. Maturitas. 2011;70(2):141-145. doi:10.1016/j.maturitas.2011.06.017

22. Liu Y, Diao L, Xu L. The impact of childhood experience of starvations on the health of older adults: evidence from China. Int J Health Plann Manage. 2021;36(2):515-531. doi:10.1002/hpm.3099

23. Rothschild J, Haase E. The mental health of women and climate change: direct neuropsychiatric impacts and associated psychological concerns. Int J Gynaecol Obstet. 2023;160(2):405-413. doi:10.1002/ijgo.14479

24. Cianconi P, Betro S, Janiri L. The impact of climate change on mental health: a systematic descriptive review. Frontiers Psychiatry. 2020;11:74. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00074

25. World Economic Forum. Climate refugees – the world’s forgotten victims. June 18, 2021. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2021/06/climate-refugees-the-world-s-forgotten-victims

26. Climate Refugees. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.climate-refugees.org/why

27. Pihkala P. Anxiety and the ecological crisis: an analysis of eco-anxiety and climate anxiety. Sustainability. 2020;12(19):7836. doi:10.3390/su12197836

28. Galway LP, Beery T, Jones-Casey K, et al. Mapping the solastalgia literature: a scoping review study. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2019;16(15):2662. doi:10.3390/ijerph16152662

29. Albrecht GA. Earth Emotions. New Words for a New World. Cornell University Press; 2019.

30. Sorensen C, Hess J. Treatment and prevention of heat-related illness. N Engl J Med. 2022;387(15):1404-1413. doi:10.1056/NEJMcp2210623

31. Chong TWH, Castle DJ. Layer upon layer: thermoregulation in schizophrenia. Schizophr Res. 2004;69(2-3):149-157. doi:10.1016/s0920-9964(03)00222-6

32. von Salis S, Ehlert U, Fischer S. Altered experienced thermoregulation in depression--no evidence for an effect of early life stress. Front Psychiatry. 2021;12:620656. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2021.620656

33. Sarchiapone M, Gramaglia C, Iosue M, et al. The association between electrodermal activity (EDA), depression and suicidal behaviour: a systematic review and narrative synthesis. BMC Psychiatry. 2018;18(1):22. doi:10.1186/s12888-017-1551-4

34. Martin-Latry K, Goumy MP, Latry P, et al. Psychotropic drugs use and risk of heat-related hospitalisation. Eur Psychiatry. 2007;22(6):335-338. doi:10.1016/j.eurpsy.2007.03.007

35. Ebi KL, Capon A, Berry P, et al. Hot weather and heat extremes: health risks. Lancet. 2021;398(10301):698-708. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(21)01208-3

36. Lee MJ, McLean KE, Kuo M, et al. Chronic diseases associated with mortality in British Columbia, Canada during the 2021 Western North America extreme heat event. Geohealth. 2023;7(3):e2022GH000729. doi:10.1029/2022GH000729

37. Busch AB, Huskamp HA, Raja P, et al. Disruptions in care for Medicare beneficiaries with severe mental illness during the COVID-19 pandemic. JAMA Netw Open. 2022;5(1):e2145677. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.45677

38. Siskind D, Honer WG, Clark S, et al. Consensus statement on the use of clozapine during the COVID-19 pandemic. J Psychiatry Neurosci. 2020;45(3):222-223. doi:10.1503/jpn.200061

39. MacLaurin SA, Mulligan C, Van Alphen MU, et al. Optimal long-acting injectable antipsychotic management during COVID-19. J Clin Psychiatry. 2021;82(1): 20l13730. doi:10.4088/JCP.20l13730

40. Bartels SJ, Baggett TP, Freudenreich O, et al. COVID-19 emergency reforms in Massachusetts to support behavioral health care and reduce mortality of people with serious mental illness. Psychiatr Serv. 2020;71(10):1078-1081. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.202000244

41. Van Alphen MU, Lim C, Freudenreich O. Mobile vaccine clinics for patients with serious mental illness and health care workers in outpatient mental health clinics. Psychiatr Serv. February 8, 2023. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.20220460

42. Lim C, Van Alphen MU, Maclaurin S, et al. Increasing COVID-19 vaccination rates among patients with serious mental illness: a pilot intervention study. Psychiatr Serv. 2022;73(11):1274-1277. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.202100702

43. Marlon JR, Bloodhart B, Ballew MT, et al. How hope and doubt affect climate change mobilization. Front Commun. May 21, 2019. doi:10.3389/fcomm.2019.00020

44. Dorison CA, Lerner JS, Heller BH, et al. In COVID-19 health messaging, loss framing increases anxiety with little-to-no concomitant benefits: experimental evidence from 84 countries. Affective Sci. 2022;3(3):577-602. doi:10.1007/s42761-022-00128-3

45. Maibach E. Increasing public awareness and facilitating behavior change: two guiding heuristics. George Mason University, Center for Climate Change Communication. September 2015. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.climatechangecommunication.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Maibach-Two-hueristics-September-2015-revised.pdf

46. Koh KA, Raviola G, Stoddard FJ Jr. Psychiatry and crisis communication during COVID-19: a view from the trenches. Psychiatr Serv. 2021;72(5):615. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.202000912

47. Velez G, Adam B, Shadid O, et al. The clock is ticking: are we prepared for mass climate migration? Psychiatr News. March 24, 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://psychnews.psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.pn.2023.04.4.3

48. Ingle HE, Mikulewicz M. Mental health and climate change: tackling invisible injustice. Lancet Planet Health. 2020;4:e128-e130. doi:10.1016/S2542-5196(20)30081-4

49. Shah UA, Merlo G. Personal and planetary health--the connection with dietary choices. JAMA. 2023;329(21):1823-1824. doi:10.1001/jama.2023.6118

50. Lim C, Van Alphen MU, Freudenreich O. Becoming vaccine ambassadors: a new role for psychiatrists. Current Psychiatry. 2021;20(8):10-11,17-21,26-28,38. doi:10.12788/cp.0155

51. My Green Doctor. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://mygreendoctor.org/

52. Healthcare Without Harm. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://noharm.org/

53. Levy BS, Patz JA. Climate change, human rights, and social justice. Ann Glob Health. 2015;81:310-322.

54. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Global warming of 1.5° C 2018. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/

55. Steffen W, Crutzen J, McNeill JR. The Anthropocene: are humans now overwhelming the great forces of nature? Ambio. 2007;36(8):614-621. doi:10.1579/0044-7447(2007)36[614:taahno]2.0.co;2

56. American Meteorological Society. Explaining extreme events from a climate perspective. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.ametsoc.org/ams/index.cfm/publications/bulletin-of-the-american-meteorological-society-bams/explaining-extreme-events-from-a-climate-perspective/

57. Nierenberg AA. Coping in the age of turmoil. Psychiatr Ann. 2022;52(7):263. July 1, 2022. doi:10.3928/23258160-20220701-01

58. Belkin G. Leadership for the social climate. N Engl J Med. 2020;382(21):1975-1977. doi:10.1056/NEJMp2001507

59. Skinner JR. Doctors and climate change: first do no harm. J Paediatr Child Health. 2021;57(11):1754-1758. doi:10.1111/jpc.15658

References

1. Kretz L. Hope in environmental philosophy. J Agricult Environ Ethics. 2013;26:925-944. doi:10.1007/s10806-012-9425-8

2. Ursano RJ, Morganstein JC, Cooper R. Position statement on mental health and climate change. American Psychiatric Association. March 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.psychiatry.org/getattachment/0ce71f37-61a6-44d0-8fcd-c752b7e935fd/Position-Mental-Health-Climate-Change.pdf

3. Eckelman MJ, Huang K, Lagasse R, et al. Health care pollution and public health damage in the United States: an update. Health Aff (Millwood). 2020;39:2071-2079.

4. Dzau VJ, Levine R, Barrett G, et al. Decarbonizing the U.S. health sector - a call to action. N Engl J Med. 2021;385(23):2117-2119. doi:10.1056/NEJMp2115675

5. Haase E, Augustinavicius JH, K. Climate change and psychiatry. In: Tasman A, Riba MB, Alarcón RD, et al, eds. Tasman’s Psychiatry. 5th ed. Springer; 2023.

6. Belkin G. Mental health and the global race to resilience. Psychiatr Times. 2023;40(3):26.

7. Hu SR, Yang JQ. Harvard Medical School will integrate climate change into M.D. curriculum. The Harvard Crimson. February 3, 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2023/2/3/hms-climate-curriculum/#:~:text=The%20new%20climate%20change%20curriculum,in%20arriving%20at%20climate%20solutions

8. Funk C, Gramlich J. Amid coronavirus threat, Americans generally have a high level of trust in medical doctors. Pew Research Center. March 13, 2020. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/03/13/amid-coronavirus-threat-americans-generally-have-a-high-level-of-trust-in-medical-doctors/

9. Coverdale J, Balon R, Beresin EV, et al. Climate change: a call to action for the psychiatric profession. Acad Psychiatry. 2018;42(3):317-323. doi:10.1007/s40596-018-0885-7

10. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. AR6 synthesis report: climate change 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.ipcc.ch/report/sixth-assessment-report-cycle/

11. Perera FP. Multiple threats to child health from fossil fuel combustion: impacts of air pollution and climate change. Environ Health Perspect. 2017;125(2):141-148. doi:10.1289/EHP299

12. Hahad O, Lelieveldz J, Birklein F, et al. Ambient air pollution increases the risk of cerebrovascular and neuropsychiatric disorders through induction of inflammation and oxidative stress. Int J Mol Sci. 2020;21(12):4306. doi:10.3390/ijms21124306

13. Brockmeyer S, D’Angiulli A. How air pollution alters brain development: the role of neuroinflammation. Translational Neurosci. 2016;7(1):24-30. doi:10.1515/tnsci-2016-0005

14. Yang T, Wang J, Huang J, et al. Long-term exposure to multiple ambient air pollutants and association with incident depression and anxiety. JAMA Psychiatry. 2023;80:305-313. doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2022.4812

15. Worthington MA, Petkova E, Freudenreich O, et al. Air pollution and hippocampal atrophy in first episode schizophrenia. Schizophr Res. 2020;218:63-69. doi:10.1016/j.schres.2020.03.001

16. Dumont C, Haase E, Dolber T, et al. Climate change and risk of completed suicide. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2020;208(7):559-565. doi:10.1097/NMD.0000000000001162

17. Burke M, Gonzales F, Bayis P, et al. Higher temperatures increase suicide rates in the United States and Mexico. Nat Climate Change. 2018;8:723-729. doi:10.1038/s41558-018-0222-x

18. Frangione B, Villamizar LAR, Lang JJ, et al. Short-term changes in meteorological conditions and suicide: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Environ Res. 2022;207:112230. doi:10.1016/j.envres.2021.112230

19. Rocklov J, Dubrow R. Climate change: an enduring challenge for vector-borne disease prevention and control. Nat Immunol. 2020;21(5):479-483. doi:10.1038/s41590-020-0648-y

20. Carlson CJ, Albery GF, Merow C, et al. Climate change increases cross-species viral transmission risk. Nature. 2022;607(7919):555-562. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-04788-w

21. Roseboom TJ, Painter RC, van Abeelen AFM, et al. Hungry in the womb: what are the consequences? Lessons from the Dutch famine. Maturitas. 2011;70(2):141-145. doi:10.1016/j.maturitas.2011.06.017

22. Liu Y, Diao L, Xu L. The impact of childhood experience of starvations on the health of older adults: evidence from China. Int J Health Plann Manage. 2021;36(2):515-531. doi:10.1002/hpm.3099

23. Rothschild J, Haase E. The mental health of women and climate change: direct neuropsychiatric impacts and associated psychological concerns. Int J Gynaecol Obstet. 2023;160(2):405-413. doi:10.1002/ijgo.14479

24. Cianconi P, Betro S, Janiri L. The impact of climate change on mental health: a systematic descriptive review. Frontiers Psychiatry. 2020;11:74. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00074

25. World Economic Forum. Climate refugees – the world’s forgotten victims. June 18, 2021. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2021/06/climate-refugees-the-world-s-forgotten-victims

26. Climate Refugees. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.climate-refugees.org/why

27. Pihkala P. Anxiety and the ecological crisis: an analysis of eco-anxiety and climate anxiety. Sustainability. 2020;12(19):7836. doi:10.3390/su12197836

28. Galway LP, Beery T, Jones-Casey K, et al. Mapping the solastalgia literature: a scoping review study. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2019;16(15):2662. doi:10.3390/ijerph16152662

29. Albrecht GA. Earth Emotions. New Words for a New World. Cornell University Press; 2019.

30. Sorensen C, Hess J. Treatment and prevention of heat-related illness. N Engl J Med. 2022;387(15):1404-1413. doi:10.1056/NEJMcp2210623

31. Chong TWH, Castle DJ. Layer upon layer: thermoregulation in schizophrenia. Schizophr Res. 2004;69(2-3):149-157. doi:10.1016/s0920-9964(03)00222-6

32. von Salis S, Ehlert U, Fischer S. Altered experienced thermoregulation in depression--no evidence for an effect of early life stress. Front Psychiatry. 2021;12:620656. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2021.620656

33. Sarchiapone M, Gramaglia C, Iosue M, et al. The association between electrodermal activity (EDA), depression and suicidal behaviour: a systematic review and narrative synthesis. BMC Psychiatry. 2018;18(1):22. doi:10.1186/s12888-017-1551-4

34. Martin-Latry K, Goumy MP, Latry P, et al. Psychotropic drugs use and risk of heat-related hospitalisation. Eur Psychiatry. 2007;22(6):335-338. doi:10.1016/j.eurpsy.2007.03.007

35. Ebi KL, Capon A, Berry P, et al. Hot weather and heat extremes: health risks. Lancet. 2021;398(10301):698-708. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(21)01208-3

36. Lee MJ, McLean KE, Kuo M, et al. Chronic diseases associated with mortality in British Columbia, Canada during the 2021 Western North America extreme heat event. Geohealth. 2023;7(3):e2022GH000729. doi:10.1029/2022GH000729

37. Busch AB, Huskamp HA, Raja P, et al. Disruptions in care for Medicare beneficiaries with severe mental illness during the COVID-19 pandemic. JAMA Netw Open. 2022;5(1):e2145677. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.45677

38. Siskind D, Honer WG, Clark S, et al. Consensus statement on the use of clozapine during the COVID-19 pandemic. J Psychiatry Neurosci. 2020;45(3):222-223. doi:10.1503/jpn.200061

39. MacLaurin SA, Mulligan C, Van Alphen MU, et al. Optimal long-acting injectable antipsychotic management during COVID-19. J Clin Psychiatry. 2021;82(1): 20l13730. doi:10.4088/JCP.20l13730

40. Bartels SJ, Baggett TP, Freudenreich O, et al. COVID-19 emergency reforms in Massachusetts to support behavioral health care and reduce mortality of people with serious mental illness. Psychiatr Serv. 2020;71(10):1078-1081. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.202000244

41. Van Alphen MU, Lim C, Freudenreich O. Mobile vaccine clinics for patients with serious mental illness and health care workers in outpatient mental health clinics. Psychiatr Serv. February 8, 2023. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.20220460

42. Lim C, Van Alphen MU, Maclaurin S, et al. Increasing COVID-19 vaccination rates among patients with serious mental illness: a pilot intervention study. Psychiatr Serv. 2022;73(11):1274-1277. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.202100702

43. Marlon JR, Bloodhart B, Ballew MT, et al. How hope and doubt affect climate change mobilization. Front Commun. May 21, 2019. doi:10.3389/fcomm.2019.00020

44. Dorison CA, Lerner JS, Heller BH, et al. In COVID-19 health messaging, loss framing increases anxiety with little-to-no concomitant benefits: experimental evidence from 84 countries. Affective Sci. 2022;3(3):577-602. doi:10.1007/s42761-022-00128-3

45. Maibach E. Increasing public awareness and facilitating behavior change: two guiding heuristics. George Mason University, Center for Climate Change Communication. September 2015. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.climatechangecommunication.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Maibach-Two-hueristics-September-2015-revised.pdf

46. Koh KA, Raviola G, Stoddard FJ Jr. Psychiatry and crisis communication during COVID-19: a view from the trenches. Psychiatr Serv. 2021;72(5):615. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.202000912

47. Velez G, Adam B, Shadid O, et al. The clock is ticking: are we prepared for mass climate migration? Psychiatr News. March 24, 2023. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://psychnews.psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.pn.2023.04.4.3

48. Ingle HE, Mikulewicz M. Mental health and climate change: tackling invisible injustice. Lancet Planet Health. 2020;4:e128-e130. doi:10.1016/S2542-5196(20)30081-4

49. Shah UA, Merlo G. Personal and planetary health--the connection with dietary choices. JAMA. 2023;329(21):1823-1824. doi:10.1001/jama.2023.6118

50. Lim C, Van Alphen MU, Freudenreich O. Becoming vaccine ambassadors: a new role for psychiatrists. Current Psychiatry. 2021;20(8):10-11,17-21,26-28,38. doi:10.12788/cp.0155

51. My Green Doctor. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://mygreendoctor.org/

52. Healthcare Without Harm. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://noharm.org/

53. Levy BS, Patz JA. Climate change, human rights, and social justice. Ann Glob Health. 2015;81:310-322.

54. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Global warming of 1.5° C 2018. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/

55. Steffen W, Crutzen J, McNeill JR. The Anthropocene: are humans now overwhelming the great forces of nature? Ambio. 2007;36(8):614-621. doi:10.1579/0044-7447(2007)36[614:taahno]2.0.co;2

56. American Meteorological Society. Explaining extreme events from a climate perspective. Accessed August 6, 2023. https://www.ametsoc.org/ams/index.cfm/publications/bulletin-of-the-american-meteorological-society-bams/explaining-extreme-events-from-a-climate-perspective/

57. Nierenberg AA. Coping in the age of turmoil. Psychiatr Ann. 2022;52(7):263. July 1, 2022. doi:10.3928/23258160-20220701-01

58. Belkin G. Leadership for the social climate. N Engl J Med. 2020;382(21):1975-1977. doi:10.1056/NEJMp2001507

59. Skinner JR. Doctors and climate change: first do no harm. J Paediatr Child Health. 2021;57(11):1754-1758. doi:10.1111/jpc.15658

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A toxic and fractured political system can breed angst and PTSD

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A toxic and fractured political system can breed angst and PTSD

As psychiatrists know, many of our severely traumatized adult patients were victims of abuse during childhood. We routinely ask every new patient about physical, emotional, or sexual abuse when they were growing up because of the well-established, serious neurobiological and mental repercussions.1,2

Perhaps one of the worst experiences for a child is to witness bitterly adversarial parents (their vital role models) who argue viciously, despise each other, and hurl insults (and even punches) at each other. Such a chronically and emotionally traumatic upbringing can haunt kids well into adulthood, disrupting their hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and triggering anxiety, depression, and even psychosis due to epigenetic changes that ultimately lead to abnormal brain development.3

It often feels that the governance of our country, or the national “political family,” is seriously fractured like a hopelessly dysfunctional family. Could that be negatively impacting the mental health of the citizenry? Having 2 antagonistic political parties expressing visceral hatred and undisguised contempt for each other 24/7 (thanks to the enabling era of cable TV, the internet, and social media) has transformed each party’s fanatic followers from fellow citizens to ideological combatants. In this poisonous societal zeitgeist of bidirectional acrimony and mutual detestation, the opposing parties and their “intellectual militias” label each other as “extremists” or “radicals.” They become completely blind to any redeeming social value in the ideas or principles of their political opponents. They spend enormous time and energy on undermining each other instead of attending to the myriad vital issues involved in the governance of a massive and complex country.

Winston Churchill said, “Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others that have been tried.”4 The current toxic cloud of intense “hyperpartisanship” is emblematic of the dark Machiavellian side of democracy. But those who lament the current distorted version of democracy should contemplate living in a dictatorship or totalitarian regime, where a despot would execute any dissenter or invade and destroy an adjacent country at a whim.

Churchill made that statement in 1947. The internet, social media, and smartphones were science fiction back then. Those technological advances have added fuel to the political process and significantly stoked the flames of hyperpartisanship. It’s now democracy on steroids, where freedom of expression goes to extremes, highlighting the warts and pitfalls of the democratic system. Political rivals can now communicate their ferocious disagreements to millions of their disciples instantaneously, triggering immediate rebuttals and counterattacks by their adversaries. This “virtual guerilla warfare” is mentally and emotionally exhausting to all involved, especially to the subset of neutral bystanders who are unaffiliated with either political party, which, due to the “religification” of politics, have become like secular religions.5 Chronic, unremitting, inescapable stress is a sure pathway for anxiety, depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, and even brain atrophy.

Optimists may point out that the United States has weathered and emerged stronger from many serious traumas, including the Civil War (with its lethal divisiveness), World War I, the deadly 1918 influenza pandemic, the Great Depression, Pearl Harbor, World War II, the Cold War, the Vietnam War, the Watergate political scandal, the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the banking collapse and recession, and most recently the COVID-19 pandemic, which brought society to a standstill and induced so much anxiety and uncertainty.

On the other hand, pessimists would insist those sequential crises left indelible scars that cumulatively altered the mindset of political rivals, predisposing them to extreme views of each other. Alienation inevitably leads to fanaticism. It’s perplexing but fascinating how the fierce bidirectional missives of weaponized ideas can be as virulent and destructive as a traditional physical war. Perhaps in this era, the pen is mightier than the sword after all.

Continue to: From a psychiatric perspective...

 

 

From a psychiatric perspective, the intransigent groupthink of political partisanship eerily resembles folie en masse, a psychiatric syndrome for which there is no established treatment. It has become a serious threat to our modern democracy. So I decided to ask the “know-it-all” artificial intelligence ChatGPT, whom I previously had “invited” to write a “guest editorial” about myths surrounding psychiatry,6 to answer 3 burning questions:

1. Is there toxic hyperpartisanship in the USA today? (Box 1)

Box 1

Is there toxic hyperpartisanship in the USA today? (generated by ChatGPT)

Yes, there is toxic hyperpartisanship in the United States today. Political polarization has been on the rise for several decades, and in recent years, it has become increasingly toxic and divisive. This toxic hyperpartisanship has contributed to a breakdown in civil discourse and a lack of cooperation and compromise in government.

The toxic hyperpartisanship is evident in many aspects of American society, including politics, media, and social media. Political leaders often engage in divisive rhetoric and focus on winning at all costs, rather than working towards solutions that benefit the country as a whole. Media outlets often present news in a partisan manner, further fueling political polarization. Social media platforms have also played a role in exacerbating toxic hyperpartisanship by allowing the spread of misinformation and creating echo chambers where people are only exposed to like-minded viewpoints.

The consequences of toxic hyperpartisanship are significant, as it can hinder progress on important issues and erode trust in institutions and government. It also makes it difficult for people to engage in productive dialogue and find common ground, leading to a lack of cooperation and compromise.

It is important for individuals to be aware of the impact of toxic hyperpartisanship and work towards finding ways to bridge the political divide and engage in constructive dialogue.

2. How can severe hyperpartisanship be corrected? (Supplemental Box 1)

Supplemental Box 1

How can severe hyperpartisanship be corrected? (generated by ChatGPT)

Severe hyperpartisanship, characterized by intense and entrenched divisions between political parties, can be a challenging issue to address, but there are several steps that can be taken to work towards correcting it. Here are some potential approaches:

1. Promote civil discourse: Encourage respectful and constructive conversations between individuals with differing political views. This can be achieved through education programs, media campaigns, and initiatives to foster open dialogue.

2. Electoral reforms: Consider implementing electoral reforms that can reduce the influence of extreme partisanship. For example, ranked-choice voting or nonpartisan primaries may encourage candidates to appeal to a broader base of voters rather than just their party’s base.

3. Campaign finance reform: Limit the influence of money in politics, as it can exacerbate hyperpartisanship by allowing wealthy donors to have undue influence over candidates and parties.

4. Independent redistricting: Ensure that electoral district boundaries are drawn in a fair and nonpartisan manner. Gerrymandering, the manipulation of district lines to favor one party, can contribute to hyperpartisanship by creating “safe” districts where extreme candidates are more likely to be elected.

5. Promote media literacy: Encourage media literacy education to help citizens critically evaluate information sources and avoid echo chambers. A well-informed electorate is less susceptible to extreme partisanship.

6. Encourage bipartisan collaboration: Highlight and support instances of successful bipartisan collaboration. Elected officials who work across the aisle can serve as positive examples and encourage others to follow suit.

7. Address economic inequality: Tackling economic disparities can alleviate some of the underlying factors that contribute to polarization. When people feel economically secure, they may be more willing to seek common ground.

8. Civics education: Improve civics education in schools to foster a deeper understanding of democratic values, the political process, and the importance of civic engagement.

9. Leadership example: Encourage political leaders to model cooperation and compromise rather than relying on divisive rhetoric. Voters often take cues from their leaders’ behavior.

10. Promote third parties: Support and encourage the emergence of viable thirdparty candidates. A more diverse political landscape can provide alternatives to extreme partisanship.

11. Focus on common ground: Identify and prioritize issues where there is potential for bipartisan consensus and progress. Building success on these issues can create momentum for further cooperation.

12. Encourage grassroots activism: Support grassroots movements that seek to bridge divides and foster understanding between individuals and communities with different political perspectives.

It’s essential to recognize that addressing severe hyperpartisanship is a complex and long-term process that requires collective effort from citizens, political leaders, educators, and institutions. It won’t be achieved overnight, but through sustained and committed actions, progress can be made toward a more collaborative and less divisive political climate.

3. What can cause the collapse of a democracy? (Supplemental Box 2).

Supplemental Box 2

What can cause the collapse of a democracy? (generated by ChatGPT)

The collapse of a democracy can be a complex and multifaceted process, influenced by various factors and circumstances. Some of the common causes that can lead to the erosion or breakdown of a democratic system include:

1. Authoritarianism and power concentration: When leaders or institutions become increasingly authoritarian, centralizing power and weakening checks and balances, it can undermine democratic principles.

2. Corruption and lack of accountability: Rampant corruption among political leaders and institutions can erode public trust in the democratic system, leading to disillusionment and disengagement.

3. Economic instability: Prolonged economic crises or severe inequality can lead to social unrest, increasing the appeal of populist or extremist movements that may challenge democratic norms.

4. Weakening of rule of law: If the rule of law is weakened, and there is a lack of respect for judicial independence and constitutional principles, democratic institutions can become vulnerable to manipulation.

5. Erosion of civil liberties: Suppression of freedom of speech, media, assembly, and association can limit citizens’ ability to express their opinions and participate in the democratic process.

6. Polarization and divisive politics: Extreme political polarization and a breakdown of civil discourse can hinder cooperation and compromise essential for a functioning democracy.

7. External interference: Foreign intervention, propaganda, or cyberattacks can influence electoral processes and undermine democratic institutions.

8. Rise of populism and nationalism: Populist movements that challenge democratic norms, demonize minorities, or advocate for a strongman leadership can pose a threat to democracy.

9. Demographic and social shifts: Demographic changes and social tensions can exacerbate political divisions and weaken the fabric of democratic societies.

10. Lack of civic education and participation: A lack of civic education and low voter turnout can lead to reduced civic engagement and undermine the democratic process.

It is crucial to understand that no democracy is immune to these challenges, and the strength of a democratic system depends on the vigilance and engagement of its citizens, the integrity of its institutions, and the commitment to upholding democratic values. Safeguarding and strengthening democracy requires ongoing efforts to address these issues and protect the principles that underpin democratic governance.

Judge for yourself, but I believe the ChatGPT responses were spot-on.

References

1. Lippard ETC, Nemeroff CB. The devastating clinical consequences of child abuse and neglect: increased disease vulnerability and poor treatment response in mood disorders. Am J Psychiatry. 2023;180(8):548-564.

2. Nemeroff CB. Paradise lost: the neurobiological and clinical consequences of child abuse and neglect. Neuron. 2016;89(5):892-909.

3. Zhang ZZ, Moeckel C, Mustafa M, et al. The association of epigenetic age acceleration and depressive and anxiety symptom severity among children recently exposed to substantiated maltreatment. J Psychiatr Res. 2023;165:7-13.

4. International Churchill Society. The worst form of government. Accessed August 8, 2023. https://winstonchurchill.org/resources/quotes/the-worst-form-of-government/

5. Nasrallah HA. From ideology to articles of faith: the ‘religification’ of political beliefs. Current Psychiatry. 2021;20(7):4-5,19.

6. Nasrallah HA. A ‘guest editorial’ … generated by ChatGPT? Current Psychiatry. 2023;22(4):22:6-7.

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As psychiatrists know, many of our severely traumatized adult patients were victims of abuse during childhood. We routinely ask every new patient about physical, emotional, or sexual abuse when they were growing up because of the well-established, serious neurobiological and mental repercussions.1,2

Perhaps one of the worst experiences for a child is to witness bitterly adversarial parents (their vital role models) who argue viciously, despise each other, and hurl insults (and even punches) at each other. Such a chronically and emotionally traumatic upbringing can haunt kids well into adulthood, disrupting their hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and triggering anxiety, depression, and even psychosis due to epigenetic changes that ultimately lead to abnormal brain development.3

It often feels that the governance of our country, or the national “political family,” is seriously fractured like a hopelessly dysfunctional family. Could that be negatively impacting the mental health of the citizenry? Having 2 antagonistic political parties expressing visceral hatred and undisguised contempt for each other 24/7 (thanks to the enabling era of cable TV, the internet, and social media) has transformed each party’s fanatic followers from fellow citizens to ideological combatants. In this poisonous societal zeitgeist of bidirectional acrimony and mutual detestation, the opposing parties and their “intellectual militias” label each other as “extremists” or “radicals.” They become completely blind to any redeeming social value in the ideas or principles of their political opponents. They spend enormous time and energy on undermining each other instead of attending to the myriad vital issues involved in the governance of a massive and complex country.

Winston Churchill said, “Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others that have been tried.”4 The current toxic cloud of intense “hyperpartisanship” is emblematic of the dark Machiavellian side of democracy. But those who lament the current distorted version of democracy should contemplate living in a dictatorship or totalitarian regime, where a despot would execute any dissenter or invade and destroy an adjacent country at a whim.

Churchill made that statement in 1947. The internet, social media, and smartphones were science fiction back then. Those technological advances have added fuel to the political process and significantly stoked the flames of hyperpartisanship. It’s now democracy on steroids, where freedom of expression goes to extremes, highlighting the warts and pitfalls of the democratic system. Political rivals can now communicate their ferocious disagreements to millions of their disciples instantaneously, triggering immediate rebuttals and counterattacks by their adversaries. This “virtual guerilla warfare” is mentally and emotionally exhausting to all involved, especially to the subset of neutral bystanders who are unaffiliated with either political party, which, due to the “religification” of politics, have become like secular religions.5 Chronic, unremitting, inescapable stress is a sure pathway for anxiety, depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, and even brain atrophy.

Optimists may point out that the United States has weathered and emerged stronger from many serious traumas, including the Civil War (with its lethal divisiveness), World War I, the deadly 1918 influenza pandemic, the Great Depression, Pearl Harbor, World War II, the Cold War, the Vietnam War, the Watergate political scandal, the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the banking collapse and recession, and most recently the COVID-19 pandemic, which brought society to a standstill and induced so much anxiety and uncertainty.

On the other hand, pessimists would insist those sequential crises left indelible scars that cumulatively altered the mindset of political rivals, predisposing them to extreme views of each other. Alienation inevitably leads to fanaticism. It’s perplexing but fascinating how the fierce bidirectional missives of weaponized ideas can be as virulent and destructive as a traditional physical war. Perhaps in this era, the pen is mightier than the sword after all.

Continue to: From a psychiatric perspective...

 

 

From a psychiatric perspective, the intransigent groupthink of political partisanship eerily resembles folie en masse, a psychiatric syndrome for which there is no established treatment. It has become a serious threat to our modern democracy. So I decided to ask the “know-it-all” artificial intelligence ChatGPT, whom I previously had “invited” to write a “guest editorial” about myths surrounding psychiatry,6 to answer 3 burning questions:

1. Is there toxic hyperpartisanship in the USA today? (Box 1)

Box 1

Is there toxic hyperpartisanship in the USA today? (generated by ChatGPT)

Yes, there is toxic hyperpartisanship in the United States today. Political polarization has been on the rise for several decades, and in recent years, it has become increasingly toxic and divisive. This toxic hyperpartisanship has contributed to a breakdown in civil discourse and a lack of cooperation and compromise in government.

The toxic hyperpartisanship is evident in many aspects of American society, including politics, media, and social media. Political leaders often engage in divisive rhetoric and focus on winning at all costs, rather than working towards solutions that benefit the country as a whole. Media outlets often present news in a partisan manner, further fueling political polarization. Social media platforms have also played a role in exacerbating toxic hyperpartisanship by allowing the spread of misinformation and creating echo chambers where people are only exposed to like-minded viewpoints.

The consequences of toxic hyperpartisanship are significant, as it can hinder progress on important issues and erode trust in institutions and government. It also makes it difficult for people to engage in productive dialogue and find common ground, leading to a lack of cooperation and compromise.

It is important for individuals to be aware of the impact of toxic hyperpartisanship and work towards finding ways to bridge the political divide and engage in constructive dialogue.

2. How can severe hyperpartisanship be corrected? (Supplemental Box 1)

Supplemental Box 1

How can severe hyperpartisanship be corrected? (generated by ChatGPT)

Severe hyperpartisanship, characterized by intense and entrenched divisions between political parties, can be a challenging issue to address, but there are several steps that can be taken to work towards correcting it. Here are some potential approaches:

1. Promote civil discourse: Encourage respectful and constructive conversations between individuals with differing political views. This can be achieved through education programs, media campaigns, and initiatives to foster open dialogue.

2. Electoral reforms: Consider implementing electoral reforms that can reduce the influence of extreme partisanship. For example, ranked-choice voting or nonpartisan primaries may encourage candidates to appeal to a broader base of voters rather than just their party’s base.

3. Campaign finance reform: Limit the influence of money in politics, as it can exacerbate hyperpartisanship by allowing wealthy donors to have undue influence over candidates and parties.

4. Independent redistricting: Ensure that electoral district boundaries are drawn in a fair and nonpartisan manner. Gerrymandering, the manipulation of district lines to favor one party, can contribute to hyperpartisanship by creating “safe” districts where extreme candidates are more likely to be elected.

5. Promote media literacy: Encourage media literacy education to help citizens critically evaluate information sources and avoid echo chambers. A well-informed electorate is less susceptible to extreme partisanship.

6. Encourage bipartisan collaboration: Highlight and support instances of successful bipartisan collaboration. Elected officials who work across the aisle can serve as positive examples and encourage others to follow suit.

7. Address economic inequality: Tackling economic disparities can alleviate some of the underlying factors that contribute to polarization. When people feel economically secure, they may be more willing to seek common ground.

8. Civics education: Improve civics education in schools to foster a deeper understanding of democratic values, the political process, and the importance of civic engagement.

9. Leadership example: Encourage political leaders to model cooperation and compromise rather than relying on divisive rhetoric. Voters often take cues from their leaders’ behavior.

10. Promote third parties: Support and encourage the emergence of viable thirdparty candidates. A more diverse political landscape can provide alternatives to extreme partisanship.

11. Focus on common ground: Identify and prioritize issues where there is potential for bipartisan consensus and progress. Building success on these issues can create momentum for further cooperation.

12. Encourage grassroots activism: Support grassroots movements that seek to bridge divides and foster understanding between individuals and communities with different political perspectives.

It’s essential to recognize that addressing severe hyperpartisanship is a complex and long-term process that requires collective effort from citizens, political leaders, educators, and institutions. It won’t be achieved overnight, but through sustained and committed actions, progress can be made toward a more collaborative and less divisive political climate.

3. What can cause the collapse of a democracy? (Supplemental Box 2).

Supplemental Box 2

What can cause the collapse of a democracy? (generated by ChatGPT)

The collapse of a democracy can be a complex and multifaceted process, influenced by various factors and circumstances. Some of the common causes that can lead to the erosion or breakdown of a democratic system include:

1. Authoritarianism and power concentration: When leaders or institutions become increasingly authoritarian, centralizing power and weakening checks and balances, it can undermine democratic principles.

2. Corruption and lack of accountability: Rampant corruption among political leaders and institutions can erode public trust in the democratic system, leading to disillusionment and disengagement.

3. Economic instability: Prolonged economic crises or severe inequality can lead to social unrest, increasing the appeal of populist or extremist movements that may challenge democratic norms.

4. Weakening of rule of law: If the rule of law is weakened, and there is a lack of respect for judicial independence and constitutional principles, democratic institutions can become vulnerable to manipulation.

5. Erosion of civil liberties: Suppression of freedom of speech, media, assembly, and association can limit citizens’ ability to express their opinions and participate in the democratic process.

6. Polarization and divisive politics: Extreme political polarization and a breakdown of civil discourse can hinder cooperation and compromise essential for a functioning democracy.

7. External interference: Foreign intervention, propaganda, or cyberattacks can influence electoral processes and undermine democratic institutions.

8. Rise of populism and nationalism: Populist movements that challenge democratic norms, demonize minorities, or advocate for a strongman leadership can pose a threat to democracy.

9. Demographic and social shifts: Demographic changes and social tensions can exacerbate political divisions and weaken the fabric of democratic societies.

10. Lack of civic education and participation: A lack of civic education and low voter turnout can lead to reduced civic engagement and undermine the democratic process.

It is crucial to understand that no democracy is immune to these challenges, and the strength of a democratic system depends on the vigilance and engagement of its citizens, the integrity of its institutions, and the commitment to upholding democratic values. Safeguarding and strengthening democracy requires ongoing efforts to address these issues and protect the principles that underpin democratic governance.

Judge for yourself, but I believe the ChatGPT responses were spot-on.

As psychiatrists know, many of our severely traumatized adult patients were victims of abuse during childhood. We routinely ask every new patient about physical, emotional, or sexual abuse when they were growing up because of the well-established, serious neurobiological and mental repercussions.1,2

Perhaps one of the worst experiences for a child is to witness bitterly adversarial parents (their vital role models) who argue viciously, despise each other, and hurl insults (and even punches) at each other. Such a chronically and emotionally traumatic upbringing can haunt kids well into adulthood, disrupting their hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and triggering anxiety, depression, and even psychosis due to epigenetic changes that ultimately lead to abnormal brain development.3

It often feels that the governance of our country, or the national “political family,” is seriously fractured like a hopelessly dysfunctional family. Could that be negatively impacting the mental health of the citizenry? Having 2 antagonistic political parties expressing visceral hatred and undisguised contempt for each other 24/7 (thanks to the enabling era of cable TV, the internet, and social media) has transformed each party’s fanatic followers from fellow citizens to ideological combatants. In this poisonous societal zeitgeist of bidirectional acrimony and mutual detestation, the opposing parties and their “intellectual militias” label each other as “extremists” or “radicals.” They become completely blind to any redeeming social value in the ideas or principles of their political opponents. They spend enormous time and energy on undermining each other instead of attending to the myriad vital issues involved in the governance of a massive and complex country.

Winston Churchill said, “Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others that have been tried.”4 The current toxic cloud of intense “hyperpartisanship” is emblematic of the dark Machiavellian side of democracy. But those who lament the current distorted version of democracy should contemplate living in a dictatorship or totalitarian regime, where a despot would execute any dissenter or invade and destroy an adjacent country at a whim.

Churchill made that statement in 1947. The internet, social media, and smartphones were science fiction back then. Those technological advances have added fuel to the political process and significantly stoked the flames of hyperpartisanship. It’s now democracy on steroids, where freedom of expression goes to extremes, highlighting the warts and pitfalls of the democratic system. Political rivals can now communicate their ferocious disagreements to millions of their disciples instantaneously, triggering immediate rebuttals and counterattacks by their adversaries. This “virtual guerilla warfare” is mentally and emotionally exhausting to all involved, especially to the subset of neutral bystanders who are unaffiliated with either political party, which, due to the “religification” of politics, have become like secular religions.5 Chronic, unremitting, inescapable stress is a sure pathway for anxiety, depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, and even brain atrophy.

Optimists may point out that the United States has weathered and emerged stronger from many serious traumas, including the Civil War (with its lethal divisiveness), World War I, the deadly 1918 influenza pandemic, the Great Depression, Pearl Harbor, World War II, the Cold War, the Vietnam War, the Watergate political scandal, the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the banking collapse and recession, and most recently the COVID-19 pandemic, which brought society to a standstill and induced so much anxiety and uncertainty.

On the other hand, pessimists would insist those sequential crises left indelible scars that cumulatively altered the mindset of political rivals, predisposing them to extreme views of each other. Alienation inevitably leads to fanaticism. It’s perplexing but fascinating how the fierce bidirectional missives of weaponized ideas can be as virulent and destructive as a traditional physical war. Perhaps in this era, the pen is mightier than the sword after all.

Continue to: From a psychiatric perspective...

 

 

From a psychiatric perspective, the intransigent groupthink of political partisanship eerily resembles folie en masse, a psychiatric syndrome for which there is no established treatment. It has become a serious threat to our modern democracy. So I decided to ask the “know-it-all” artificial intelligence ChatGPT, whom I previously had “invited” to write a “guest editorial” about myths surrounding psychiatry,6 to answer 3 burning questions:

1. Is there toxic hyperpartisanship in the USA today? (Box 1)

Box 1

Is there toxic hyperpartisanship in the USA today? (generated by ChatGPT)

Yes, there is toxic hyperpartisanship in the United States today. Political polarization has been on the rise for several decades, and in recent years, it has become increasingly toxic and divisive. This toxic hyperpartisanship has contributed to a breakdown in civil discourse and a lack of cooperation and compromise in government.

The toxic hyperpartisanship is evident in many aspects of American society, including politics, media, and social media. Political leaders often engage in divisive rhetoric and focus on winning at all costs, rather than working towards solutions that benefit the country as a whole. Media outlets often present news in a partisan manner, further fueling political polarization. Social media platforms have also played a role in exacerbating toxic hyperpartisanship by allowing the spread of misinformation and creating echo chambers where people are only exposed to like-minded viewpoints.

The consequences of toxic hyperpartisanship are significant, as it can hinder progress on important issues and erode trust in institutions and government. It also makes it difficult for people to engage in productive dialogue and find common ground, leading to a lack of cooperation and compromise.

It is important for individuals to be aware of the impact of toxic hyperpartisanship and work towards finding ways to bridge the political divide and engage in constructive dialogue.

2. How can severe hyperpartisanship be corrected? (Supplemental Box 1)

Supplemental Box 1

How can severe hyperpartisanship be corrected? (generated by ChatGPT)

Severe hyperpartisanship, characterized by intense and entrenched divisions between political parties, can be a challenging issue to address, but there are several steps that can be taken to work towards correcting it. Here are some potential approaches:

1. Promote civil discourse: Encourage respectful and constructive conversations between individuals with differing political views. This can be achieved through education programs, media campaigns, and initiatives to foster open dialogue.

2. Electoral reforms: Consider implementing electoral reforms that can reduce the influence of extreme partisanship. For example, ranked-choice voting or nonpartisan primaries may encourage candidates to appeal to a broader base of voters rather than just their party’s base.

3. Campaign finance reform: Limit the influence of money in politics, as it can exacerbate hyperpartisanship by allowing wealthy donors to have undue influence over candidates and parties.

4. Independent redistricting: Ensure that electoral district boundaries are drawn in a fair and nonpartisan manner. Gerrymandering, the manipulation of district lines to favor one party, can contribute to hyperpartisanship by creating “safe” districts where extreme candidates are more likely to be elected.

5. Promote media literacy: Encourage media literacy education to help citizens critically evaluate information sources and avoid echo chambers. A well-informed electorate is less susceptible to extreme partisanship.

6. Encourage bipartisan collaboration: Highlight and support instances of successful bipartisan collaboration. Elected officials who work across the aisle can serve as positive examples and encourage others to follow suit.

7. Address economic inequality: Tackling economic disparities can alleviate some of the underlying factors that contribute to polarization. When people feel economically secure, they may be more willing to seek common ground.

8. Civics education: Improve civics education in schools to foster a deeper understanding of democratic values, the political process, and the importance of civic engagement.

9. Leadership example: Encourage political leaders to model cooperation and compromise rather than relying on divisive rhetoric. Voters often take cues from their leaders’ behavior.

10. Promote third parties: Support and encourage the emergence of viable thirdparty candidates. A more diverse political landscape can provide alternatives to extreme partisanship.

11. Focus on common ground: Identify and prioritize issues where there is potential for bipartisan consensus and progress. Building success on these issues can create momentum for further cooperation.

12. Encourage grassroots activism: Support grassroots movements that seek to bridge divides and foster understanding between individuals and communities with different political perspectives.

It’s essential to recognize that addressing severe hyperpartisanship is a complex and long-term process that requires collective effort from citizens, political leaders, educators, and institutions. It won’t be achieved overnight, but through sustained and committed actions, progress can be made toward a more collaborative and less divisive political climate.

3. What can cause the collapse of a democracy? (Supplemental Box 2).

Supplemental Box 2

What can cause the collapse of a democracy? (generated by ChatGPT)

The collapse of a democracy can be a complex and multifaceted process, influenced by various factors and circumstances. Some of the common causes that can lead to the erosion or breakdown of a democratic system include:

1. Authoritarianism and power concentration: When leaders or institutions become increasingly authoritarian, centralizing power and weakening checks and balances, it can undermine democratic principles.

2. Corruption and lack of accountability: Rampant corruption among political leaders and institutions can erode public trust in the democratic system, leading to disillusionment and disengagement.

3. Economic instability: Prolonged economic crises or severe inequality can lead to social unrest, increasing the appeal of populist or extremist movements that may challenge democratic norms.

4. Weakening of rule of law: If the rule of law is weakened, and there is a lack of respect for judicial independence and constitutional principles, democratic institutions can become vulnerable to manipulation.

5. Erosion of civil liberties: Suppression of freedom of speech, media, assembly, and association can limit citizens’ ability to express their opinions and participate in the democratic process.

6. Polarization and divisive politics: Extreme political polarization and a breakdown of civil discourse can hinder cooperation and compromise essential for a functioning democracy.

7. External interference: Foreign intervention, propaganda, or cyberattacks can influence electoral processes and undermine democratic institutions.

8. Rise of populism and nationalism: Populist movements that challenge democratic norms, demonize minorities, or advocate for a strongman leadership can pose a threat to democracy.

9. Demographic and social shifts: Demographic changes and social tensions can exacerbate political divisions and weaken the fabric of democratic societies.

10. Lack of civic education and participation: A lack of civic education and low voter turnout can lead to reduced civic engagement and undermine the democratic process.

It is crucial to understand that no democracy is immune to these challenges, and the strength of a democratic system depends on the vigilance and engagement of its citizens, the integrity of its institutions, and the commitment to upholding democratic values. Safeguarding and strengthening democracy requires ongoing efforts to address these issues and protect the principles that underpin democratic governance.

Judge for yourself, but I believe the ChatGPT responses were spot-on.

References

1. Lippard ETC, Nemeroff CB. The devastating clinical consequences of child abuse and neglect: increased disease vulnerability and poor treatment response in mood disorders. Am J Psychiatry. 2023;180(8):548-564.

2. Nemeroff CB. Paradise lost: the neurobiological and clinical consequences of child abuse and neglect. Neuron. 2016;89(5):892-909.

3. Zhang ZZ, Moeckel C, Mustafa M, et al. The association of epigenetic age acceleration and depressive and anxiety symptom severity among children recently exposed to substantiated maltreatment. J Psychiatr Res. 2023;165:7-13.

4. International Churchill Society. The worst form of government. Accessed August 8, 2023. https://winstonchurchill.org/resources/quotes/the-worst-form-of-government/

5. Nasrallah HA. From ideology to articles of faith: the ‘religification’ of political beliefs. Current Psychiatry. 2021;20(7):4-5,19.

6. Nasrallah HA. A ‘guest editorial’ … generated by ChatGPT? Current Psychiatry. 2023;22(4):22:6-7.

References

1. Lippard ETC, Nemeroff CB. The devastating clinical consequences of child abuse and neglect: increased disease vulnerability and poor treatment response in mood disorders. Am J Psychiatry. 2023;180(8):548-564.

2. Nemeroff CB. Paradise lost: the neurobiological and clinical consequences of child abuse and neglect. Neuron. 2016;89(5):892-909.

3. Zhang ZZ, Moeckel C, Mustafa M, et al. The association of epigenetic age acceleration and depressive and anxiety symptom severity among children recently exposed to substantiated maltreatment. J Psychiatr Res. 2023;165:7-13.

4. International Churchill Society. The worst form of government. Accessed August 8, 2023. https://winstonchurchill.org/resources/quotes/the-worst-form-of-government/

5. Nasrallah HA. From ideology to articles of faith: the ‘religification’ of political beliefs. Current Psychiatry. 2021;20(7):4-5,19.

6. Nasrallah HA. A ‘guest editorial’ … generated by ChatGPT? Current Psychiatry. 2023;22(4):22:6-7.

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