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High rate of mental health problems in transgender children

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 07/29/2022 - 17:07

Transgender children, even those as young as 9 or 10 years old, already show increased susceptibility to mental health problems compared with their cisgender peers, new research suggests.

Investigators assessed a sample of more than 7000 children aged 9-10 years in the general population and found those who reported being transgender scored considerably higher on all six subscales of the DSM-5-oriented Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL).

Transgender children had almost sixfold higher odds of suicidality and over twice the odds of depressive and anxiety problems, compared with cisgender children. Moreover, transgender children displayed higher levels of mental health problems compared with previous studies of transgender children recruited from specialist gender clinics.

“Our findings emphasize the vulnerability of transgender children, including those who may not yet have accessed specialist support,” senior author Kenneth C. Pang, MBBS, BMedSc, PhD, associate professor, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, University of Melbourne, Royal Children’s Hospital, Australia, told this news organization.

“Clinicians providing general health care to transgender children should keep this vulnerability in mind and proactively address any mental health problems that exist,” he said.

The findings were published online as a research letter in JAMA Network Open.
 

Higher levels of support?

“We felt this study was important to conduct because previous studies regarding the mental health of transgender children have been drawn from children receiving specialist gender-related care,” Dr. Pang said.

“Transgender children receiving such care are likely to enjoy higher levels of support than those unable to access such services, and this might create differences in mental health,” he added.

To investigate this issue, the researchers turned to participants (n = 7,169; mean age, 10.3 years) in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study.

“The ABCD study is a longitudinal study of over 11,000 children who were recruited to reflect the sociodemographic variation of the U.S. population,” lead author Douglas H. Russell, MSc, a PhD candidate at the University of Melbourne, told this news organization.

To be included in the current study, children had to understand and respond to the question “Are you transgender?”

The researchers compared mental health outcomes between transgender and cisgender children (n = 58 and n = 7,111, respectively) using the CBCL, which study participants had completed at baseline.
 

Key protective factor

The transgender children recorded higher mean T scores for all six subscales of the CBCL, although all children scored in the references range; and the standardized mean difference was “small.”

Suicidality was measured by summing the two suicide-related items in the parent-report CBCL assessing suicidal ideation and attempts.

“For the CBCL, T scores are calculated for measures that are scored on a continuous scale,” Dr. Pang noted. “Responses to the suicidality questions on the CBCL were assessed in a categorical manner (at risk of suicide vs. not), as previously described by others. So T scores were therefore not able to be calculated.”

When the investigators determined the proportion of cisgender and transgender children who scored in the “borderline” or “clinical” range (T score, 65), they found increased odds of transgender children scoring in that range in all six subscales, as well as suicidality.

The researchers note the results for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and oppositional defiant problems were not statistically significant.

Previous studies that used clinical samples of young transgender children (aged 5 -11 years) reported lower rates of depression and anxiety than what was found in the current study.

“Transgender children in the general population displayed higher levels of mental health problems compared to previous studies of transgender children recruited from specialist gender clinics,” Mr. Russell said.

One reason for that may be children in specialist clinics “are likely to have support from their families (a key protective factor for the mental health of transgender young people); in comparison, many transgender children in the general population lack parental support for their gender,” the investigators wrote.

“Our findings suggest that by 9 to 10 years of age transgender children already show increased susceptibility to mental health problems compared with their cisgender peers, which has important public health implications,” they added.

The researchers noted that whether this susceptibility “is due to stigma, minority stress, discrimination, or gender dysphoria is unclear, but providing appropriate mental health supports to this vulnerable group is paramount.”
 

 

 

“Pathologizing and damaging”

Commenting for this news organiztion, Jack L. Turban, MD, incoming assistant professor of child and adolescent psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, said that “sadly” the findings are “largely in line with past studies that have shown dramatic mental health disparities” for transgender and gender diverse youth.

“The dramatically elevated odds of suicidality warrants particular public health concern,” said Dr. Turban, who was not involved with the study.

He noted these results “come at a time when transgender youth are under legislative attack in many states throughout the country, and the national rhetoric around them has been pathologizing and damaging.”

Dr. Turban said that he worries “if our national discourse around trans youth doesn’t change soon, that these disparities will worsen.”

Funding was provided to individual investigators by the Hugh Williamson Foundation, the Royal Children’s Hospital foundation, the National Health and Medical Research Council, and the Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship. Mr. Russell and Dr. Pang reported being members of the Australian Professional Association for Trans Health. Dr. Pang is a member of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health and a member of the editorial board of the journal Transgender Health. Dr. Turban reported textbook royalties from Springer Nature, being on the scientific advisory board of Panorama Global (UpSwing Fund), and payments as an expert witness for the American Civil Liberties Union, Lambda Legal, and Cooley LLP. He has received a pilot research award from AACAP and pharmaceutical partners (Arbor and Pfizer), a research fellowship from the Sorensen Foundation, and freelance payments from the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times.

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

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Transgender children, even those as young as 9 or 10 years old, already show increased susceptibility to mental health problems compared with their cisgender peers, new research suggests.

Investigators assessed a sample of more than 7000 children aged 9-10 years in the general population and found those who reported being transgender scored considerably higher on all six subscales of the DSM-5-oriented Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL).

Transgender children had almost sixfold higher odds of suicidality and over twice the odds of depressive and anxiety problems, compared with cisgender children. Moreover, transgender children displayed higher levels of mental health problems compared with previous studies of transgender children recruited from specialist gender clinics.

“Our findings emphasize the vulnerability of transgender children, including those who may not yet have accessed specialist support,” senior author Kenneth C. Pang, MBBS, BMedSc, PhD, associate professor, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, University of Melbourne, Royal Children’s Hospital, Australia, told this news organization.

“Clinicians providing general health care to transgender children should keep this vulnerability in mind and proactively address any mental health problems that exist,” he said.

The findings were published online as a research letter in JAMA Network Open.
 

Higher levels of support?

“We felt this study was important to conduct because previous studies regarding the mental health of transgender children have been drawn from children receiving specialist gender-related care,” Dr. Pang said.

“Transgender children receiving such care are likely to enjoy higher levels of support than those unable to access such services, and this might create differences in mental health,” he added.

To investigate this issue, the researchers turned to participants (n = 7,169; mean age, 10.3 years) in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study.

“The ABCD study is a longitudinal study of over 11,000 children who were recruited to reflect the sociodemographic variation of the U.S. population,” lead author Douglas H. Russell, MSc, a PhD candidate at the University of Melbourne, told this news organization.

To be included in the current study, children had to understand and respond to the question “Are you transgender?”

The researchers compared mental health outcomes between transgender and cisgender children (n = 58 and n = 7,111, respectively) using the CBCL, which study participants had completed at baseline.
 

Key protective factor

The transgender children recorded higher mean T scores for all six subscales of the CBCL, although all children scored in the references range; and the standardized mean difference was “small.”

Suicidality was measured by summing the two suicide-related items in the parent-report CBCL assessing suicidal ideation and attempts.

“For the CBCL, T scores are calculated for measures that are scored on a continuous scale,” Dr. Pang noted. “Responses to the suicidality questions on the CBCL were assessed in a categorical manner (at risk of suicide vs. not), as previously described by others. So T scores were therefore not able to be calculated.”

When the investigators determined the proportion of cisgender and transgender children who scored in the “borderline” or “clinical” range (T score, 65), they found increased odds of transgender children scoring in that range in all six subscales, as well as suicidality.

The researchers note the results for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and oppositional defiant problems were not statistically significant.

Previous studies that used clinical samples of young transgender children (aged 5 -11 years) reported lower rates of depression and anxiety than what was found in the current study.

“Transgender children in the general population displayed higher levels of mental health problems compared to previous studies of transgender children recruited from specialist gender clinics,” Mr. Russell said.

One reason for that may be children in specialist clinics “are likely to have support from their families (a key protective factor for the mental health of transgender young people); in comparison, many transgender children in the general population lack parental support for their gender,” the investigators wrote.

“Our findings suggest that by 9 to 10 years of age transgender children already show increased susceptibility to mental health problems compared with their cisgender peers, which has important public health implications,” they added.

The researchers noted that whether this susceptibility “is due to stigma, minority stress, discrimination, or gender dysphoria is unclear, but providing appropriate mental health supports to this vulnerable group is paramount.”
 

 

 

“Pathologizing and damaging”

Commenting for this news organiztion, Jack L. Turban, MD, incoming assistant professor of child and adolescent psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, said that “sadly” the findings are “largely in line with past studies that have shown dramatic mental health disparities” for transgender and gender diverse youth.

“The dramatically elevated odds of suicidality warrants particular public health concern,” said Dr. Turban, who was not involved with the study.

He noted these results “come at a time when transgender youth are under legislative attack in many states throughout the country, and the national rhetoric around them has been pathologizing and damaging.”

Dr. Turban said that he worries “if our national discourse around trans youth doesn’t change soon, that these disparities will worsen.”

Funding was provided to individual investigators by the Hugh Williamson Foundation, the Royal Children’s Hospital foundation, the National Health and Medical Research Council, and the Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship. Mr. Russell and Dr. Pang reported being members of the Australian Professional Association for Trans Health. Dr. Pang is a member of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health and a member of the editorial board of the journal Transgender Health. Dr. Turban reported textbook royalties from Springer Nature, being on the scientific advisory board of Panorama Global (UpSwing Fund), and payments as an expert witness for the American Civil Liberties Union, Lambda Legal, and Cooley LLP. He has received a pilot research award from AACAP and pharmaceutical partners (Arbor and Pfizer), a research fellowship from the Sorensen Foundation, and freelance payments from the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times.

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

Transgender children, even those as young as 9 or 10 years old, already show increased susceptibility to mental health problems compared with their cisgender peers, new research suggests.

Investigators assessed a sample of more than 7000 children aged 9-10 years in the general population and found those who reported being transgender scored considerably higher on all six subscales of the DSM-5-oriented Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL).

Transgender children had almost sixfold higher odds of suicidality and over twice the odds of depressive and anxiety problems, compared with cisgender children. Moreover, transgender children displayed higher levels of mental health problems compared with previous studies of transgender children recruited from specialist gender clinics.

“Our findings emphasize the vulnerability of transgender children, including those who may not yet have accessed specialist support,” senior author Kenneth C. Pang, MBBS, BMedSc, PhD, associate professor, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, University of Melbourne, Royal Children’s Hospital, Australia, told this news organization.

“Clinicians providing general health care to transgender children should keep this vulnerability in mind and proactively address any mental health problems that exist,” he said.

The findings were published online as a research letter in JAMA Network Open.
 

Higher levels of support?

“We felt this study was important to conduct because previous studies regarding the mental health of transgender children have been drawn from children receiving specialist gender-related care,” Dr. Pang said.

“Transgender children receiving such care are likely to enjoy higher levels of support than those unable to access such services, and this might create differences in mental health,” he added.

To investigate this issue, the researchers turned to participants (n = 7,169; mean age, 10.3 years) in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study.

“The ABCD study is a longitudinal study of over 11,000 children who were recruited to reflect the sociodemographic variation of the U.S. population,” lead author Douglas H. Russell, MSc, a PhD candidate at the University of Melbourne, told this news organization.

To be included in the current study, children had to understand and respond to the question “Are you transgender?”

The researchers compared mental health outcomes between transgender and cisgender children (n = 58 and n = 7,111, respectively) using the CBCL, which study participants had completed at baseline.
 

Key protective factor

The transgender children recorded higher mean T scores for all six subscales of the CBCL, although all children scored in the references range; and the standardized mean difference was “small.”

Suicidality was measured by summing the two suicide-related items in the parent-report CBCL assessing suicidal ideation and attempts.

“For the CBCL, T scores are calculated for measures that are scored on a continuous scale,” Dr. Pang noted. “Responses to the suicidality questions on the CBCL were assessed in a categorical manner (at risk of suicide vs. not), as previously described by others. So T scores were therefore not able to be calculated.”

When the investigators determined the proportion of cisgender and transgender children who scored in the “borderline” or “clinical” range (T score, 65), they found increased odds of transgender children scoring in that range in all six subscales, as well as suicidality.

The researchers note the results for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and oppositional defiant problems were not statistically significant.

Previous studies that used clinical samples of young transgender children (aged 5 -11 years) reported lower rates of depression and anxiety than what was found in the current study.

“Transgender children in the general population displayed higher levels of mental health problems compared to previous studies of transgender children recruited from specialist gender clinics,” Mr. Russell said.

One reason for that may be children in specialist clinics “are likely to have support from their families (a key protective factor for the mental health of transgender young people); in comparison, many transgender children in the general population lack parental support for their gender,” the investigators wrote.

“Our findings suggest that by 9 to 10 years of age transgender children already show increased susceptibility to mental health problems compared with their cisgender peers, which has important public health implications,” they added.

The researchers noted that whether this susceptibility “is due to stigma, minority stress, discrimination, or gender dysphoria is unclear, but providing appropriate mental health supports to this vulnerable group is paramount.”
 

 

 

“Pathologizing and damaging”

Commenting for this news organiztion, Jack L. Turban, MD, incoming assistant professor of child and adolescent psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, said that “sadly” the findings are “largely in line with past studies that have shown dramatic mental health disparities” for transgender and gender diverse youth.

“The dramatically elevated odds of suicidality warrants particular public health concern,” said Dr. Turban, who was not involved with the study.

He noted these results “come at a time when transgender youth are under legislative attack in many states throughout the country, and the national rhetoric around them has been pathologizing and damaging.”

Dr. Turban said that he worries “if our national discourse around trans youth doesn’t change soon, that these disparities will worsen.”

Funding was provided to individual investigators by the Hugh Williamson Foundation, the Royal Children’s Hospital foundation, the National Health and Medical Research Council, and the Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship. Mr. Russell and Dr. Pang reported being members of the Australian Professional Association for Trans Health. Dr. Pang is a member of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health and a member of the editorial board of the journal Transgender Health. Dr. Turban reported textbook royalties from Springer Nature, being on the scientific advisory board of Panorama Global (UpSwing Fund), and payments as an expert witness for the American Civil Liberties Union, Lambda Legal, and Cooley LLP. He has received a pilot research award from AACAP and pharmaceutical partners (Arbor and Pfizer), a research fellowship from the Sorensen Foundation, and freelance payments from the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times.

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

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Guideline advises against depression screening in pregnancy

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 07/28/2022 - 16:24

The Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care recommends against the routine screening of all pregnant and postpartum women for depression using a standard questionnaire, according to its new guideline.

The basis for its position is the lack of evidence that such screening “adds value beyond discussions about overall wellbeing, depression, anxiety, and mood that are currently a part of established perinatal clinical care.

“We should not be using a one-size-fits all approach,” lead author Eddy Lang, MD, professor and head of emergency medicine at the Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary (Alta.), told this news organization.

Instead, the task force emphasizes regular clinical care, including asking patients about their wellbeing and support systems. The task force categorizes the recommendation as conditional and as having very low-certainty evidence.

The recommendation was published in CMAJ.
 

One randomized study

The task force is an independent panel of clinicians and scientists that makes recommendations on primary and secondary prevention in primary care. A working group of five members of the task force developed this recommendation with scientific support from Public Health Agency of Canada staff.

In its research, the task force found only one study that showed a benefit of routine depression screening in this population. This study was a randomized controlled trial conducted in Hong Kong. Researchers evaluated 462 postpartum women who were randomly assigned to receive screening with the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) or no screening 2 months post partum.

“We found the effect of screening in this study to be very uncertain for the important outcomes of interest,” said Dr. Lang.

“These included parent-child stress, marital stress, and the number of infant hospital admissions. The effects of screening on all of these outcomes were very uncertain, mainly because it was such a small trial,” he said.

The task force also assessed how pregnant and postpartum women feel about being screened. What these women most wanted was a good relationship with a trusted primary care provider who would initiate discussions about their mental health in a caring atmosphere.

“Although they told us they liked the idea of universal screening, they admitted to their family doctors that they actually preferred to be asked about their wellbeing, [to be asked] how things were going at home, and [to have] a discussion about their mental health and wellbeing, rather than a formal screening process. They felt a discussion about depression with a primary health care provider during the pregnancy and postpartum period is critical,” said Dr. Lang.

Thus, the task force recommends “against instrument-based depression screening using a questionnaire with cutoff score to distinguish ‘screen positive’ and ‘screen negative’ administered to all individuals during pregnancy and the postpartum period (up to 1 year after childbirth).”
 

Screening remains common

“There’s a lot of uncertainty in the scientific community about whether it’s a good idea to administer a screening test to all pregnant and postpartum women to determine in a systematic way if they might be suffering from depression,” said Dr. Lang.

The task force recommended against screening for depression among perinatal or postpartum women in 2013, but screening is still performed in many provinces, said Dr. Lang.

Dr. Lang emphasized that the recommendation does not apply to usual care, in which the provider asks questions about and discusses a patient’s mental health and proceeds on the basis of their clinical judgment; nor does it apply to diagnostic pathways in which the clinician suspects that the individual may have depression and tests her accordingly.

“What we are saying in our recommendation is that all clinicians should ask about a patient’s wellbeing, about their mood, their anxiety, and these questions are an important part of the clinical assessment of pregnant and postpartum women. But we’re also saying the usefulness of doing so with a questionnaire and using a cutoff score on the questionnaire to decide who needs further assessment or possibly treatment is unproven by the research,” Dr. Lang said.
 

A growing problem

For Diane Francoeur, MD, CEO of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada, this is all well and good, but the reality is that such screening is better than nothing.

Quebec is the only Canadian province that conducts universal screening for all pregnant and postpartum women, Dr. Francoeur said in an interview. She was not part of the task force.

“I agree that it should be more than one approach, but the problem is that there is such a shortage of resources. There are many issues that can arise when you follow a woman during her pregnancy,” she said.

Dr. Francoeur said that COVID-19 has been particularly tough on women, including pregnant and postpartum women, who are the most vulnerable.

“Especially during the COVID era, it was astonishing how women were not doing well. Their stress level was so high. We need to have a specific approach dedicated to prenatal mental health, because it’s a problem that is bigger than it used to be,” she said.

Violence against women has increased considerably since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, said Dr. Francoeur. “Many more women have been killed by their partners. We have never seen anything like this before, and I hope we will never see this again,” she said.

“Help was more available a few years ago, but now, it’s really hard if and when you need to have a quick consultation with a specialist and the woman is really depressed. It can take forever. So, it’s okay to screen, but then, what’s next? Who is going to be there to take these women and help them? And we don’t have the answer,” Dr. Francoeur said.

Pregnant and postpartum women who suffer from depression need more than pills, she added. “We reassure them and treat their depression pharmacologically, but it’s also a time to give appropriate support and help them through the pregnancy and get well prepared to receive their newborn, because, as we now know, that first year of life is really important for the child, and the mom needs to be supported.”

Funding for the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care is provided by the Public Health Agency of Canada. Dr. Lang and Dr. Francoeur reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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The Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care recommends against the routine screening of all pregnant and postpartum women for depression using a standard questionnaire, according to its new guideline.

The basis for its position is the lack of evidence that such screening “adds value beyond discussions about overall wellbeing, depression, anxiety, and mood that are currently a part of established perinatal clinical care.

“We should not be using a one-size-fits all approach,” lead author Eddy Lang, MD, professor and head of emergency medicine at the Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary (Alta.), told this news organization.

Instead, the task force emphasizes regular clinical care, including asking patients about their wellbeing and support systems. The task force categorizes the recommendation as conditional and as having very low-certainty evidence.

The recommendation was published in CMAJ.
 

One randomized study

The task force is an independent panel of clinicians and scientists that makes recommendations on primary and secondary prevention in primary care. A working group of five members of the task force developed this recommendation with scientific support from Public Health Agency of Canada staff.

In its research, the task force found only one study that showed a benefit of routine depression screening in this population. This study was a randomized controlled trial conducted in Hong Kong. Researchers evaluated 462 postpartum women who were randomly assigned to receive screening with the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) or no screening 2 months post partum.

“We found the effect of screening in this study to be very uncertain for the important outcomes of interest,” said Dr. Lang.

“These included parent-child stress, marital stress, and the number of infant hospital admissions. The effects of screening on all of these outcomes were very uncertain, mainly because it was such a small trial,” he said.

The task force also assessed how pregnant and postpartum women feel about being screened. What these women most wanted was a good relationship with a trusted primary care provider who would initiate discussions about their mental health in a caring atmosphere.

“Although they told us they liked the idea of universal screening, they admitted to their family doctors that they actually preferred to be asked about their wellbeing, [to be asked] how things were going at home, and [to have] a discussion about their mental health and wellbeing, rather than a formal screening process. They felt a discussion about depression with a primary health care provider during the pregnancy and postpartum period is critical,” said Dr. Lang.

Thus, the task force recommends “against instrument-based depression screening using a questionnaire with cutoff score to distinguish ‘screen positive’ and ‘screen negative’ administered to all individuals during pregnancy and the postpartum period (up to 1 year after childbirth).”
 

Screening remains common

“There’s a lot of uncertainty in the scientific community about whether it’s a good idea to administer a screening test to all pregnant and postpartum women to determine in a systematic way if they might be suffering from depression,” said Dr. Lang.

The task force recommended against screening for depression among perinatal or postpartum women in 2013, but screening is still performed in many provinces, said Dr. Lang.

Dr. Lang emphasized that the recommendation does not apply to usual care, in which the provider asks questions about and discusses a patient’s mental health and proceeds on the basis of their clinical judgment; nor does it apply to diagnostic pathways in which the clinician suspects that the individual may have depression and tests her accordingly.

“What we are saying in our recommendation is that all clinicians should ask about a patient’s wellbeing, about their mood, their anxiety, and these questions are an important part of the clinical assessment of pregnant and postpartum women. But we’re also saying the usefulness of doing so with a questionnaire and using a cutoff score on the questionnaire to decide who needs further assessment or possibly treatment is unproven by the research,” Dr. Lang said.
 

A growing problem

For Diane Francoeur, MD, CEO of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada, this is all well and good, but the reality is that such screening is better than nothing.

Quebec is the only Canadian province that conducts universal screening for all pregnant and postpartum women, Dr. Francoeur said in an interview. She was not part of the task force.

“I agree that it should be more than one approach, but the problem is that there is such a shortage of resources. There are many issues that can arise when you follow a woman during her pregnancy,” she said.

Dr. Francoeur said that COVID-19 has been particularly tough on women, including pregnant and postpartum women, who are the most vulnerable.

“Especially during the COVID era, it was astonishing how women were not doing well. Their stress level was so high. We need to have a specific approach dedicated to prenatal mental health, because it’s a problem that is bigger than it used to be,” she said.

Violence against women has increased considerably since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, said Dr. Francoeur. “Many more women have been killed by their partners. We have never seen anything like this before, and I hope we will never see this again,” she said.

“Help was more available a few years ago, but now, it’s really hard if and when you need to have a quick consultation with a specialist and the woman is really depressed. It can take forever. So, it’s okay to screen, but then, what’s next? Who is going to be there to take these women and help them? And we don’t have the answer,” Dr. Francoeur said.

Pregnant and postpartum women who suffer from depression need more than pills, she added. “We reassure them and treat their depression pharmacologically, but it’s also a time to give appropriate support and help them through the pregnancy and get well prepared to receive their newborn, because, as we now know, that first year of life is really important for the child, and the mom needs to be supported.”

Funding for the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care is provided by the Public Health Agency of Canada. Dr. Lang and Dr. Francoeur reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

The Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care recommends against the routine screening of all pregnant and postpartum women for depression using a standard questionnaire, according to its new guideline.

The basis for its position is the lack of evidence that such screening “adds value beyond discussions about overall wellbeing, depression, anxiety, and mood that are currently a part of established perinatal clinical care.

“We should not be using a one-size-fits all approach,” lead author Eddy Lang, MD, professor and head of emergency medicine at the Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary (Alta.), told this news organization.

Instead, the task force emphasizes regular clinical care, including asking patients about their wellbeing and support systems. The task force categorizes the recommendation as conditional and as having very low-certainty evidence.

The recommendation was published in CMAJ.
 

One randomized study

The task force is an independent panel of clinicians and scientists that makes recommendations on primary and secondary prevention in primary care. A working group of five members of the task force developed this recommendation with scientific support from Public Health Agency of Canada staff.

In its research, the task force found only one study that showed a benefit of routine depression screening in this population. This study was a randomized controlled trial conducted in Hong Kong. Researchers evaluated 462 postpartum women who were randomly assigned to receive screening with the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) or no screening 2 months post partum.

“We found the effect of screening in this study to be very uncertain for the important outcomes of interest,” said Dr. Lang.

“These included parent-child stress, marital stress, and the number of infant hospital admissions. The effects of screening on all of these outcomes were very uncertain, mainly because it was such a small trial,” he said.

The task force also assessed how pregnant and postpartum women feel about being screened. What these women most wanted was a good relationship with a trusted primary care provider who would initiate discussions about their mental health in a caring atmosphere.

“Although they told us they liked the idea of universal screening, they admitted to their family doctors that they actually preferred to be asked about their wellbeing, [to be asked] how things were going at home, and [to have] a discussion about their mental health and wellbeing, rather than a formal screening process. They felt a discussion about depression with a primary health care provider during the pregnancy and postpartum period is critical,” said Dr. Lang.

Thus, the task force recommends “against instrument-based depression screening using a questionnaire with cutoff score to distinguish ‘screen positive’ and ‘screen negative’ administered to all individuals during pregnancy and the postpartum period (up to 1 year after childbirth).”
 

Screening remains common

“There’s a lot of uncertainty in the scientific community about whether it’s a good idea to administer a screening test to all pregnant and postpartum women to determine in a systematic way if they might be suffering from depression,” said Dr. Lang.

The task force recommended against screening for depression among perinatal or postpartum women in 2013, but screening is still performed in many provinces, said Dr. Lang.

Dr. Lang emphasized that the recommendation does not apply to usual care, in which the provider asks questions about and discusses a patient’s mental health and proceeds on the basis of their clinical judgment; nor does it apply to diagnostic pathways in which the clinician suspects that the individual may have depression and tests her accordingly.

“What we are saying in our recommendation is that all clinicians should ask about a patient’s wellbeing, about their mood, their anxiety, and these questions are an important part of the clinical assessment of pregnant and postpartum women. But we’re also saying the usefulness of doing so with a questionnaire and using a cutoff score on the questionnaire to decide who needs further assessment or possibly treatment is unproven by the research,” Dr. Lang said.
 

A growing problem

For Diane Francoeur, MD, CEO of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada, this is all well and good, but the reality is that such screening is better than nothing.

Quebec is the only Canadian province that conducts universal screening for all pregnant and postpartum women, Dr. Francoeur said in an interview. She was not part of the task force.

“I agree that it should be more than one approach, but the problem is that there is such a shortage of resources. There are many issues that can arise when you follow a woman during her pregnancy,” she said.

Dr. Francoeur said that COVID-19 has been particularly tough on women, including pregnant and postpartum women, who are the most vulnerable.

“Especially during the COVID era, it was astonishing how women were not doing well. Their stress level was so high. We need to have a specific approach dedicated to prenatal mental health, because it’s a problem that is bigger than it used to be,” she said.

Violence against women has increased considerably since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, said Dr. Francoeur. “Many more women have been killed by their partners. We have never seen anything like this before, and I hope we will never see this again,” she said.

“Help was more available a few years ago, but now, it’s really hard if and when you need to have a quick consultation with a specialist and the woman is really depressed. It can take forever. So, it’s okay to screen, but then, what’s next? Who is going to be there to take these women and help them? And we don’t have the answer,” Dr. Francoeur said.

Pregnant and postpartum women who suffer from depression need more than pills, she added. “We reassure them and treat their depression pharmacologically, but it’s also a time to give appropriate support and help them through the pregnancy and get well prepared to receive their newborn, because, as we now know, that first year of life is really important for the child, and the mom needs to be supported.”

Funding for the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care is provided by the Public Health Agency of Canada. Dr. Lang and Dr. Francoeur reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Hospital programs tackle mental health effects of long COVID

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Fri, 07/29/2022 - 08:52

There’s little doubt that long COVID is real. Even as doctors and federal agencies struggle to define the syndrome, hospitals and health care systems are opening long COVID specialty treatment programs. As of July 25, there’s at least one long COVID center in almost every state – 48 out of 50, according to the patient advocacy group Survivor Corps.

Among the biggest challenges will be treating the mental health effects of long COVID. Well after people recover from acute COVID infections, they can still have a wide range of lingering symptoms, including depression, anxiety, brain fog, and PTSD.

courtesy Oregon Health & Science University
Dr. Jordan Anderson

Specialized centers will be tackling these problems even as the United States struggles to deal with mental health needs.

One study of COVID patients found more than one-third of them had symptoms of depression, anxiety, or PTSD 3-6 months after their initial infection. Another analysis of 30 previous studies of long COVID patients found roughly one in eight of them had severe depression – and that the risk was similar regardless of whether people were hospitalized for COVID-19.

“Many of these symptoms can emerge months into the course of long COVID illness,” said Jordan Anderson, DO, a neuropsychiatrist who sees patients at the Long COVID-19 Program at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland. Psychological symptoms are often made worse by physical setbacks like extreme fatigue and by challenges of working, caring for children, and keeping up with daily routines, he said.

“This impact is not only severe, but also chronic for many,” he said.

Like dozens of hospitals around the country, Oregon Health & Science opened its center for long COVID as it became clear that more patients would need help for ongoing physical and mental health symptoms. Today, there’s at least one long COVID center – sometimes called post-COVID care centers or clinics – in every state but Kansas and South Dakota, Survivor Corps said.

Many long COVID care centers aim to tackle both physical and mental health symptoms, said Tracy Vannorsdall, PhD, a neuropsychologist with the Johns Hopkins Post-Acute COVID-19 Team program. One goal at Hopkins is to identify patients with psychological issues that might otherwise get overlooked.

A sizable minority of patients at the Johns Hopkins center – up to about 35% – report mental health problems that they didn’t have until after they got COVID-19, Dr. Vannorsdall says. The most common mental health issues providers see are depression, anxiety, and trauma-related distress.

“Routine assessment is key,” Dr. Vannorsdall said. “If patients are not asked about their mental health symptoms, they may not spontaneously report them to their provider due to fear of stigma or simply not appreciating that there are effective treatments available for these issues.”

Fear that doctors won’t take symptoms seriously is common, says Heather Murray MD, a senior instructor in psychiatry at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora.

“Many patients worry their physicians, loved ones, and society will not believe them or will minimize their symptoms and suffering,” said Dr. Murray, who treats patients at the UCHealth Post-COVID Clinic.

Diagnostic tests in long COVID patients often don’t have conclusive results, which can lead doctors and patients themselves to question whether symptoms are truly “physical versus psychosomatic,” she said. “It is important that providers believe their patients and treat their symptoms, even when diagnostic tests are unrevealing.”
 

 

 

Growing mental health crisis

Patients often find their way to academic treatment centers after surviving severe COVID-19 infections. But a growing number of long COVID patients show up at these centers after milder cases. These patients were never hospitalized for COVID-19 but still have persistent symptoms like fatigue, thinking problems, and mood disorders.

Among the major challenges is a shortage of mental health care providers to meet the surging need for care since the start of the pandemic. Around the world, anxiety and depression surged 25% during the first year of the pandemic, according to the World Health Organization.

In the United States, 40% of adults report feelings of anxiety and depression, and one in three high school students have feelings of sadness and hopelessness, according to a March 2022 statement from the White House.

Despite this surging need for care, almost half of Americans live in areas with a severe shortage of mental health care providers, according to the Health Resources and Services Administration. As of 2019, the United States had a shortage of about 6,790 mental health providers. Since then, the shortage has worsened; it’s now about 7,500 providers.

“One of the biggest challenges for hospitals and clinics in treating mental health disorders in long COVID is the limited resources and long wait times to get in for evaluations and treatment,” said Nyaz Didehbani, PhD, a neuropsychologist who treats long COVID patients at the COVID Recover program at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas.

These delays can lead to worse outcomes, Dr. Didehbani said. “Additionally, patients do not feel that they are being heard, as many providers are not aware of the mental health impact and relationship with physical and cognitive symptoms.” .

Even when doctors recognize that psychological challenges are common with long COVID, they still have to think creatively to come up with treatments that meet the unique needs of these patients, said Thida Thant, MD, an assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Colorado who treats patients at the UCHealth Post-COVID Clinic.

“There are at least two major factors that make treating psychological issues in long COVID more complex: The fact that the pandemic is still ongoing and still so divisive throughout society, and the fact that we don’t know a single best way to treat all symptoms of long COVID,” she said.

Some common treatments for anxiety and depression, like psychotherapy and medication, can be used for long COVID patients with these conditions. But another intervention that can work wonders for many people with mood disorders – exercise – doesn’t always work for long COVID patients. That’s because many of them struggle with physical challenges like chronic fatigue and what’s known as postexertional malaise, or a worsening of symptoms after even limited physical effort.

“While we normally encourage patients to be active, have a daily routine, and to engage in physical activity as part of their mental health treatment, some long COVID patients find that their symptoms worsen after increased activity,” Dr. Vannorsdall said.

Patients who are able to reach long COVID care centers are much more apt to get mental health problems diagnosed and treated, doctors at many programs around the country agree. But many patients hardest hit by the pandemic – the poor and racial and ethnic minorities – are also less likely to have ready access to hospitals that offer these programs, said Dr. Anderson.

“Affluent, predominantly White populations are showing up in these clinics, while we know that non-White populations have disproportionally high rates of acute infection, hospitalization, and death related to the virus,” he said.

Clinics are also concentrated in academic medical centers and in urban areas, limiting options for people in rural communities who may have to drive for hours to access care, Dr. Anderson said.

“Even before long COVID, we already knew that many people live in areas where there simply aren’t enough mental health services available,” said John Zulueta, MD, an assistant professor of clinical psychiatry at the University of Illinois at Chicago who provides mental health evaluations at the UI Health Post-COVID Clinic.

“As more patients develop mental health issues associated with long COVID, it’s going to put more stress on an already stressed system,” he said.

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

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There’s little doubt that long COVID is real. Even as doctors and federal agencies struggle to define the syndrome, hospitals and health care systems are opening long COVID specialty treatment programs. As of July 25, there’s at least one long COVID center in almost every state – 48 out of 50, according to the patient advocacy group Survivor Corps.

Among the biggest challenges will be treating the mental health effects of long COVID. Well after people recover from acute COVID infections, they can still have a wide range of lingering symptoms, including depression, anxiety, brain fog, and PTSD.

courtesy Oregon Health & Science University
Dr. Jordan Anderson

Specialized centers will be tackling these problems even as the United States struggles to deal with mental health needs.

One study of COVID patients found more than one-third of them had symptoms of depression, anxiety, or PTSD 3-6 months after their initial infection. Another analysis of 30 previous studies of long COVID patients found roughly one in eight of them had severe depression – and that the risk was similar regardless of whether people were hospitalized for COVID-19.

“Many of these symptoms can emerge months into the course of long COVID illness,” said Jordan Anderson, DO, a neuropsychiatrist who sees patients at the Long COVID-19 Program at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland. Psychological symptoms are often made worse by physical setbacks like extreme fatigue and by challenges of working, caring for children, and keeping up with daily routines, he said.

“This impact is not only severe, but also chronic for many,” he said.

Like dozens of hospitals around the country, Oregon Health & Science opened its center for long COVID as it became clear that more patients would need help for ongoing physical and mental health symptoms. Today, there’s at least one long COVID center – sometimes called post-COVID care centers or clinics – in every state but Kansas and South Dakota, Survivor Corps said.

Many long COVID care centers aim to tackle both physical and mental health symptoms, said Tracy Vannorsdall, PhD, a neuropsychologist with the Johns Hopkins Post-Acute COVID-19 Team program. One goal at Hopkins is to identify patients with psychological issues that might otherwise get overlooked.

A sizable minority of patients at the Johns Hopkins center – up to about 35% – report mental health problems that they didn’t have until after they got COVID-19, Dr. Vannorsdall says. The most common mental health issues providers see are depression, anxiety, and trauma-related distress.

“Routine assessment is key,” Dr. Vannorsdall said. “If patients are not asked about their mental health symptoms, they may not spontaneously report them to their provider due to fear of stigma or simply not appreciating that there are effective treatments available for these issues.”

Fear that doctors won’t take symptoms seriously is common, says Heather Murray MD, a senior instructor in psychiatry at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora.

“Many patients worry their physicians, loved ones, and society will not believe them or will minimize their symptoms and suffering,” said Dr. Murray, who treats patients at the UCHealth Post-COVID Clinic.

Diagnostic tests in long COVID patients often don’t have conclusive results, which can lead doctors and patients themselves to question whether symptoms are truly “physical versus psychosomatic,” she said. “It is important that providers believe their patients and treat their symptoms, even when diagnostic tests are unrevealing.”
 

 

 

Growing mental health crisis

Patients often find their way to academic treatment centers after surviving severe COVID-19 infections. But a growing number of long COVID patients show up at these centers after milder cases. These patients were never hospitalized for COVID-19 but still have persistent symptoms like fatigue, thinking problems, and mood disorders.

Among the major challenges is a shortage of mental health care providers to meet the surging need for care since the start of the pandemic. Around the world, anxiety and depression surged 25% during the first year of the pandemic, according to the World Health Organization.

In the United States, 40% of adults report feelings of anxiety and depression, and one in three high school students have feelings of sadness and hopelessness, according to a March 2022 statement from the White House.

Despite this surging need for care, almost half of Americans live in areas with a severe shortage of mental health care providers, according to the Health Resources and Services Administration. As of 2019, the United States had a shortage of about 6,790 mental health providers. Since then, the shortage has worsened; it’s now about 7,500 providers.

“One of the biggest challenges for hospitals and clinics in treating mental health disorders in long COVID is the limited resources and long wait times to get in for evaluations and treatment,” said Nyaz Didehbani, PhD, a neuropsychologist who treats long COVID patients at the COVID Recover program at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas.

These delays can lead to worse outcomes, Dr. Didehbani said. “Additionally, patients do not feel that they are being heard, as many providers are not aware of the mental health impact and relationship with physical and cognitive symptoms.” .

Even when doctors recognize that psychological challenges are common with long COVID, they still have to think creatively to come up with treatments that meet the unique needs of these patients, said Thida Thant, MD, an assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Colorado who treats patients at the UCHealth Post-COVID Clinic.

“There are at least two major factors that make treating psychological issues in long COVID more complex: The fact that the pandemic is still ongoing and still so divisive throughout society, and the fact that we don’t know a single best way to treat all symptoms of long COVID,” she said.

Some common treatments for anxiety and depression, like psychotherapy and medication, can be used for long COVID patients with these conditions. But another intervention that can work wonders for many people with mood disorders – exercise – doesn’t always work for long COVID patients. That’s because many of them struggle with physical challenges like chronic fatigue and what’s known as postexertional malaise, or a worsening of symptoms after even limited physical effort.

“While we normally encourage patients to be active, have a daily routine, and to engage in physical activity as part of their mental health treatment, some long COVID patients find that their symptoms worsen after increased activity,” Dr. Vannorsdall said.

Patients who are able to reach long COVID care centers are much more apt to get mental health problems diagnosed and treated, doctors at many programs around the country agree. But many patients hardest hit by the pandemic – the poor and racial and ethnic minorities – are also less likely to have ready access to hospitals that offer these programs, said Dr. Anderson.

“Affluent, predominantly White populations are showing up in these clinics, while we know that non-White populations have disproportionally high rates of acute infection, hospitalization, and death related to the virus,” he said.

Clinics are also concentrated in academic medical centers and in urban areas, limiting options for people in rural communities who may have to drive for hours to access care, Dr. Anderson said.

“Even before long COVID, we already knew that many people live in areas where there simply aren’t enough mental health services available,” said John Zulueta, MD, an assistant professor of clinical psychiatry at the University of Illinois at Chicago who provides mental health evaluations at the UI Health Post-COVID Clinic.

“As more patients develop mental health issues associated with long COVID, it’s going to put more stress on an already stressed system,” he said.

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

There’s little doubt that long COVID is real. Even as doctors and federal agencies struggle to define the syndrome, hospitals and health care systems are opening long COVID specialty treatment programs. As of July 25, there’s at least one long COVID center in almost every state – 48 out of 50, according to the patient advocacy group Survivor Corps.

Among the biggest challenges will be treating the mental health effects of long COVID. Well after people recover from acute COVID infections, they can still have a wide range of lingering symptoms, including depression, anxiety, brain fog, and PTSD.

courtesy Oregon Health & Science University
Dr. Jordan Anderson

Specialized centers will be tackling these problems even as the United States struggles to deal with mental health needs.

One study of COVID patients found more than one-third of them had symptoms of depression, anxiety, or PTSD 3-6 months after their initial infection. Another analysis of 30 previous studies of long COVID patients found roughly one in eight of them had severe depression – and that the risk was similar regardless of whether people were hospitalized for COVID-19.

“Many of these symptoms can emerge months into the course of long COVID illness,” said Jordan Anderson, DO, a neuropsychiatrist who sees patients at the Long COVID-19 Program at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland. Psychological symptoms are often made worse by physical setbacks like extreme fatigue and by challenges of working, caring for children, and keeping up with daily routines, he said.

“This impact is not only severe, but also chronic for many,” he said.

Like dozens of hospitals around the country, Oregon Health & Science opened its center for long COVID as it became clear that more patients would need help for ongoing physical and mental health symptoms. Today, there’s at least one long COVID center – sometimes called post-COVID care centers or clinics – in every state but Kansas and South Dakota, Survivor Corps said.

Many long COVID care centers aim to tackle both physical and mental health symptoms, said Tracy Vannorsdall, PhD, a neuropsychologist with the Johns Hopkins Post-Acute COVID-19 Team program. One goal at Hopkins is to identify patients with psychological issues that might otherwise get overlooked.

A sizable minority of patients at the Johns Hopkins center – up to about 35% – report mental health problems that they didn’t have until after they got COVID-19, Dr. Vannorsdall says. The most common mental health issues providers see are depression, anxiety, and trauma-related distress.

“Routine assessment is key,” Dr. Vannorsdall said. “If patients are not asked about their mental health symptoms, they may not spontaneously report them to their provider due to fear of stigma or simply not appreciating that there are effective treatments available for these issues.”

Fear that doctors won’t take symptoms seriously is common, says Heather Murray MD, a senior instructor in psychiatry at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora.

“Many patients worry their physicians, loved ones, and society will not believe them or will minimize their symptoms and suffering,” said Dr. Murray, who treats patients at the UCHealth Post-COVID Clinic.

Diagnostic tests in long COVID patients often don’t have conclusive results, which can lead doctors and patients themselves to question whether symptoms are truly “physical versus psychosomatic,” she said. “It is important that providers believe their patients and treat their symptoms, even when diagnostic tests are unrevealing.”
 

 

 

Growing mental health crisis

Patients often find their way to academic treatment centers after surviving severe COVID-19 infections. But a growing number of long COVID patients show up at these centers after milder cases. These patients were never hospitalized for COVID-19 but still have persistent symptoms like fatigue, thinking problems, and mood disorders.

Among the major challenges is a shortage of mental health care providers to meet the surging need for care since the start of the pandemic. Around the world, anxiety and depression surged 25% during the first year of the pandemic, according to the World Health Organization.

In the United States, 40% of adults report feelings of anxiety and depression, and one in three high school students have feelings of sadness and hopelessness, according to a March 2022 statement from the White House.

Despite this surging need for care, almost half of Americans live in areas with a severe shortage of mental health care providers, according to the Health Resources and Services Administration. As of 2019, the United States had a shortage of about 6,790 mental health providers. Since then, the shortage has worsened; it’s now about 7,500 providers.

“One of the biggest challenges for hospitals and clinics in treating mental health disorders in long COVID is the limited resources and long wait times to get in for evaluations and treatment,” said Nyaz Didehbani, PhD, a neuropsychologist who treats long COVID patients at the COVID Recover program at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas.

These delays can lead to worse outcomes, Dr. Didehbani said. “Additionally, patients do not feel that they are being heard, as many providers are not aware of the mental health impact and relationship with physical and cognitive symptoms.” .

Even when doctors recognize that psychological challenges are common with long COVID, they still have to think creatively to come up with treatments that meet the unique needs of these patients, said Thida Thant, MD, an assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Colorado who treats patients at the UCHealth Post-COVID Clinic.

“There are at least two major factors that make treating psychological issues in long COVID more complex: The fact that the pandemic is still ongoing and still so divisive throughout society, and the fact that we don’t know a single best way to treat all symptoms of long COVID,” she said.

Some common treatments for anxiety and depression, like psychotherapy and medication, can be used for long COVID patients with these conditions. But another intervention that can work wonders for many people with mood disorders – exercise – doesn’t always work for long COVID patients. That’s because many of them struggle with physical challenges like chronic fatigue and what’s known as postexertional malaise, or a worsening of symptoms after even limited physical effort.

“While we normally encourage patients to be active, have a daily routine, and to engage in physical activity as part of their mental health treatment, some long COVID patients find that their symptoms worsen after increased activity,” Dr. Vannorsdall said.

Patients who are able to reach long COVID care centers are much more apt to get mental health problems diagnosed and treated, doctors at many programs around the country agree. But many patients hardest hit by the pandemic – the poor and racial and ethnic minorities – are also less likely to have ready access to hospitals that offer these programs, said Dr. Anderson.

“Affluent, predominantly White populations are showing up in these clinics, while we know that non-White populations have disproportionally high rates of acute infection, hospitalization, and death related to the virus,” he said.

Clinics are also concentrated in academic medical centers and in urban areas, limiting options for people in rural communities who may have to drive for hours to access care, Dr. Anderson said.

“Even before long COVID, we already knew that many people live in areas where there simply aren’t enough mental health services available,” said John Zulueta, MD, an assistant professor of clinical psychiatry at the University of Illinois at Chicago who provides mental health evaluations at the UI Health Post-COVID Clinic.

“As more patients develop mental health issues associated with long COVID, it’s going to put more stress on an already stressed system,” he said.

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

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Mental health assessment for gender-diverse patients

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Wed, 07/27/2022 - 08:50

Over the past several years, the number of patients seeking gender-affirming services has exponentially increased.1 Unfortunately, the number of patients presenting for treatment has exceeded evidence-based guidelines, research, and the number of providers familiar with gender-affirming care. Many institutions and associations such as the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) advocate for training of providers; however, many patients will be seen by providers who are not qualified in diagnosing gender dysphoria. As a result, many practitioners rely on the mental health evaluation of gender-diverse individuals prior to prescribing hormonal therapy or before planning surgery.

Practitioners qualified to provide mental health services can include persons within in the field of psychology, psychiatry, social work, licensed professional counseling, nursing, or family medicine (with specific training in mental health).2 WPATH also defines specific criteria as part of the mental health assessment. For example, providers should have a master’s degree or higher in clinical behavioral science, competence in using the DSM/ICD, the ability to recognize and diagnose coexisting mental health concerns, and undergo continuing education in the treatment of gender dysphoria.2 Unfortunately, the demand for gender-competent mental health professionals exceeds the number available, and many patients are seen by therapists lacking experience within this field.3 This discrepancy can present an additional barrier to the health needs of transgender patients and sometimes inhibit access to hormone therapy, or even more catastrophically, compromise their presurgical assessment and surgical outcome.

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

For patients seeking chest surgery (mastectomy or breast augmentation), one letter from a mental health provider is necessary. If a patient is interested in pursuing genital surgery or the removal or reproductive organs, two letters from two separate mental health providers are required. Typically, one letter is from the patient’s primary therapist, and the other is often a second opinion. These letters must include a patient’s general characteristics, psychosocial assessment results, duration of the mental health professional’s relationship with the client, an explanation that the criteria for surgery have been met, a statement supporting the patient’s request for surgery and that informed consent was obtained, and a statement that the mental health professional is available for coordination of care.2 It is crucial to delineate that while a mental health evaluation is mandated, psychotherapy is not.

A therapist’s letter is not essential prior to initiating hormones; however, it is recommended if practitioners are unfamiliar with gender-diverse patients and current standards of care. If a provider such as a family physician, endocrinologist, or obstetrician/gynecologist is knowledgeable about the diagnostic criteria for gender dysphoria, they can prescribe hormones without a therapist’s letter. Additional considerations include establishing whether a patient has persistent gender dysphoria, has the capacity to give informed consent, and has “reasonably well-controlled” mental illness.3 The prevalence of both depression and anxiety is exceptionally high in this population, whereas rates of bipolar disorder and schizophrenia mirror that of the general population.3 Mental illness is not a contraindication to hormone therapy because there is sufficient evidence to support the benefits of gender-affirming hormones in reducing both anxiety and depression.

In contrast, concurrent severe psychiatric illness (i.e., bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, borderline personality disorder) that is not well controlled could prohibit patients from undergoing gender-affirming surgeries. Even the most well-educated patients do not truly understand the process of surgery and the rigorous postoperative care required, particularly after genital surgery. Many patients underestimate the need for a support system in the postoperative period and cannot predict their emotional response after undergoing such complex procedures. During a surgical consultation, the surgeon can help identify any mental, physical, monetary, or social constraints patients may have and work closely with other providers, including a well-trained mental health professional, to optimize a patient’s surgical recovery. Ideally, patients undergoing surgery are seen at multidisciplinary centers with the capabilities of addressing these concerns.

The patient’s perspective on the need for a therapist is often mixed. Historically, therapist letters have been viewed by patients as a form of “gatekeeping” and an additional barrier they are forced to overcome to receive treatment. However, the role of a mental health provider who specializes in gender-affirming care cannot be overstated. In the context of surgery, I often try to reframe the role the therapist as an integral part of the multidisciplinary team. Mental health assessments preoperatively can better prepare patients for their upcoming surgery. More importantly, this multidisciplinary approach can help identify potential issues with coping strategies or exacerbations of other mental health conditions that may arise in the immediate postoperative period.

There is no question that exceptional gender-affirming care requires a multidisciplinary approach. Establishing strong relationships between hormone prescribers, surgeons, and behavioral health specialists in an essential step toward providing competent patient-centered care.
 

Dr. Brandt is an ob.gyn. and fellowship-trained gender-affirming surgeon in West Reading, Pa.

References

1. Ettner R. Mental health evaluation for gender confirmation surgery. Clin Plastic Surg. 2018;45(3):307-11.

2. Karasic D. Mental health care for the adult transgender patient. In: Ferrando CA, ed. Comprehensive Care of the Transgender Patient. Philadelphia: Elsevier; 2020:8-11.

3. World Professional Association for Transgender Health. Standards of care for the health of transsexual, transgender, and gender nonconforming people. 7th ed. Minneapolis: WPATH; 2012.

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Over the past several years, the number of patients seeking gender-affirming services has exponentially increased.1 Unfortunately, the number of patients presenting for treatment has exceeded evidence-based guidelines, research, and the number of providers familiar with gender-affirming care. Many institutions and associations such as the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) advocate for training of providers; however, many patients will be seen by providers who are not qualified in diagnosing gender dysphoria. As a result, many practitioners rely on the mental health evaluation of gender-diverse individuals prior to prescribing hormonal therapy or before planning surgery.

Practitioners qualified to provide mental health services can include persons within in the field of psychology, psychiatry, social work, licensed professional counseling, nursing, or family medicine (with specific training in mental health).2 WPATH also defines specific criteria as part of the mental health assessment. For example, providers should have a master’s degree or higher in clinical behavioral science, competence in using the DSM/ICD, the ability to recognize and diagnose coexisting mental health concerns, and undergo continuing education in the treatment of gender dysphoria.2 Unfortunately, the demand for gender-competent mental health professionals exceeds the number available, and many patients are seen by therapists lacking experience within this field.3 This discrepancy can present an additional barrier to the health needs of transgender patients and sometimes inhibit access to hormone therapy, or even more catastrophically, compromise their presurgical assessment and surgical outcome.

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

For patients seeking chest surgery (mastectomy or breast augmentation), one letter from a mental health provider is necessary. If a patient is interested in pursuing genital surgery or the removal or reproductive organs, two letters from two separate mental health providers are required. Typically, one letter is from the patient’s primary therapist, and the other is often a second opinion. These letters must include a patient’s general characteristics, psychosocial assessment results, duration of the mental health professional’s relationship with the client, an explanation that the criteria for surgery have been met, a statement supporting the patient’s request for surgery and that informed consent was obtained, and a statement that the mental health professional is available for coordination of care.2 It is crucial to delineate that while a mental health evaluation is mandated, psychotherapy is not.

A therapist’s letter is not essential prior to initiating hormones; however, it is recommended if practitioners are unfamiliar with gender-diverse patients and current standards of care. If a provider such as a family physician, endocrinologist, or obstetrician/gynecologist is knowledgeable about the diagnostic criteria for gender dysphoria, they can prescribe hormones without a therapist’s letter. Additional considerations include establishing whether a patient has persistent gender dysphoria, has the capacity to give informed consent, and has “reasonably well-controlled” mental illness.3 The prevalence of both depression and anxiety is exceptionally high in this population, whereas rates of bipolar disorder and schizophrenia mirror that of the general population.3 Mental illness is not a contraindication to hormone therapy because there is sufficient evidence to support the benefits of gender-affirming hormones in reducing both anxiety and depression.

In contrast, concurrent severe psychiatric illness (i.e., bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, borderline personality disorder) that is not well controlled could prohibit patients from undergoing gender-affirming surgeries. Even the most well-educated patients do not truly understand the process of surgery and the rigorous postoperative care required, particularly after genital surgery. Many patients underestimate the need for a support system in the postoperative period and cannot predict their emotional response after undergoing such complex procedures. During a surgical consultation, the surgeon can help identify any mental, physical, monetary, or social constraints patients may have and work closely with other providers, including a well-trained mental health professional, to optimize a patient’s surgical recovery. Ideally, patients undergoing surgery are seen at multidisciplinary centers with the capabilities of addressing these concerns.

The patient’s perspective on the need for a therapist is often mixed. Historically, therapist letters have been viewed by patients as a form of “gatekeeping” and an additional barrier they are forced to overcome to receive treatment. However, the role of a mental health provider who specializes in gender-affirming care cannot be overstated. In the context of surgery, I often try to reframe the role the therapist as an integral part of the multidisciplinary team. Mental health assessments preoperatively can better prepare patients for their upcoming surgery. More importantly, this multidisciplinary approach can help identify potential issues with coping strategies or exacerbations of other mental health conditions that may arise in the immediate postoperative period.

There is no question that exceptional gender-affirming care requires a multidisciplinary approach. Establishing strong relationships between hormone prescribers, surgeons, and behavioral health specialists in an essential step toward providing competent patient-centered care.
 

Dr. Brandt is an ob.gyn. and fellowship-trained gender-affirming surgeon in West Reading, Pa.

References

1. Ettner R. Mental health evaluation for gender confirmation surgery. Clin Plastic Surg. 2018;45(3):307-11.

2. Karasic D. Mental health care for the adult transgender patient. In: Ferrando CA, ed. Comprehensive Care of the Transgender Patient. Philadelphia: Elsevier; 2020:8-11.

3. World Professional Association for Transgender Health. Standards of care for the health of transsexual, transgender, and gender nonconforming people. 7th ed. Minneapolis: WPATH; 2012.

Over the past several years, the number of patients seeking gender-affirming services has exponentially increased.1 Unfortunately, the number of patients presenting for treatment has exceeded evidence-based guidelines, research, and the number of providers familiar with gender-affirming care. Many institutions and associations such as the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) advocate for training of providers; however, many patients will be seen by providers who are not qualified in diagnosing gender dysphoria. As a result, many practitioners rely on the mental health evaluation of gender-diverse individuals prior to prescribing hormonal therapy or before planning surgery.

Practitioners qualified to provide mental health services can include persons within in the field of psychology, psychiatry, social work, licensed professional counseling, nursing, or family medicine (with specific training in mental health).2 WPATH also defines specific criteria as part of the mental health assessment. For example, providers should have a master’s degree or higher in clinical behavioral science, competence in using the DSM/ICD, the ability to recognize and diagnose coexisting mental health concerns, and undergo continuing education in the treatment of gender dysphoria.2 Unfortunately, the demand for gender-competent mental health professionals exceeds the number available, and many patients are seen by therapists lacking experience within this field.3 This discrepancy can present an additional barrier to the health needs of transgender patients and sometimes inhibit access to hormone therapy, or even more catastrophically, compromise their presurgical assessment and surgical outcome.

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

For patients seeking chest surgery (mastectomy or breast augmentation), one letter from a mental health provider is necessary. If a patient is interested in pursuing genital surgery or the removal or reproductive organs, two letters from two separate mental health providers are required. Typically, one letter is from the patient’s primary therapist, and the other is often a second opinion. These letters must include a patient’s general characteristics, psychosocial assessment results, duration of the mental health professional’s relationship with the client, an explanation that the criteria for surgery have been met, a statement supporting the patient’s request for surgery and that informed consent was obtained, and a statement that the mental health professional is available for coordination of care.2 It is crucial to delineate that while a mental health evaluation is mandated, psychotherapy is not.

A therapist’s letter is not essential prior to initiating hormones; however, it is recommended if practitioners are unfamiliar with gender-diverse patients and current standards of care. If a provider such as a family physician, endocrinologist, or obstetrician/gynecologist is knowledgeable about the diagnostic criteria for gender dysphoria, they can prescribe hormones without a therapist’s letter. Additional considerations include establishing whether a patient has persistent gender dysphoria, has the capacity to give informed consent, and has “reasonably well-controlled” mental illness.3 The prevalence of both depression and anxiety is exceptionally high in this population, whereas rates of bipolar disorder and schizophrenia mirror that of the general population.3 Mental illness is not a contraindication to hormone therapy because there is sufficient evidence to support the benefits of gender-affirming hormones in reducing both anxiety and depression.

In contrast, concurrent severe psychiatric illness (i.e., bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, borderline personality disorder) that is not well controlled could prohibit patients from undergoing gender-affirming surgeries. Even the most well-educated patients do not truly understand the process of surgery and the rigorous postoperative care required, particularly after genital surgery. Many patients underestimate the need for a support system in the postoperative period and cannot predict their emotional response after undergoing such complex procedures. During a surgical consultation, the surgeon can help identify any mental, physical, monetary, or social constraints patients may have and work closely with other providers, including a well-trained mental health professional, to optimize a patient’s surgical recovery. Ideally, patients undergoing surgery are seen at multidisciplinary centers with the capabilities of addressing these concerns.

The patient’s perspective on the need for a therapist is often mixed. Historically, therapist letters have been viewed by patients as a form of “gatekeeping” and an additional barrier they are forced to overcome to receive treatment. However, the role of a mental health provider who specializes in gender-affirming care cannot be overstated. In the context of surgery, I often try to reframe the role the therapist as an integral part of the multidisciplinary team. Mental health assessments preoperatively can better prepare patients for their upcoming surgery. More importantly, this multidisciplinary approach can help identify potential issues with coping strategies or exacerbations of other mental health conditions that may arise in the immediate postoperative period.

There is no question that exceptional gender-affirming care requires a multidisciplinary approach. Establishing strong relationships between hormone prescribers, surgeons, and behavioral health specialists in an essential step toward providing competent patient-centered care.
 

Dr. Brandt is an ob.gyn. and fellowship-trained gender-affirming surgeon in West Reading, Pa.

References

1. Ettner R. Mental health evaluation for gender confirmation surgery. Clin Plastic Surg. 2018;45(3):307-11.

2. Karasic D. Mental health care for the adult transgender patient. In: Ferrando CA, ed. Comprehensive Care of the Transgender Patient. Philadelphia: Elsevier; 2020:8-11.

3. World Professional Association for Transgender Health. Standards of care for the health of transsexual, transgender, and gender nonconforming people. 7th ed. Minneapolis: WPATH; 2012.

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Clinical characteristics of recurrent RIME elucidated in chart review

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Onset of recurrent reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption (RIME) was most common among males between the ages of 11 and 12 years, which is younger than previously described, in a single-center retrospective study. In addition, 71% of patients with recurrent disease experienced 1-2 recurrences – episodes that were generally milder and occurred at variable intervals.

Those are among key findings from the study of 50 patients with RIME, presented by Catherina X. Pan at the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology.

Catherina X. Pan

Reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption (RIME) is a novel term encompassing an array of rare, parainfectious mucositis diseases, noted Ms. Pan, a fourth-year medical student at Harvard Medical School, Boston. Previously known as Mycoplasma pneumoniae-induced rash and mucositis (MIRM), common clinical characteristics of RIME include less than 10% body surface area involvement of polymorphic skin lesions (vesiculobullous or targetoid macules/papules); erosive oral, genital, and/or ocular mucositis involving more than two sites, and evidence of prior infection including but not limited to upper respiratory infection, fever, and cough.

In addition to M. pneumoniae, other pathogens have been implicated, she said. “While the underlying etiology of the disease is not entirely clear, it’s become increasingly known that RIME tends to recur in a subset of patients.”

A cohort study of 13 patients with RIME found that Black race, male sex, and older age were predominant among the five patients who developed recurrent disease.

The estimated recurrence rate is between 8% and 38%, but the clinical characteristics of patients who develop recurrent RIME tend to be poorly understood, Ms. Pan said.

Along with her mentor, Sadaf Hussain, MD, of the department of dermatology at Boston Children’s Hospital, Ms. Pan conducted a retrospective chart review to characterize the clinical history and course of disease in patients diagnosed with recurrent RIME. They extracted data between January of 2000 and March of 2022 using ICD-10 codes used by board-certified dermatologists at Boston Children’s Hospital, as well as a text search for RIME or MIRM in the dermatology notes. Patients were included if they had a RIME/MIRM diagnosis by a board-certified dermatologist and/or infection on PCR/serology and mucositis involvement with limited skin involvement.

The study population included 50 patients: 24 with recurrent RIME and 26 with isolated RIME. The majority (66%) were male, and the mean age of RIME onset was between 11 and 12 years old, which is up to two years younger than previously reported in the case series of 13 patients. Most of the study participants (79%) were White, but there were no significant differences in patients who had recurrent RIME and those who had isolated RIME in terms of age, sex, or race.
 

Isolated vs. recurrent RIME

However, compared with patients who had isolated RIME, a greater proportion of those with recurrent RIME had a history of atopic disease (46% vs. 23%, respectively; P = .136), as well as a history of tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy (25% vs. 4%; P = .045). “This has not been previously observed, but it may generate a hypothesis that patients with a history of frequent infection as well as amplified immune responses may be associated with disease recurrence,” Ms. Pan said.

The average number of episodes among patients with recurrent RIME was 3.5 and the interval between episodes was variable, at a mean of 10.2 months. Ms. Pan reported that 71% of recurrent RIME patients experienced 1-2 episodes, although one patient experienced 9 episodes.

Clinically, episodes among all patients with RIME were characterized by infectious prodromal symptoms (69%), oral lesions (95%), ocular lesions (60%), genital lesions (41%) and cutaneous lesions (40%). However, RIME recurrences were less severe and more atypical, with 49% involving only one mucosal surface and 29% involving two mucosal surfaces. Also, except for oral lesions, rates of infectious prodromal symptoms and other lesions significantly decreased among recurrences compared with initial RIME.

“Notably, we found that M. pneumoniae was the most common known cause of RIME, particularly among the initial episodes,” Ms. Pan said. “However, 61% of recurrent RIME episodes did not have a known cause in terms of infectious etiology. And, concordant with prior studies, we also found decreased severity [of RIME recurrences] as indicated by decreased rates of emergency department presentation, hospitalization, and duration of hospitalization.”

In other findings, psychiatric complications such as anxiety and depression followed the onset of RIME in 33% of those with recurrent disease and 22% of those with isolated disease. In addition, the three most common treatments among all 50 patients were systemic steroids, topical steroids, and M. pneumoniae-specific antibiotics.



“While RIME is considered as typically milder than Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis with low mortality rates, it can lead to severe complications including conjunctival shrinkage, corneal ulceration and scarring, blindness, and oral, ocular, urogenital synechiae,” Ms. Pan noted. “Increased use of corticosteroids and steroid-sparing agents such as IVIG have also been observed. Multidisciplinary care with ophthalmology, urology, and mental health services is critical.”

She acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its retrospective, single-center design, and the possibility that milder cases may have been excluded due to a lack of accurate diagnosis or referral.

Carrie C. Coughlin, MD, who was asked to comment on the study results, pointed out that nearly half (24) of patients in the cohort experienced recurrent RIME. “This is a high proportion, suggesting counseling about the possibility of recurrence is more important than previously thought,” said Dr. Coughlin, director of the section of pediatric dermatology Washington University/St. Louis Children’s Hospital.

“Fortunately, recurrent cases tended to be less severe. However, many patients had more than one recurrence, making this challenging for affected patients.”

The researchers reported having no financial disclosures. Dr. Coughlin is on the board of the Pediatric Dermatology Research Alliance (PeDRA) and the International Immunosuppression and Transplant Skin Cancer Collaborative.

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Onset of recurrent reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption (RIME) was most common among males between the ages of 11 and 12 years, which is younger than previously described, in a single-center retrospective study. In addition, 71% of patients with recurrent disease experienced 1-2 recurrences – episodes that were generally milder and occurred at variable intervals.

Those are among key findings from the study of 50 patients with RIME, presented by Catherina X. Pan at the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology.

Catherina X. Pan

Reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption (RIME) is a novel term encompassing an array of rare, parainfectious mucositis diseases, noted Ms. Pan, a fourth-year medical student at Harvard Medical School, Boston. Previously known as Mycoplasma pneumoniae-induced rash and mucositis (MIRM), common clinical characteristics of RIME include less than 10% body surface area involvement of polymorphic skin lesions (vesiculobullous or targetoid macules/papules); erosive oral, genital, and/or ocular mucositis involving more than two sites, and evidence of prior infection including but not limited to upper respiratory infection, fever, and cough.

In addition to M. pneumoniae, other pathogens have been implicated, she said. “While the underlying etiology of the disease is not entirely clear, it’s become increasingly known that RIME tends to recur in a subset of patients.”

A cohort study of 13 patients with RIME found that Black race, male sex, and older age were predominant among the five patients who developed recurrent disease.

The estimated recurrence rate is between 8% and 38%, but the clinical characteristics of patients who develop recurrent RIME tend to be poorly understood, Ms. Pan said.

Along with her mentor, Sadaf Hussain, MD, of the department of dermatology at Boston Children’s Hospital, Ms. Pan conducted a retrospective chart review to characterize the clinical history and course of disease in patients diagnosed with recurrent RIME. They extracted data between January of 2000 and March of 2022 using ICD-10 codes used by board-certified dermatologists at Boston Children’s Hospital, as well as a text search for RIME or MIRM in the dermatology notes. Patients were included if they had a RIME/MIRM diagnosis by a board-certified dermatologist and/or infection on PCR/serology and mucositis involvement with limited skin involvement.

The study population included 50 patients: 24 with recurrent RIME and 26 with isolated RIME. The majority (66%) were male, and the mean age of RIME onset was between 11 and 12 years old, which is up to two years younger than previously reported in the case series of 13 patients. Most of the study participants (79%) were White, but there were no significant differences in patients who had recurrent RIME and those who had isolated RIME in terms of age, sex, or race.
 

Isolated vs. recurrent RIME

However, compared with patients who had isolated RIME, a greater proportion of those with recurrent RIME had a history of atopic disease (46% vs. 23%, respectively; P = .136), as well as a history of tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy (25% vs. 4%; P = .045). “This has not been previously observed, but it may generate a hypothesis that patients with a history of frequent infection as well as amplified immune responses may be associated with disease recurrence,” Ms. Pan said.

The average number of episodes among patients with recurrent RIME was 3.5 and the interval between episodes was variable, at a mean of 10.2 months. Ms. Pan reported that 71% of recurrent RIME patients experienced 1-2 episodes, although one patient experienced 9 episodes.

Clinically, episodes among all patients with RIME were characterized by infectious prodromal symptoms (69%), oral lesions (95%), ocular lesions (60%), genital lesions (41%) and cutaneous lesions (40%). However, RIME recurrences were less severe and more atypical, with 49% involving only one mucosal surface and 29% involving two mucosal surfaces. Also, except for oral lesions, rates of infectious prodromal symptoms and other lesions significantly decreased among recurrences compared with initial RIME.

“Notably, we found that M. pneumoniae was the most common known cause of RIME, particularly among the initial episodes,” Ms. Pan said. “However, 61% of recurrent RIME episodes did not have a known cause in terms of infectious etiology. And, concordant with prior studies, we also found decreased severity [of RIME recurrences] as indicated by decreased rates of emergency department presentation, hospitalization, and duration of hospitalization.”

In other findings, psychiatric complications such as anxiety and depression followed the onset of RIME in 33% of those with recurrent disease and 22% of those with isolated disease. In addition, the three most common treatments among all 50 patients were systemic steroids, topical steroids, and M. pneumoniae-specific antibiotics.



“While RIME is considered as typically milder than Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis with low mortality rates, it can lead to severe complications including conjunctival shrinkage, corneal ulceration and scarring, blindness, and oral, ocular, urogenital synechiae,” Ms. Pan noted. “Increased use of corticosteroids and steroid-sparing agents such as IVIG have also been observed. Multidisciplinary care with ophthalmology, urology, and mental health services is critical.”

She acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its retrospective, single-center design, and the possibility that milder cases may have been excluded due to a lack of accurate diagnosis or referral.

Carrie C. Coughlin, MD, who was asked to comment on the study results, pointed out that nearly half (24) of patients in the cohort experienced recurrent RIME. “This is a high proportion, suggesting counseling about the possibility of recurrence is more important than previously thought,” said Dr. Coughlin, director of the section of pediatric dermatology Washington University/St. Louis Children’s Hospital.

“Fortunately, recurrent cases tended to be less severe. However, many patients had more than one recurrence, making this challenging for affected patients.”

The researchers reported having no financial disclosures. Dr. Coughlin is on the board of the Pediatric Dermatology Research Alliance (PeDRA) and the International Immunosuppression and Transplant Skin Cancer Collaborative.

Onset of recurrent reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption (RIME) was most common among males between the ages of 11 and 12 years, which is younger than previously described, in a single-center retrospective study. In addition, 71% of patients with recurrent disease experienced 1-2 recurrences – episodes that were generally milder and occurred at variable intervals.

Those are among key findings from the study of 50 patients with RIME, presented by Catherina X. Pan at the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology.

Catherina X. Pan

Reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption (RIME) is a novel term encompassing an array of rare, parainfectious mucositis diseases, noted Ms. Pan, a fourth-year medical student at Harvard Medical School, Boston. Previously known as Mycoplasma pneumoniae-induced rash and mucositis (MIRM), common clinical characteristics of RIME include less than 10% body surface area involvement of polymorphic skin lesions (vesiculobullous or targetoid macules/papules); erosive oral, genital, and/or ocular mucositis involving more than two sites, and evidence of prior infection including but not limited to upper respiratory infection, fever, and cough.

In addition to M. pneumoniae, other pathogens have been implicated, she said. “While the underlying etiology of the disease is not entirely clear, it’s become increasingly known that RIME tends to recur in a subset of patients.”

A cohort study of 13 patients with RIME found that Black race, male sex, and older age were predominant among the five patients who developed recurrent disease.

The estimated recurrence rate is between 8% and 38%, but the clinical characteristics of patients who develop recurrent RIME tend to be poorly understood, Ms. Pan said.

Along with her mentor, Sadaf Hussain, MD, of the department of dermatology at Boston Children’s Hospital, Ms. Pan conducted a retrospective chart review to characterize the clinical history and course of disease in patients diagnosed with recurrent RIME. They extracted data between January of 2000 and March of 2022 using ICD-10 codes used by board-certified dermatologists at Boston Children’s Hospital, as well as a text search for RIME or MIRM in the dermatology notes. Patients were included if they had a RIME/MIRM diagnosis by a board-certified dermatologist and/or infection on PCR/serology and mucositis involvement with limited skin involvement.

The study population included 50 patients: 24 with recurrent RIME and 26 with isolated RIME. The majority (66%) were male, and the mean age of RIME onset was between 11 and 12 years old, which is up to two years younger than previously reported in the case series of 13 patients. Most of the study participants (79%) were White, but there were no significant differences in patients who had recurrent RIME and those who had isolated RIME in terms of age, sex, or race.
 

Isolated vs. recurrent RIME

However, compared with patients who had isolated RIME, a greater proportion of those with recurrent RIME had a history of atopic disease (46% vs. 23%, respectively; P = .136), as well as a history of tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy (25% vs. 4%; P = .045). “This has not been previously observed, but it may generate a hypothesis that patients with a history of frequent infection as well as amplified immune responses may be associated with disease recurrence,” Ms. Pan said.

The average number of episodes among patients with recurrent RIME was 3.5 and the interval between episodes was variable, at a mean of 10.2 months. Ms. Pan reported that 71% of recurrent RIME patients experienced 1-2 episodes, although one patient experienced 9 episodes.

Clinically, episodes among all patients with RIME were characterized by infectious prodromal symptoms (69%), oral lesions (95%), ocular lesions (60%), genital lesions (41%) and cutaneous lesions (40%). However, RIME recurrences were less severe and more atypical, with 49% involving only one mucosal surface and 29% involving two mucosal surfaces. Also, except for oral lesions, rates of infectious prodromal symptoms and other lesions significantly decreased among recurrences compared with initial RIME.

“Notably, we found that M. pneumoniae was the most common known cause of RIME, particularly among the initial episodes,” Ms. Pan said. “However, 61% of recurrent RIME episodes did not have a known cause in terms of infectious etiology. And, concordant with prior studies, we also found decreased severity [of RIME recurrences] as indicated by decreased rates of emergency department presentation, hospitalization, and duration of hospitalization.”

In other findings, psychiatric complications such as anxiety and depression followed the onset of RIME in 33% of those with recurrent disease and 22% of those with isolated disease. In addition, the three most common treatments among all 50 patients were systemic steroids, topical steroids, and M. pneumoniae-specific antibiotics.



“While RIME is considered as typically milder than Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis with low mortality rates, it can lead to severe complications including conjunctival shrinkage, corneal ulceration and scarring, blindness, and oral, ocular, urogenital synechiae,” Ms. Pan noted. “Increased use of corticosteroids and steroid-sparing agents such as IVIG have also been observed. Multidisciplinary care with ophthalmology, urology, and mental health services is critical.”

She acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its retrospective, single-center design, and the possibility that milder cases may have been excluded due to a lack of accurate diagnosis or referral.

Carrie C. Coughlin, MD, who was asked to comment on the study results, pointed out that nearly half (24) of patients in the cohort experienced recurrent RIME. “This is a high proportion, suggesting counseling about the possibility of recurrence is more important than previously thought,” said Dr. Coughlin, director of the section of pediatric dermatology Washington University/St. Louis Children’s Hospital.

“Fortunately, recurrent cases tended to be less severe. However, many patients had more than one recurrence, making this challenging for affected patients.”

The researchers reported having no financial disclosures. Dr. Coughlin is on the board of the Pediatric Dermatology Research Alliance (PeDRA) and the International Immunosuppression and Transplant Skin Cancer Collaborative.

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‘Ecotrauma’: The effects of climate change on mental health

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 07/26/2022 - 12:10

In June of this year, the World Health Organization launched a policy report to confront the increasingly strong and lasting impacts that climate change is having directly and indirectly on people’s mental health and psychosocial well-being.

In addition to the increasingly high incidence of mental disorders (for instance, emotional distress, stress, depression, and suicidal behavior) affecting people worldwide, the WHO warned of new, emerging syndromes that are directly related to climate change, such as “ecotrauma.” This term refers to anxiety in the face of the apocalyptic scenario predicted to result from the transformation of ecosystems by anthropogenic activity.

Two weeks after the release of the policy report, which integrates key policies for countries to address one of the biggest challenges, the WHO published its largest review of global mental health since the turn of the century. The work provides a model for governments, academics, health professionals, and civil society to become key players when dealing with the mental health problems that our society is going through.

Bernhard_Staehli/Thinkstock

As the document highlights, almost 1 billion people, including 14% of the world’s adolescents, were living with a mental health disorder in 2019. Suicide accounted for more than 1 in 100 deaths, and 58% of cases occurred before age 50 years. Mental health disorders are already the leading cause of disability in the world, and people with serious but preventable diseases die on average 10-20 years earlier than the general population.

The COVID-19 crisis has significantly aggravated mental health disorders, especially in populations such as minors. Consequently, many experts refer to this public health phenomenon as the new major pandemic. “I’m not sure it’s correct to call a set of mental health problems a pandemic, but the reality is that many countries are ignoring or largely forgetting this crisis,” Sarah Sheppard, WHO communications officer, told this news organization. According to Ms. Sheppard, “stigma and lack of understanding are key drivers of these problems and have been one of the reasons for the lack of mental health funding for decades. Mental health receives less than 1% of international health aid.” We recently interviewed Ms. Sheppard about these challenges.

Univadis: As the data provided in the recently released Mental Health and Climate Change Policy Brief indicate, there are large gaps in many countries between mental health needs and the services and systems available to address them. Where can we start to change this reality?

Ms. Sheppard: The simplest answer to improve the situation we face begins with a change in people’s priorities when it comes to valuing mental health. This would lead to greater investment in human and financial resources for mental health services and systems. However, the challenge lies in the complexity of the problem. In the report we just published, we provide comprehensive recommendations on how to transform mental health systems for all, such as trying to integrate climate change considerations into policies and programs for mental health or building on existing global commitments, including the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) or the Paris Agreement.

Univadis: Is there evidence that mental illnesses and disorders affect some populations more than others, such as women, for example?

Ms. Sheppard: The prevalence of mental disorders varies according to conditions and according to sex and age. In general, I don’t think we can say that mental health conditions or disorders affect women more than men. There are groups at risk, but vulnerability depends on the context and varies a lot. Of course, social determinants such as poverty, unstable housing, and exposure to adversity can significantly increase risk.

Univadis: According to the statistics recently provided by the WHO, changes in the environment are directly and indirectly affecting people’s mental health and psychosocial well-being. The new report highlights the gap between countries when it comes to addressing this complex problem. Is there any country that is carrying out political or innovative initiatives in this regard?

Ms. Sheppard: Yes, there are many case studies in the policy brief that highlight important work in the area. There are strong examples that are highlighted in the summary. One of them is India and its resilient cities program. Focused on the reduction of disaster risk, climate resilience, and mental health and psychosocial support at city level, this project resulted from a collaboration between the United Nations Development Program and the Indian National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, which began in 2017.

Univadis: In addition to its effects on mental health, we are seeing how climate change is causing the appearance and resurgence of zoonoses, such as the pandemic caused by coronavirus and now monkeypox.

Ms. Sheppard: Mike Ryan, head of emergency situations at WHO, stated at the beginning of June that the increase in zoonoses raises the risk of new pandemics. Infections transmitted from animals to humans, such as Ebola, COVID-19, or monkeypox, have multiplied in recent years. Climate change alters the conditions for pathogens and zoonotic disease vectors and their distribution. The intensification of travel, for example, allows them to spread more quickly and in a more uncontrolled way.

Human health, including mental health, is connected to animal health. As various materials available to us from our World Health Day 2022 campaign examine, the links between planetary health and human health are inextricable.

Univadis: How is it possible that while scientific progress advances and more powerful and efficient technologies are developed, we become increasingly vulnerable to environmental phenomena?

Ms. Sheppard: Scientific advancement improves our understanding of the quality and scale of the health impacts of climate change, including the identification of the most vulnerable groups, as well as the adaptation and mitigation measures that would work to reduce the consequences on health. At the same time, climate change is widespread, rapid, and intensifying. Technological advances have a role to play in mitigation, particularly those tools that reduce our dependence on burning fossil fuels, as well as adaptation to climate change. For example, early warning systems for extreme weather events could reduce those vulnerabilities your question mentioned.

On the other hand, the measures proposed by the latest report on mental health and climate change have multiple effects. Some are particularly powerful and are not overly dependent on new technology. These include changing our mode of transport to low-emission, physically active ways to get around (walking, cycling), the benefits of which are already more than proven for both the environment and human health.

This article was translated from Univadis Spain.

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

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In June of this year, the World Health Organization launched a policy report to confront the increasingly strong and lasting impacts that climate change is having directly and indirectly on people’s mental health and psychosocial well-being.

In addition to the increasingly high incidence of mental disorders (for instance, emotional distress, stress, depression, and suicidal behavior) affecting people worldwide, the WHO warned of new, emerging syndromes that are directly related to climate change, such as “ecotrauma.” This term refers to anxiety in the face of the apocalyptic scenario predicted to result from the transformation of ecosystems by anthropogenic activity.

Two weeks after the release of the policy report, which integrates key policies for countries to address one of the biggest challenges, the WHO published its largest review of global mental health since the turn of the century. The work provides a model for governments, academics, health professionals, and civil society to become key players when dealing with the mental health problems that our society is going through.

Bernhard_Staehli/Thinkstock

As the document highlights, almost 1 billion people, including 14% of the world’s adolescents, were living with a mental health disorder in 2019. Suicide accounted for more than 1 in 100 deaths, and 58% of cases occurred before age 50 years. Mental health disorders are already the leading cause of disability in the world, and people with serious but preventable diseases die on average 10-20 years earlier than the general population.

The COVID-19 crisis has significantly aggravated mental health disorders, especially in populations such as minors. Consequently, many experts refer to this public health phenomenon as the new major pandemic. “I’m not sure it’s correct to call a set of mental health problems a pandemic, but the reality is that many countries are ignoring or largely forgetting this crisis,” Sarah Sheppard, WHO communications officer, told this news organization. According to Ms. Sheppard, “stigma and lack of understanding are key drivers of these problems and have been one of the reasons for the lack of mental health funding for decades. Mental health receives less than 1% of international health aid.” We recently interviewed Ms. Sheppard about these challenges.

Univadis: As the data provided in the recently released Mental Health and Climate Change Policy Brief indicate, there are large gaps in many countries between mental health needs and the services and systems available to address them. Where can we start to change this reality?

Ms. Sheppard: The simplest answer to improve the situation we face begins with a change in people’s priorities when it comes to valuing mental health. This would lead to greater investment in human and financial resources for mental health services and systems. However, the challenge lies in the complexity of the problem. In the report we just published, we provide comprehensive recommendations on how to transform mental health systems for all, such as trying to integrate climate change considerations into policies and programs for mental health or building on existing global commitments, including the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) or the Paris Agreement.

Univadis: Is there evidence that mental illnesses and disorders affect some populations more than others, such as women, for example?

Ms. Sheppard: The prevalence of mental disorders varies according to conditions and according to sex and age. In general, I don’t think we can say that mental health conditions or disorders affect women more than men. There are groups at risk, but vulnerability depends on the context and varies a lot. Of course, social determinants such as poverty, unstable housing, and exposure to adversity can significantly increase risk.

Univadis: According to the statistics recently provided by the WHO, changes in the environment are directly and indirectly affecting people’s mental health and psychosocial well-being. The new report highlights the gap between countries when it comes to addressing this complex problem. Is there any country that is carrying out political or innovative initiatives in this regard?

Ms. Sheppard: Yes, there are many case studies in the policy brief that highlight important work in the area. There are strong examples that are highlighted in the summary. One of them is India and its resilient cities program. Focused on the reduction of disaster risk, climate resilience, and mental health and psychosocial support at city level, this project resulted from a collaboration between the United Nations Development Program and the Indian National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, which began in 2017.

Univadis: In addition to its effects on mental health, we are seeing how climate change is causing the appearance and resurgence of zoonoses, such as the pandemic caused by coronavirus and now monkeypox.

Ms. Sheppard: Mike Ryan, head of emergency situations at WHO, stated at the beginning of June that the increase in zoonoses raises the risk of new pandemics. Infections transmitted from animals to humans, such as Ebola, COVID-19, or monkeypox, have multiplied in recent years. Climate change alters the conditions for pathogens and zoonotic disease vectors and their distribution. The intensification of travel, for example, allows them to spread more quickly and in a more uncontrolled way.

Human health, including mental health, is connected to animal health. As various materials available to us from our World Health Day 2022 campaign examine, the links between planetary health and human health are inextricable.

Univadis: How is it possible that while scientific progress advances and more powerful and efficient technologies are developed, we become increasingly vulnerable to environmental phenomena?

Ms. Sheppard: Scientific advancement improves our understanding of the quality and scale of the health impacts of climate change, including the identification of the most vulnerable groups, as well as the adaptation and mitigation measures that would work to reduce the consequences on health. At the same time, climate change is widespread, rapid, and intensifying. Technological advances have a role to play in mitigation, particularly those tools that reduce our dependence on burning fossil fuels, as well as adaptation to climate change. For example, early warning systems for extreme weather events could reduce those vulnerabilities your question mentioned.

On the other hand, the measures proposed by the latest report on mental health and climate change have multiple effects. Some are particularly powerful and are not overly dependent on new technology. These include changing our mode of transport to low-emission, physically active ways to get around (walking, cycling), the benefits of which are already more than proven for both the environment and human health.

This article was translated from Univadis Spain.

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

In June of this year, the World Health Organization launched a policy report to confront the increasingly strong and lasting impacts that climate change is having directly and indirectly on people’s mental health and psychosocial well-being.

In addition to the increasingly high incidence of mental disorders (for instance, emotional distress, stress, depression, and suicidal behavior) affecting people worldwide, the WHO warned of new, emerging syndromes that are directly related to climate change, such as “ecotrauma.” This term refers to anxiety in the face of the apocalyptic scenario predicted to result from the transformation of ecosystems by anthropogenic activity.

Two weeks after the release of the policy report, which integrates key policies for countries to address one of the biggest challenges, the WHO published its largest review of global mental health since the turn of the century. The work provides a model for governments, academics, health professionals, and civil society to become key players when dealing with the mental health problems that our society is going through.

Bernhard_Staehli/Thinkstock

As the document highlights, almost 1 billion people, including 14% of the world’s adolescents, were living with a mental health disorder in 2019. Suicide accounted for more than 1 in 100 deaths, and 58% of cases occurred before age 50 years. Mental health disorders are already the leading cause of disability in the world, and people with serious but preventable diseases die on average 10-20 years earlier than the general population.

The COVID-19 crisis has significantly aggravated mental health disorders, especially in populations such as minors. Consequently, many experts refer to this public health phenomenon as the new major pandemic. “I’m not sure it’s correct to call a set of mental health problems a pandemic, but the reality is that many countries are ignoring or largely forgetting this crisis,” Sarah Sheppard, WHO communications officer, told this news organization. According to Ms. Sheppard, “stigma and lack of understanding are key drivers of these problems and have been one of the reasons for the lack of mental health funding for decades. Mental health receives less than 1% of international health aid.” We recently interviewed Ms. Sheppard about these challenges.

Univadis: As the data provided in the recently released Mental Health and Climate Change Policy Brief indicate, there are large gaps in many countries between mental health needs and the services and systems available to address them. Where can we start to change this reality?

Ms. Sheppard: The simplest answer to improve the situation we face begins with a change in people’s priorities when it comes to valuing mental health. This would lead to greater investment in human and financial resources for mental health services and systems. However, the challenge lies in the complexity of the problem. In the report we just published, we provide comprehensive recommendations on how to transform mental health systems for all, such as trying to integrate climate change considerations into policies and programs for mental health or building on existing global commitments, including the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) or the Paris Agreement.

Univadis: Is there evidence that mental illnesses and disorders affect some populations more than others, such as women, for example?

Ms. Sheppard: The prevalence of mental disorders varies according to conditions and according to sex and age. In general, I don’t think we can say that mental health conditions or disorders affect women more than men. There are groups at risk, but vulnerability depends on the context and varies a lot. Of course, social determinants such as poverty, unstable housing, and exposure to adversity can significantly increase risk.

Univadis: According to the statistics recently provided by the WHO, changes in the environment are directly and indirectly affecting people’s mental health and psychosocial well-being. The new report highlights the gap between countries when it comes to addressing this complex problem. Is there any country that is carrying out political or innovative initiatives in this regard?

Ms. Sheppard: Yes, there are many case studies in the policy brief that highlight important work in the area. There are strong examples that are highlighted in the summary. One of them is India and its resilient cities program. Focused on the reduction of disaster risk, climate resilience, and mental health and psychosocial support at city level, this project resulted from a collaboration between the United Nations Development Program and the Indian National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, which began in 2017.

Univadis: In addition to its effects on mental health, we are seeing how climate change is causing the appearance and resurgence of zoonoses, such as the pandemic caused by coronavirus and now monkeypox.

Ms. Sheppard: Mike Ryan, head of emergency situations at WHO, stated at the beginning of June that the increase in zoonoses raises the risk of new pandemics. Infections transmitted from animals to humans, such as Ebola, COVID-19, or monkeypox, have multiplied in recent years. Climate change alters the conditions for pathogens and zoonotic disease vectors and their distribution. The intensification of travel, for example, allows them to spread more quickly and in a more uncontrolled way.

Human health, including mental health, is connected to animal health. As various materials available to us from our World Health Day 2022 campaign examine, the links between planetary health and human health are inextricable.

Univadis: How is it possible that while scientific progress advances and more powerful and efficient technologies are developed, we become increasingly vulnerable to environmental phenomena?

Ms. Sheppard: Scientific advancement improves our understanding of the quality and scale of the health impacts of climate change, including the identification of the most vulnerable groups, as well as the adaptation and mitigation measures that would work to reduce the consequences on health. At the same time, climate change is widespread, rapid, and intensifying. Technological advances have a role to play in mitigation, particularly those tools that reduce our dependence on burning fossil fuels, as well as adaptation to climate change. For example, early warning systems for extreme weather events could reduce those vulnerabilities your question mentioned.

On the other hand, the measures proposed by the latest report on mental health and climate change have multiple effects. Some are particularly powerful and are not overly dependent on new technology. These include changing our mode of transport to low-emission, physically active ways to get around (walking, cycling), the benefits of which are already more than proven for both the environment and human health.

This article was translated from Univadis Spain.

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

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Growing evidence gardening cultivates mental health

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Mon, 07/25/2022 - 09:07

Taking up gardening is linked to improved mood and decreased stress, new research suggests.

The results of the small pilot study add to the growing body of evidence supporting the therapeutic value of gardening, study investigator Charles Guy, PhD, professor emeritus, University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Gainesville, told this news organization.

“If we can see therapeutic benefits among healthy individuals in a rigorously designed study, where variability was as controlled as you will see in this field, then now is the time to invest in some large-scale multi-institutional studies,” Dr. Guy added.

The study was published online in PLOS ONE.
 

Horticulture as therapy

Horticulture therapy involves engaging in gardening and plant-based activities facilitated by a trained therapist. Previous studies found that this intervention reduces apathy and improves cognitive function in some populations.

The current study included healthy, nonsmoking, and non–drug-using women, whose average age was about 32.5 years and whose body mass index was less than 32. The participants had no chronic conditions and were not allergic to pollen or plants.

Virtually all previous studies of therapeutic gardening included participants who had been diagnosed with conditions such as depression, chronic pain, or PTSD. “If we can see a therapeutic benefit with perfectly healthy people, then this is likely to have a therapeutic effect with whatever clinical population you might be interested in looking at,” said Dr. Guy.

In addition, including only women reduced variability, which is important in a small study, he said.

The researchers randomly assigned 20 participants to the gardening intervention and 20 to an art intervention. Each intervention consisted of twice-weekly 60-minute sessions for 4 weeks and a single follow-up session.

The art group was asked not to visit art galleries, museums, arts and crafts events, or art-related websites. Those in the gardening group were told not to visit parks or botanical gardens, not to engage in gardening activities, and not to visit gardening websites.

Activities in both groups involved a similar level of physical, cognitive, and social engagement. Gardeners were taught how to plant seeds and transplant and harvest edible crops, such as tomatoes, beans, and basil. Those in the art group learned papermaking and storytelling through drawing, printmaking, and mixed media collage.

At the beginning and end of the study, participants completed six questionnaires: the Profile of Mood States 2-A (POMS) short form, the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), the Beck Depression Inventory II (BDI-II), the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Adults, the Satisfaction With Participation in Discretionary Social Activities, and the 36-item Short-Form Survey.

Participants wore wrist cuff blood pressure and heart rate monitors.

The analysis included 15 persons in the gardening group and 17 in the art group.

Participants in both interventions improved on several scales. For example, the mean preintervention POMS TMD (T score) for gardeners was 53.1, which was reduced to a mean of 46.9 post intervention (P = .018). In the art group, the means score was 53.5 before the intervention and 47.0 after the intervention (P = .009).

For the PSS, mean scores went from 14.9 to 9.4 (P = .002) for gardening and from 15.8 to 10.0 (P = .001) for artmaking.

For the BDI-II, mean scores dropped from 8.2 to 2.8 (P = .001) for gardening and from 9.0 to 5.1 (P = .009) for art.

However, gardening was associated with less trait anxiety than artmaking. “We concluded that both interventions were roughly equally therapeutic, with one glaring exception, and that was with trait anxiety, where the gardening resulted in statistical separation from the art group,” said Dr. Guy.

There appeared to be dose responses for total mood disturbance, perceived stress, and depression symptomatology for both gardening and artmaking.

Neither intervention affected heart rate or blood pressure. A larger sample might be needed to detect treatment differences in healthy women, the investigators noted.

The therapeutic benefit of gardening may lie in the role of plants in human evolution, during which “we relied on plants for shelter; we relied on them for protection; we relied on them obviously for nutrition,” said Dr. Guy.

The study results support carrying out large, well-designed, rigorously designed trials “that will definitively and conclusively demonstrate treatment effects with quantitative descriptions of those treatment effects with respect to dosage,” he said.
 

 

 

Good for the mind

Commenting on the study, Sir Richard Thompson, MD, past president, Royal College of Physicians, London, who has written about the health benefits of gardening, said this new study provides “more evidence that both gardening and art therapy are good for the mind” with mostly equal benefits for the two interventions.

Anuradha Dullewe Wijeyeratne
Dr. Richard Thompson

“A much larger study would be needed to strengthen their case, but it fits in with much of the literature,” said Dr. Thompson.

However, he acknowledged the difficulty of carrying out scientifically robust studies in the field of alternative medicine, which “tends to be frowned upon” by some scientists.

Dr. Thompson identified some drawbacks of the study. In trying to measure so many parameters, the authors “may have had to resort to complex statistical analyses,” which may have led to some outcome changes being statistically positive by chance.

He noted that the study was small and that the gardening arm was “artificial” in that it was carried out in a greenhouse. “Maybe being outside would have been more beneficial; it would be interesting to test that hypothesis.”

As well, he pointed out initial differences between the two groups, including income and initial blood pressure, but he doubts these were significant.

He agreed that changes in cardiovascular parameters wouldn’t be expected in healthy young women, “as there’s little room for improvement.

“I wonder whether more improvement might have been seen in participants who were already suffering from anxiety, depression, etc.”

The study was supported by the Horticulture Research Institute, the Gene and Barbara Batson Endowed Nursery Fund, Florida Nursery Growers and Landscape Association, the Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Wilmot Botanical Gardens, the Center for Arts in Medicine, Health Shands Arts in Medicine, and the department of environmental horticulture at the University of Florida. The authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Taking up gardening is linked to improved mood and decreased stress, new research suggests.

The results of the small pilot study add to the growing body of evidence supporting the therapeutic value of gardening, study investigator Charles Guy, PhD, professor emeritus, University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Gainesville, told this news organization.

“If we can see therapeutic benefits among healthy individuals in a rigorously designed study, where variability was as controlled as you will see in this field, then now is the time to invest in some large-scale multi-institutional studies,” Dr. Guy added.

The study was published online in PLOS ONE.
 

Horticulture as therapy

Horticulture therapy involves engaging in gardening and plant-based activities facilitated by a trained therapist. Previous studies found that this intervention reduces apathy and improves cognitive function in some populations.

The current study included healthy, nonsmoking, and non–drug-using women, whose average age was about 32.5 years and whose body mass index was less than 32. The participants had no chronic conditions and were not allergic to pollen or plants.

Virtually all previous studies of therapeutic gardening included participants who had been diagnosed with conditions such as depression, chronic pain, or PTSD. “If we can see a therapeutic benefit with perfectly healthy people, then this is likely to have a therapeutic effect with whatever clinical population you might be interested in looking at,” said Dr. Guy.

In addition, including only women reduced variability, which is important in a small study, he said.

The researchers randomly assigned 20 participants to the gardening intervention and 20 to an art intervention. Each intervention consisted of twice-weekly 60-minute sessions for 4 weeks and a single follow-up session.

The art group was asked not to visit art galleries, museums, arts and crafts events, or art-related websites. Those in the gardening group were told not to visit parks or botanical gardens, not to engage in gardening activities, and not to visit gardening websites.

Activities in both groups involved a similar level of physical, cognitive, and social engagement. Gardeners were taught how to plant seeds and transplant and harvest edible crops, such as tomatoes, beans, and basil. Those in the art group learned papermaking and storytelling through drawing, printmaking, and mixed media collage.

At the beginning and end of the study, participants completed six questionnaires: the Profile of Mood States 2-A (POMS) short form, the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), the Beck Depression Inventory II (BDI-II), the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Adults, the Satisfaction With Participation in Discretionary Social Activities, and the 36-item Short-Form Survey.

Participants wore wrist cuff blood pressure and heart rate monitors.

The analysis included 15 persons in the gardening group and 17 in the art group.

Participants in both interventions improved on several scales. For example, the mean preintervention POMS TMD (T score) for gardeners was 53.1, which was reduced to a mean of 46.9 post intervention (P = .018). In the art group, the means score was 53.5 before the intervention and 47.0 after the intervention (P = .009).

For the PSS, mean scores went from 14.9 to 9.4 (P = .002) for gardening and from 15.8 to 10.0 (P = .001) for artmaking.

For the BDI-II, mean scores dropped from 8.2 to 2.8 (P = .001) for gardening and from 9.0 to 5.1 (P = .009) for art.

However, gardening was associated with less trait anxiety than artmaking. “We concluded that both interventions were roughly equally therapeutic, with one glaring exception, and that was with trait anxiety, where the gardening resulted in statistical separation from the art group,” said Dr. Guy.

There appeared to be dose responses for total mood disturbance, perceived stress, and depression symptomatology for both gardening and artmaking.

Neither intervention affected heart rate or blood pressure. A larger sample might be needed to detect treatment differences in healthy women, the investigators noted.

The therapeutic benefit of gardening may lie in the role of plants in human evolution, during which “we relied on plants for shelter; we relied on them for protection; we relied on them obviously for nutrition,” said Dr. Guy.

The study results support carrying out large, well-designed, rigorously designed trials “that will definitively and conclusively demonstrate treatment effects with quantitative descriptions of those treatment effects with respect to dosage,” he said.
 

 

 

Good for the mind

Commenting on the study, Sir Richard Thompson, MD, past president, Royal College of Physicians, London, who has written about the health benefits of gardening, said this new study provides “more evidence that both gardening and art therapy are good for the mind” with mostly equal benefits for the two interventions.

Anuradha Dullewe Wijeyeratne
Dr. Richard Thompson

“A much larger study would be needed to strengthen their case, but it fits in with much of the literature,” said Dr. Thompson.

However, he acknowledged the difficulty of carrying out scientifically robust studies in the field of alternative medicine, which “tends to be frowned upon” by some scientists.

Dr. Thompson identified some drawbacks of the study. In trying to measure so many parameters, the authors “may have had to resort to complex statistical analyses,” which may have led to some outcome changes being statistically positive by chance.

He noted that the study was small and that the gardening arm was “artificial” in that it was carried out in a greenhouse. “Maybe being outside would have been more beneficial; it would be interesting to test that hypothesis.”

As well, he pointed out initial differences between the two groups, including income and initial blood pressure, but he doubts these were significant.

He agreed that changes in cardiovascular parameters wouldn’t be expected in healthy young women, “as there’s little room for improvement.

“I wonder whether more improvement might have been seen in participants who were already suffering from anxiety, depression, etc.”

The study was supported by the Horticulture Research Institute, the Gene and Barbara Batson Endowed Nursery Fund, Florida Nursery Growers and Landscape Association, the Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Wilmot Botanical Gardens, the Center for Arts in Medicine, Health Shands Arts in Medicine, and the department of environmental horticulture at the University of Florida. The authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Taking up gardening is linked to improved mood and decreased stress, new research suggests.

The results of the small pilot study add to the growing body of evidence supporting the therapeutic value of gardening, study investigator Charles Guy, PhD, professor emeritus, University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Gainesville, told this news organization.

“If we can see therapeutic benefits among healthy individuals in a rigorously designed study, where variability was as controlled as you will see in this field, then now is the time to invest in some large-scale multi-institutional studies,” Dr. Guy added.

The study was published online in PLOS ONE.
 

Horticulture as therapy

Horticulture therapy involves engaging in gardening and plant-based activities facilitated by a trained therapist. Previous studies found that this intervention reduces apathy and improves cognitive function in some populations.

The current study included healthy, nonsmoking, and non–drug-using women, whose average age was about 32.5 years and whose body mass index was less than 32. The participants had no chronic conditions and were not allergic to pollen or plants.

Virtually all previous studies of therapeutic gardening included participants who had been diagnosed with conditions such as depression, chronic pain, or PTSD. “If we can see a therapeutic benefit with perfectly healthy people, then this is likely to have a therapeutic effect with whatever clinical population you might be interested in looking at,” said Dr. Guy.

In addition, including only women reduced variability, which is important in a small study, he said.

The researchers randomly assigned 20 participants to the gardening intervention and 20 to an art intervention. Each intervention consisted of twice-weekly 60-minute sessions for 4 weeks and a single follow-up session.

The art group was asked not to visit art galleries, museums, arts and crafts events, or art-related websites. Those in the gardening group were told not to visit parks or botanical gardens, not to engage in gardening activities, and not to visit gardening websites.

Activities in both groups involved a similar level of physical, cognitive, and social engagement. Gardeners were taught how to plant seeds and transplant and harvest edible crops, such as tomatoes, beans, and basil. Those in the art group learned papermaking and storytelling through drawing, printmaking, and mixed media collage.

At the beginning and end of the study, participants completed six questionnaires: the Profile of Mood States 2-A (POMS) short form, the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), the Beck Depression Inventory II (BDI-II), the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Adults, the Satisfaction With Participation in Discretionary Social Activities, and the 36-item Short-Form Survey.

Participants wore wrist cuff blood pressure and heart rate monitors.

The analysis included 15 persons in the gardening group and 17 in the art group.

Participants in both interventions improved on several scales. For example, the mean preintervention POMS TMD (T score) for gardeners was 53.1, which was reduced to a mean of 46.9 post intervention (P = .018). In the art group, the means score was 53.5 before the intervention and 47.0 after the intervention (P = .009).

For the PSS, mean scores went from 14.9 to 9.4 (P = .002) for gardening and from 15.8 to 10.0 (P = .001) for artmaking.

For the BDI-II, mean scores dropped from 8.2 to 2.8 (P = .001) for gardening and from 9.0 to 5.1 (P = .009) for art.

However, gardening was associated with less trait anxiety than artmaking. “We concluded that both interventions were roughly equally therapeutic, with one glaring exception, and that was with trait anxiety, where the gardening resulted in statistical separation from the art group,” said Dr. Guy.

There appeared to be dose responses for total mood disturbance, perceived stress, and depression symptomatology for both gardening and artmaking.

Neither intervention affected heart rate or blood pressure. A larger sample might be needed to detect treatment differences in healthy women, the investigators noted.

The therapeutic benefit of gardening may lie in the role of plants in human evolution, during which “we relied on plants for shelter; we relied on them for protection; we relied on them obviously for nutrition,” said Dr. Guy.

The study results support carrying out large, well-designed, rigorously designed trials “that will definitively and conclusively demonstrate treatment effects with quantitative descriptions of those treatment effects with respect to dosage,” he said.
 

 

 

Good for the mind

Commenting on the study, Sir Richard Thompson, MD, past president, Royal College of Physicians, London, who has written about the health benefits of gardening, said this new study provides “more evidence that both gardening and art therapy are good for the mind” with mostly equal benefits for the two interventions.

Anuradha Dullewe Wijeyeratne
Dr. Richard Thompson

“A much larger study would be needed to strengthen their case, but it fits in with much of the literature,” said Dr. Thompson.

However, he acknowledged the difficulty of carrying out scientifically robust studies in the field of alternative medicine, which “tends to be frowned upon” by some scientists.

Dr. Thompson identified some drawbacks of the study. In trying to measure so many parameters, the authors “may have had to resort to complex statistical analyses,” which may have led to some outcome changes being statistically positive by chance.

He noted that the study was small and that the gardening arm was “artificial” in that it was carried out in a greenhouse. “Maybe being outside would have been more beneficial; it would be interesting to test that hypothesis.”

As well, he pointed out initial differences between the two groups, including income and initial blood pressure, but he doubts these were significant.

He agreed that changes in cardiovascular parameters wouldn’t be expected in healthy young women, “as there’s little room for improvement.

“I wonder whether more improvement might have been seen in participants who were already suffering from anxiety, depression, etc.”

The study was supported by the Horticulture Research Institute, the Gene and Barbara Batson Endowed Nursery Fund, Florida Nursery Growers and Landscape Association, the Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Wilmot Botanical Gardens, the Center for Arts in Medicine, Health Shands Arts in Medicine, and the department of environmental horticulture at the University of Florida. The authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Electroacupuncture promising for depression-related insomnia

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Changed
Tue, 07/19/2022 - 14:47

Electroacupuncture (EA) may significantly improve sleep quality in patients with depression who also have insomnia, new research suggests.

In a study of more than 200 adults with depression and comorbid insomnia, change from baseline to week 8 on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) was 3 points greater in the group receiving EA versus a group receiving sham acupuncture (SA) plus standard care, and 5 points greater vs a control group receiving standard care only. The improvements were sustained during a 24-week postintervention follow-up.

The EA group also showed significant improvement in depression, insomnia, self-rated anxiety, and total sleep time – all of which were not found in the SA or control groups.

“Based on the results of our trial, we recommend patients with depression and insomnia seek the treatment of EA as an alternative and complementary therapy for better results,” study investigator Shifen Xu, PhD, Shanghai (China) Municipal Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, told this news organization.

The findings were published online in JAMA Network Open.
 

Bidirectional relationship

Sleep disturbance is the prominent symptom in patients with depression,” the investigators noted.

Depression and sleep issues have a bidirectional relationship, in that “poor sleep quality contributes to the development of depression, and having depression makes a person more likely to develop sleep issues,” they wrote.

Patients with co-occurring depression and sleep disorders are more difficult to treat and have a greater risk for relapse and recurrence of depression, they added.

Acupuncture may be an “effective drug-free approach to help treat mental illness and sleep disorders,” the researchers noted. A previous study suggested acupuncture may improve sleep efficacy and prolong total sleep in patients with primary insomnia.

“EA is the combination of traditional Chinese acupuncture with electric-impulse stimulation, and it can enhance the therapeutic effect of the acupoints throughout the needle retention time,” Dr. Xu said.

A previous pilot study of EA for depression-related insomnia showed significant improvements in sleep quality after EA treatment, but the sample size was small.

The current researchers, therefore, undertook the present study – with a larger sample size and comparison with SA and standard care. They divided 270 adults (mean age, 50.3 years; 71.9% women) at three tertiary hospitals in Shanghai into three groups, each consisting of 90 participants.

The EA plus standard care group and the SA plus standard care group received 30-minute treatments three times per week for 8 weeks. The control group received standard care only.

All participants had DSM-5–diagnosed depression; baseline PSQI scores greater than 7, with higher scores indicating worse sleep quality and a greater number or sleep disorders; and Hamilton Depression Rating Scales (HDRS-17) scores of 20-35, with higher scores indicating higher depression levels.

Patients with secondary depressive disorders caused by other conditions, medication, or psychotic disorders were excluded, as were patients with a history of alcohol abuse or drug dependence or those who had received acupuncture within the previous year.

Of the patients who completed the 8-week intervention, 83 were in the EA group, 81 in the SA group, and 83 in the control group. Almost all participants (91.5%) completed all outcome measurements by the end of the 24-week follow-up period (also known as week 32).
 

 

 

Calm mind, balanced mood

At the 8-week posttreatment assessment, which was the primary endpoint, the EA group had a mean reduction from baseline of 6.2 points (95% confidence interval, −6.9 to −5.6) in PSQI score.

There was a significant difference in PSQI score between the EA versus the SA group (−3.6 points; 95% CI, −4.4 to −2.8; P < .001) and vs the control group (−5.1 points; 95% CI, −6.0 to −4.2; P <  .001).

The efficacy of EA in treating insomnia was sustained during the postintervention follow-up period when the EA group had a significantly greater reduction in PSQI score, compared with the SA group (−4.7; 95% CI, −5.4 to −3.9; P < .001) and the control group (−5.0; 95% CI, −5.8 to −4.1; P < .001).

Patients receiving EA also experienced significant (all P values < .001) improvement from baseline on secondary outcomes, including:

  • Scores on the HDRS (−10.7; 95% CI, −11.8 to −9.7)
  • Scores on the Insomnia Severity Index, (−7.6; 95% CI,−8.5 to −6.7)
  • Scores on the Self-rated Anxiety Scale (−2.9; 95% CI, −4.1 to −1.7)
  • Total sleep time, as recorded by sleep actigraphy (29.1 minutes; 95% CI, 21.5-36.7)

In addition, the EA group showed significant improvement in depression scores compared with the SA and control groups at both 8 and 32 weeks (all P values < .001).



Participants in the EA group also had a 4.2% (95% CI, 2.6% - 5.8%) higher sleep efficiency score at week 8, compared with those in the SA group (P < .001).

In addition, they had lower scores on the Insomnia Severity Index and the Self-rated Anxiety Scale, and longer total sleep time, compared with the control group at week 8.

None of the participants reported any serious adverse events.

“Our findings constitute subjective and objective evidence of the efficacy and safety of EA with standard care in treating comorbid depression and insomnia compared with SA with standard care or standard care alone,” the investigators wrote.

“The acupoints we used in this trial mainly act on calming mind, relieving negative mood, and balancing the yin-yang,” Dr. Xu added.


 

Viable adjunctive treatment

Commenting on the study, Albert Yeung, MD, ScD, associate director of the Mass General Depression and Clinical Research Program and associate professor of psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, said that, with the evidence from this study, “acupuncture and/or electroacupuncture could be a viable adjunctive treatment for depressed patients who suffer from insomnia.”

courtesy Harvard Medical School
Dr. Albert Yeung

Dr. Yeung, who was not involved with the study, is the coauthor of an accompanying editorial.

“More well-designed studies are warranted to provide evidence for integrating holistic treatment in medicine,” he said.

The study was funded by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and Shanghai Municipal Health. The investigators and Dr. Yeung reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Electroacupuncture (EA) may significantly improve sleep quality in patients with depression who also have insomnia, new research suggests.

In a study of more than 200 adults with depression and comorbid insomnia, change from baseline to week 8 on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) was 3 points greater in the group receiving EA versus a group receiving sham acupuncture (SA) plus standard care, and 5 points greater vs a control group receiving standard care only. The improvements were sustained during a 24-week postintervention follow-up.

The EA group also showed significant improvement in depression, insomnia, self-rated anxiety, and total sleep time – all of which were not found in the SA or control groups.

“Based on the results of our trial, we recommend patients with depression and insomnia seek the treatment of EA as an alternative and complementary therapy for better results,” study investigator Shifen Xu, PhD, Shanghai (China) Municipal Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, told this news organization.

The findings were published online in JAMA Network Open.
 

Bidirectional relationship

Sleep disturbance is the prominent symptom in patients with depression,” the investigators noted.

Depression and sleep issues have a bidirectional relationship, in that “poor sleep quality contributes to the development of depression, and having depression makes a person more likely to develop sleep issues,” they wrote.

Patients with co-occurring depression and sleep disorders are more difficult to treat and have a greater risk for relapse and recurrence of depression, they added.

Acupuncture may be an “effective drug-free approach to help treat mental illness and sleep disorders,” the researchers noted. A previous study suggested acupuncture may improve sleep efficacy and prolong total sleep in patients with primary insomnia.

“EA is the combination of traditional Chinese acupuncture with electric-impulse stimulation, and it can enhance the therapeutic effect of the acupoints throughout the needle retention time,” Dr. Xu said.

A previous pilot study of EA for depression-related insomnia showed significant improvements in sleep quality after EA treatment, but the sample size was small.

The current researchers, therefore, undertook the present study – with a larger sample size and comparison with SA and standard care. They divided 270 adults (mean age, 50.3 years; 71.9% women) at three tertiary hospitals in Shanghai into three groups, each consisting of 90 participants.

The EA plus standard care group and the SA plus standard care group received 30-minute treatments three times per week for 8 weeks. The control group received standard care only.

All participants had DSM-5–diagnosed depression; baseline PSQI scores greater than 7, with higher scores indicating worse sleep quality and a greater number or sleep disorders; and Hamilton Depression Rating Scales (HDRS-17) scores of 20-35, with higher scores indicating higher depression levels.

Patients with secondary depressive disorders caused by other conditions, medication, or psychotic disorders were excluded, as were patients with a history of alcohol abuse or drug dependence or those who had received acupuncture within the previous year.

Of the patients who completed the 8-week intervention, 83 were in the EA group, 81 in the SA group, and 83 in the control group. Almost all participants (91.5%) completed all outcome measurements by the end of the 24-week follow-up period (also known as week 32).
 

 

 

Calm mind, balanced mood

At the 8-week posttreatment assessment, which was the primary endpoint, the EA group had a mean reduction from baseline of 6.2 points (95% confidence interval, −6.9 to −5.6) in PSQI score.

There was a significant difference in PSQI score between the EA versus the SA group (−3.6 points; 95% CI, −4.4 to −2.8; P < .001) and vs the control group (−5.1 points; 95% CI, −6.0 to −4.2; P <  .001).

The efficacy of EA in treating insomnia was sustained during the postintervention follow-up period when the EA group had a significantly greater reduction in PSQI score, compared with the SA group (−4.7; 95% CI, −5.4 to −3.9; P < .001) and the control group (−5.0; 95% CI, −5.8 to −4.1; P < .001).

Patients receiving EA also experienced significant (all P values < .001) improvement from baseline on secondary outcomes, including:

  • Scores on the HDRS (−10.7; 95% CI, −11.8 to −9.7)
  • Scores on the Insomnia Severity Index, (−7.6; 95% CI,−8.5 to −6.7)
  • Scores on the Self-rated Anxiety Scale (−2.9; 95% CI, −4.1 to −1.7)
  • Total sleep time, as recorded by sleep actigraphy (29.1 minutes; 95% CI, 21.5-36.7)

In addition, the EA group showed significant improvement in depression scores compared with the SA and control groups at both 8 and 32 weeks (all P values < .001).



Participants in the EA group also had a 4.2% (95% CI, 2.6% - 5.8%) higher sleep efficiency score at week 8, compared with those in the SA group (P < .001).

In addition, they had lower scores on the Insomnia Severity Index and the Self-rated Anxiety Scale, and longer total sleep time, compared with the control group at week 8.

None of the participants reported any serious adverse events.

“Our findings constitute subjective and objective evidence of the efficacy and safety of EA with standard care in treating comorbid depression and insomnia compared with SA with standard care or standard care alone,” the investigators wrote.

“The acupoints we used in this trial mainly act on calming mind, relieving negative mood, and balancing the yin-yang,” Dr. Xu added.


 

Viable adjunctive treatment

Commenting on the study, Albert Yeung, MD, ScD, associate director of the Mass General Depression and Clinical Research Program and associate professor of psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, said that, with the evidence from this study, “acupuncture and/or electroacupuncture could be a viable adjunctive treatment for depressed patients who suffer from insomnia.”

courtesy Harvard Medical School
Dr. Albert Yeung

Dr. Yeung, who was not involved with the study, is the coauthor of an accompanying editorial.

“More well-designed studies are warranted to provide evidence for integrating holistic treatment in medicine,” he said.

The study was funded by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and Shanghai Municipal Health. The investigators and Dr. Yeung reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

Electroacupuncture (EA) may significantly improve sleep quality in patients with depression who also have insomnia, new research suggests.

In a study of more than 200 adults with depression and comorbid insomnia, change from baseline to week 8 on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) was 3 points greater in the group receiving EA versus a group receiving sham acupuncture (SA) plus standard care, and 5 points greater vs a control group receiving standard care only. The improvements were sustained during a 24-week postintervention follow-up.

The EA group also showed significant improvement in depression, insomnia, self-rated anxiety, and total sleep time – all of which were not found in the SA or control groups.

“Based on the results of our trial, we recommend patients with depression and insomnia seek the treatment of EA as an alternative and complementary therapy for better results,” study investigator Shifen Xu, PhD, Shanghai (China) Municipal Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, told this news organization.

The findings were published online in JAMA Network Open.
 

Bidirectional relationship

Sleep disturbance is the prominent symptom in patients with depression,” the investigators noted.

Depression and sleep issues have a bidirectional relationship, in that “poor sleep quality contributes to the development of depression, and having depression makes a person more likely to develop sleep issues,” they wrote.

Patients with co-occurring depression and sleep disorders are more difficult to treat and have a greater risk for relapse and recurrence of depression, they added.

Acupuncture may be an “effective drug-free approach to help treat mental illness and sleep disorders,” the researchers noted. A previous study suggested acupuncture may improve sleep efficacy and prolong total sleep in patients with primary insomnia.

“EA is the combination of traditional Chinese acupuncture with electric-impulse stimulation, and it can enhance the therapeutic effect of the acupoints throughout the needle retention time,” Dr. Xu said.

A previous pilot study of EA for depression-related insomnia showed significant improvements in sleep quality after EA treatment, but the sample size was small.

The current researchers, therefore, undertook the present study – with a larger sample size and comparison with SA and standard care. They divided 270 adults (mean age, 50.3 years; 71.9% women) at three tertiary hospitals in Shanghai into three groups, each consisting of 90 participants.

The EA plus standard care group and the SA plus standard care group received 30-minute treatments three times per week for 8 weeks. The control group received standard care only.

All participants had DSM-5–diagnosed depression; baseline PSQI scores greater than 7, with higher scores indicating worse sleep quality and a greater number or sleep disorders; and Hamilton Depression Rating Scales (HDRS-17) scores of 20-35, with higher scores indicating higher depression levels.

Patients with secondary depressive disorders caused by other conditions, medication, or psychotic disorders were excluded, as were patients with a history of alcohol abuse or drug dependence or those who had received acupuncture within the previous year.

Of the patients who completed the 8-week intervention, 83 were in the EA group, 81 in the SA group, and 83 in the control group. Almost all participants (91.5%) completed all outcome measurements by the end of the 24-week follow-up period (also known as week 32).
 

 

 

Calm mind, balanced mood

At the 8-week posttreatment assessment, which was the primary endpoint, the EA group had a mean reduction from baseline of 6.2 points (95% confidence interval, −6.9 to −5.6) in PSQI score.

There was a significant difference in PSQI score between the EA versus the SA group (−3.6 points; 95% CI, −4.4 to −2.8; P < .001) and vs the control group (−5.1 points; 95% CI, −6.0 to −4.2; P <  .001).

The efficacy of EA in treating insomnia was sustained during the postintervention follow-up period when the EA group had a significantly greater reduction in PSQI score, compared with the SA group (−4.7; 95% CI, −5.4 to −3.9; P < .001) and the control group (−5.0; 95% CI, −5.8 to −4.1; P < .001).

Patients receiving EA also experienced significant (all P values < .001) improvement from baseline on secondary outcomes, including:

  • Scores on the HDRS (−10.7; 95% CI, −11.8 to −9.7)
  • Scores on the Insomnia Severity Index, (−7.6; 95% CI,−8.5 to −6.7)
  • Scores on the Self-rated Anxiety Scale (−2.9; 95% CI, −4.1 to −1.7)
  • Total sleep time, as recorded by sleep actigraphy (29.1 minutes; 95% CI, 21.5-36.7)

In addition, the EA group showed significant improvement in depression scores compared with the SA and control groups at both 8 and 32 weeks (all P values < .001).



Participants in the EA group also had a 4.2% (95% CI, 2.6% - 5.8%) higher sleep efficiency score at week 8, compared with those in the SA group (P < .001).

In addition, they had lower scores on the Insomnia Severity Index and the Self-rated Anxiety Scale, and longer total sleep time, compared with the control group at week 8.

None of the participants reported any serious adverse events.

“Our findings constitute subjective and objective evidence of the efficacy and safety of EA with standard care in treating comorbid depression and insomnia compared with SA with standard care or standard care alone,” the investigators wrote.

“The acupoints we used in this trial mainly act on calming mind, relieving negative mood, and balancing the yin-yang,” Dr. Xu added.


 

Viable adjunctive treatment

Commenting on the study, Albert Yeung, MD, ScD, associate director of the Mass General Depression and Clinical Research Program and associate professor of psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, said that, with the evidence from this study, “acupuncture and/or electroacupuncture could be a viable adjunctive treatment for depressed patients who suffer from insomnia.”

courtesy Harvard Medical School
Dr. Albert Yeung

Dr. Yeung, who was not involved with the study, is the coauthor of an accompanying editorial.

“More well-designed studies are warranted to provide evidence for integrating holistic treatment in medicine,” he said.

The study was funded by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and Shanghai Municipal Health. The investigators and Dr. Yeung reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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How AI is helping prevent suicide in veterans

Medically reviewed by Jennifer Casarella, MD

Dan Miller has parked his Nissan Altima on the side of the road near a field outside Chicago and is holding a gun to his head. 

Haunted for years by the compounded trauma of tours of duty in the Middle East and his work as a police officer in Chicago, at that moment, Dr. Miller saw no reason to live. And there were troubles at home with his wife and children, who had grown fearful of his behavior.

“My whole world was falling apart,” he says of that dark night in 2014. “It left a hole I didn’t know how to fill.”

He chose not to pull the trigger after a brochure on the passenger seat of his car gave him an unexpected perspective – and launched him on a path to help others in his situation.

Had Mr. Miller taken his life that night, he would have joined thousands of other veterans who died by suicide. About 17 U.S. veterans lose their lives this way each day, on average, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs. In 2019, the last year for which records are available, 6,261 veterans took their own lives – and the suicide rate for veterans was 52% higher than for nonveterans, the agency’s records show. 

The problem has become so severe that the Veterans Health Administration now uses artificial intelligence (AI) to help identify veterans at the highest risk of suicide – and reach out to them before a crisis strikes.

But that wasn’t available when Dan Miller’s life was unraveling.

In the years leading up to his near-suicide, his wife had pushed him to get help. “She said, ‘You’re not the same person you were when you left. The kids are scared of you. The pets are scared of you,” he recalls.

He resisted, even when his wife threatened divorce. Rising through the ranks of the Marines, Mr. Miller had become more emotionally isolated. He feared losing his job and the respect of others if he let anyone know what he was going through.

Finally, he gave the VHA a chance. He went in for an initial consultation in 2010 and didn’t find it helpful. He didn’t like being told what to do. So he stopped. He turned to obsessive exercise and excessive drinking.

That day in 2014, Mr. Miller’s wife told him she was taking the kids out for a playdate. After she left, he was served with divorce papers. Less than an hour later, he was parked in his car with his gun, ready to end his life.

But if it all had happened just a few years later, things might never have gotten to that point.
 

Scanning for suicide risk

In 2017, the VHA piloted its AI program, called REACH VET, that aims to help prevent veterans from dying by suicide.

Every month, a computer scans the electronic health records of all VHA patients who’ve had a health care visit for any reason in the last 2 years. It checks more than 140 variables and weights them to estimate someone’s overall suicide risk at that moment in time.

To build the risk algorithm, a computer combed through the medical records of 6,360 veterans confirmed to have died by suicide between 2009 and 2011. (The VHA continually updates the list of variables from the health records of VHA patients, including those who have died by suicide since then and others.)

Some variables are things you’d expect:

  • A past suicide attempt.
  • A diagnosis of depression or other mental illness.
  • A diagnosis of a terminal illness.

Others are more surprising. For example, a diagnosis of arthritis or diabetes adds weight.



REACH VET flags the riskiest cases – the top 0.1% – for a mental health or primary care provider to review. They reach out to the patient to tell them how and why their record was flagged, discuss any recommended treatment changes, and ask them to come in for a visit.

“It’s an opportunity to talk about their risk factors, which is designed to lead to a conversation about safety planning,” says clinical psychologist Matthew Miller, PhD, national director of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs’ Suicide Prevention Program. He’s not related to Dan Miller.

Making a suicide safety plan

A safety plan is a document that outlines how a person can help prevent their own suicide in a crisis. 

The plan may include:

  • A list of personal triggers or warning signs.
  • What’s helped them in the past.
  • Names of people or organizations who can support them.
  • Plans to remove means of suicide, such as guns, from their environment.
  • Their reasons for living.

In people at risk for suicide, research shows that having a safety plan reduces suicidal thoughts and attempts, lowers rates of depression and hopelessness, and boosts veterans’ engagement with the health care system. It may also help people manage things that trigger their suicidal thoughts.
 

Getting the call

What if REACH VET had been around when Dan Miller was in crisis – and he’d gotten a call from the VHA?

“It absolutely, positively would have helped because one of the biggest things on that day when I got served was feeling completely alone and that I had no one to turn to,” Mr. Miller says. He’s now a speaker for the Wounded Warrior Project, a nonprofit that serves veterans and active-duty service people.

Vets’ reactions to the unexpected VHA phone call, psychologist Dr. Miller says, “run the gamut from ‘Thank you for contacting me. Let’s talk,’ to ‘What are you talking about? Leave me alone!’ ”

Nothing stops all suicides. But REACH VET is having an impact. In a clinical trial, vets contacted through REACH VET had more doctor visits, were more likely to have a written suicide prevention safety plan, and had fewer hospital admissions for mental health, ER visits, and suicide attempts.
 

'One of the biggest things on that day ... was feeling completely alone and that I had no one to turn to.' - Dan Miller

An assist from AI

Even simple outreach can make a big difference. And there’s research to prove it.

One study included 4,730 veterans recently discharged from psychiatric care at the VHA, a group considered at high risk for suicide. 

Half of them got 13 caring emails from hospital staff in the weeks after leaving the hospital. The emails mentioned personal things the patient had shared, like a love of hiking, and wished them well. The other veterans got routine follow-up but no emails.

Two years later, those who got the caring emails were less likely to have died by suicide than the other vets. The study was published in 2014 in Contemporary Clinical Trials.

Researchers have done studies like this many times: with handwritten notes from the primary care doctor, postcards from the ER, and so forth. The results never vary: The notes reduce suicide risk.

“If we could use AI to identify people to receive notes or phone calls, it would be a very effective and inexpensive way to guide follow-up care,” says Rebecca Bernert, PhD, director and founder of the Suicide Prevention Research Laboratory at Stanford (Calif.) University.
 

 

 

AI doesn’t replace clinical judgment.

“AI can capture data that we miss due to the limits of our humanity,” psychologist Dr. Miller says. “There’s suicide prevention processes founded on big data and AI, and there are processes founded in clinical intuition and acumen.”

AI is only as good as the data it’s based on. If that data lacks diversity, it may miss things. And variables that apply to veterans may differ in civilians.
 

Stopping suicidal thoughts

Google is putting AI to work against suicide, too. Its MUM (Multitask Unified Model) technology seeks to understand the intent behind what we google.

MUM powers Google Search. It can often tell the difference between a search for information about suicide for someone writing a research paper on the topic and a search for information on how or where to carry out a suicide.

When Google Search detects that someone in the United States might be in crisis and at risk of suicide, the first search results that person gets are the number for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and other resources for people in crisis.

Google Home Assistant works in the same way. When a user makes a query that signals a suicide-related crisis, the gadget serves up resources that offer help.

MUM is working to understand the nuances of crisis language in 75 languages so that Google Search can provide people in crisis with hotlines or other resources in many countries.

“We want to find partners that are accessible to users in terms of hours of operation. We have a strong preference for finding partners that promise confidentiality and privacy to the extent that those are permitted [in that country],” says Anne Merritt, MD, a product manager at Google Search.

Other companies are working on apps that use AI to spot suicide risk in other ways, including voice technology that may notice subtle changes in the voice of someone who’s depressed and may be thinking of suicide. Those are still in development but show promise. Keep in mind that apps do not require government approval, so if you try one, be sure to let your health care provider know.
 

Changing the channel

Seeing a hotline number on your phone or computer screen can help, Dan Miller says. “If I happened to be online, searching maybe for a bridge to jump off of ... and suddenly that pops up on the screen, it’s like it changes the channel.”

It may not work for everyone, he says, but that search result could interrupt someone’s suicidal train of thought.

That’s crucial, psychologist Dr. Miller says, because most suicide attempts escalate from first thought to potentially fatal action in just 1 hour. That’s how fast it happened for Dan Miller in 2014.

“When you’re able to put time and space between the suicidal thought and the access to the method to act on that thought, you save lives,” Dr. Bernert says.
 

Making a different choice

An interruption in Mr. Miller’s thinking is what had saved his life.

Holding the gun to his head, Mr. Miller looked over at the passenger seat at a brochure from Wounded Warrior Project, which he had just learned about. Mr. Miller noticed a photo of a man in a wheelchair, a veteran like him, who had no legs. He thought that the man looked worse off than him but hadn’t given up.

Mr. Miller put down his gun and decided to get help.

Recovering from a near suicide attempt, he says, is a journey. It doesn’t happen overnight. Now, 8 years later, Mr. Miller is planning a brief break from the speaker circuit. He plans to spend 2 weeks in an outpatient counseling program for posttraumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury.

“Telling my story to strangers – part of it is healing me in a way, but I’m learning that repeating the story over and over again is also keeping me from letting it go. And I’m still healing.”

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

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How AI is helping prevent suicide in veterans

How AI is helping prevent suicide in veterans

Medically reviewed by Jennifer Casarella, MD

Dan Miller has parked his Nissan Altima on the side of the road near a field outside Chicago and is holding a gun to his head. 

Haunted for years by the compounded trauma of tours of duty in the Middle East and his work as a police officer in Chicago, at that moment, Dr. Miller saw no reason to live. And there were troubles at home with his wife and children, who had grown fearful of his behavior.

“My whole world was falling apart,” he says of that dark night in 2014. “It left a hole I didn’t know how to fill.”

He chose not to pull the trigger after a brochure on the passenger seat of his car gave him an unexpected perspective – and launched him on a path to help others in his situation.

Had Mr. Miller taken his life that night, he would have joined thousands of other veterans who died by suicide. About 17 U.S. veterans lose their lives this way each day, on average, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs. In 2019, the last year for which records are available, 6,261 veterans took their own lives – and the suicide rate for veterans was 52% higher than for nonveterans, the agency’s records show. 

The problem has become so severe that the Veterans Health Administration now uses artificial intelligence (AI) to help identify veterans at the highest risk of suicide – and reach out to them before a crisis strikes.

But that wasn’t available when Dan Miller’s life was unraveling.

In the years leading up to his near-suicide, his wife had pushed him to get help. “She said, ‘You’re not the same person you were when you left. The kids are scared of you. The pets are scared of you,” he recalls.

He resisted, even when his wife threatened divorce. Rising through the ranks of the Marines, Mr. Miller had become more emotionally isolated. He feared losing his job and the respect of others if he let anyone know what he was going through.

Finally, he gave the VHA a chance. He went in for an initial consultation in 2010 and didn’t find it helpful. He didn’t like being told what to do. So he stopped. He turned to obsessive exercise and excessive drinking.

That day in 2014, Mr. Miller’s wife told him she was taking the kids out for a playdate. After she left, he was served with divorce papers. Less than an hour later, he was parked in his car with his gun, ready to end his life.

But if it all had happened just a few years later, things might never have gotten to that point.
 

Scanning for suicide risk

In 2017, the VHA piloted its AI program, called REACH VET, that aims to help prevent veterans from dying by suicide.

Every month, a computer scans the electronic health records of all VHA patients who’ve had a health care visit for any reason in the last 2 years. It checks more than 140 variables and weights them to estimate someone’s overall suicide risk at that moment in time.

To build the risk algorithm, a computer combed through the medical records of 6,360 veterans confirmed to have died by suicide between 2009 and 2011. (The VHA continually updates the list of variables from the health records of VHA patients, including those who have died by suicide since then and others.)

Some variables are things you’d expect:

  • A past suicide attempt.
  • A diagnosis of depression or other mental illness.
  • A diagnosis of a terminal illness.

Others are more surprising. For example, a diagnosis of arthritis or diabetes adds weight.



REACH VET flags the riskiest cases – the top 0.1% – for a mental health or primary care provider to review. They reach out to the patient to tell them how and why their record was flagged, discuss any recommended treatment changes, and ask them to come in for a visit.

“It’s an opportunity to talk about their risk factors, which is designed to lead to a conversation about safety planning,” says clinical psychologist Matthew Miller, PhD, national director of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs’ Suicide Prevention Program. He’s not related to Dan Miller.

Making a suicide safety plan

A safety plan is a document that outlines how a person can help prevent their own suicide in a crisis. 

The plan may include:

  • A list of personal triggers or warning signs.
  • What’s helped them in the past.
  • Names of people or organizations who can support them.
  • Plans to remove means of suicide, such as guns, from their environment.
  • Their reasons for living.

In people at risk for suicide, research shows that having a safety plan reduces suicidal thoughts and attempts, lowers rates of depression and hopelessness, and boosts veterans’ engagement with the health care system. It may also help people manage things that trigger their suicidal thoughts.
 

Getting the call

What if REACH VET had been around when Dan Miller was in crisis – and he’d gotten a call from the VHA?

“It absolutely, positively would have helped because one of the biggest things on that day when I got served was feeling completely alone and that I had no one to turn to,” Mr. Miller says. He’s now a speaker for the Wounded Warrior Project, a nonprofit that serves veterans and active-duty service people.

Vets’ reactions to the unexpected VHA phone call, psychologist Dr. Miller says, “run the gamut from ‘Thank you for contacting me. Let’s talk,’ to ‘What are you talking about? Leave me alone!’ ”

Nothing stops all suicides. But REACH VET is having an impact. In a clinical trial, vets contacted through REACH VET had more doctor visits, were more likely to have a written suicide prevention safety plan, and had fewer hospital admissions for mental health, ER visits, and suicide attempts.
 

'One of the biggest things on that day ... was feeling completely alone and that I had no one to turn to.' - Dan Miller

An assist from AI

Even simple outreach can make a big difference. And there’s research to prove it.

One study included 4,730 veterans recently discharged from psychiatric care at the VHA, a group considered at high risk for suicide. 

Half of them got 13 caring emails from hospital staff in the weeks after leaving the hospital. The emails mentioned personal things the patient had shared, like a love of hiking, and wished them well. The other veterans got routine follow-up but no emails.

Two years later, those who got the caring emails were less likely to have died by suicide than the other vets. The study was published in 2014 in Contemporary Clinical Trials.

Researchers have done studies like this many times: with handwritten notes from the primary care doctor, postcards from the ER, and so forth. The results never vary: The notes reduce suicide risk.

“If we could use AI to identify people to receive notes or phone calls, it would be a very effective and inexpensive way to guide follow-up care,” says Rebecca Bernert, PhD, director and founder of the Suicide Prevention Research Laboratory at Stanford (Calif.) University.
 

 

 

AI doesn’t replace clinical judgment.

“AI can capture data that we miss due to the limits of our humanity,” psychologist Dr. Miller says. “There’s suicide prevention processes founded on big data and AI, and there are processes founded in clinical intuition and acumen.”

AI is only as good as the data it’s based on. If that data lacks diversity, it may miss things. And variables that apply to veterans may differ in civilians.
 

Stopping suicidal thoughts

Google is putting AI to work against suicide, too. Its MUM (Multitask Unified Model) technology seeks to understand the intent behind what we google.

MUM powers Google Search. It can often tell the difference between a search for information about suicide for someone writing a research paper on the topic and a search for information on how or where to carry out a suicide.

When Google Search detects that someone in the United States might be in crisis and at risk of suicide, the first search results that person gets are the number for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and other resources for people in crisis.

Google Home Assistant works in the same way. When a user makes a query that signals a suicide-related crisis, the gadget serves up resources that offer help.

MUM is working to understand the nuances of crisis language in 75 languages so that Google Search can provide people in crisis with hotlines or other resources in many countries.

“We want to find partners that are accessible to users in terms of hours of operation. We have a strong preference for finding partners that promise confidentiality and privacy to the extent that those are permitted [in that country],” says Anne Merritt, MD, a product manager at Google Search.

Other companies are working on apps that use AI to spot suicide risk in other ways, including voice technology that may notice subtle changes in the voice of someone who’s depressed and may be thinking of suicide. Those are still in development but show promise. Keep in mind that apps do not require government approval, so if you try one, be sure to let your health care provider know.
 

Changing the channel

Seeing a hotline number on your phone or computer screen can help, Dan Miller says. “If I happened to be online, searching maybe for a bridge to jump off of ... and suddenly that pops up on the screen, it’s like it changes the channel.”

It may not work for everyone, he says, but that search result could interrupt someone’s suicidal train of thought.

That’s crucial, psychologist Dr. Miller says, because most suicide attempts escalate from first thought to potentially fatal action in just 1 hour. That’s how fast it happened for Dan Miller in 2014.

“When you’re able to put time and space between the suicidal thought and the access to the method to act on that thought, you save lives,” Dr. Bernert says.
 

Making a different choice

An interruption in Mr. Miller’s thinking is what had saved his life.

Holding the gun to his head, Mr. Miller looked over at the passenger seat at a brochure from Wounded Warrior Project, which he had just learned about. Mr. Miller noticed a photo of a man in a wheelchair, a veteran like him, who had no legs. He thought that the man looked worse off than him but hadn’t given up.

Mr. Miller put down his gun and decided to get help.

Recovering from a near suicide attempt, he says, is a journey. It doesn’t happen overnight. Now, 8 years later, Mr. Miller is planning a brief break from the speaker circuit. He plans to spend 2 weeks in an outpatient counseling program for posttraumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury.

“Telling my story to strangers – part of it is healing me in a way, but I’m learning that repeating the story over and over again is also keeping me from letting it go. And I’m still healing.”

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

Medically reviewed by Jennifer Casarella, MD

Dan Miller has parked his Nissan Altima on the side of the road near a field outside Chicago and is holding a gun to his head. 

Haunted for years by the compounded trauma of tours of duty in the Middle East and his work as a police officer in Chicago, at that moment, Dr. Miller saw no reason to live. And there were troubles at home with his wife and children, who had grown fearful of his behavior.

“My whole world was falling apart,” he says of that dark night in 2014. “It left a hole I didn’t know how to fill.”

He chose not to pull the trigger after a brochure on the passenger seat of his car gave him an unexpected perspective – and launched him on a path to help others in his situation.

Had Mr. Miller taken his life that night, he would have joined thousands of other veterans who died by suicide. About 17 U.S. veterans lose their lives this way each day, on average, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs. In 2019, the last year for which records are available, 6,261 veterans took their own lives – and the suicide rate for veterans was 52% higher than for nonveterans, the agency’s records show. 

The problem has become so severe that the Veterans Health Administration now uses artificial intelligence (AI) to help identify veterans at the highest risk of suicide – and reach out to them before a crisis strikes.

But that wasn’t available when Dan Miller’s life was unraveling.

In the years leading up to his near-suicide, his wife had pushed him to get help. “She said, ‘You’re not the same person you were when you left. The kids are scared of you. The pets are scared of you,” he recalls.

He resisted, even when his wife threatened divorce. Rising through the ranks of the Marines, Mr. Miller had become more emotionally isolated. He feared losing his job and the respect of others if he let anyone know what he was going through.

Finally, he gave the VHA a chance. He went in for an initial consultation in 2010 and didn’t find it helpful. He didn’t like being told what to do. So he stopped. He turned to obsessive exercise and excessive drinking.

That day in 2014, Mr. Miller’s wife told him she was taking the kids out for a playdate. After she left, he was served with divorce papers. Less than an hour later, he was parked in his car with his gun, ready to end his life.

But if it all had happened just a few years later, things might never have gotten to that point.
 

Scanning for suicide risk

In 2017, the VHA piloted its AI program, called REACH VET, that aims to help prevent veterans from dying by suicide.

Every month, a computer scans the electronic health records of all VHA patients who’ve had a health care visit for any reason in the last 2 years. It checks more than 140 variables and weights them to estimate someone’s overall suicide risk at that moment in time.

To build the risk algorithm, a computer combed through the medical records of 6,360 veterans confirmed to have died by suicide between 2009 and 2011. (The VHA continually updates the list of variables from the health records of VHA patients, including those who have died by suicide since then and others.)

Some variables are things you’d expect:

  • A past suicide attempt.
  • A diagnosis of depression or other mental illness.
  • A diagnosis of a terminal illness.

Others are more surprising. For example, a diagnosis of arthritis or diabetes adds weight.



REACH VET flags the riskiest cases – the top 0.1% – for a mental health or primary care provider to review. They reach out to the patient to tell them how and why their record was flagged, discuss any recommended treatment changes, and ask them to come in for a visit.

“It’s an opportunity to talk about their risk factors, which is designed to lead to a conversation about safety planning,” says clinical psychologist Matthew Miller, PhD, national director of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs’ Suicide Prevention Program. He’s not related to Dan Miller.

Making a suicide safety plan

A safety plan is a document that outlines how a person can help prevent their own suicide in a crisis. 

The plan may include:

  • A list of personal triggers or warning signs.
  • What’s helped them in the past.
  • Names of people or organizations who can support them.
  • Plans to remove means of suicide, such as guns, from their environment.
  • Their reasons for living.

In people at risk for suicide, research shows that having a safety plan reduces suicidal thoughts and attempts, lowers rates of depression and hopelessness, and boosts veterans’ engagement with the health care system. It may also help people manage things that trigger their suicidal thoughts.
 

Getting the call

What if REACH VET had been around when Dan Miller was in crisis – and he’d gotten a call from the VHA?

“It absolutely, positively would have helped because one of the biggest things on that day when I got served was feeling completely alone and that I had no one to turn to,” Mr. Miller says. He’s now a speaker for the Wounded Warrior Project, a nonprofit that serves veterans and active-duty service people.

Vets’ reactions to the unexpected VHA phone call, psychologist Dr. Miller says, “run the gamut from ‘Thank you for contacting me. Let’s talk,’ to ‘What are you talking about? Leave me alone!’ ”

Nothing stops all suicides. But REACH VET is having an impact. In a clinical trial, vets contacted through REACH VET had more doctor visits, were more likely to have a written suicide prevention safety plan, and had fewer hospital admissions for mental health, ER visits, and suicide attempts.
 

'One of the biggest things on that day ... was feeling completely alone and that I had no one to turn to.' - Dan Miller

An assist from AI

Even simple outreach can make a big difference. And there’s research to prove it.

One study included 4,730 veterans recently discharged from psychiatric care at the VHA, a group considered at high risk for suicide. 

Half of them got 13 caring emails from hospital staff in the weeks after leaving the hospital. The emails mentioned personal things the patient had shared, like a love of hiking, and wished them well. The other veterans got routine follow-up but no emails.

Two years later, those who got the caring emails were less likely to have died by suicide than the other vets. The study was published in 2014 in Contemporary Clinical Trials.

Researchers have done studies like this many times: with handwritten notes from the primary care doctor, postcards from the ER, and so forth. The results never vary: The notes reduce suicide risk.

“If we could use AI to identify people to receive notes or phone calls, it would be a very effective and inexpensive way to guide follow-up care,” says Rebecca Bernert, PhD, director and founder of the Suicide Prevention Research Laboratory at Stanford (Calif.) University.
 

 

 

AI doesn’t replace clinical judgment.

“AI can capture data that we miss due to the limits of our humanity,” psychologist Dr. Miller says. “There’s suicide prevention processes founded on big data and AI, and there are processes founded in clinical intuition and acumen.”

AI is only as good as the data it’s based on. If that data lacks diversity, it may miss things. And variables that apply to veterans may differ in civilians.
 

Stopping suicidal thoughts

Google is putting AI to work against suicide, too. Its MUM (Multitask Unified Model) technology seeks to understand the intent behind what we google.

MUM powers Google Search. It can often tell the difference between a search for information about suicide for someone writing a research paper on the topic and a search for information on how or where to carry out a suicide.

When Google Search detects that someone in the United States might be in crisis and at risk of suicide, the first search results that person gets are the number for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and other resources for people in crisis.

Google Home Assistant works in the same way. When a user makes a query that signals a suicide-related crisis, the gadget serves up resources that offer help.

MUM is working to understand the nuances of crisis language in 75 languages so that Google Search can provide people in crisis with hotlines or other resources in many countries.

“We want to find partners that are accessible to users in terms of hours of operation. We have a strong preference for finding partners that promise confidentiality and privacy to the extent that those are permitted [in that country],” says Anne Merritt, MD, a product manager at Google Search.

Other companies are working on apps that use AI to spot suicide risk in other ways, including voice technology that may notice subtle changes in the voice of someone who’s depressed and may be thinking of suicide. Those are still in development but show promise. Keep in mind that apps do not require government approval, so if you try one, be sure to let your health care provider know.
 

Changing the channel

Seeing a hotline number on your phone or computer screen can help, Dan Miller says. “If I happened to be online, searching maybe for a bridge to jump off of ... and suddenly that pops up on the screen, it’s like it changes the channel.”

It may not work for everyone, he says, but that search result could interrupt someone’s suicidal train of thought.

That’s crucial, psychologist Dr. Miller says, because most suicide attempts escalate from first thought to potentially fatal action in just 1 hour. That’s how fast it happened for Dan Miller in 2014.

“When you’re able to put time and space between the suicidal thought and the access to the method to act on that thought, you save lives,” Dr. Bernert says.
 

Making a different choice

An interruption in Mr. Miller’s thinking is what had saved his life.

Holding the gun to his head, Mr. Miller looked over at the passenger seat at a brochure from Wounded Warrior Project, which he had just learned about. Mr. Miller noticed a photo of a man in a wheelchair, a veteran like him, who had no legs. He thought that the man looked worse off than him but hadn’t given up.

Mr. Miller put down his gun and decided to get help.

Recovering from a near suicide attempt, he says, is a journey. It doesn’t happen overnight. Now, 8 years later, Mr. Miller is planning a brief break from the speaker circuit. He plans to spend 2 weeks in an outpatient counseling program for posttraumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury.

“Telling my story to strangers – part of it is healing me in a way, but I’m learning that repeating the story over and over again is also keeping me from letting it go. And I’m still healing.”

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

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Antidepressants may curb opioid overdose

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Changed
Wed, 07/20/2022 - 14:38

Patients with a history of depression who are also being treated with opioid analgesics have a lower risk for overdose and self-harm after taking antidepressants, new research suggests.

Investigators analyzed insurance claims for more than 200,000 adults with a history of depression. Of these, 8,200 experienced adverse events (AEs) during the year after initiation of opioid therapy.

However, the risk for an AE such as overdose and other forms of self-harm was reduced among patients who had been treated with antidepressants for at least 6 weeks.

The take-home message is that clinicians and health systems need to be more aware that individuals in pain are more likely to be depressed and at higher risk for AEs – so the depression should be treated “more liberally,” corresponding author Bradley Stein, MD, PhD, a practicing psychiatrist in Pittsburgh and director of the Rand Corporation Opioid Policy Center, told this news organization.

“If you are treating someone with pain, particularly chronic pain, it’s critically important to better assess their depression and not to attribute depressive symptoms only to pain,” Dr. Stein said.

The findings were published online  in Psychiatric Services.
 

Promising approach?

Opioid treatment for pain “complicates the interactions among pain, depression, and self-harm,” the investigators write. Individuals with depression receiving long-term opioid therapy are two to three times more likely to misuse opioids, compared with individuals who do not have depression.

Although comorbid depression “substantially increases overdose and suicide risk, it remains underdiagnosed and undertreated among individuals with chronic pain,” the researchers note. They add that increasing access to depression treatment may be a “potentially promising approach to preventing overdoses and suicide” in these patients.

“We know that individuals using opioids who have a history of depression are more likely to have negative outcomes, such as overdoses and self-harm events,” Dr. Stein said. “We wanted to see whether antidepressants, which would treat depression in these individuals, would help with that.”

The researchers assessed a database of commercial insurance claims of adults with a history of depression who received opioids between 2007 and 2017 (n = 283,374). The data included 336,599 opioid treatment episodes.

To be included in the study, patients had to have been diagnosed with depression before they filled their first opioid prescription.

The “outcome of interest” was time from the beginning of an opioid episode until an adverse event, such as opioid poisoning, overdose of nonopioid controlled or illicit substances, or self-harm unrelated to overdose.

Participants were followed from the onset of the opioid episode until an AE occurred, loss to follow-up, or week 52, whichever came first.

The “key independent variable” was filling an antidepressant prescription. The patient’s sex and age were considered to be independent variables as well.
 

Teasing out antidepressant effect

Of participants with a history of depression treatment, 8,203 experienced at least one AE during the 12 months after treatment initiation (n = 47,486 AEs). Approximately half (50.8%) filled an antidepressant prescription at least once during the 12 months after the opioid episode began.

AEs were more likely among men than among women. The highest risk was in patients aged 18-24 years.

After adjusting for age and sex, participants who had received antidepressants had a greater risk for all adverse outcomes during the first 6 weeks of antidepressant treatment. However, those who had received antidepressants for 6 weeks or longer were at reduced risk for all adverse outcomes.



“We took advantage of the fact that, for most people, antidepressants take a while to work and aren’t immediately effective, so we were able to use that difference in our research,” Dr. Stein said.

“We wouldn’t expect to see an immediate effect of antidepressants, so the difference between what we saw immediately after the person had started treatment and the time it took for the antidepressant to be effective enabled us to tease out the effect of the antidepressant,” he added.

 

 

Consider CBT?

Andrew Saxon, MD, professor, department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, said clinicians “tend to think categorically and give people diagnoses that are clear-cut.” But neurobiologically, “it may be hard to distinguish where chronic pain ends and depression begins, or whether there’s some commonality.”

For patients with chronic pain and those taking opioids, “we need to be very attuned to the possibility or likelihood that they have major depression and other psychiatric diagnoses, like PTSD and anxiety disorders, which are very common,” said Dr. Saxon, who is also the director of the Center of Excellence in Substance Abuse Treatment and Education at the VA Puget Sound Health Care System. He was not involved with the current research.

He noted that treating those disorders “is a very important component of managing chronic pain.” However, “patients just starting antidepressants need to be carefully monitored when they’re getting stabilized on their antidepressants because they can have side effects, particularly early on, that can destabilize them.”

Dr. Saxon added that beyond pharmacotherapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for pain might be an even better intervention for addressing both pain and depression.

Also commenting for this article, Brian Hurley, MD, an addiction medicine specialist and the medical director of the Division of Substance Abuse Prevention and Control for the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, said: “In the context of the largest wave of overdose mortality in U.S. history, we know comparatively little about the impact of mental health interventions that mitigate overdose risks.”

This study “contributes important new information that treating depression with antidepressant medications reduces overdose and self-harm risks for people who are prescribed opioids,” said Dr. Hurley, who is also the president-elect of the American Society of Addiction Medicine.

It also “underscores the general importance of integrated mental health and substance use disorder treatment in both primary care and in mental health settings,” added Dr. Hurley, who was not involved with the study.

The study was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The investigators and commenters reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Patients with a history of depression who are also being treated with opioid analgesics have a lower risk for overdose and self-harm after taking antidepressants, new research suggests.

Investigators analyzed insurance claims for more than 200,000 adults with a history of depression. Of these, 8,200 experienced adverse events (AEs) during the year after initiation of opioid therapy.

However, the risk for an AE such as overdose and other forms of self-harm was reduced among patients who had been treated with antidepressants for at least 6 weeks.

The take-home message is that clinicians and health systems need to be more aware that individuals in pain are more likely to be depressed and at higher risk for AEs – so the depression should be treated “more liberally,” corresponding author Bradley Stein, MD, PhD, a practicing psychiatrist in Pittsburgh and director of the Rand Corporation Opioid Policy Center, told this news organization.

“If you are treating someone with pain, particularly chronic pain, it’s critically important to better assess their depression and not to attribute depressive symptoms only to pain,” Dr. Stein said.

The findings were published online  in Psychiatric Services.
 

Promising approach?

Opioid treatment for pain “complicates the interactions among pain, depression, and self-harm,” the investigators write. Individuals with depression receiving long-term opioid therapy are two to three times more likely to misuse opioids, compared with individuals who do not have depression.

Although comorbid depression “substantially increases overdose and suicide risk, it remains underdiagnosed and undertreated among individuals with chronic pain,” the researchers note. They add that increasing access to depression treatment may be a “potentially promising approach to preventing overdoses and suicide” in these patients.

“We know that individuals using opioids who have a history of depression are more likely to have negative outcomes, such as overdoses and self-harm events,” Dr. Stein said. “We wanted to see whether antidepressants, which would treat depression in these individuals, would help with that.”

The researchers assessed a database of commercial insurance claims of adults with a history of depression who received opioids between 2007 and 2017 (n = 283,374). The data included 336,599 opioid treatment episodes.

To be included in the study, patients had to have been diagnosed with depression before they filled their first opioid prescription.

The “outcome of interest” was time from the beginning of an opioid episode until an adverse event, such as opioid poisoning, overdose of nonopioid controlled or illicit substances, or self-harm unrelated to overdose.

Participants were followed from the onset of the opioid episode until an AE occurred, loss to follow-up, or week 52, whichever came first.

The “key independent variable” was filling an antidepressant prescription. The patient’s sex and age were considered to be independent variables as well.
 

Teasing out antidepressant effect

Of participants with a history of depression treatment, 8,203 experienced at least one AE during the 12 months after treatment initiation (n = 47,486 AEs). Approximately half (50.8%) filled an antidepressant prescription at least once during the 12 months after the opioid episode began.

AEs were more likely among men than among women. The highest risk was in patients aged 18-24 years.

After adjusting for age and sex, participants who had received antidepressants had a greater risk for all adverse outcomes during the first 6 weeks of antidepressant treatment. However, those who had received antidepressants for 6 weeks or longer were at reduced risk for all adverse outcomes.



“We took advantage of the fact that, for most people, antidepressants take a while to work and aren’t immediately effective, so we were able to use that difference in our research,” Dr. Stein said.

“We wouldn’t expect to see an immediate effect of antidepressants, so the difference between what we saw immediately after the person had started treatment and the time it took for the antidepressant to be effective enabled us to tease out the effect of the antidepressant,” he added.

 

 

Consider CBT?

Andrew Saxon, MD, professor, department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, said clinicians “tend to think categorically and give people diagnoses that are clear-cut.” But neurobiologically, “it may be hard to distinguish where chronic pain ends and depression begins, or whether there’s some commonality.”

For patients with chronic pain and those taking opioids, “we need to be very attuned to the possibility or likelihood that they have major depression and other psychiatric diagnoses, like PTSD and anxiety disorders, which are very common,” said Dr. Saxon, who is also the director of the Center of Excellence in Substance Abuse Treatment and Education at the VA Puget Sound Health Care System. He was not involved with the current research.

He noted that treating those disorders “is a very important component of managing chronic pain.” However, “patients just starting antidepressants need to be carefully monitored when they’re getting stabilized on their antidepressants because they can have side effects, particularly early on, that can destabilize them.”

Dr. Saxon added that beyond pharmacotherapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for pain might be an even better intervention for addressing both pain and depression.

Also commenting for this article, Brian Hurley, MD, an addiction medicine specialist and the medical director of the Division of Substance Abuse Prevention and Control for the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, said: “In the context of the largest wave of overdose mortality in U.S. history, we know comparatively little about the impact of mental health interventions that mitigate overdose risks.”

This study “contributes important new information that treating depression with antidepressant medications reduces overdose and self-harm risks for people who are prescribed opioids,” said Dr. Hurley, who is also the president-elect of the American Society of Addiction Medicine.

It also “underscores the general importance of integrated mental health and substance use disorder treatment in both primary care and in mental health settings,” added Dr. Hurley, who was not involved with the study.

The study was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The investigators and commenters reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

Patients with a history of depression who are also being treated with opioid analgesics have a lower risk for overdose and self-harm after taking antidepressants, new research suggests.

Investigators analyzed insurance claims for more than 200,000 adults with a history of depression. Of these, 8,200 experienced adverse events (AEs) during the year after initiation of opioid therapy.

However, the risk for an AE such as overdose and other forms of self-harm was reduced among patients who had been treated with antidepressants for at least 6 weeks.

The take-home message is that clinicians and health systems need to be more aware that individuals in pain are more likely to be depressed and at higher risk for AEs – so the depression should be treated “more liberally,” corresponding author Bradley Stein, MD, PhD, a practicing psychiatrist in Pittsburgh and director of the Rand Corporation Opioid Policy Center, told this news organization.

“If you are treating someone with pain, particularly chronic pain, it’s critically important to better assess their depression and not to attribute depressive symptoms only to pain,” Dr. Stein said.

The findings were published online  in Psychiatric Services.
 

Promising approach?

Opioid treatment for pain “complicates the interactions among pain, depression, and self-harm,” the investigators write. Individuals with depression receiving long-term opioid therapy are two to three times more likely to misuse opioids, compared with individuals who do not have depression.

Although comorbid depression “substantially increases overdose and suicide risk, it remains underdiagnosed and undertreated among individuals with chronic pain,” the researchers note. They add that increasing access to depression treatment may be a “potentially promising approach to preventing overdoses and suicide” in these patients.

“We know that individuals using opioids who have a history of depression are more likely to have negative outcomes, such as overdoses and self-harm events,” Dr. Stein said. “We wanted to see whether antidepressants, which would treat depression in these individuals, would help with that.”

The researchers assessed a database of commercial insurance claims of adults with a history of depression who received opioids between 2007 and 2017 (n = 283,374). The data included 336,599 opioid treatment episodes.

To be included in the study, patients had to have been diagnosed with depression before they filled their first opioid prescription.

The “outcome of interest” was time from the beginning of an opioid episode until an adverse event, such as opioid poisoning, overdose of nonopioid controlled or illicit substances, or self-harm unrelated to overdose.

Participants were followed from the onset of the opioid episode until an AE occurred, loss to follow-up, or week 52, whichever came first.

The “key independent variable” was filling an antidepressant prescription. The patient’s sex and age were considered to be independent variables as well.
 

Teasing out antidepressant effect

Of participants with a history of depression treatment, 8,203 experienced at least one AE during the 12 months after treatment initiation (n = 47,486 AEs). Approximately half (50.8%) filled an antidepressant prescription at least once during the 12 months after the opioid episode began.

AEs were more likely among men than among women. The highest risk was in patients aged 18-24 years.

After adjusting for age and sex, participants who had received antidepressants had a greater risk for all adverse outcomes during the first 6 weeks of antidepressant treatment. However, those who had received antidepressants for 6 weeks or longer were at reduced risk for all adverse outcomes.



“We took advantage of the fact that, for most people, antidepressants take a while to work and aren’t immediately effective, so we were able to use that difference in our research,” Dr. Stein said.

“We wouldn’t expect to see an immediate effect of antidepressants, so the difference between what we saw immediately after the person had started treatment and the time it took for the antidepressant to be effective enabled us to tease out the effect of the antidepressant,” he added.

 

 

Consider CBT?

Andrew Saxon, MD, professor, department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, said clinicians “tend to think categorically and give people diagnoses that are clear-cut.” But neurobiologically, “it may be hard to distinguish where chronic pain ends and depression begins, or whether there’s some commonality.”

For patients with chronic pain and those taking opioids, “we need to be very attuned to the possibility or likelihood that they have major depression and other psychiatric diagnoses, like PTSD and anxiety disorders, which are very common,” said Dr. Saxon, who is also the director of the Center of Excellence in Substance Abuse Treatment and Education at the VA Puget Sound Health Care System. He was not involved with the current research.

He noted that treating those disorders “is a very important component of managing chronic pain.” However, “patients just starting antidepressants need to be carefully monitored when they’re getting stabilized on their antidepressants because they can have side effects, particularly early on, that can destabilize them.”

Dr. Saxon added that beyond pharmacotherapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for pain might be an even better intervention for addressing both pain and depression.

Also commenting for this article, Brian Hurley, MD, an addiction medicine specialist and the medical director of the Division of Substance Abuse Prevention and Control for the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, said: “In the context of the largest wave of overdose mortality in U.S. history, we know comparatively little about the impact of mental health interventions that mitigate overdose risks.”

This study “contributes important new information that treating depression with antidepressant medications reduces overdose and self-harm risks for people who are prescribed opioids,” said Dr. Hurley, who is also the president-elect of the American Society of Addiction Medicine.

It also “underscores the general importance of integrated mental health and substance use disorder treatment in both primary care and in mental health settings,” added Dr. Hurley, who was not involved with the study.

The study was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The investigators and commenters reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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