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Inflammatory profiles impact major depressive disorder

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Wed, 07/20/2022 - 14:44

Early onset of disease in patients with major depressive disorder may be linked to a specific inflammatory profile, based on data from 234 individuals.

Major depressive disorder (MDD) remains common, and evidence suggests that it is increasing among younger individuals, but data on early-onset MDD in adults are limited, Ana Paula Anzolin, a graduate student at the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil, and colleagues wrote.

Although previous studies have shown abnormal cytokine production in patients with MDD, the impact of inflammation on MDD and disease onset and progression remains unclear, they said.

In a study published in Psychiatry Research, the authors identified outpatients aged 18-85 years with confirmed MDD and scores of at least 8 on the HAM-D scale who were undergoing treatment at a single center. Early onset was defined as a diagnosis of MDD before age 30 years (99 patients) and late onset was defined as a diagnosis at age 30 years and older (135 patients). The researchers measured levels of interleukin-6, IL-1 beta, IL-10, and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha).

Overall, the level of cytokine profiles in early- versus late-onset disease was significantly higher for IL-1B and TNF-alpha (P < .001 for both). The significant difference between early- and late-onset disease remained regardless of comorbidity with autoimmune diseases, the researchers noted.

IL-6 levels were higher in the early-onset group and IL-10 levels were higher in the late-onset group, but these differences were not significant.

“We believe these findings provide a hint that early-onset MDD may be a particular subtype in which the proinflammatory state plays a greater role than in late-onset MDD,” the researchers wrote.

The results also support findings from previous studies that suggest a divergence between early- and late adult–onset depression, they said. More research on early-onset MDD in adults is needed, as these patients tend to have more severe symptoms, more medical and psychiatric comorbidities, and an increased risk of depressive episodes and suicide attempts.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the lack of a control group, the retrospective assessment of disease onset, and the limited cytokines studied, which do not reflect changes in the entire immune network response, the researchers noted.

However, the study is the first known to examine the association of serum cytokines and early- and late-onset MDD in adults, and the results support the use of IL-1B and TNF-alpha as potential treatment targets in the development of new therapies for MDD, they concluded.

The study was supported by the Fundo de Incentivo à Pesquisa – Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre, the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico, and the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
 

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Early onset of disease in patients with major depressive disorder may be linked to a specific inflammatory profile, based on data from 234 individuals.

Major depressive disorder (MDD) remains common, and evidence suggests that it is increasing among younger individuals, but data on early-onset MDD in adults are limited, Ana Paula Anzolin, a graduate student at the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil, and colleagues wrote.

Although previous studies have shown abnormal cytokine production in patients with MDD, the impact of inflammation on MDD and disease onset and progression remains unclear, they said.

In a study published in Psychiatry Research, the authors identified outpatients aged 18-85 years with confirmed MDD and scores of at least 8 on the HAM-D scale who were undergoing treatment at a single center. Early onset was defined as a diagnosis of MDD before age 30 years (99 patients) and late onset was defined as a diagnosis at age 30 years and older (135 patients). The researchers measured levels of interleukin-6, IL-1 beta, IL-10, and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha).

Overall, the level of cytokine profiles in early- versus late-onset disease was significantly higher for IL-1B and TNF-alpha (P < .001 for both). The significant difference between early- and late-onset disease remained regardless of comorbidity with autoimmune diseases, the researchers noted.

IL-6 levels were higher in the early-onset group and IL-10 levels were higher in the late-onset group, but these differences were not significant.

“We believe these findings provide a hint that early-onset MDD may be a particular subtype in which the proinflammatory state plays a greater role than in late-onset MDD,” the researchers wrote.

The results also support findings from previous studies that suggest a divergence between early- and late adult–onset depression, they said. More research on early-onset MDD in adults is needed, as these patients tend to have more severe symptoms, more medical and psychiatric comorbidities, and an increased risk of depressive episodes and suicide attempts.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the lack of a control group, the retrospective assessment of disease onset, and the limited cytokines studied, which do not reflect changes in the entire immune network response, the researchers noted.

However, the study is the first known to examine the association of serum cytokines and early- and late-onset MDD in adults, and the results support the use of IL-1B and TNF-alpha as potential treatment targets in the development of new therapies for MDD, they concluded.

The study was supported by the Fundo de Incentivo à Pesquisa – Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre, the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico, and the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
 

Early onset of disease in patients with major depressive disorder may be linked to a specific inflammatory profile, based on data from 234 individuals.

Major depressive disorder (MDD) remains common, and evidence suggests that it is increasing among younger individuals, but data on early-onset MDD in adults are limited, Ana Paula Anzolin, a graduate student at the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil, and colleagues wrote.

Although previous studies have shown abnormal cytokine production in patients with MDD, the impact of inflammation on MDD and disease onset and progression remains unclear, they said.

In a study published in Psychiatry Research, the authors identified outpatients aged 18-85 years with confirmed MDD and scores of at least 8 on the HAM-D scale who were undergoing treatment at a single center. Early onset was defined as a diagnosis of MDD before age 30 years (99 patients) and late onset was defined as a diagnosis at age 30 years and older (135 patients). The researchers measured levels of interleukin-6, IL-1 beta, IL-10, and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha).

Overall, the level of cytokine profiles in early- versus late-onset disease was significantly higher for IL-1B and TNF-alpha (P < .001 for both). The significant difference between early- and late-onset disease remained regardless of comorbidity with autoimmune diseases, the researchers noted.

IL-6 levels were higher in the early-onset group and IL-10 levels were higher in the late-onset group, but these differences were not significant.

“We believe these findings provide a hint that early-onset MDD may be a particular subtype in which the proinflammatory state plays a greater role than in late-onset MDD,” the researchers wrote.

The results also support findings from previous studies that suggest a divergence between early- and late adult–onset depression, they said. More research on early-onset MDD in adults is needed, as these patients tend to have more severe symptoms, more medical and psychiatric comorbidities, and an increased risk of depressive episodes and suicide attempts.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the lack of a control group, the retrospective assessment of disease onset, and the limited cytokines studied, which do not reflect changes in the entire immune network response, the researchers noted.

However, the study is the first known to examine the association of serum cytokines and early- and late-onset MDD in adults, and the results support the use of IL-1B and TNF-alpha as potential treatment targets in the development of new therapies for MDD, they concluded.

The study was supported by the Fundo de Incentivo à Pesquisa – Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre, the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico, and the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
 

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The heartache of bereavement can be fatal in heart failure

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Mon, 08/08/2022 - 09:29

The stress of losing a family member can hasten the death of patients with heart failure, suggests a large Swedish study that points to the need for greater integration of psychosocial risk factors in the treatment of HF.

The adjusted relative risk of dying was nearly 30% higher among bereaved patients with HF (1.29; 95% confidence interval, 1.27-1.30) and slightly higher for those grieving the loss of more than one family member (RR, 1.35).

The highest risk was in the first week after the loss (RR, 1.78) but persisted after 5 years of follow-up (RR, 1.30).

“Heart failure is a very difficult condition and has a very poor prognosis comparable to many, many cancers,” senior author Krisztina László, PhD, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, said in an interview. “So it’s important for us to be aware of these increased risks and to understand them better.”

The early risk for death could be related to stress-induced cardiomyopathy, or Takotsubo syndrome, as well as activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, and sympathetic nervous system, she explained. Higher long-term risks may reflect chronic stress, leading to poorly managed disease and an unhealthy lifestyle.

“If we understand better the underlying mechanisms maybe we can give more specific advice,” Dr. László said. “At this stage, I think having an awareness of the risk and trying to follow patients or at least not let them fall out of usual care, asking questions, trying to understand what their needs are, maybe that is what we can do well.”

A recent position paper by the European Association of Preventive Cardiology pointed out that psychosocial risk factors, like depression and social isolation, can exacerbate heart failure and calls for better integration of psychosocial factors in the treatment of patients with chronic HF.

“We don’t do a very good job of it, but I think they are very important,” observed Stuart D. Russell, MD, a professor of medicine who specializes in advanced HF at Duke University, Durham, N.C., and was not involved in the study.

“When we hear about a spouse dying, we might call and give condolences, but it’s probably a group of patients that for the next 6 months or so we need to watch more closely and see if there are things we can impact both medically as well as socially to perhaps prevent some of this increase in mortality,” he told this news organization.

Although several studies have linked bereavement with adverse health outcomes, this is just one of two studies to look specifically at its role in HF prognosis, Dr. László noted. A 2013 study of 66,000 male veterans reported that widowers had nearly a 38% higher all-cause mortality risk than did married veterans.

The present study extends those findings to 490,527 patients in the Swedish Heart Failure Registry between 2000 and 2018 and/or in the Swedish Patient Register with a primary diagnosis of HF between 1987 and 2018. During a mean follow-up of 3.7 years, 12% of participants had a family member die, and 383,674 participants died.

Results showed the HF mortality risk increased 10% after the death of a child, 20% with the death of a spouse/partner, 13% with a sibling’s death, and 5% with the death of a grandchild.

No increased risk was seen after the death of a parent, which is likely owed to a median patient age of about 75 years and “is in line with our expectations of the life cycle,” Dr. László said.

An association between bereavement and mortality risk was observed in cases of loss caused by cardiovascular disease (RR, 1.34) and other natural causes (RR, 1.27) but also in cases of unnatural deaths, such as suicide (RR, 1.13).

The overall findings were similar regardless of left ventricular ejection fraction and New York Heart Association functional class and were not affected by sex or country of birth.

Dr. Russell agreed that the death of a parent would be expected among these older patients with HF but said that “if the mechanism of this truly is kind of this increased stress hormones and Takotsubo-type mechanism, you’d think it would be worse if it was your kid that died. That shocked me a bit.”

The strong association between mortality and the loss of a spouse or partner was not surprising, given that they’re an important source of mutual social support, he added.

“If it’s a 75-year-old whose spouse dies, we need to make sure that we have the children’s phone number or other people that we can reach out to and say: ‘Can you check on them?’ ” he said. “And we need to make sure that somebody else is coming in with them because I would guess that probably at least half of what patients hear in a clinic visit goes in one ear and out the other and it’s going to make that much better. So we need to find who that new support person is for the patient.”

Asked whether there are efforts underway to incorporate psychosocial factors into current U.S. guidelines, Dr. Russell replied, “certainly within heart failure, I don’t think we’re really discussing it and, that may be the best part of this paper. It really makes us think about a different way of approaching these older patients.”

Dr. László said that future studies are needed to investigate whether less severe sources of stress may also contribute to poor HF prognosis.

“In our population, 12% of patients were affected, which is quite high, but there are patients with heart failure who experience on a daily basis other sources of stress, which are less severe but chronic and affect large numbers,” she said. “This may also have important public health implications and will be an important next step.”

The authors noted that they were unable to eliminate residual confounding by genetic factors or unmeasured socioeconomic-, lifestyle-, or health-related factors shared by family members. Other limitations are limited power to detect a modest effect in some of the subanalyses and that the findings may be generalizable only to countries with social and cultural contexts and health-related factors similar to those of Sweden.

The study was supported by grants from the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research, the Karolinska Institutet’s Research Foundation, and the China Scholarship Council. Dr. László is also supported by a grant from the Heart and Lung Foundation. All other authors and Dr. Russell reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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The stress of losing a family member can hasten the death of patients with heart failure, suggests a large Swedish study that points to the need for greater integration of psychosocial risk factors in the treatment of HF.

The adjusted relative risk of dying was nearly 30% higher among bereaved patients with HF (1.29; 95% confidence interval, 1.27-1.30) and slightly higher for those grieving the loss of more than one family member (RR, 1.35).

The highest risk was in the first week after the loss (RR, 1.78) but persisted after 5 years of follow-up (RR, 1.30).

“Heart failure is a very difficult condition and has a very poor prognosis comparable to many, many cancers,” senior author Krisztina László, PhD, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, said in an interview. “So it’s important for us to be aware of these increased risks and to understand them better.”

The early risk for death could be related to stress-induced cardiomyopathy, or Takotsubo syndrome, as well as activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, and sympathetic nervous system, she explained. Higher long-term risks may reflect chronic stress, leading to poorly managed disease and an unhealthy lifestyle.

“If we understand better the underlying mechanisms maybe we can give more specific advice,” Dr. László said. “At this stage, I think having an awareness of the risk and trying to follow patients or at least not let them fall out of usual care, asking questions, trying to understand what their needs are, maybe that is what we can do well.”

A recent position paper by the European Association of Preventive Cardiology pointed out that psychosocial risk factors, like depression and social isolation, can exacerbate heart failure and calls for better integration of psychosocial factors in the treatment of patients with chronic HF.

“We don’t do a very good job of it, but I think they are very important,” observed Stuart D. Russell, MD, a professor of medicine who specializes in advanced HF at Duke University, Durham, N.C., and was not involved in the study.

“When we hear about a spouse dying, we might call and give condolences, but it’s probably a group of patients that for the next 6 months or so we need to watch more closely and see if there are things we can impact both medically as well as socially to perhaps prevent some of this increase in mortality,” he told this news organization.

Although several studies have linked bereavement with adverse health outcomes, this is just one of two studies to look specifically at its role in HF prognosis, Dr. László noted. A 2013 study of 66,000 male veterans reported that widowers had nearly a 38% higher all-cause mortality risk than did married veterans.

The present study extends those findings to 490,527 patients in the Swedish Heart Failure Registry between 2000 and 2018 and/or in the Swedish Patient Register with a primary diagnosis of HF between 1987 and 2018. During a mean follow-up of 3.7 years, 12% of participants had a family member die, and 383,674 participants died.

Results showed the HF mortality risk increased 10% after the death of a child, 20% with the death of a spouse/partner, 13% with a sibling’s death, and 5% with the death of a grandchild.

No increased risk was seen after the death of a parent, which is likely owed to a median patient age of about 75 years and “is in line with our expectations of the life cycle,” Dr. László said.

An association between bereavement and mortality risk was observed in cases of loss caused by cardiovascular disease (RR, 1.34) and other natural causes (RR, 1.27) but also in cases of unnatural deaths, such as suicide (RR, 1.13).

The overall findings were similar regardless of left ventricular ejection fraction and New York Heart Association functional class and were not affected by sex or country of birth.

Dr. Russell agreed that the death of a parent would be expected among these older patients with HF but said that “if the mechanism of this truly is kind of this increased stress hormones and Takotsubo-type mechanism, you’d think it would be worse if it was your kid that died. That shocked me a bit.”

The strong association between mortality and the loss of a spouse or partner was not surprising, given that they’re an important source of mutual social support, he added.

“If it’s a 75-year-old whose spouse dies, we need to make sure that we have the children’s phone number or other people that we can reach out to and say: ‘Can you check on them?’ ” he said. “And we need to make sure that somebody else is coming in with them because I would guess that probably at least half of what patients hear in a clinic visit goes in one ear and out the other and it’s going to make that much better. So we need to find who that new support person is for the patient.”

Asked whether there are efforts underway to incorporate psychosocial factors into current U.S. guidelines, Dr. Russell replied, “certainly within heart failure, I don’t think we’re really discussing it and, that may be the best part of this paper. It really makes us think about a different way of approaching these older patients.”

Dr. László said that future studies are needed to investigate whether less severe sources of stress may also contribute to poor HF prognosis.

“In our population, 12% of patients were affected, which is quite high, but there are patients with heart failure who experience on a daily basis other sources of stress, which are less severe but chronic and affect large numbers,” she said. “This may also have important public health implications and will be an important next step.”

The authors noted that they were unable to eliminate residual confounding by genetic factors or unmeasured socioeconomic-, lifestyle-, or health-related factors shared by family members. Other limitations are limited power to detect a modest effect in some of the subanalyses and that the findings may be generalizable only to countries with social and cultural contexts and health-related factors similar to those of Sweden.

The study was supported by grants from the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research, the Karolinska Institutet’s Research Foundation, and the China Scholarship Council. Dr. László is also supported by a grant from the Heart and Lung Foundation. All other authors and Dr. Russell reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

The stress of losing a family member can hasten the death of patients with heart failure, suggests a large Swedish study that points to the need for greater integration of psychosocial risk factors in the treatment of HF.

The adjusted relative risk of dying was nearly 30% higher among bereaved patients with HF (1.29; 95% confidence interval, 1.27-1.30) and slightly higher for those grieving the loss of more than one family member (RR, 1.35).

The highest risk was in the first week after the loss (RR, 1.78) but persisted after 5 years of follow-up (RR, 1.30).

“Heart failure is a very difficult condition and has a very poor prognosis comparable to many, many cancers,” senior author Krisztina László, PhD, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, said in an interview. “So it’s important for us to be aware of these increased risks and to understand them better.”

The early risk for death could be related to stress-induced cardiomyopathy, or Takotsubo syndrome, as well as activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, and sympathetic nervous system, she explained. Higher long-term risks may reflect chronic stress, leading to poorly managed disease and an unhealthy lifestyle.

“If we understand better the underlying mechanisms maybe we can give more specific advice,” Dr. László said. “At this stage, I think having an awareness of the risk and trying to follow patients or at least not let them fall out of usual care, asking questions, trying to understand what their needs are, maybe that is what we can do well.”

A recent position paper by the European Association of Preventive Cardiology pointed out that psychosocial risk factors, like depression and social isolation, can exacerbate heart failure and calls for better integration of psychosocial factors in the treatment of patients with chronic HF.

“We don’t do a very good job of it, but I think they are very important,” observed Stuart D. Russell, MD, a professor of medicine who specializes in advanced HF at Duke University, Durham, N.C., and was not involved in the study.

“When we hear about a spouse dying, we might call and give condolences, but it’s probably a group of patients that for the next 6 months or so we need to watch more closely and see if there are things we can impact both medically as well as socially to perhaps prevent some of this increase in mortality,” he told this news organization.

Although several studies have linked bereavement with adverse health outcomes, this is just one of two studies to look specifically at its role in HF prognosis, Dr. László noted. A 2013 study of 66,000 male veterans reported that widowers had nearly a 38% higher all-cause mortality risk than did married veterans.

The present study extends those findings to 490,527 patients in the Swedish Heart Failure Registry between 2000 and 2018 and/or in the Swedish Patient Register with a primary diagnosis of HF between 1987 and 2018. During a mean follow-up of 3.7 years, 12% of participants had a family member die, and 383,674 participants died.

Results showed the HF mortality risk increased 10% after the death of a child, 20% with the death of a spouse/partner, 13% with a sibling’s death, and 5% with the death of a grandchild.

No increased risk was seen after the death of a parent, which is likely owed to a median patient age of about 75 years and “is in line with our expectations of the life cycle,” Dr. László said.

An association between bereavement and mortality risk was observed in cases of loss caused by cardiovascular disease (RR, 1.34) and other natural causes (RR, 1.27) but also in cases of unnatural deaths, such as suicide (RR, 1.13).

The overall findings were similar regardless of left ventricular ejection fraction and New York Heart Association functional class and were not affected by sex or country of birth.

Dr. Russell agreed that the death of a parent would be expected among these older patients with HF but said that “if the mechanism of this truly is kind of this increased stress hormones and Takotsubo-type mechanism, you’d think it would be worse if it was your kid that died. That shocked me a bit.”

The strong association between mortality and the loss of a spouse or partner was not surprising, given that they’re an important source of mutual social support, he added.

“If it’s a 75-year-old whose spouse dies, we need to make sure that we have the children’s phone number or other people that we can reach out to and say: ‘Can you check on them?’ ” he said. “And we need to make sure that somebody else is coming in with them because I would guess that probably at least half of what patients hear in a clinic visit goes in one ear and out the other and it’s going to make that much better. So we need to find who that new support person is for the patient.”

Asked whether there are efforts underway to incorporate psychosocial factors into current U.S. guidelines, Dr. Russell replied, “certainly within heart failure, I don’t think we’re really discussing it and, that may be the best part of this paper. It really makes us think about a different way of approaching these older patients.”

Dr. László said that future studies are needed to investigate whether less severe sources of stress may also contribute to poor HF prognosis.

“In our population, 12% of patients were affected, which is quite high, but there are patients with heart failure who experience on a daily basis other sources of stress, which are less severe but chronic and affect large numbers,” she said. “This may also have important public health implications and will be an important next step.”

The authors noted that they were unable to eliminate residual confounding by genetic factors or unmeasured socioeconomic-, lifestyle-, or health-related factors shared by family members. Other limitations are limited power to detect a modest effect in some of the subanalyses and that the findings may be generalizable only to countries with social and cultural contexts and health-related factors similar to those of Sweden.

The study was supported by grants from the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research, the Karolinska Institutet’s Research Foundation, and the China Scholarship Council. Dr. László is also supported by a grant from the Heart and Lung Foundation. All other authors and Dr. Russell reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Depression screens do not reduce suicidal acts in teens: Study

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Mon, 07/11/2022 - 16:17

Screening adolescents for signs of depression does not reduce their emergency department visits, hospitalizations, or treatment for suicidal behaviors, according to research published in Preventive Medicine. Adolescents who underwent a depression screening were just as likely to need these services as those who did not.

In 2016, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended that adolescents aged 12-18 years be screened for major depressive disorder, provided that effective treatment options and follow-up strategies are in place.

“The main goal of depression screening is really to reduce adverse psychiatric outcomes. But I think a collateral hope is that, in reducing these adverse psychiatric outcomes, you would also reduce avoidable health services use,” such as ED visits or hospitalizations, said Kira Riehm, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in epidemiology at Columbia University, New York, who led the research. Dr. Riehm designed the new study, which was part of her doctoral work at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, to test this premise.

Dr. Riehm and colleagues compared 14,433 adolescents aged 12-18 years who were screened for depression at least once during a wellness visit from 2014 to 2017 to 43,299 adolescents who were not screened for depression during such visits. Depression screenings were interspersed among a total of 281,463 adolescent wellness visits from 2014 to 2017, which represented 5% of all visits.

The researchers used diagnostic codes from a database of insurance claims to determine who had undergone depression screening. They then compared use of ED services, inpatient hospitalizations, and the number of treatments for suicidal behaviors between the two groups for the 2 years following the wellness visit.

The average age of the adolescents who underwent screening was 13-14 years, as was the average age of adolescents who were not screened. Both groups were evenly matched with respect to being male or female.

The researchers estimated that a high majority of adolescents in the sample were White (83%). Black persons represented 7% of the sample; Hispanic/Latino, 5%; and Asian, 3%. Insurance claims don’t always include racial and ethnicity data, Dr. Riehm said, so her group statistically imputed these proportions. The claims data also do not include details about which type of screening tool was used or the results of the screening, such as whether a teen exhibited mild or severe depression.

Adolescents in both groups were just as likely to go to the ED for any reason, be admitted to the hospital for any reason, or undergo treatment for suicidal behaviors. The researchers observed a slight association between being screened for depression and going to the ED specifically for a mental health reason (relative risk, 1.16; 95% confidence interval, 1.00-1.33). The sex of the adolescents had no bearing on whether they used these services.

“I think people think of [depression screening] as one event. But in reality, screening is a series of different events that all have to be happening in order for a screening program to work,” Dr. Riehm told this news organization.

These events could include ensuring that adolescents who exhibit signs of depression receive a proper assessment, receive medications if needed, and have access to psychotherapists who can help them. Without these supports in place, she said, a one-off depression screening may have limited benefit.

“There’s a lot of places where people could drop out of that care continuum,” Dr. Riehm said.

“One-time screening may not be enough,” said Trân Đoàn, PhD, MPH, a postdoctoral researcher in the University of Pittsburgh department of pediatrics.

Dr. Đoàn, who was not involved in the research, noted that the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends annual screening of all adolescents for depressive symptoms. Given that only 5% of the visits in this sample included any kind of depression screening, Dr. Đoàn said, some pediatric practices may not have felt they had the resources to adequately address positive screenings for depression.

Both Dr. Riehm and Dr. Đoàn are focusing on the link between depression screening and health outcomes. In her own doctoral work at the University of Michigan, Dr. Đoàn modeled the effects of universal annual depression screening in primary care settings on the health status of people aged 12-22 years. She is currently preparing this work for publication.

“I did find that, over the long term, there is improvement in health outcomes if we were to screen on an annual basis,” provided improved screening is coupled with comprehensive treatment plans, Dr. Đoàn said. The model’s health outcomes measures included an increase in life expectancy as well as a greater proportion of depression-free days among adolescents who receive appropriate treatment.

Dr. Riehm and Dr. Đoàn disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Screening adolescents for signs of depression does not reduce their emergency department visits, hospitalizations, or treatment for suicidal behaviors, according to research published in Preventive Medicine. Adolescents who underwent a depression screening were just as likely to need these services as those who did not.

In 2016, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended that adolescents aged 12-18 years be screened for major depressive disorder, provided that effective treatment options and follow-up strategies are in place.

“The main goal of depression screening is really to reduce adverse psychiatric outcomes. But I think a collateral hope is that, in reducing these adverse psychiatric outcomes, you would also reduce avoidable health services use,” such as ED visits or hospitalizations, said Kira Riehm, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in epidemiology at Columbia University, New York, who led the research. Dr. Riehm designed the new study, which was part of her doctoral work at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, to test this premise.

Dr. Riehm and colleagues compared 14,433 adolescents aged 12-18 years who were screened for depression at least once during a wellness visit from 2014 to 2017 to 43,299 adolescents who were not screened for depression during such visits. Depression screenings were interspersed among a total of 281,463 adolescent wellness visits from 2014 to 2017, which represented 5% of all visits.

The researchers used diagnostic codes from a database of insurance claims to determine who had undergone depression screening. They then compared use of ED services, inpatient hospitalizations, and the number of treatments for suicidal behaviors between the two groups for the 2 years following the wellness visit.

The average age of the adolescents who underwent screening was 13-14 years, as was the average age of adolescents who were not screened. Both groups were evenly matched with respect to being male or female.

The researchers estimated that a high majority of adolescents in the sample were White (83%). Black persons represented 7% of the sample; Hispanic/Latino, 5%; and Asian, 3%. Insurance claims don’t always include racial and ethnicity data, Dr. Riehm said, so her group statistically imputed these proportions. The claims data also do not include details about which type of screening tool was used or the results of the screening, such as whether a teen exhibited mild or severe depression.

Adolescents in both groups were just as likely to go to the ED for any reason, be admitted to the hospital for any reason, or undergo treatment for suicidal behaviors. The researchers observed a slight association between being screened for depression and going to the ED specifically for a mental health reason (relative risk, 1.16; 95% confidence interval, 1.00-1.33). The sex of the adolescents had no bearing on whether they used these services.

“I think people think of [depression screening] as one event. But in reality, screening is a series of different events that all have to be happening in order for a screening program to work,” Dr. Riehm told this news organization.

These events could include ensuring that adolescents who exhibit signs of depression receive a proper assessment, receive medications if needed, and have access to psychotherapists who can help them. Without these supports in place, she said, a one-off depression screening may have limited benefit.

“There’s a lot of places where people could drop out of that care continuum,” Dr. Riehm said.

“One-time screening may not be enough,” said Trân Đoàn, PhD, MPH, a postdoctoral researcher in the University of Pittsburgh department of pediatrics.

Dr. Đoàn, who was not involved in the research, noted that the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends annual screening of all adolescents for depressive symptoms. Given that only 5% of the visits in this sample included any kind of depression screening, Dr. Đoàn said, some pediatric practices may not have felt they had the resources to adequately address positive screenings for depression.

Both Dr. Riehm and Dr. Đoàn are focusing on the link between depression screening and health outcomes. In her own doctoral work at the University of Michigan, Dr. Đoàn modeled the effects of universal annual depression screening in primary care settings on the health status of people aged 12-22 years. She is currently preparing this work for publication.

“I did find that, over the long term, there is improvement in health outcomes if we were to screen on an annual basis,” provided improved screening is coupled with comprehensive treatment plans, Dr. Đoàn said. The model’s health outcomes measures included an increase in life expectancy as well as a greater proportion of depression-free days among adolescents who receive appropriate treatment.

Dr. Riehm and Dr. Đoàn disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Screening adolescents for signs of depression does not reduce their emergency department visits, hospitalizations, or treatment for suicidal behaviors, according to research published in Preventive Medicine. Adolescents who underwent a depression screening were just as likely to need these services as those who did not.

In 2016, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended that adolescents aged 12-18 years be screened for major depressive disorder, provided that effective treatment options and follow-up strategies are in place.

“The main goal of depression screening is really to reduce adverse psychiatric outcomes. But I think a collateral hope is that, in reducing these adverse psychiatric outcomes, you would also reduce avoidable health services use,” such as ED visits or hospitalizations, said Kira Riehm, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in epidemiology at Columbia University, New York, who led the research. Dr. Riehm designed the new study, which was part of her doctoral work at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, to test this premise.

Dr. Riehm and colleagues compared 14,433 adolescents aged 12-18 years who were screened for depression at least once during a wellness visit from 2014 to 2017 to 43,299 adolescents who were not screened for depression during such visits. Depression screenings were interspersed among a total of 281,463 adolescent wellness visits from 2014 to 2017, which represented 5% of all visits.

The researchers used diagnostic codes from a database of insurance claims to determine who had undergone depression screening. They then compared use of ED services, inpatient hospitalizations, and the number of treatments for suicidal behaviors between the two groups for the 2 years following the wellness visit.

The average age of the adolescents who underwent screening was 13-14 years, as was the average age of adolescents who were not screened. Both groups were evenly matched with respect to being male or female.

The researchers estimated that a high majority of adolescents in the sample were White (83%). Black persons represented 7% of the sample; Hispanic/Latino, 5%; and Asian, 3%. Insurance claims don’t always include racial and ethnicity data, Dr. Riehm said, so her group statistically imputed these proportions. The claims data also do not include details about which type of screening tool was used or the results of the screening, such as whether a teen exhibited mild or severe depression.

Adolescents in both groups were just as likely to go to the ED for any reason, be admitted to the hospital for any reason, or undergo treatment for suicidal behaviors. The researchers observed a slight association between being screened for depression and going to the ED specifically for a mental health reason (relative risk, 1.16; 95% confidence interval, 1.00-1.33). The sex of the adolescents had no bearing on whether they used these services.

“I think people think of [depression screening] as one event. But in reality, screening is a series of different events that all have to be happening in order for a screening program to work,” Dr. Riehm told this news organization.

These events could include ensuring that adolescents who exhibit signs of depression receive a proper assessment, receive medications if needed, and have access to psychotherapists who can help them. Without these supports in place, she said, a one-off depression screening may have limited benefit.

“There’s a lot of places where people could drop out of that care continuum,” Dr. Riehm said.

“One-time screening may not be enough,” said Trân Đoàn, PhD, MPH, a postdoctoral researcher in the University of Pittsburgh department of pediatrics.

Dr. Đoàn, who was not involved in the research, noted that the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends annual screening of all adolescents for depressive symptoms. Given that only 5% of the visits in this sample included any kind of depression screening, Dr. Đoàn said, some pediatric practices may not have felt they had the resources to adequately address positive screenings for depression.

Both Dr. Riehm and Dr. Đoàn are focusing on the link between depression screening and health outcomes. In her own doctoral work at the University of Michigan, Dr. Đoàn modeled the effects of universal annual depression screening in primary care settings on the health status of people aged 12-22 years. She is currently preparing this work for publication.

“I did find that, over the long term, there is improvement in health outcomes if we were to screen on an annual basis,” provided improved screening is coupled with comprehensive treatment plans, Dr. Đoàn said. The model’s health outcomes measures included an increase in life expectancy as well as a greater proportion of depression-free days among adolescents who receive appropriate treatment.

Dr. Riehm and Dr. Đoàn disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Are social networks threatening adolescents’ mental health?

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When it comes to the link between mental health and social networks, be careful of jumping to conclusions. This warning came from Margot Morgiève, PhD, sociology researcher at the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research and the Center for Research in Medicine, Science, Health, Mental Health, and Society (Inserm-Cermes 3). She delivered her remarks at the opening session of the Pediatric Societies Congress organized by the French Society of Pediatrics, based on an increasing amount of scientific literature on the subject.

In 2021, 4.2 billion people, or more than half the world’s population, used social networks, and 80.3% of French citizens had a social network account.
 

‘Facebook depression’

Between those who condemn social networks for causing problems in adolescents and those who, in contrast, view it as a lifeline, what do we really know about their impact on the mental health of young people?

Although several studies have found a significant association between the heavy use of social networks and anxiety, depressive symptoms, and stress, there have also been reports of decreased life satisfaction, as well as reduced general well-being and self-esteem.

“Due to an increased [concurrence] between mood disorders or depression and the use of social networks, researchers wanted to establish a new disorder: ‘Facebook Depression,’ ” commented Dr. Morgiève, who is also a clinical psychologist and coordinator of the chat and social network unit for the French national suicide prevention hotline 3114.

“But they quickly realized that it would be wrong to recognize it as a characterized disorder, because it would appear that the harmful effects of social networks on mental health are not linked to the social network itself, but rather to problematic social network use.”
 

Teens’ fantasy life

There are three major categories of problematic social network use, the first being social comparison. This refers to the spontaneous tendency of social beings to compare themselves to individuals who appear to be more attractive than them.

This is nothing new, but it is exacerbated on social networks. Users emphasize the positive aspects of their life and present themselves as balanced, popular, and satisfied.

However, this leads to strong normative constraints, which result in a negative self-assessment, thereby lowering self-esteem and promoting the emergence of depressive symptoms. “Thus, it isn’t the social network that creates depression, but rather the phenomenon of comparison, which it pushes to the extreme,” said Dr. Morgiève.

The second problem associated with social networks is their propensity to promote addictive behavior through [observational learning], which can give rise to compulsive and uncontrolled behavior, as illustrated by “FOMO,” or fear of missing out.

Hence the idea of defining a specific entity called “social network addiction,” which was also quickly abandoned. It is the very features of social networks that generate this fear and thus this tendency, just like news feeds (constant updating of a personalized news list).

“Substitutive” use is the third major category. This is when time spent in the online environment replaces that spent offline. Excessive users report a feeling of loneliness and an awareness of a lack of intimate connections.
 

 

 

Language of distress

Initial studies using artificial intelligence and machine learning tend to show that a digital language of distress exists. Authors noticed that themes associated with self-loathing, loneliness, suicide, death, and self-harm correlated with users who exhibited the highest levels of depression.

The very structure of the language (more words, more use of “I,” more references to death, and fewer verbs) correlated with users in distress.

According to the authors, the typical social network practice of vaguebooking – writing a post that may incite worry, such as “better days are coming” – is a significant predictive factor of suicidal ideation. A visual language of distress also reportedly exists – for example, the use of darker shades, like the black-and-white inkwell filter with no enhancements in Instagram.
 

Internet risks and dangers

Digital environments entail many risks and dangers. Suicide pacts and online suicides (like the suicide of a young girl on Periscope in 2016) remain rare but go viral. The same is true of challenges. In 2015, the Blue Whale Challenge consisted of a list of 50 challenges ranging from the benign to the dramatic, with the final challenge being to “hang yourself.”

Its huge media coverage might well have added to its viral success had the social networks not quickly reacted in a positive manner.

Trolling, for its part, consists of posting provocative content with the intent of either sparking conflict or causing distress.

Cyberbullying, the most common online risk adolescents face, is the repeated spreading of false, embarrassing, or hostile information.

A growing danger is sexting (sending, receiving, or passing on sexually explicit photographs, messages, or images). The serious potential consequences of sexting include revenge porn or cyber rape, which is defined as the distribution of illicit content without consent, the practice of which has been linked to depression and involvement in risky behavior.

The risk of suicide exposure should no longer be overlooked, in view of the hypothesis that some online content relating to suicide may produce a suggestive effect with respect to the idea or the method of suicide, as well as precipitating suicide attempts.

“People who post suicidal comments are in communities that are closely connected by bonds of affiliation (memberships, friendships) and activities (retweets, likes, comments),” explained Dr. Morgiève.

But in these communities, emotionally charged information that spreads rapidly and repetitively could promote corumination, hence the concept of “suicidocosme [suicide world]», developed in 2017 by Charles-Edouard Notredame, MD, of the child and adolescent psychiatry department at Lille (France) University Hospital. This, in turn, can produce and increase the suicide contagion based on the Werther effect model.

Just one of many examples is Marilyn Monroe’s suicide in 1962, which increased the suicide rate by 40% in Los Angeles. The Werther effect is especially significant because two biases are present: the prestige bias (identification with the person one admires) and similarity bias (identification with the person who resembles me).

Similarity bias is the most decisive in adolescence. It should be noted that the positive counterpart to the Werther effect is the Papageno effect. The Belgian singer-songwriter Stromae’s TV appearances earlier this year, in which he spoke about his suicidal ideations, enabling young people to recognize their suffering and seek help, is an example of the Papageno effect.
 

 

 

Support on social networks?

Social networks can increase connectedness, for example, the feeling of being connected to something meaningful outside oneself. Connectedness promotes psychological well-being and quality of life.

The very characteristics of social networks can enhance elements of connectedness, both objectively by increasing users’ social sphere, and subjectively by reinforcing the feeling of social belonging and subjective well-being.

Taking Facebook and its “anniversary” feature as an example, it has been shown that the greater the number of Facebook friends, the more individuals saw themselves as being connected to a community.

“Millennials, or people born between the beginning of the 1980s and the end of the 1990s, are thus more likely to take advantage of the digital social environment to establish a new relationship with psychological suffering and its attempts to ease it,” said Dr. Morgiève.

They are also more likely to naturally turn to the digital space to look for help. More and more of them are searching the Internet for information on mental health and sharing experiences to get support.”

An example is the It Gets Better Project, which is a good illustration of the structure of online peer communities, with stories from LGBTQ+ individuals who describe how they succeeded in coping with adversity during their adolescence. In this way, social media seems to help identify peers and positive resources that are usually unavailable outside of the digital space. As a result, thanks to normative models on extremely strong social networks that are easy to conform to, these online peer-support communities have the potential to facilitate social interactions and reinforce a feeling both of hope and of belonging to a group.”
 

Promoting access to care

In Dr. Morgiève’s opinion, “access to care, particularly in the area of adolescent mental health, is extremely critical, given the lack of support precisely when they need it the most, as [evidenced] by the number of suicide attempts.

“There are two types of barriers to seeking help which can explain this. The first is structural barriers: help is too expensive or too far away or the wait is too long. The second refers to personal barriers, including denying the need for help, which may involve a self-sufficiency bias, the feeling that one cannot be helped, refusal to bother close friends and family, fear of being stigmatized, and a feeling of shame.”

These types of barriers are particularly difficult to overcome because the beliefs regarding care and caregivers are limiting (doubts about caregiver confidentiality, reliability, and competence). This is observed especially in adolescents because of the desire for emancipation and development of identity. So [the help relationship] may be experienced as subordination or alienation.

On a positive note, it is the very properties of social networks that will enable these obstacles to seeking help to be overcome. The fact that they are available everywhere makes up for young people’s lack of mobility and regional disparities. In addition, it ensures discretion and freedom of use, while reducing inhibitions.

The fact that social networks are free of charge overcomes structural obstacles, such as financial and organizational costs, as well as personal obstacles, thereby facilitating engagement and lessening the motivational cost. The dissociative pseudonymity or anonymity reduces the feeling of vulnerability associated with revealing oneself, as well as fears of a breach of confidentiality.

Dr. Morgiève summed it up by saying: “While offline life is silent because young people don’t talk about their suicidal ideations, online life truly removes inhibitions about speaking, relationships, and sharing experiences. Thus, the internet offers adolescents new opportunities to express themselves, which they’re not doing in real life.”
 

 

 

Professionals go digital

France records one suicide every hour (8,885 deaths a year) and one suicide attempt every 4 minutes. Since the 1950s, government-funded telehealth prevention and assistance programs, such as S.O.S. Amitié, Suicide Écoute, SOS Suicide Phénix, etc., have been developed. Their values and principles are anonymity, nondirectivity, nonjudgment, and neutrality. In addition to these nonprofit offerings, a professional teleprevention program, the confidential suicide prevention hotline 3114 – with professionals who are available to listen 24 hours a day, 7 days a week – was launched by the Ministry of Health and Prevention in October 2021.

Its values and principles include confidentiality, proactivity, concern, and caring for others. To date, 13 of 17 centers have opened. In the space of 6 months, they have received 50,000 calls, with an average of 400-500 calls a day. The dedicated chat application was codesigned with users (suicide attempters). And now social networks are joining in. For example, the hotline number 3114 appears whenever a TikTok user types the word “suicide.”

Dr. Morgiève said she has no conflicts of interest regarding the subject presented.

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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When it comes to the link between mental health and social networks, be careful of jumping to conclusions. This warning came from Margot Morgiève, PhD, sociology researcher at the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research and the Center for Research in Medicine, Science, Health, Mental Health, and Society (Inserm-Cermes 3). She delivered her remarks at the opening session of the Pediatric Societies Congress organized by the French Society of Pediatrics, based on an increasing amount of scientific literature on the subject.

In 2021, 4.2 billion people, or more than half the world’s population, used social networks, and 80.3% of French citizens had a social network account.
 

‘Facebook depression’

Between those who condemn social networks for causing problems in adolescents and those who, in contrast, view it as a lifeline, what do we really know about their impact on the mental health of young people?

Although several studies have found a significant association between the heavy use of social networks and anxiety, depressive symptoms, and stress, there have also been reports of decreased life satisfaction, as well as reduced general well-being and self-esteem.

“Due to an increased [concurrence] between mood disorders or depression and the use of social networks, researchers wanted to establish a new disorder: ‘Facebook Depression,’ ” commented Dr. Morgiève, who is also a clinical psychologist and coordinator of the chat and social network unit for the French national suicide prevention hotline 3114.

“But they quickly realized that it would be wrong to recognize it as a characterized disorder, because it would appear that the harmful effects of social networks on mental health are not linked to the social network itself, but rather to problematic social network use.”
 

Teens’ fantasy life

There are three major categories of problematic social network use, the first being social comparison. This refers to the spontaneous tendency of social beings to compare themselves to individuals who appear to be more attractive than them.

This is nothing new, but it is exacerbated on social networks. Users emphasize the positive aspects of their life and present themselves as balanced, popular, and satisfied.

However, this leads to strong normative constraints, which result in a negative self-assessment, thereby lowering self-esteem and promoting the emergence of depressive symptoms. “Thus, it isn’t the social network that creates depression, but rather the phenomenon of comparison, which it pushes to the extreme,” said Dr. Morgiève.

The second problem associated with social networks is their propensity to promote addictive behavior through [observational learning], which can give rise to compulsive and uncontrolled behavior, as illustrated by “FOMO,” or fear of missing out.

Hence the idea of defining a specific entity called “social network addiction,” which was also quickly abandoned. It is the very features of social networks that generate this fear and thus this tendency, just like news feeds (constant updating of a personalized news list).

“Substitutive” use is the third major category. This is when time spent in the online environment replaces that spent offline. Excessive users report a feeling of loneliness and an awareness of a lack of intimate connections.
 

 

 

Language of distress

Initial studies using artificial intelligence and machine learning tend to show that a digital language of distress exists. Authors noticed that themes associated with self-loathing, loneliness, suicide, death, and self-harm correlated with users who exhibited the highest levels of depression.

The very structure of the language (more words, more use of “I,” more references to death, and fewer verbs) correlated with users in distress.

According to the authors, the typical social network practice of vaguebooking – writing a post that may incite worry, such as “better days are coming” – is a significant predictive factor of suicidal ideation. A visual language of distress also reportedly exists – for example, the use of darker shades, like the black-and-white inkwell filter with no enhancements in Instagram.
 

Internet risks and dangers

Digital environments entail many risks and dangers. Suicide pacts and online suicides (like the suicide of a young girl on Periscope in 2016) remain rare but go viral. The same is true of challenges. In 2015, the Blue Whale Challenge consisted of a list of 50 challenges ranging from the benign to the dramatic, with the final challenge being to “hang yourself.”

Its huge media coverage might well have added to its viral success had the social networks not quickly reacted in a positive manner.

Trolling, for its part, consists of posting provocative content with the intent of either sparking conflict or causing distress.

Cyberbullying, the most common online risk adolescents face, is the repeated spreading of false, embarrassing, or hostile information.

A growing danger is sexting (sending, receiving, or passing on sexually explicit photographs, messages, or images). The serious potential consequences of sexting include revenge porn or cyber rape, which is defined as the distribution of illicit content without consent, the practice of which has been linked to depression and involvement in risky behavior.

The risk of suicide exposure should no longer be overlooked, in view of the hypothesis that some online content relating to suicide may produce a suggestive effect with respect to the idea or the method of suicide, as well as precipitating suicide attempts.

“People who post suicidal comments are in communities that are closely connected by bonds of affiliation (memberships, friendships) and activities (retweets, likes, comments),” explained Dr. Morgiève.

But in these communities, emotionally charged information that spreads rapidly and repetitively could promote corumination, hence the concept of “suicidocosme [suicide world]», developed in 2017 by Charles-Edouard Notredame, MD, of the child and adolescent psychiatry department at Lille (France) University Hospital. This, in turn, can produce and increase the suicide contagion based on the Werther effect model.

Just one of many examples is Marilyn Monroe’s suicide in 1962, which increased the suicide rate by 40% in Los Angeles. The Werther effect is especially significant because two biases are present: the prestige bias (identification with the person one admires) and similarity bias (identification with the person who resembles me).

Similarity bias is the most decisive in adolescence. It should be noted that the positive counterpart to the Werther effect is the Papageno effect. The Belgian singer-songwriter Stromae’s TV appearances earlier this year, in which he spoke about his suicidal ideations, enabling young people to recognize their suffering and seek help, is an example of the Papageno effect.
 

 

 

Support on social networks?

Social networks can increase connectedness, for example, the feeling of being connected to something meaningful outside oneself. Connectedness promotes psychological well-being and quality of life.

The very characteristics of social networks can enhance elements of connectedness, both objectively by increasing users’ social sphere, and subjectively by reinforcing the feeling of social belonging and subjective well-being.

Taking Facebook and its “anniversary” feature as an example, it has been shown that the greater the number of Facebook friends, the more individuals saw themselves as being connected to a community.

“Millennials, or people born between the beginning of the 1980s and the end of the 1990s, are thus more likely to take advantage of the digital social environment to establish a new relationship with psychological suffering and its attempts to ease it,” said Dr. Morgiève.

They are also more likely to naturally turn to the digital space to look for help. More and more of them are searching the Internet for information on mental health and sharing experiences to get support.”

An example is the It Gets Better Project, which is a good illustration of the structure of online peer communities, with stories from LGBTQ+ individuals who describe how they succeeded in coping with adversity during their adolescence. In this way, social media seems to help identify peers and positive resources that are usually unavailable outside of the digital space. As a result, thanks to normative models on extremely strong social networks that are easy to conform to, these online peer-support communities have the potential to facilitate social interactions and reinforce a feeling both of hope and of belonging to a group.”
 

Promoting access to care

In Dr. Morgiève’s opinion, “access to care, particularly in the area of adolescent mental health, is extremely critical, given the lack of support precisely when they need it the most, as [evidenced] by the number of suicide attempts.

“There are two types of barriers to seeking help which can explain this. The first is structural barriers: help is too expensive or too far away or the wait is too long. The second refers to personal barriers, including denying the need for help, which may involve a self-sufficiency bias, the feeling that one cannot be helped, refusal to bother close friends and family, fear of being stigmatized, and a feeling of shame.”

These types of barriers are particularly difficult to overcome because the beliefs regarding care and caregivers are limiting (doubts about caregiver confidentiality, reliability, and competence). This is observed especially in adolescents because of the desire for emancipation and development of identity. So [the help relationship] may be experienced as subordination or alienation.

On a positive note, it is the very properties of social networks that will enable these obstacles to seeking help to be overcome. The fact that they are available everywhere makes up for young people’s lack of mobility and regional disparities. In addition, it ensures discretion and freedom of use, while reducing inhibitions.

The fact that social networks are free of charge overcomes structural obstacles, such as financial and organizational costs, as well as personal obstacles, thereby facilitating engagement and lessening the motivational cost. The dissociative pseudonymity or anonymity reduces the feeling of vulnerability associated with revealing oneself, as well as fears of a breach of confidentiality.

Dr. Morgiève summed it up by saying: “While offline life is silent because young people don’t talk about their suicidal ideations, online life truly removes inhibitions about speaking, relationships, and sharing experiences. Thus, the internet offers adolescents new opportunities to express themselves, which they’re not doing in real life.”
 

 

 

Professionals go digital

France records one suicide every hour (8,885 deaths a year) and one suicide attempt every 4 minutes. Since the 1950s, government-funded telehealth prevention and assistance programs, such as S.O.S. Amitié, Suicide Écoute, SOS Suicide Phénix, etc., have been developed. Their values and principles are anonymity, nondirectivity, nonjudgment, and neutrality. In addition to these nonprofit offerings, a professional teleprevention program, the confidential suicide prevention hotline 3114 – with professionals who are available to listen 24 hours a day, 7 days a week – was launched by the Ministry of Health and Prevention in October 2021.

Its values and principles include confidentiality, proactivity, concern, and caring for others. To date, 13 of 17 centers have opened. In the space of 6 months, they have received 50,000 calls, with an average of 400-500 calls a day. The dedicated chat application was codesigned with users (suicide attempters). And now social networks are joining in. For example, the hotline number 3114 appears whenever a TikTok user types the word “suicide.”

Dr. Morgiève said she has no conflicts of interest regarding the subject presented.

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

When it comes to the link between mental health and social networks, be careful of jumping to conclusions. This warning came from Margot Morgiève, PhD, sociology researcher at the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research and the Center for Research in Medicine, Science, Health, Mental Health, and Society (Inserm-Cermes 3). She delivered her remarks at the opening session of the Pediatric Societies Congress organized by the French Society of Pediatrics, based on an increasing amount of scientific literature on the subject.

In 2021, 4.2 billion people, or more than half the world’s population, used social networks, and 80.3% of French citizens had a social network account.
 

‘Facebook depression’

Between those who condemn social networks for causing problems in adolescents and those who, in contrast, view it as a lifeline, what do we really know about their impact on the mental health of young people?

Although several studies have found a significant association between the heavy use of social networks and anxiety, depressive symptoms, and stress, there have also been reports of decreased life satisfaction, as well as reduced general well-being and self-esteem.

“Due to an increased [concurrence] between mood disorders or depression and the use of social networks, researchers wanted to establish a new disorder: ‘Facebook Depression,’ ” commented Dr. Morgiève, who is also a clinical psychologist and coordinator of the chat and social network unit for the French national suicide prevention hotline 3114.

“But they quickly realized that it would be wrong to recognize it as a characterized disorder, because it would appear that the harmful effects of social networks on mental health are not linked to the social network itself, but rather to problematic social network use.”
 

Teens’ fantasy life

There are three major categories of problematic social network use, the first being social comparison. This refers to the spontaneous tendency of social beings to compare themselves to individuals who appear to be more attractive than them.

This is nothing new, but it is exacerbated on social networks. Users emphasize the positive aspects of their life and present themselves as balanced, popular, and satisfied.

However, this leads to strong normative constraints, which result in a negative self-assessment, thereby lowering self-esteem and promoting the emergence of depressive symptoms. “Thus, it isn’t the social network that creates depression, but rather the phenomenon of comparison, which it pushes to the extreme,” said Dr. Morgiève.

The second problem associated with social networks is their propensity to promote addictive behavior through [observational learning], which can give rise to compulsive and uncontrolled behavior, as illustrated by “FOMO,” or fear of missing out.

Hence the idea of defining a specific entity called “social network addiction,” which was also quickly abandoned. It is the very features of social networks that generate this fear and thus this tendency, just like news feeds (constant updating of a personalized news list).

“Substitutive” use is the third major category. This is when time spent in the online environment replaces that spent offline. Excessive users report a feeling of loneliness and an awareness of a lack of intimate connections.
 

 

 

Language of distress

Initial studies using artificial intelligence and machine learning tend to show that a digital language of distress exists. Authors noticed that themes associated with self-loathing, loneliness, suicide, death, and self-harm correlated with users who exhibited the highest levels of depression.

The very structure of the language (more words, more use of “I,” more references to death, and fewer verbs) correlated with users in distress.

According to the authors, the typical social network practice of vaguebooking – writing a post that may incite worry, such as “better days are coming” – is a significant predictive factor of suicidal ideation. A visual language of distress also reportedly exists – for example, the use of darker shades, like the black-and-white inkwell filter with no enhancements in Instagram.
 

Internet risks and dangers

Digital environments entail many risks and dangers. Suicide pacts and online suicides (like the suicide of a young girl on Periscope in 2016) remain rare but go viral. The same is true of challenges. In 2015, the Blue Whale Challenge consisted of a list of 50 challenges ranging from the benign to the dramatic, with the final challenge being to “hang yourself.”

Its huge media coverage might well have added to its viral success had the social networks not quickly reacted in a positive manner.

Trolling, for its part, consists of posting provocative content with the intent of either sparking conflict or causing distress.

Cyberbullying, the most common online risk adolescents face, is the repeated spreading of false, embarrassing, or hostile information.

A growing danger is sexting (sending, receiving, or passing on sexually explicit photographs, messages, or images). The serious potential consequences of sexting include revenge porn or cyber rape, which is defined as the distribution of illicit content without consent, the practice of which has been linked to depression and involvement in risky behavior.

The risk of suicide exposure should no longer be overlooked, in view of the hypothesis that some online content relating to suicide may produce a suggestive effect with respect to the idea or the method of suicide, as well as precipitating suicide attempts.

“People who post suicidal comments are in communities that are closely connected by bonds of affiliation (memberships, friendships) and activities (retweets, likes, comments),” explained Dr. Morgiève.

But in these communities, emotionally charged information that spreads rapidly and repetitively could promote corumination, hence the concept of “suicidocosme [suicide world]», developed in 2017 by Charles-Edouard Notredame, MD, of the child and adolescent psychiatry department at Lille (France) University Hospital. This, in turn, can produce and increase the suicide contagion based on the Werther effect model.

Just one of many examples is Marilyn Monroe’s suicide in 1962, which increased the suicide rate by 40% in Los Angeles. The Werther effect is especially significant because two biases are present: the prestige bias (identification with the person one admires) and similarity bias (identification with the person who resembles me).

Similarity bias is the most decisive in adolescence. It should be noted that the positive counterpart to the Werther effect is the Papageno effect. The Belgian singer-songwriter Stromae’s TV appearances earlier this year, in which he spoke about his suicidal ideations, enabling young people to recognize their suffering and seek help, is an example of the Papageno effect.
 

 

 

Support on social networks?

Social networks can increase connectedness, for example, the feeling of being connected to something meaningful outside oneself. Connectedness promotes psychological well-being and quality of life.

The very characteristics of social networks can enhance elements of connectedness, both objectively by increasing users’ social sphere, and subjectively by reinforcing the feeling of social belonging and subjective well-being.

Taking Facebook and its “anniversary” feature as an example, it has been shown that the greater the number of Facebook friends, the more individuals saw themselves as being connected to a community.

“Millennials, or people born between the beginning of the 1980s and the end of the 1990s, are thus more likely to take advantage of the digital social environment to establish a new relationship with psychological suffering and its attempts to ease it,” said Dr. Morgiève.

They are also more likely to naturally turn to the digital space to look for help. More and more of them are searching the Internet for information on mental health and sharing experiences to get support.”

An example is the It Gets Better Project, which is a good illustration of the structure of online peer communities, with stories from LGBTQ+ individuals who describe how they succeeded in coping with adversity during their adolescence. In this way, social media seems to help identify peers and positive resources that are usually unavailable outside of the digital space. As a result, thanks to normative models on extremely strong social networks that are easy to conform to, these online peer-support communities have the potential to facilitate social interactions and reinforce a feeling both of hope and of belonging to a group.”
 

Promoting access to care

In Dr. Morgiève’s opinion, “access to care, particularly in the area of adolescent mental health, is extremely critical, given the lack of support precisely when they need it the most, as [evidenced] by the number of suicide attempts.

“There are two types of barriers to seeking help which can explain this. The first is structural barriers: help is too expensive or too far away or the wait is too long. The second refers to personal barriers, including denying the need for help, which may involve a self-sufficiency bias, the feeling that one cannot be helped, refusal to bother close friends and family, fear of being stigmatized, and a feeling of shame.”

These types of barriers are particularly difficult to overcome because the beliefs regarding care and caregivers are limiting (doubts about caregiver confidentiality, reliability, and competence). This is observed especially in adolescents because of the desire for emancipation and development of identity. So [the help relationship] may be experienced as subordination or alienation.

On a positive note, it is the very properties of social networks that will enable these obstacles to seeking help to be overcome. The fact that they are available everywhere makes up for young people’s lack of mobility and regional disparities. In addition, it ensures discretion and freedom of use, while reducing inhibitions.

The fact that social networks are free of charge overcomes structural obstacles, such as financial and organizational costs, as well as personal obstacles, thereby facilitating engagement and lessening the motivational cost. The dissociative pseudonymity or anonymity reduces the feeling of vulnerability associated with revealing oneself, as well as fears of a breach of confidentiality.

Dr. Morgiève summed it up by saying: “While offline life is silent because young people don’t talk about their suicidal ideations, online life truly removes inhibitions about speaking, relationships, and sharing experiences. Thus, the internet offers adolescents new opportunities to express themselves, which they’re not doing in real life.”
 

 

 

Professionals go digital

France records one suicide every hour (8,885 deaths a year) and one suicide attempt every 4 minutes. Since the 1950s, government-funded telehealth prevention and assistance programs, such as S.O.S. Amitié, Suicide Écoute, SOS Suicide Phénix, etc., have been developed. Their values and principles are anonymity, nondirectivity, nonjudgment, and neutrality. In addition to these nonprofit offerings, a professional teleprevention program, the confidential suicide prevention hotline 3114 – with professionals who are available to listen 24 hours a day, 7 days a week – was launched by the Ministry of Health and Prevention in October 2021.

Its values and principles include confidentiality, proactivity, concern, and caring for others. To date, 13 of 17 centers have opened. In the space of 6 months, they have received 50,000 calls, with an average of 400-500 calls a day. The dedicated chat application was codesigned with users (suicide attempters). And now social networks are joining in. For example, the hotline number 3114 appears whenever a TikTok user types the word “suicide.”

Dr. Morgiève said she has no conflicts of interest regarding the subject presented.

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The mother’s double jeopardy

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Tue, 07/05/2022 - 18:57

Jamestown, Colo., is a small mountain town several miles up through Lefthand Canyon out of Boulder, in the Rocky Mountains. The canyon roads are steep, winding, and narrow, and peopled by brightly clad cyclists struggling up the hill and flying down faster than the cars. The road through Jamestown is dusty in the summer with brightly colored oil barrels strategically placed in the middle of the single road through town. Slashed across their sides: “SLOW DOWN! Watch out for our feral children!”

Wild child or hothouse child? What is the best choice? Women bear the brunt of this deciding, whether they are working outside of the home, or stay-at-home caregivers, or both. Women know they will be blamed if they get it wrong.

Dr. Alison M. Heru

Society has exacted a tall order on women who choose to have children. Patriarchal norms ask (White) women who choose both to work and have children, if they are really a “stay-at-home” mother who must work, or a “working” mother who prefers work over their children. The underlying attitude can be read as: “Are you someone who prioritizes paid work over caregiving, or are you someone who prioritizes caregiving over work?” You may be seen as a bad mother if you prioritize work over the welfare of your child. If you prioritize your child over your work, then you are not a reliable, dedicated worker. The working mother can’t win.

Woman’s central question is what kind of mother should I be? Mothers struggle with this question all their lives; when their child has difficulties, society’s question is what did you do wrong with your child? Mothers internalize the standard of the “good mother” and are aware of each minor transgression that depicts them as the “bad mother.” It is hard to escape the impossible perfectionistic standard of the good mother. But perhaps it has come time to push back on the moral imbalance.
 

Internalized sexism

As women move out of the home into the workplace, the societal pressures to maintain the status quo bear down on women, trying to keep them in their place.

Social pressures employ subtle “technologies of the self,” so that women – as any oppressed group – learn to internalize these technologies, and monitor themselves.1 This is now widely accepted as internalized sexism, whereby women feel that they are not good enough, do not have the right qualifications, and are “less” than the dominant group (men). This phenomenon is also recognized when racial and ethnic biases are assimilated unconsciously, as internalized racism. Should we also have internalized “momism”?

Women are caught between trying to claim their individualism as well as feeling the responsibility to be the self-denying mother. Everyone has an opinion about the place of women. Conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly considered “women’s lib” to be un-American, citing women in the military and the establishment of federal day care centers as actions of a communist state. A similar ideology helped form the antifeminist organization Concerned Women for America, which self-reports that it is the largest American public policy women’s organization. Formed in opposition to the National Organization for Women, CWA is focused on maintaining the traditional family, as understood by (White) evangelical Christians.

An example similar to CWA is the Council of Biblical Manhood and Womanhood. It was established to help evangelical Christian churches defend themselves against an accommodation of secular feminism and also against evangelical feminism (which pushes for more equality in the church). It promotes complementarianism – the idea that masculinity and femininity are ordained by God and that men and women are created to complement each other.

At the other extreme, the most radical of feminists believe in the need to create a women-only society where women would be free from the patriarchy. Less angry but decidedly weirder are the feminists called “FEMEN” who once staged a protest at the Vatican where topless women feigned intercourse with crucifixes, chanting slogans against the pope and religion.

Most women tread a path between extremes, a path which is difficult and lonely. Without a firm ideology, this path is strewn with doubts and pitfalls. Some career-oriented women who have delayed motherhood, knowing that they will soon be biologically past their peak and possibly also without a partner, wonder if they should become single mothers using sperm donation. For many women, the workplace does not offer much help with maternity leave or childcare. Even when maternity leave is available, there is a still a lack of understanding about what is needed.

“Think of it as caregiver bias. If you just extend maternity leave, what is implied is that you’re still expecting me to be the primary source of care for my child, when in fact my partner wants to share the load and will need support to do so as well,” said Pamela Culpepper, an expert in corporate diversity and inclusion.2

 

 

Intensive mothering

When the glamor of the workplace wears off and/or when the misogyny and the harassment become too much, women who have the financial stability may decide to return to the role of the stay-at-home mother. Perhaps, in the home, she can feel fulfilled. Yet, young American urban and suburban mothers now parent under a new name – “intensive mothering.”

Conducting in-depth interviews of 38 women of diverse backgrounds in the United States, Sharon Hays found women describing their 2- to 4-year-old children as innocent and priceless, and believing that they – the mothers – should be primarily responsible for rearing their children, using “child-rearing methods that are child centered, expert guided, emotionally absorbing, labor intensive, and financially expensive.”3 Ms. Hays clarified four beliefs that were common to all the women in the study: mothers are more suitable caregivers than fathers; mothering should be child centered; parenting consists of a set of skills that need to be learned; and parenting is labor-intensive but an emotionally fulfilling activity.

Hays wondered if this type of mothering developed as the last defense against “the impoverishment of social ties, communal obligations and unremunerated commitments.”3 She suggested that women succumbing to social pressures to return to the home is yet another example of how society is set up to benefit men, capitalism, political leaders, and those who try to maintain a “traditional” form of family life.3 Ms. Hays concluded that the practice of intensive mothering is a class-based practice of privileged white women, entangled with capitalism in that the buying of “essential” baby products is equated with good mothering. She found this ideology to be oppressive of all women, regardless of their social class, ethnic background, household composition, and financial situation. Ms. Hays noted that many women experience guilt for not matching up to these ideals.

In “Dead End Feminism,” Elisabeth Badinter asks if the upheaval in the role of women has caused so much uncertainty that it is easier for women to regress to a time when they were in the home and knew themselves as mothers. They ask if this has been reinforced by the movement to embrace all things natural, eschewing the falseness of chemicals and other things that threaten Mother Earth.4

Whatever type of parenting a woman chooses, you can be sure that she, not the father, will be held accountable. There is no escaping the power of the mother: she will continue to symbolize all that is good and bad as the embodiment of the Mother Archetype. All of this is the background against which you will see the new mother in the family. She will not articulate her dilemma, that is your role as the family psychiatrist.

Dr. Heru is professor of psychiatry at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora. She is editor of “Working With Families in Medical Settings: A Multidisciplinary Guide for Psychiatrists and Other Health Professionals” (New York: Routledge, 2013). She has no conflicts of interest to disclose. Contact Dr. Heru at [email protected].

References

1. Martin LH et al (eds.). Technologies of the Self: A Seminar with Michel Foucault. University of Massachusetts Press: Amherst, Mass.: University of Massachusetts Press, 2022.

2. How Pamela Culpepper Is Changing The Narrative Of Women In The Workplace. Huffpost. 2020 Mar 6. https://www.huffpost.com/entry/pamela-culpepper-diversity-inclusion-empowerment_n_5e56b6ffc5b62e9dc7dbc307.

3. Hays S. Cultural Contradictions of Motherhood. Yale University Press: New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1996.

4. Badinter E. (translated by Borossa J). Dead End Feminism. Malden, Mass.: Polity Press, 2006.

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Jamestown, Colo., is a small mountain town several miles up through Lefthand Canyon out of Boulder, in the Rocky Mountains. The canyon roads are steep, winding, and narrow, and peopled by brightly clad cyclists struggling up the hill and flying down faster than the cars. The road through Jamestown is dusty in the summer with brightly colored oil barrels strategically placed in the middle of the single road through town. Slashed across their sides: “SLOW DOWN! Watch out for our feral children!”

Wild child or hothouse child? What is the best choice? Women bear the brunt of this deciding, whether they are working outside of the home, or stay-at-home caregivers, or both. Women know they will be blamed if they get it wrong.

Dr. Alison M. Heru

Society has exacted a tall order on women who choose to have children. Patriarchal norms ask (White) women who choose both to work and have children, if they are really a “stay-at-home” mother who must work, or a “working” mother who prefers work over their children. The underlying attitude can be read as: “Are you someone who prioritizes paid work over caregiving, or are you someone who prioritizes caregiving over work?” You may be seen as a bad mother if you prioritize work over the welfare of your child. If you prioritize your child over your work, then you are not a reliable, dedicated worker. The working mother can’t win.

Woman’s central question is what kind of mother should I be? Mothers struggle with this question all their lives; when their child has difficulties, society’s question is what did you do wrong with your child? Mothers internalize the standard of the “good mother” and are aware of each minor transgression that depicts them as the “bad mother.” It is hard to escape the impossible perfectionistic standard of the good mother. But perhaps it has come time to push back on the moral imbalance.
 

Internalized sexism

As women move out of the home into the workplace, the societal pressures to maintain the status quo bear down on women, trying to keep them in their place.

Social pressures employ subtle “technologies of the self,” so that women – as any oppressed group – learn to internalize these technologies, and monitor themselves.1 This is now widely accepted as internalized sexism, whereby women feel that they are not good enough, do not have the right qualifications, and are “less” than the dominant group (men). This phenomenon is also recognized when racial and ethnic biases are assimilated unconsciously, as internalized racism. Should we also have internalized “momism”?

Women are caught between trying to claim their individualism as well as feeling the responsibility to be the self-denying mother. Everyone has an opinion about the place of women. Conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly considered “women’s lib” to be un-American, citing women in the military and the establishment of federal day care centers as actions of a communist state. A similar ideology helped form the antifeminist organization Concerned Women for America, which self-reports that it is the largest American public policy women’s organization. Formed in opposition to the National Organization for Women, CWA is focused on maintaining the traditional family, as understood by (White) evangelical Christians.

An example similar to CWA is the Council of Biblical Manhood and Womanhood. It was established to help evangelical Christian churches defend themselves against an accommodation of secular feminism and also against evangelical feminism (which pushes for more equality in the church). It promotes complementarianism – the idea that masculinity and femininity are ordained by God and that men and women are created to complement each other.

At the other extreme, the most radical of feminists believe in the need to create a women-only society where women would be free from the patriarchy. Less angry but decidedly weirder are the feminists called “FEMEN” who once staged a protest at the Vatican where topless women feigned intercourse with crucifixes, chanting slogans against the pope and religion.

Most women tread a path between extremes, a path which is difficult and lonely. Without a firm ideology, this path is strewn with doubts and pitfalls. Some career-oriented women who have delayed motherhood, knowing that they will soon be biologically past their peak and possibly also without a partner, wonder if they should become single mothers using sperm donation. For many women, the workplace does not offer much help with maternity leave or childcare. Even when maternity leave is available, there is a still a lack of understanding about what is needed.

“Think of it as caregiver bias. If you just extend maternity leave, what is implied is that you’re still expecting me to be the primary source of care for my child, when in fact my partner wants to share the load and will need support to do so as well,” said Pamela Culpepper, an expert in corporate diversity and inclusion.2

 

 

Intensive mothering

When the glamor of the workplace wears off and/or when the misogyny and the harassment become too much, women who have the financial stability may decide to return to the role of the stay-at-home mother. Perhaps, in the home, she can feel fulfilled. Yet, young American urban and suburban mothers now parent under a new name – “intensive mothering.”

Conducting in-depth interviews of 38 women of diverse backgrounds in the United States, Sharon Hays found women describing their 2- to 4-year-old children as innocent and priceless, and believing that they – the mothers – should be primarily responsible for rearing their children, using “child-rearing methods that are child centered, expert guided, emotionally absorbing, labor intensive, and financially expensive.”3 Ms. Hays clarified four beliefs that were common to all the women in the study: mothers are more suitable caregivers than fathers; mothering should be child centered; parenting consists of a set of skills that need to be learned; and parenting is labor-intensive but an emotionally fulfilling activity.

Hays wondered if this type of mothering developed as the last defense against “the impoverishment of social ties, communal obligations and unremunerated commitments.”3 She suggested that women succumbing to social pressures to return to the home is yet another example of how society is set up to benefit men, capitalism, political leaders, and those who try to maintain a “traditional” form of family life.3 Ms. Hays concluded that the practice of intensive mothering is a class-based practice of privileged white women, entangled with capitalism in that the buying of “essential” baby products is equated with good mothering. She found this ideology to be oppressive of all women, regardless of their social class, ethnic background, household composition, and financial situation. Ms. Hays noted that many women experience guilt for not matching up to these ideals.

In “Dead End Feminism,” Elisabeth Badinter asks if the upheaval in the role of women has caused so much uncertainty that it is easier for women to regress to a time when they were in the home and knew themselves as mothers. They ask if this has been reinforced by the movement to embrace all things natural, eschewing the falseness of chemicals and other things that threaten Mother Earth.4

Whatever type of parenting a woman chooses, you can be sure that she, not the father, will be held accountable. There is no escaping the power of the mother: she will continue to symbolize all that is good and bad as the embodiment of the Mother Archetype. All of this is the background against which you will see the new mother in the family. She will not articulate her dilemma, that is your role as the family psychiatrist.

Dr. Heru is professor of psychiatry at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora. She is editor of “Working With Families in Medical Settings: A Multidisciplinary Guide for Psychiatrists and Other Health Professionals” (New York: Routledge, 2013). She has no conflicts of interest to disclose. Contact Dr. Heru at [email protected].

References

1. Martin LH et al (eds.). Technologies of the Self: A Seminar with Michel Foucault. University of Massachusetts Press: Amherst, Mass.: University of Massachusetts Press, 2022.

2. How Pamela Culpepper Is Changing The Narrative Of Women In The Workplace. Huffpost. 2020 Mar 6. https://www.huffpost.com/entry/pamela-culpepper-diversity-inclusion-empowerment_n_5e56b6ffc5b62e9dc7dbc307.

3. Hays S. Cultural Contradictions of Motherhood. Yale University Press: New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1996.

4. Badinter E. (translated by Borossa J). Dead End Feminism. Malden, Mass.: Polity Press, 2006.

Jamestown, Colo., is a small mountain town several miles up through Lefthand Canyon out of Boulder, in the Rocky Mountains. The canyon roads are steep, winding, and narrow, and peopled by brightly clad cyclists struggling up the hill and flying down faster than the cars. The road through Jamestown is dusty in the summer with brightly colored oil barrels strategically placed in the middle of the single road through town. Slashed across their sides: “SLOW DOWN! Watch out for our feral children!”

Wild child or hothouse child? What is the best choice? Women bear the brunt of this deciding, whether they are working outside of the home, or stay-at-home caregivers, or both. Women know they will be blamed if they get it wrong.

Dr. Alison M. Heru

Society has exacted a tall order on women who choose to have children. Patriarchal norms ask (White) women who choose both to work and have children, if they are really a “stay-at-home” mother who must work, or a “working” mother who prefers work over their children. The underlying attitude can be read as: “Are you someone who prioritizes paid work over caregiving, or are you someone who prioritizes caregiving over work?” You may be seen as a bad mother if you prioritize work over the welfare of your child. If you prioritize your child over your work, then you are not a reliable, dedicated worker. The working mother can’t win.

Woman’s central question is what kind of mother should I be? Mothers struggle with this question all their lives; when their child has difficulties, society’s question is what did you do wrong with your child? Mothers internalize the standard of the “good mother” and are aware of each minor transgression that depicts them as the “bad mother.” It is hard to escape the impossible perfectionistic standard of the good mother. But perhaps it has come time to push back on the moral imbalance.
 

Internalized sexism

As women move out of the home into the workplace, the societal pressures to maintain the status quo bear down on women, trying to keep them in their place.

Social pressures employ subtle “technologies of the self,” so that women – as any oppressed group – learn to internalize these technologies, and monitor themselves.1 This is now widely accepted as internalized sexism, whereby women feel that they are not good enough, do not have the right qualifications, and are “less” than the dominant group (men). This phenomenon is also recognized when racial and ethnic biases are assimilated unconsciously, as internalized racism. Should we also have internalized “momism”?

Women are caught between trying to claim their individualism as well as feeling the responsibility to be the self-denying mother. Everyone has an opinion about the place of women. Conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly considered “women’s lib” to be un-American, citing women in the military and the establishment of federal day care centers as actions of a communist state. A similar ideology helped form the antifeminist organization Concerned Women for America, which self-reports that it is the largest American public policy women’s organization. Formed in opposition to the National Organization for Women, CWA is focused on maintaining the traditional family, as understood by (White) evangelical Christians.

An example similar to CWA is the Council of Biblical Manhood and Womanhood. It was established to help evangelical Christian churches defend themselves against an accommodation of secular feminism and also against evangelical feminism (which pushes for more equality in the church). It promotes complementarianism – the idea that masculinity and femininity are ordained by God and that men and women are created to complement each other.

At the other extreme, the most radical of feminists believe in the need to create a women-only society where women would be free from the patriarchy. Less angry but decidedly weirder are the feminists called “FEMEN” who once staged a protest at the Vatican where topless women feigned intercourse with crucifixes, chanting slogans against the pope and religion.

Most women tread a path between extremes, a path which is difficult and lonely. Without a firm ideology, this path is strewn with doubts and pitfalls. Some career-oriented women who have delayed motherhood, knowing that they will soon be biologically past their peak and possibly also without a partner, wonder if they should become single mothers using sperm donation. For many women, the workplace does not offer much help with maternity leave or childcare. Even when maternity leave is available, there is a still a lack of understanding about what is needed.

“Think of it as caregiver bias. If you just extend maternity leave, what is implied is that you’re still expecting me to be the primary source of care for my child, when in fact my partner wants to share the load and will need support to do so as well,” said Pamela Culpepper, an expert in corporate diversity and inclusion.2

 

 

Intensive mothering

When the glamor of the workplace wears off and/or when the misogyny and the harassment become too much, women who have the financial stability may decide to return to the role of the stay-at-home mother. Perhaps, in the home, she can feel fulfilled. Yet, young American urban and suburban mothers now parent under a new name – “intensive mothering.”

Conducting in-depth interviews of 38 women of diverse backgrounds in the United States, Sharon Hays found women describing their 2- to 4-year-old children as innocent and priceless, and believing that they – the mothers – should be primarily responsible for rearing their children, using “child-rearing methods that are child centered, expert guided, emotionally absorbing, labor intensive, and financially expensive.”3 Ms. Hays clarified four beliefs that were common to all the women in the study: mothers are more suitable caregivers than fathers; mothering should be child centered; parenting consists of a set of skills that need to be learned; and parenting is labor-intensive but an emotionally fulfilling activity.

Hays wondered if this type of mothering developed as the last defense against “the impoverishment of social ties, communal obligations and unremunerated commitments.”3 She suggested that women succumbing to social pressures to return to the home is yet another example of how society is set up to benefit men, capitalism, political leaders, and those who try to maintain a “traditional” form of family life.3 Ms. Hays concluded that the practice of intensive mothering is a class-based practice of privileged white women, entangled with capitalism in that the buying of “essential” baby products is equated with good mothering. She found this ideology to be oppressive of all women, regardless of their social class, ethnic background, household composition, and financial situation. Ms. Hays noted that many women experience guilt for not matching up to these ideals.

In “Dead End Feminism,” Elisabeth Badinter asks if the upheaval in the role of women has caused so much uncertainty that it is easier for women to regress to a time when they were in the home and knew themselves as mothers. They ask if this has been reinforced by the movement to embrace all things natural, eschewing the falseness of chemicals and other things that threaten Mother Earth.4

Whatever type of parenting a woman chooses, you can be sure that she, not the father, will be held accountable. There is no escaping the power of the mother: she will continue to symbolize all that is good and bad as the embodiment of the Mother Archetype. All of this is the background against which you will see the new mother in the family. She will not articulate her dilemma, that is your role as the family psychiatrist.

Dr. Heru is professor of psychiatry at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora. She is editor of “Working With Families in Medical Settings: A Multidisciplinary Guide for Psychiatrists and Other Health Professionals” (New York: Routledge, 2013). She has no conflicts of interest to disclose. Contact Dr. Heru at [email protected].

References

1. Martin LH et al (eds.). Technologies of the Self: A Seminar with Michel Foucault. University of Massachusetts Press: Amherst, Mass.: University of Massachusetts Press, 2022.

2. How Pamela Culpepper Is Changing The Narrative Of Women In The Workplace. Huffpost. 2020 Mar 6. https://www.huffpost.com/entry/pamela-culpepper-diversity-inclusion-empowerment_n_5e56b6ffc5b62e9dc7dbc307.

3. Hays S. Cultural Contradictions of Motherhood. Yale University Press: New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1996.

4. Badinter E. (translated by Borossa J). Dead End Feminism. Malden, Mass.: Polity Press, 2006.

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Termination of pregnancy for medical reasons: A mental health perspective

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Fri, 07/01/2022 - 01:15
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Termination of pregnancy for medical reasons: A mental health perspective

Termination of pregnancy for medical reasons (TFMR) occurs when a pregnancy is ended due to medical complications that threaten the health of a pregnant individual and/or fetus, or when a fetus has a poor prognosis or life-limiting diagnosis. It is distinct from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists identification of all abortions as medically indicated. Common indications for TFMR include life-threatening pregnancy complications (eg, placental abruption, hyperemesis gravidarum, exacerbation of psychiatric illness), chromosomal abnormalities (eg, Trisomy 13, 18, and 21; Klinefelter syndrome), and fetal anomalies (eg, neural tube defects, cardiac defects, renal agenesis). In this article, we discuss the negative psychological outcomes of TFMR, and how to screen and intervene to best help women who experience TFMR.

Psychiatric sequelae of TFMR

Unlike abortions in general, negative psychological outcomes are common among women who experience TFMR.1 Nearly one-half of women develop symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and approximately one-fourth show signs of depression at 4 months after termination.2 Such symptoms usually improve with time but may return around trauma anniversaries (date of diagnosis or termination). Women with a history of trauma, a prior psychiatric diagnosis, and/or no living children are at greater risk. Self-blame, doubt, and high levels of distress are also risk factors.2-4 Protective factors include positive coping strategies (such as acceptance or reframing), higher perceived social support, and high self-efficacy.3,4

Screening: What to ask, and how

Use open-ended questions to ask about a patient’s obstetric history:

  • Have you ever been pregnant?
  • If you’re comfortable sharing, what were the outcomes of these pregnancies?

If a woman discloses that she has experienced a TFMR, screen for and normalize psychiatric outcomes by asking:

  • Symptoms of grief, depression, and anxiety are common after TFMR. Have you experienced such symptoms?
  • What impact has terminating your pregnancy for medical reasons had on your mental health?

Screening tools such as the General Self-Efficacy Scale can help assess predictive factors, while other scales can assess specific diagnoses (eg, Patient Health Questionaire-9 for depression, Impact of Event Scale-Revised and PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 for trauma-related symptoms, Traumatic Grief Inventory Self Report Version for pathological grief). The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale can assess for depression, but if you use this instrument, exclude statements that reference a current pregnancy or recent delivery.

How to best help

Interventions should be specific and targeted. Thus, consider the individual nature of the experience and variation in attachment that can occur over time.5 OB-GYN and perinatal psychiatry clinicians can recommend local resources and support groups that specifically focus on TFMR, rather than on general pregnancy loss. Refer patients to therapists who specialize in pregnancy loss, reproductive trauma, and/or TFMR. Cognitive-behavioral therapy and acceptance and commitment therapy may be appropriate and effective.3 Online support groups (such as Termination of Pregnancy for Medical Reasons; www.facebook.com/groups/TFMRgroup/) can supplement or fill gaps in local resources. Suggest books that discuss TFMR, such as Our Heartbreaking Choices: Forty-Six Women Share Their Stories of Interrupting a Much-Wanted Pregnancy.6 Also suggest ways to facilitate conversations with children around TFMR, which is described in a series of books by Katrina Villegas (https://shop.terminationsremembered.com/product-category/childrens-books-about-termination-for-medical-reasons/). Inquire about support rituals, such as naming their child, holding a memorial service, and/or recognizing their due date. Also, for a woman who has experienced TFMR, remember to screen for anxiety in subsequent pregnancies.

References

1. González-Ramos Z, Zuriguel-Pérez E, Albacar-Riobóo N, et al. The emotional responses of women when terminating a pregnancy for medical reasons: a scoping review. Midwifery. 2021;103:103095. doi:10.1016/j.midw.2021.103095
2. Korenromp MJ, Page-Christiaens GCML, van den Bout J, et al. Adjustment to termination of pregnancy for fetal anomaly: a longitudinal study in women at 4, 8, and 16 months. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2009;201(2):160.e1-7.
3. Lafarge C, Mitchell K, Fox P. Perinatal grief following a termination of pregnancy for foetal abnormality: the impact of coping strategies. Prenat Diagn. 2013;33(12):1173-1182.
4. Korenromp MJ, Christiaens GC, van den Bout J, et al. Long-term psychological consequences of pregnancy termination for fetal abnormality: a cross-sectional study. Prenat Diagn. 2005;25(3):253-260.
5. Lou S, Hvidtjørn D, Jørgensen ML, Vogel I. “I had to think: this is not a child.” A qualitative exploration of how women/couples articulate their relation to the fetus/child following termination of a wanted pregnancy due to Down syndrome. Sex Reprod Healthc. 2021;28:100606. doi: 10.1016/j.srhc.2021.100606
6. Brooks C (ed.). Our Heartbreaking Choices: Forty-Six Women Share Their Stories of Interrupting a Much-Wanted Pregnancy. iUniverse; 2008.

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Dr. Wendt is a PGY-4 Psychiatry Resident, University of Washington Psychiatry Residency Program, Seattle, Washington. Dr. Shickich is a psychiatrist specializing in women’s mental health, Swedish Medical Group, Seattle, Washington. Dr. LaPlante is Assistant Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.

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Dr. Wendt is a PGY-4 Psychiatry Resident, University of Washington Psychiatry Residency Program, Seattle, Washington. Dr. Shickich is a psychiatrist specializing in women’s mental health, Swedish Medical Group, Seattle, Washington. Dr. LaPlante is Assistant Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.

Disclosures
The authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this article, or with manufacturers of competing products.

Author and Disclosure Information

Dr. Wendt is a PGY-4 Psychiatry Resident, University of Washington Psychiatry Residency Program, Seattle, Washington. Dr. Shickich is a psychiatrist specializing in women’s mental health, Swedish Medical Group, Seattle, Washington. Dr. LaPlante is Assistant Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.

Disclosures
The authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this article, or with manufacturers of competing products.

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Termination of pregnancy for medical reasons (TFMR) occurs when a pregnancy is ended due to medical complications that threaten the health of a pregnant individual and/or fetus, or when a fetus has a poor prognosis or life-limiting diagnosis. It is distinct from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists identification of all abortions as medically indicated. Common indications for TFMR include life-threatening pregnancy complications (eg, placental abruption, hyperemesis gravidarum, exacerbation of psychiatric illness), chromosomal abnormalities (eg, Trisomy 13, 18, and 21; Klinefelter syndrome), and fetal anomalies (eg, neural tube defects, cardiac defects, renal agenesis). In this article, we discuss the negative psychological outcomes of TFMR, and how to screen and intervene to best help women who experience TFMR.

Psychiatric sequelae of TFMR

Unlike abortions in general, negative psychological outcomes are common among women who experience TFMR.1 Nearly one-half of women develop symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and approximately one-fourth show signs of depression at 4 months after termination.2 Such symptoms usually improve with time but may return around trauma anniversaries (date of diagnosis or termination). Women with a history of trauma, a prior psychiatric diagnosis, and/or no living children are at greater risk. Self-blame, doubt, and high levels of distress are also risk factors.2-4 Protective factors include positive coping strategies (such as acceptance or reframing), higher perceived social support, and high self-efficacy.3,4

Screening: What to ask, and how

Use open-ended questions to ask about a patient’s obstetric history:

  • Have you ever been pregnant?
  • If you’re comfortable sharing, what were the outcomes of these pregnancies?

If a woman discloses that she has experienced a TFMR, screen for and normalize psychiatric outcomes by asking:

  • Symptoms of grief, depression, and anxiety are common after TFMR. Have you experienced such symptoms?
  • What impact has terminating your pregnancy for medical reasons had on your mental health?

Screening tools such as the General Self-Efficacy Scale can help assess predictive factors, while other scales can assess specific diagnoses (eg, Patient Health Questionaire-9 for depression, Impact of Event Scale-Revised and PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 for trauma-related symptoms, Traumatic Grief Inventory Self Report Version for pathological grief). The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale can assess for depression, but if you use this instrument, exclude statements that reference a current pregnancy or recent delivery.

How to best help

Interventions should be specific and targeted. Thus, consider the individual nature of the experience and variation in attachment that can occur over time.5 OB-GYN and perinatal psychiatry clinicians can recommend local resources and support groups that specifically focus on TFMR, rather than on general pregnancy loss. Refer patients to therapists who specialize in pregnancy loss, reproductive trauma, and/or TFMR. Cognitive-behavioral therapy and acceptance and commitment therapy may be appropriate and effective.3 Online support groups (such as Termination of Pregnancy for Medical Reasons; www.facebook.com/groups/TFMRgroup/) can supplement or fill gaps in local resources. Suggest books that discuss TFMR, such as Our Heartbreaking Choices: Forty-Six Women Share Their Stories of Interrupting a Much-Wanted Pregnancy.6 Also suggest ways to facilitate conversations with children around TFMR, which is described in a series of books by Katrina Villegas (https://shop.terminationsremembered.com/product-category/childrens-books-about-termination-for-medical-reasons/). Inquire about support rituals, such as naming their child, holding a memorial service, and/or recognizing their due date. Also, for a woman who has experienced TFMR, remember to screen for anxiety in subsequent pregnancies.

Termination of pregnancy for medical reasons (TFMR) occurs when a pregnancy is ended due to medical complications that threaten the health of a pregnant individual and/or fetus, or when a fetus has a poor prognosis or life-limiting diagnosis. It is distinct from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists identification of all abortions as medically indicated. Common indications for TFMR include life-threatening pregnancy complications (eg, placental abruption, hyperemesis gravidarum, exacerbation of psychiatric illness), chromosomal abnormalities (eg, Trisomy 13, 18, and 21; Klinefelter syndrome), and fetal anomalies (eg, neural tube defects, cardiac defects, renal agenesis). In this article, we discuss the negative psychological outcomes of TFMR, and how to screen and intervene to best help women who experience TFMR.

Psychiatric sequelae of TFMR

Unlike abortions in general, negative psychological outcomes are common among women who experience TFMR.1 Nearly one-half of women develop symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and approximately one-fourth show signs of depression at 4 months after termination.2 Such symptoms usually improve with time but may return around trauma anniversaries (date of diagnosis or termination). Women with a history of trauma, a prior psychiatric diagnosis, and/or no living children are at greater risk. Self-blame, doubt, and high levels of distress are also risk factors.2-4 Protective factors include positive coping strategies (such as acceptance or reframing), higher perceived social support, and high self-efficacy.3,4

Screening: What to ask, and how

Use open-ended questions to ask about a patient’s obstetric history:

  • Have you ever been pregnant?
  • If you’re comfortable sharing, what were the outcomes of these pregnancies?

If a woman discloses that she has experienced a TFMR, screen for and normalize psychiatric outcomes by asking:

  • Symptoms of grief, depression, and anxiety are common after TFMR. Have you experienced such symptoms?
  • What impact has terminating your pregnancy for medical reasons had on your mental health?

Screening tools such as the General Self-Efficacy Scale can help assess predictive factors, while other scales can assess specific diagnoses (eg, Patient Health Questionaire-9 for depression, Impact of Event Scale-Revised and PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 for trauma-related symptoms, Traumatic Grief Inventory Self Report Version for pathological grief). The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale can assess for depression, but if you use this instrument, exclude statements that reference a current pregnancy or recent delivery.

How to best help

Interventions should be specific and targeted. Thus, consider the individual nature of the experience and variation in attachment that can occur over time.5 OB-GYN and perinatal psychiatry clinicians can recommend local resources and support groups that specifically focus on TFMR, rather than on general pregnancy loss. Refer patients to therapists who specialize in pregnancy loss, reproductive trauma, and/or TFMR. Cognitive-behavioral therapy and acceptance and commitment therapy may be appropriate and effective.3 Online support groups (such as Termination of Pregnancy for Medical Reasons; www.facebook.com/groups/TFMRgroup/) can supplement or fill gaps in local resources. Suggest books that discuss TFMR, such as Our Heartbreaking Choices: Forty-Six Women Share Their Stories of Interrupting a Much-Wanted Pregnancy.6 Also suggest ways to facilitate conversations with children around TFMR, which is described in a series of books by Katrina Villegas (https://shop.terminationsremembered.com/product-category/childrens-books-about-termination-for-medical-reasons/). Inquire about support rituals, such as naming their child, holding a memorial service, and/or recognizing their due date. Also, for a woman who has experienced TFMR, remember to screen for anxiety in subsequent pregnancies.

References

1. González-Ramos Z, Zuriguel-Pérez E, Albacar-Riobóo N, et al. The emotional responses of women when terminating a pregnancy for medical reasons: a scoping review. Midwifery. 2021;103:103095. doi:10.1016/j.midw.2021.103095
2. Korenromp MJ, Page-Christiaens GCML, van den Bout J, et al. Adjustment to termination of pregnancy for fetal anomaly: a longitudinal study in women at 4, 8, and 16 months. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2009;201(2):160.e1-7.
3. Lafarge C, Mitchell K, Fox P. Perinatal grief following a termination of pregnancy for foetal abnormality: the impact of coping strategies. Prenat Diagn. 2013;33(12):1173-1182.
4. Korenromp MJ, Christiaens GC, van den Bout J, et al. Long-term psychological consequences of pregnancy termination for fetal abnormality: a cross-sectional study. Prenat Diagn. 2005;25(3):253-260.
5. Lou S, Hvidtjørn D, Jørgensen ML, Vogel I. “I had to think: this is not a child.” A qualitative exploration of how women/couples articulate their relation to the fetus/child following termination of a wanted pregnancy due to Down syndrome. Sex Reprod Healthc. 2021;28:100606. doi: 10.1016/j.srhc.2021.100606
6. Brooks C (ed.). Our Heartbreaking Choices: Forty-Six Women Share Their Stories of Interrupting a Much-Wanted Pregnancy. iUniverse; 2008.

References

1. González-Ramos Z, Zuriguel-Pérez E, Albacar-Riobóo N, et al. The emotional responses of women when terminating a pregnancy for medical reasons: a scoping review. Midwifery. 2021;103:103095. doi:10.1016/j.midw.2021.103095
2. Korenromp MJ, Page-Christiaens GCML, van den Bout J, et al. Adjustment to termination of pregnancy for fetal anomaly: a longitudinal study in women at 4, 8, and 16 months. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2009;201(2):160.e1-7.
3. Lafarge C, Mitchell K, Fox P. Perinatal grief following a termination of pregnancy for foetal abnormality: the impact of coping strategies. Prenat Diagn. 2013;33(12):1173-1182.
4. Korenromp MJ, Christiaens GC, van den Bout J, et al. Long-term psychological consequences of pregnancy termination for fetal abnormality: a cross-sectional study. Prenat Diagn. 2005;25(3):253-260.
5. Lou S, Hvidtjørn D, Jørgensen ML, Vogel I. “I had to think: this is not a child.” A qualitative exploration of how women/couples articulate their relation to the fetus/child following termination of a wanted pregnancy due to Down syndrome. Sex Reprod Healthc. 2021;28:100606. doi: 10.1016/j.srhc.2021.100606
6. Brooks C (ed.). Our Heartbreaking Choices: Forty-Six Women Share Their Stories of Interrupting a Much-Wanted Pregnancy. iUniverse; 2008.

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Children with migraine at high risk of comorbid anxiety, depression

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Children and adolescents with migraine are about twice as likely to have an anxiety or depressive disorder as those without migraine, results from a new review and meta-analysis suggest.

“This is compelling, high-level evidence showing there’s this established comorbidity between migraine and anxiety and depressive symptoms and disorders in this age group,” co-investigator Serena L. Orr, MD, a pediatric neurologist and headache specialist at Alberta Children’s Hospital and assistant professor in the department of pediatrics, University of Calgary (Alta.), told this news organization.

The results “should compel every clinician who is seeing a child or adolescent with migraine to screen for anxiety and depression and to manage that if it’s present. That should be the standard of care with this level of evidence,” Dr. Orr said.

The findings were presented at the American Headache Society (AHS) Annual Meeting 2022.
 

Incidence divergence

Previous studies have suggested that 10%-20% of children and adolescents will experience migraine at some point before adulthood, with the prevalence increasing after puberty.

While the female-to-male ratio is about 1:1 before puberty, there is a “big divergence in incidence curves” afterward – with the female-to-male ratio reaching 2-3:1 in adulthood, Dr. Orr noted. Experts believe hormones drive this divergence, she said, noting that male adults with migraine have lower testosterone levels than male adults without migraine.

Dr. Orr and her colleagues were keen to investigate the relationship between child migraine and anxiety symptoms and disorders, as well as between child migraine and depression symptoms and disorders. They searched the literature for related case-control, cross-sectional, and cohort studies with participants of ages up to 18 years.

The researchers selected 80 studies to include in the review. Most of the studies were carried out in the past 30 to 40 years and were in English and other languages. Both community-based and clinical studies were included.

Of the total, 73 studies reported on the association between the exposures and migraine, and 51 were amenable to quantitative pooling.

Results from a meta-analysis that included 16 studies that compared children and adolescents who had migraine with their healthy peers showed a significant association between migraine and anxiety symptoms (standardized mean difference, 1.13; 95% confidence interval, 0.64-1.63; P < .0001).

Compared with children who did not have migraine, those with migraine had almost twice the odds of an anxiety disorder in 15 studies (odds ratio, 1.93; 95% CI, 1.49-2.50; P < .0001).

In addition, there was an association between migraine and depressive symptoms in 17 relevant studies (SMD, 0.67; 95% CI, 0.46-0.87; P < .0001). Participants with versus without migraine also had higher odds of depressive disorders in 18 studies (OR, 2.01; 95% CI, 1.46-2.78; P < .0001).

Effect sizes were similar between community-based and clinic studies. Dr. Orr said it is important to note that the analysis wasn’t restricted to studies with “just kids with really high disease burden who are going to naturally be more predisposed to psychiatric comorbidity.”
 

‘Shocking’ lack of research

The researchers were also interested in determining whether having migraine along with anxiety or depression symptoms or disorders could affect headache-specific outcomes and whether such patients’ conditions would be more refractory to treatment. However, these outcomes were “all over the place” in the 18 relevant studies, Dr. Orr reported.

“Some looked at headache frequency, some at disability, some at school functioning; so, we were not able to put them into a meta-analysis,” she said.

Only two studies examined whether anxiety or depression earlier in childhood predisposes to subsequent migraine, so that issue is still unresolved, Dr. Orr added.

The investigators also assessed whether outcomes with migraine are similar to those with other headache types, such as tension-type headaches. “We did not find a difference at the symptom or disorder level, but there were fewer of those studies” – and these, too, were heterogeneous, said Dr. Orr.

The researchers did not find any studies of the association between migraine and trauma, which Dr. Orr said was “shocking.”

“In the broader pediatric chronic-pain literature, there’s research showing that having a trauma or stress-related disorder is associated with more chronic pain and worse chronic pain outcomes, but we could not find a study that specifically looked at that question in migraine,” she added.

Emerging evidence suggests there may be a bidirectional relationship between migraine and anxiety/depression, at least in adults. Dr. Orr said having these symptoms appears to raise the risk for migraine, but whether that’s environmental or driven by shared genetics isn’t clear.

Experiencing chronic pain may also predispose individuals to anxiety and depression, “but we need more studies on this.”

In addition to screening children with migraine for anxiety and depression, clinicians should advocate for better access to mental health resources for patients with these comorbidities, Dr. Orr noted.

She added that a limitation of the review was that 82.5% of the studies reported unadjusted associations and that 26.3% of the studies were of low quality.
 

High-level evidence

Sara Pavitt, MD, chief of the Pediatric Headache Program and assistant professor in the department of neurology, the University of Texas at Austin, said the investigators “should be applauded” for providing “high-level evidence” to better understand the relationship between migraine and anxiety and depression in pediatric patients.

Such information has been “lacking” for this patient population, said Dr. Pavitt, who was not involved with the research.

She noted that screening kids for mood disorders is challenging, given the relatively few pediatric mental health care providers. A referral for a psychiatric follow-up can mean a 9- to 12-month wait – or even longer for children who do not have insurance or use Medicare.

“Providers need to have more incentives to care for patients with Medicare or lack of insurance – these patients are often excluded from practices because reimbursement is so poor,” Dr. Pavitt said.

Additional pediatric studies are needed to understand how other mental health disorders, such as panic disorder, phobias, and posttraumatic stress disorder, may be related to migraine, she added.

The study received no outside funding. Dr. Orr has received grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and royalties from Cambridge University Press for book publication, and she is on editorial boards of Headache, Neurology, and the American Migraine Foundation. Dr. Pavitt serves on an advisory board for Theranica, which produces a neuromodulation device for acute migraine treatment, although this is not directly relevant to this review.

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

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Children and adolescents with migraine are about twice as likely to have an anxiety or depressive disorder as those without migraine, results from a new review and meta-analysis suggest.

“This is compelling, high-level evidence showing there’s this established comorbidity between migraine and anxiety and depressive symptoms and disorders in this age group,” co-investigator Serena L. Orr, MD, a pediatric neurologist and headache specialist at Alberta Children’s Hospital and assistant professor in the department of pediatrics, University of Calgary (Alta.), told this news organization.

The results “should compel every clinician who is seeing a child or adolescent with migraine to screen for anxiety and depression and to manage that if it’s present. That should be the standard of care with this level of evidence,” Dr. Orr said.

The findings were presented at the American Headache Society (AHS) Annual Meeting 2022.
 

Incidence divergence

Previous studies have suggested that 10%-20% of children and adolescents will experience migraine at some point before adulthood, with the prevalence increasing after puberty.

While the female-to-male ratio is about 1:1 before puberty, there is a “big divergence in incidence curves” afterward – with the female-to-male ratio reaching 2-3:1 in adulthood, Dr. Orr noted. Experts believe hormones drive this divergence, she said, noting that male adults with migraine have lower testosterone levels than male adults without migraine.

Dr. Orr and her colleagues were keen to investigate the relationship between child migraine and anxiety symptoms and disorders, as well as between child migraine and depression symptoms and disorders. They searched the literature for related case-control, cross-sectional, and cohort studies with participants of ages up to 18 years.

The researchers selected 80 studies to include in the review. Most of the studies were carried out in the past 30 to 40 years and were in English and other languages. Both community-based and clinical studies were included.

Of the total, 73 studies reported on the association between the exposures and migraine, and 51 were amenable to quantitative pooling.

Results from a meta-analysis that included 16 studies that compared children and adolescents who had migraine with their healthy peers showed a significant association between migraine and anxiety symptoms (standardized mean difference, 1.13; 95% confidence interval, 0.64-1.63; P < .0001).

Compared with children who did not have migraine, those with migraine had almost twice the odds of an anxiety disorder in 15 studies (odds ratio, 1.93; 95% CI, 1.49-2.50; P < .0001).

In addition, there was an association between migraine and depressive symptoms in 17 relevant studies (SMD, 0.67; 95% CI, 0.46-0.87; P < .0001). Participants with versus without migraine also had higher odds of depressive disorders in 18 studies (OR, 2.01; 95% CI, 1.46-2.78; P < .0001).

Effect sizes were similar between community-based and clinic studies. Dr. Orr said it is important to note that the analysis wasn’t restricted to studies with “just kids with really high disease burden who are going to naturally be more predisposed to psychiatric comorbidity.”
 

‘Shocking’ lack of research

The researchers were also interested in determining whether having migraine along with anxiety or depression symptoms or disorders could affect headache-specific outcomes and whether such patients’ conditions would be more refractory to treatment. However, these outcomes were “all over the place” in the 18 relevant studies, Dr. Orr reported.

“Some looked at headache frequency, some at disability, some at school functioning; so, we were not able to put them into a meta-analysis,” she said.

Only two studies examined whether anxiety or depression earlier in childhood predisposes to subsequent migraine, so that issue is still unresolved, Dr. Orr added.

The investigators also assessed whether outcomes with migraine are similar to those with other headache types, such as tension-type headaches. “We did not find a difference at the symptom or disorder level, but there were fewer of those studies” – and these, too, were heterogeneous, said Dr. Orr.

The researchers did not find any studies of the association between migraine and trauma, which Dr. Orr said was “shocking.”

“In the broader pediatric chronic-pain literature, there’s research showing that having a trauma or stress-related disorder is associated with more chronic pain and worse chronic pain outcomes, but we could not find a study that specifically looked at that question in migraine,” she added.

Emerging evidence suggests there may be a bidirectional relationship between migraine and anxiety/depression, at least in adults. Dr. Orr said having these symptoms appears to raise the risk for migraine, but whether that’s environmental or driven by shared genetics isn’t clear.

Experiencing chronic pain may also predispose individuals to anxiety and depression, “but we need more studies on this.”

In addition to screening children with migraine for anxiety and depression, clinicians should advocate for better access to mental health resources for patients with these comorbidities, Dr. Orr noted.

She added that a limitation of the review was that 82.5% of the studies reported unadjusted associations and that 26.3% of the studies were of low quality.
 

High-level evidence

Sara Pavitt, MD, chief of the Pediatric Headache Program and assistant professor in the department of neurology, the University of Texas at Austin, said the investigators “should be applauded” for providing “high-level evidence” to better understand the relationship between migraine and anxiety and depression in pediatric patients.

Such information has been “lacking” for this patient population, said Dr. Pavitt, who was not involved with the research.

She noted that screening kids for mood disorders is challenging, given the relatively few pediatric mental health care providers. A referral for a psychiatric follow-up can mean a 9- to 12-month wait – or even longer for children who do not have insurance or use Medicare.

“Providers need to have more incentives to care for patients with Medicare or lack of insurance – these patients are often excluded from practices because reimbursement is so poor,” Dr. Pavitt said.

Additional pediatric studies are needed to understand how other mental health disorders, such as panic disorder, phobias, and posttraumatic stress disorder, may be related to migraine, she added.

The study received no outside funding. Dr. Orr has received grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and royalties from Cambridge University Press for book publication, and she is on editorial boards of Headache, Neurology, and the American Migraine Foundation. Dr. Pavitt serves on an advisory board for Theranica, which produces a neuromodulation device for acute migraine treatment, although this is not directly relevant to this review.

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

Children and adolescents with migraine are about twice as likely to have an anxiety or depressive disorder as those without migraine, results from a new review and meta-analysis suggest.

“This is compelling, high-level evidence showing there’s this established comorbidity between migraine and anxiety and depressive symptoms and disorders in this age group,” co-investigator Serena L. Orr, MD, a pediatric neurologist and headache specialist at Alberta Children’s Hospital and assistant professor in the department of pediatrics, University of Calgary (Alta.), told this news organization.

The results “should compel every clinician who is seeing a child or adolescent with migraine to screen for anxiety and depression and to manage that if it’s present. That should be the standard of care with this level of evidence,” Dr. Orr said.

The findings were presented at the American Headache Society (AHS) Annual Meeting 2022.
 

Incidence divergence

Previous studies have suggested that 10%-20% of children and adolescents will experience migraine at some point before adulthood, with the prevalence increasing after puberty.

While the female-to-male ratio is about 1:1 before puberty, there is a “big divergence in incidence curves” afterward – with the female-to-male ratio reaching 2-3:1 in adulthood, Dr. Orr noted. Experts believe hormones drive this divergence, she said, noting that male adults with migraine have lower testosterone levels than male adults without migraine.

Dr. Orr and her colleagues were keen to investigate the relationship between child migraine and anxiety symptoms and disorders, as well as between child migraine and depression symptoms and disorders. They searched the literature for related case-control, cross-sectional, and cohort studies with participants of ages up to 18 years.

The researchers selected 80 studies to include in the review. Most of the studies were carried out in the past 30 to 40 years and were in English and other languages. Both community-based and clinical studies were included.

Of the total, 73 studies reported on the association between the exposures and migraine, and 51 were amenable to quantitative pooling.

Results from a meta-analysis that included 16 studies that compared children and adolescents who had migraine with their healthy peers showed a significant association between migraine and anxiety symptoms (standardized mean difference, 1.13; 95% confidence interval, 0.64-1.63; P < .0001).

Compared with children who did not have migraine, those with migraine had almost twice the odds of an anxiety disorder in 15 studies (odds ratio, 1.93; 95% CI, 1.49-2.50; P < .0001).

In addition, there was an association between migraine and depressive symptoms in 17 relevant studies (SMD, 0.67; 95% CI, 0.46-0.87; P < .0001). Participants with versus without migraine also had higher odds of depressive disorders in 18 studies (OR, 2.01; 95% CI, 1.46-2.78; P < .0001).

Effect sizes were similar between community-based and clinic studies. Dr. Orr said it is important to note that the analysis wasn’t restricted to studies with “just kids with really high disease burden who are going to naturally be more predisposed to psychiatric comorbidity.”
 

‘Shocking’ lack of research

The researchers were also interested in determining whether having migraine along with anxiety or depression symptoms or disorders could affect headache-specific outcomes and whether such patients’ conditions would be more refractory to treatment. However, these outcomes were “all over the place” in the 18 relevant studies, Dr. Orr reported.

“Some looked at headache frequency, some at disability, some at school functioning; so, we were not able to put them into a meta-analysis,” she said.

Only two studies examined whether anxiety or depression earlier in childhood predisposes to subsequent migraine, so that issue is still unresolved, Dr. Orr added.

The investigators also assessed whether outcomes with migraine are similar to those with other headache types, such as tension-type headaches. “We did not find a difference at the symptom or disorder level, but there were fewer of those studies” – and these, too, were heterogeneous, said Dr. Orr.

The researchers did not find any studies of the association between migraine and trauma, which Dr. Orr said was “shocking.”

“In the broader pediatric chronic-pain literature, there’s research showing that having a trauma or stress-related disorder is associated with more chronic pain and worse chronic pain outcomes, but we could not find a study that specifically looked at that question in migraine,” she added.

Emerging evidence suggests there may be a bidirectional relationship between migraine and anxiety/depression, at least in adults. Dr. Orr said having these symptoms appears to raise the risk for migraine, but whether that’s environmental or driven by shared genetics isn’t clear.

Experiencing chronic pain may also predispose individuals to anxiety and depression, “but we need more studies on this.”

In addition to screening children with migraine for anxiety and depression, clinicians should advocate for better access to mental health resources for patients with these comorbidities, Dr. Orr noted.

She added that a limitation of the review was that 82.5% of the studies reported unadjusted associations and that 26.3% of the studies were of low quality.
 

High-level evidence

Sara Pavitt, MD, chief of the Pediatric Headache Program and assistant professor in the department of neurology, the University of Texas at Austin, said the investigators “should be applauded” for providing “high-level evidence” to better understand the relationship between migraine and anxiety and depression in pediatric patients.

Such information has been “lacking” for this patient population, said Dr. Pavitt, who was not involved with the research.

She noted that screening kids for mood disorders is challenging, given the relatively few pediatric mental health care providers. A referral for a psychiatric follow-up can mean a 9- to 12-month wait – or even longer for children who do not have insurance or use Medicare.

“Providers need to have more incentives to care for patients with Medicare or lack of insurance – these patients are often excluded from practices because reimbursement is so poor,” Dr. Pavitt said.

Additional pediatric studies are needed to understand how other mental health disorders, such as panic disorder, phobias, and posttraumatic stress disorder, may be related to migraine, she added.

The study received no outside funding. Dr. Orr has received grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and royalties from Cambridge University Press for book publication, and she is on editorial boards of Headache, Neurology, and the American Migraine Foundation. Dr. Pavitt serves on an advisory board for Theranica, which produces a neuromodulation device for acute migraine treatment, although this is not directly relevant to this review.

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

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More on T. gondii

We reviewed the article by Dr. Torrey on Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii) and schizophrenia (“Cats, toxoplasmosis, and psychosis: Understanding the risks,” Current Psychiatry, May 2022, p. 14-19) with interest. Understanding infections in utero, during the perinatal period, and at other critical developmental stages may offer ways to prevent neurodevelopmental disorders. There appear to be good reasons to explore infectious and immune disruption of normal brain development. In a meta-analysis of 7 studies, Nayeri et al1 found evidence to suggest T. gondii is a risk factor for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Given the enormous loss of human potential and suffering resulting from schizophrenia and ASD, further exploration of toxoplasmosis and other infections may be valuable as we try to reduce the severe impact of these diseases.

The natural history of toxoplasmosis is an extraordinary example of nature’s complexity. The life cycle of this parasite uses the nervous system of the mouse to increase its transmission. Behavior changes ranging from reduced cat urine avoidance and increased risk-taking are observed in mice infected with T. gondii.2 Chronic toxoplasmosis may also affect human behavior.3

Cats are fascinating, complex creatures. Of note, they produce a protein structurally like the secretion of the slow loris.4 The loris uses this brachial gland protein secretion as part of a defense strategy.5 Consideration of a possible toxic, neuroimmune role of these small mammal proteins in psychiatric disorders may open other avenues to explore.6

Our relationship to domesticated animals has been connected to serious diseases throughout human history.7 Severe acute respiratory syndrome and COVID-19 appear to be linked to animal reservoirs, mammals of the small animal trade, and the fur industry.8,9 The rapid development of vaccines for COVID-19 is commendable. In conditions with multifactorial causation, managing an infectious component is worthy of consideration.

With mounting evidence suggesting a link between T. gondii and schizophrenia, ASD, and other diseases, further epidemiological studies and pilot interventions offer value. Interventions, including encouraging keeping cats indoors only, cat immunization, and human treatment, could be implemented in high-risk families. Efficacy requires data collection. While not easy, collaborative work by psychiatrists, developmental pediatricians, veterinarians, and epidemiologists is encouraged.

Mark C. Chandler, MD
Triangle Neuropsychiatry
Durham, North Carolina

Michelle Douglass, PA-S2
Duke University Physician Assistant Program
Durham, North Carolina

References

1. Nayeri T, Sarvi S, Moosazadeh M, et al. Relationship between toxoplasmosis and autism: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Microb Pathog. 2020;147:104434. doi:10.1016/j.micpath.2020.104434
2. Kochanowsky JA, Koshy AA. Toxoplasma gondii. Curr Biol. 2018;28(14):R770-R771. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2018.05.035
3. Letcher S. Parasite mind control: how a single celled parasite carried in the cat intestine may be quietly tweaking our behavior. Scientific Kenyon: The Neuroscience Edition. 2018;22(1):4-11.
4. Scheib H, Nekaris KA, Rode-Margono J, et al. The toxicological intersection between allergen and toxin: a structural comparison of the cat dander allergenic protein Fel d1 and the slow loris brachial gland secretion protein. Toxins (Basel). 2020;12(2):86. doi:10.3390/toxins12020086
5. Nekaris KA, Moore RS, Rode EJ, et al. Mad, bad and dangerous to know: the biochemistry, ecology and evolution of slow loris venom. J Venom Anim Toxins Incl Trop Dis. 2013;19(1):21. doi:10.1186/1678-9199-19-21
6. Ligabue-Braun R. Hello, kitty: could cat allergy be a form of intoxication? J Venom Anim Toxins Incl Trop Dis. 2020;26:e20200051. doi:10.1590/1678-9199-JVATITD-2020-0051
7. Pearce-Duvet JM. The origin of human pathogens: evaluating the role of agriculture and domestic animals in the evolution of human disease. Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2006;81(3):369-382. doi:10.1017/S1464793106007020
8. Jo WK, de Oliveira-Filho EF, Rasche A, et al. Potential zoonotic sources of SARS-CoV-2 infections. Transbound Emerg Dis. 2021;68(4):1824-1834. doi:10.1111/tbed.13872
9. Bell D, Roberton S, Hunter PR. Animal origins of SARS coronavirus: possible links with the international trade in small carnivores. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2004;359(1447):1107-1114. doi:10.1098/rstb.2004.1492

Disclosures

The authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this letter, or with manufacturers of competing products.

Continue to: Pramipexole for MDD

 

 

Pramipexole for MDD

I appreciate Dr. Espejo’s recommendations for treating patients who experience limited response from initial antidepressant therapy (“Treating major depressive disorder after limited response to an initial agent,” Current Psychiatry, October 2021, p. 51-53). I would like to add that pramipexole, a dopamine receptor agonist, can also alleviate depression. A meta-analysis concluded that patients receiving monotherapy or augmentation with pramipexole (mean maximum dose 1.62 mg/d) achieved response or remission of depression.1 In an observational study of 116 patients with unipolar or bipolar depression, nearly 75% experienced response and 66% achieved remission with pramipexole augmentation (median maximum dose 1.05 mg/d).2 Pramipexole is usually well-tolerated, although patients may experience nausea, somnolence, headache, and constipation, and they should be cautioned about the risk for compulsive behaviors and psychosis.

Jonathan R. Scarff, MD
Lexington VA Health Care System
Lexington, Kentucky

References

1. Tundo A, de Filippis R, De Crescenzo F. Pramipexole in the treatment of unipolar and bipolar depression. A systematic review and meta-analysis. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 2019;140(2):116-125.
2. Tundo A, Betrò S, Iommi M, et al. Efficacy and safety of 24-week pramipexole augmentation in patients with treatment resistant depression. A retrospective cohort study. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2022;112:110425. doi:10.1016/j.pnpbp.2021.110425

Disclosures

The author reports no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this letter, or with manufacturers of competing products.

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More on T. gondii

We reviewed the article by Dr. Torrey on Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii) and schizophrenia (“Cats, toxoplasmosis, and psychosis: Understanding the risks,” Current Psychiatry, May 2022, p. 14-19) with interest. Understanding infections in utero, during the perinatal period, and at other critical developmental stages may offer ways to prevent neurodevelopmental disorders. There appear to be good reasons to explore infectious and immune disruption of normal brain development. In a meta-analysis of 7 studies, Nayeri et al1 found evidence to suggest T. gondii is a risk factor for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Given the enormous loss of human potential and suffering resulting from schizophrenia and ASD, further exploration of toxoplasmosis and other infections may be valuable as we try to reduce the severe impact of these diseases.

The natural history of toxoplasmosis is an extraordinary example of nature’s complexity. The life cycle of this parasite uses the nervous system of the mouse to increase its transmission. Behavior changes ranging from reduced cat urine avoidance and increased risk-taking are observed in mice infected with T. gondii.2 Chronic toxoplasmosis may also affect human behavior.3

Cats are fascinating, complex creatures. Of note, they produce a protein structurally like the secretion of the slow loris.4 The loris uses this brachial gland protein secretion as part of a defense strategy.5 Consideration of a possible toxic, neuroimmune role of these small mammal proteins in psychiatric disorders may open other avenues to explore.6

Our relationship to domesticated animals has been connected to serious diseases throughout human history.7 Severe acute respiratory syndrome and COVID-19 appear to be linked to animal reservoirs, mammals of the small animal trade, and the fur industry.8,9 The rapid development of vaccines for COVID-19 is commendable. In conditions with multifactorial causation, managing an infectious component is worthy of consideration.

With mounting evidence suggesting a link between T. gondii and schizophrenia, ASD, and other diseases, further epidemiological studies and pilot interventions offer value. Interventions, including encouraging keeping cats indoors only, cat immunization, and human treatment, could be implemented in high-risk families. Efficacy requires data collection. While not easy, collaborative work by psychiatrists, developmental pediatricians, veterinarians, and epidemiologists is encouraged.

Mark C. Chandler, MD
Triangle Neuropsychiatry
Durham, North Carolina

Michelle Douglass, PA-S2
Duke University Physician Assistant Program
Durham, North Carolina

References

1. Nayeri T, Sarvi S, Moosazadeh M, et al. Relationship between toxoplasmosis and autism: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Microb Pathog. 2020;147:104434. doi:10.1016/j.micpath.2020.104434
2. Kochanowsky JA, Koshy AA. Toxoplasma gondii. Curr Biol. 2018;28(14):R770-R771. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2018.05.035
3. Letcher S. Parasite mind control: how a single celled parasite carried in the cat intestine may be quietly tweaking our behavior. Scientific Kenyon: The Neuroscience Edition. 2018;22(1):4-11.
4. Scheib H, Nekaris KA, Rode-Margono J, et al. The toxicological intersection between allergen and toxin: a structural comparison of the cat dander allergenic protein Fel d1 and the slow loris brachial gland secretion protein. Toxins (Basel). 2020;12(2):86. doi:10.3390/toxins12020086
5. Nekaris KA, Moore RS, Rode EJ, et al. Mad, bad and dangerous to know: the biochemistry, ecology and evolution of slow loris venom. J Venom Anim Toxins Incl Trop Dis. 2013;19(1):21. doi:10.1186/1678-9199-19-21
6. Ligabue-Braun R. Hello, kitty: could cat allergy be a form of intoxication? J Venom Anim Toxins Incl Trop Dis. 2020;26:e20200051. doi:10.1590/1678-9199-JVATITD-2020-0051
7. Pearce-Duvet JM. The origin of human pathogens: evaluating the role of agriculture and domestic animals in the evolution of human disease. Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2006;81(3):369-382. doi:10.1017/S1464793106007020
8. Jo WK, de Oliveira-Filho EF, Rasche A, et al. Potential zoonotic sources of SARS-CoV-2 infections. Transbound Emerg Dis. 2021;68(4):1824-1834. doi:10.1111/tbed.13872
9. Bell D, Roberton S, Hunter PR. Animal origins of SARS coronavirus: possible links with the international trade in small carnivores. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2004;359(1447):1107-1114. doi:10.1098/rstb.2004.1492

Disclosures

The authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this letter, or with manufacturers of competing products.

Continue to: Pramipexole for MDD

 

 

Pramipexole for MDD

I appreciate Dr. Espejo’s recommendations for treating patients who experience limited response from initial antidepressant therapy (“Treating major depressive disorder after limited response to an initial agent,” Current Psychiatry, October 2021, p. 51-53). I would like to add that pramipexole, a dopamine receptor agonist, can also alleviate depression. A meta-analysis concluded that patients receiving monotherapy or augmentation with pramipexole (mean maximum dose 1.62 mg/d) achieved response or remission of depression.1 In an observational study of 116 patients with unipolar or bipolar depression, nearly 75% experienced response and 66% achieved remission with pramipexole augmentation (median maximum dose 1.05 mg/d).2 Pramipexole is usually well-tolerated, although patients may experience nausea, somnolence, headache, and constipation, and they should be cautioned about the risk for compulsive behaviors and psychosis.

Jonathan R. Scarff, MD
Lexington VA Health Care System
Lexington, Kentucky

References

1. Tundo A, de Filippis R, De Crescenzo F. Pramipexole in the treatment of unipolar and bipolar depression. A systematic review and meta-analysis. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 2019;140(2):116-125.
2. Tundo A, Betrò S, Iommi M, et al. Efficacy and safety of 24-week pramipexole augmentation in patients with treatment resistant depression. A retrospective cohort study. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2022;112:110425. doi:10.1016/j.pnpbp.2021.110425

Disclosures

The author reports no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this letter, or with manufacturers of competing products.

More on T. gondii

We reviewed the article by Dr. Torrey on Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii) and schizophrenia (“Cats, toxoplasmosis, and psychosis: Understanding the risks,” Current Psychiatry, May 2022, p. 14-19) with interest. Understanding infections in utero, during the perinatal period, and at other critical developmental stages may offer ways to prevent neurodevelopmental disorders. There appear to be good reasons to explore infectious and immune disruption of normal brain development. In a meta-analysis of 7 studies, Nayeri et al1 found evidence to suggest T. gondii is a risk factor for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Given the enormous loss of human potential and suffering resulting from schizophrenia and ASD, further exploration of toxoplasmosis and other infections may be valuable as we try to reduce the severe impact of these diseases.

The natural history of toxoplasmosis is an extraordinary example of nature’s complexity. The life cycle of this parasite uses the nervous system of the mouse to increase its transmission. Behavior changes ranging from reduced cat urine avoidance and increased risk-taking are observed in mice infected with T. gondii.2 Chronic toxoplasmosis may also affect human behavior.3

Cats are fascinating, complex creatures. Of note, they produce a protein structurally like the secretion of the slow loris.4 The loris uses this brachial gland protein secretion as part of a defense strategy.5 Consideration of a possible toxic, neuroimmune role of these small mammal proteins in psychiatric disorders may open other avenues to explore.6

Our relationship to domesticated animals has been connected to serious diseases throughout human history.7 Severe acute respiratory syndrome and COVID-19 appear to be linked to animal reservoirs, mammals of the small animal trade, and the fur industry.8,9 The rapid development of vaccines for COVID-19 is commendable. In conditions with multifactorial causation, managing an infectious component is worthy of consideration.

With mounting evidence suggesting a link between T. gondii and schizophrenia, ASD, and other diseases, further epidemiological studies and pilot interventions offer value. Interventions, including encouraging keeping cats indoors only, cat immunization, and human treatment, could be implemented in high-risk families. Efficacy requires data collection. While not easy, collaborative work by psychiatrists, developmental pediatricians, veterinarians, and epidemiologists is encouraged.

Mark C. Chandler, MD
Triangle Neuropsychiatry
Durham, North Carolina

Michelle Douglass, PA-S2
Duke University Physician Assistant Program
Durham, North Carolina

References

1. Nayeri T, Sarvi S, Moosazadeh M, et al. Relationship between toxoplasmosis and autism: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Microb Pathog. 2020;147:104434. doi:10.1016/j.micpath.2020.104434
2. Kochanowsky JA, Koshy AA. Toxoplasma gondii. Curr Biol. 2018;28(14):R770-R771. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2018.05.035
3. Letcher S. Parasite mind control: how a single celled parasite carried in the cat intestine may be quietly tweaking our behavior. Scientific Kenyon: The Neuroscience Edition. 2018;22(1):4-11.
4. Scheib H, Nekaris KA, Rode-Margono J, et al. The toxicological intersection between allergen and toxin: a structural comparison of the cat dander allergenic protein Fel d1 and the slow loris brachial gland secretion protein. Toxins (Basel). 2020;12(2):86. doi:10.3390/toxins12020086
5. Nekaris KA, Moore RS, Rode EJ, et al. Mad, bad and dangerous to know: the biochemistry, ecology and evolution of slow loris venom. J Venom Anim Toxins Incl Trop Dis. 2013;19(1):21. doi:10.1186/1678-9199-19-21
6. Ligabue-Braun R. Hello, kitty: could cat allergy be a form of intoxication? J Venom Anim Toxins Incl Trop Dis. 2020;26:e20200051. doi:10.1590/1678-9199-JVATITD-2020-0051
7. Pearce-Duvet JM. The origin of human pathogens: evaluating the role of agriculture and domestic animals in the evolution of human disease. Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2006;81(3):369-382. doi:10.1017/S1464793106007020
8. Jo WK, de Oliveira-Filho EF, Rasche A, et al. Potential zoonotic sources of SARS-CoV-2 infections. Transbound Emerg Dis. 2021;68(4):1824-1834. doi:10.1111/tbed.13872
9. Bell D, Roberton S, Hunter PR. Animal origins of SARS coronavirus: possible links with the international trade in small carnivores. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2004;359(1447):1107-1114. doi:10.1098/rstb.2004.1492

Disclosures

The authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this letter, or with manufacturers of competing products.

Continue to: Pramipexole for MDD

 

 

Pramipexole for MDD

I appreciate Dr. Espejo’s recommendations for treating patients who experience limited response from initial antidepressant therapy (“Treating major depressive disorder after limited response to an initial agent,” Current Psychiatry, October 2021, p. 51-53). I would like to add that pramipexole, a dopamine receptor agonist, can also alleviate depression. A meta-analysis concluded that patients receiving monotherapy or augmentation with pramipexole (mean maximum dose 1.62 mg/d) achieved response or remission of depression.1 In an observational study of 116 patients with unipolar or bipolar depression, nearly 75% experienced response and 66% achieved remission with pramipexole augmentation (median maximum dose 1.05 mg/d).2 Pramipexole is usually well-tolerated, although patients may experience nausea, somnolence, headache, and constipation, and they should be cautioned about the risk for compulsive behaviors and psychosis.

Jonathan R. Scarff, MD
Lexington VA Health Care System
Lexington, Kentucky

References

1. Tundo A, de Filippis R, De Crescenzo F. Pramipexole in the treatment of unipolar and bipolar depression. A systematic review and meta-analysis. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 2019;140(2):116-125.
2. Tundo A, Betrò S, Iommi M, et al. Efficacy and safety of 24-week pramipexole augmentation in patients with treatment resistant depression. A retrospective cohort study. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2022;112:110425. doi:10.1016/j.pnpbp.2021.110425

Disclosures

The author reports no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this letter, or with manufacturers of competing products.

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School shootings rose to highest number in 20 years, data shows

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Changed
Thu, 06/30/2022 - 07:38

School shootings from 2020 to 2021 climbed to the highest point in 2 decades, according to a new report from the National Center for Education Statistics and the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

There were 93 shootings with casualties at public and private K-12 schools across the United States from 2020 to 2021, as compared with 23 in the 2000-2001 school year. The latest number included 43 incidents with deaths.

The annual report, which examines crime and safety in schools and colleges, also found a rise in cyberbullying and verbal abuse or disrespect of teachers during the past decade.

“While the lasting impact of these crime and safety issues cannot be measured in statistics alone, these data are valuable to the efforts of our policymakers, school officials and community members to identify and implement preventive and responsive measures,” Peggy Carr, PhD, the commissioner for the National Center for Education Statistics, said in a statement.

The report used a broad definition of shootings, which included instances when guns were fired or flashed on school property, as well as when a bullet hit school grounds for any reason and shootings that happened on school property during remote instruction throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

More than 311,000 children at 331 schools have gone through gun violence since the shooting at Columbine High School in 1999, according to The Washington Post.

“The increase in shootings in schools is likely a consequence of an overall increase in gun violence and not specific to schools,” Dewey Cornell, PhD, a professor of education at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, told the newspaper.

“However, most schools will never have a shooting, and their main problems will be fighting and bullying,” he said.

Between 2009 and 2020, the rate of nonfatal criminal victimization, including theft and violent crimes, decreased for ages 12-18, the report found. The rate fell from 51 victimizations per 1,000 students to 11. A major portion of the decline happened during the first year of the pandemic.

Lower percentages of public schools reported certain issues from 2019 to 2020 than from 2009 to 2010, the report found. For instance, 15% of schools reported student bullying at least once a week, as compared with 23% a decade ago. Student sexual harassment of other students dropped from 3% to 2%, and student harassment of other students based on sexual orientation or gender identity dropped from 3% to 2%.

At the same time, teachers faced more hardships, the report found. Schools reporting verbal abuse of teachers at least once a week rose to 10% in the 2019-2020 school year, as compared with 5% in the 2009-2010 school year. Schools reporting acts of disrespect for teachers climbed from 9% to 15%.

The percentage of schools that reported cyberbullying at least once a week doubled during the decade, rising from 8% in 2009-2010 to 16% in 2019-2020, the report found. The prominence of social media has likely added to that increase, the Post reported.

What’s more, about 55% of public schools offered mental health assessments in 2019-2020, and 42% offered mental health treatment services, the report found. The low rates could be linked to not having enough funding or access to licensed professionals, the newspaper reported.

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

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School shootings from 2020 to 2021 climbed to the highest point in 2 decades, according to a new report from the National Center for Education Statistics and the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

There were 93 shootings with casualties at public and private K-12 schools across the United States from 2020 to 2021, as compared with 23 in the 2000-2001 school year. The latest number included 43 incidents with deaths.

The annual report, which examines crime and safety in schools and colleges, also found a rise in cyberbullying and verbal abuse or disrespect of teachers during the past decade.

“While the lasting impact of these crime and safety issues cannot be measured in statistics alone, these data are valuable to the efforts of our policymakers, school officials and community members to identify and implement preventive and responsive measures,” Peggy Carr, PhD, the commissioner for the National Center for Education Statistics, said in a statement.

The report used a broad definition of shootings, which included instances when guns were fired or flashed on school property, as well as when a bullet hit school grounds for any reason and shootings that happened on school property during remote instruction throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

More than 311,000 children at 331 schools have gone through gun violence since the shooting at Columbine High School in 1999, according to The Washington Post.

“The increase in shootings in schools is likely a consequence of an overall increase in gun violence and not specific to schools,” Dewey Cornell, PhD, a professor of education at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, told the newspaper.

“However, most schools will never have a shooting, and their main problems will be fighting and bullying,” he said.

Between 2009 and 2020, the rate of nonfatal criminal victimization, including theft and violent crimes, decreased for ages 12-18, the report found. The rate fell from 51 victimizations per 1,000 students to 11. A major portion of the decline happened during the first year of the pandemic.

Lower percentages of public schools reported certain issues from 2019 to 2020 than from 2009 to 2010, the report found. For instance, 15% of schools reported student bullying at least once a week, as compared with 23% a decade ago. Student sexual harassment of other students dropped from 3% to 2%, and student harassment of other students based on sexual orientation or gender identity dropped from 3% to 2%.

At the same time, teachers faced more hardships, the report found. Schools reporting verbal abuse of teachers at least once a week rose to 10% in the 2019-2020 school year, as compared with 5% in the 2009-2010 school year. Schools reporting acts of disrespect for teachers climbed from 9% to 15%.

The percentage of schools that reported cyberbullying at least once a week doubled during the decade, rising from 8% in 2009-2010 to 16% in 2019-2020, the report found. The prominence of social media has likely added to that increase, the Post reported.

What’s more, about 55% of public schools offered mental health assessments in 2019-2020, and 42% offered mental health treatment services, the report found. The low rates could be linked to not having enough funding or access to licensed professionals, the newspaper reported.

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

School shootings from 2020 to 2021 climbed to the highest point in 2 decades, according to a new report from the National Center for Education Statistics and the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

There were 93 shootings with casualties at public and private K-12 schools across the United States from 2020 to 2021, as compared with 23 in the 2000-2001 school year. The latest number included 43 incidents with deaths.

The annual report, which examines crime and safety in schools and colleges, also found a rise in cyberbullying and verbal abuse or disrespect of teachers during the past decade.

“While the lasting impact of these crime and safety issues cannot be measured in statistics alone, these data are valuable to the efforts of our policymakers, school officials and community members to identify and implement preventive and responsive measures,” Peggy Carr, PhD, the commissioner for the National Center for Education Statistics, said in a statement.

The report used a broad definition of shootings, which included instances when guns were fired or flashed on school property, as well as when a bullet hit school grounds for any reason and shootings that happened on school property during remote instruction throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

More than 311,000 children at 331 schools have gone through gun violence since the shooting at Columbine High School in 1999, according to The Washington Post.

“The increase in shootings in schools is likely a consequence of an overall increase in gun violence and not specific to schools,” Dewey Cornell, PhD, a professor of education at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, told the newspaper.

“However, most schools will never have a shooting, and their main problems will be fighting and bullying,” he said.

Between 2009 and 2020, the rate of nonfatal criminal victimization, including theft and violent crimes, decreased for ages 12-18, the report found. The rate fell from 51 victimizations per 1,000 students to 11. A major portion of the decline happened during the first year of the pandemic.

Lower percentages of public schools reported certain issues from 2019 to 2020 than from 2009 to 2010, the report found. For instance, 15% of schools reported student bullying at least once a week, as compared with 23% a decade ago. Student sexual harassment of other students dropped from 3% to 2%, and student harassment of other students based on sexual orientation or gender identity dropped from 3% to 2%.

At the same time, teachers faced more hardships, the report found. Schools reporting verbal abuse of teachers at least once a week rose to 10% in the 2019-2020 school year, as compared with 5% in the 2009-2010 school year. Schools reporting acts of disrespect for teachers climbed from 9% to 15%.

The percentage of schools that reported cyberbullying at least once a week doubled during the decade, rising from 8% in 2009-2010 to 16% in 2019-2020, the report found. The prominence of social media has likely added to that increase, the Post reported.

What’s more, about 55% of public schools offered mental health assessments in 2019-2020, and 42% offered mental health treatment services, the report found. The low rates could be linked to not having enough funding or access to licensed professionals, the newspaper reported.

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

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Suicide risk rises for cyberbullying victims

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Changed
Tue, 06/28/2022 - 14:13

Experiencing cyberbullying as a victim was a significant risk factor for suicidality in early adolescents aged 10-13 years, based on data from more than 10,000 individuals.

Adolescent suicidality, defined as suicidal ideation or suicide attempts, remains a major public health issue, Shay Arnon, MA, of Reichman University, Herzliya, Israel, and colleagues wrote.

Although cyberbullying experiences and perpetration have been associated with mental health issues, their roles as specific suicidality risk factors have not been explored, they said.

In a study published in JAMA Network Open, the researchers analyzed data on cyberbullying experiences collected between July 2018 and January 2021 as part of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, with a diverse population of young adolescents aged 10-13 years.

The study population included 10,414 participants; the mean age was 12 years, 47.6% were female.

Overall, 7.6% of the participants had reported suicidality during the study period. A total of 930 (8.9%) reported experiencing cyberbullying as victims, and 96 (0.9%) reported perpetrating cyberbullying; 66 (69%) of the perpetrators also experienced cyberbullying.

Experiencing cyberbullying was associated with a fourfold increased risk of suicidality (odds ratio, 4.2), that remained significant after controlling for factors including demographics and multiple environmental risk and protective factors, including negative life events, family conflict, parental monitoring, school environment, and racial/ethnic discrimination (OR, 2.5), and after controlling for internalizing and externalizing psychopathology (OR, 1.8).

Adolescents who were both target and perpetrator of offline peer aggression had an increased risk of suicidality (OR, 1.5 for both), and cyberbullying experiences also remained associated with suicidality when included with offline bullying as target and perpetrator (OR, 1.7).

The results contradict previous studies showing an increased risk of suicidality in cyberbullying perpetrators as well as victims, the researchers noted. Some possible reasons for this difference are the anonymity of many cyberbullying perpetrators, and the tendency of many adolescents on social media to make quick-turn comments without thinking of their actions as offensive to others.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design, which prevented conclusions about causality, a low-resolution screening for cyberbullying experiences, and the effect of unmeasured confounding variables, the researchers noted. Other limitations include the collection of data before the COVID-19 pandemic, so the effects of the pandemic on peer online communication and cyberbullying could not be determined.

However, the results suggest that experiencing cyberbullying is significantly associated with suicidality in young adolescents independent of other peer aggression experiences. “Assessment of cyberbullying experiences among children and adolescents should be a component of the comprehensive suicide risk assessment,” they concluded.
 

Pandemic pushed existing cyberbullying problems

“Electronic media use has increased significantly in the early adolescent demographic, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic,” Peter L. Loper Jr., MD, of the University of South Carolina, Columbia, said in an interview.

Dr. Peter L. Loper

“In many cases, the majority of an adolescent’s peer-peer interactions are now occurring on electronic devices. This has dramatically increased the incidence and prevalence of cyberbullying, making this study very timely and relevant,” said Dr. Loper, who was not involved in the study.

“From an experiential, ethnographic standpoint working on a psychiatric acute crisis stabilization unit, we have consistently recognized cyberbullying as a common and frequent etiology of suicidal ideation or attempt in the adolescents admitted to our unit,” said Dr. Loper. 

“Unfortunately, much of the peer-peer interactions vital to supporting healthy adolescent development are now occurring on electronic devices instead of real-time and in person,” said Dr. Loper. “This comes with great risk to our adolescents and makes them susceptible to multiple potential dangers, not the least of which is cyberbullying.

“The biggest challenge in mitigating the impact of cyberbullying is that most adolescences want to have access to electronic media,” he said. “Limiting adolescents’ access to electronic media, and monitoring adolescents’ electronic media use are vital steps to preventing cyberbullying. Apps such as ‘Bark’ can used by parents to monitor their adolescents’ electronic media activity to ensure their safety and well-being.”

Additional research is needed to focus on other areas in which electronic media use may be affecting adolescents’ social, emotional, and psychological well-being and development, “which will become more and more important as electronic media use in this demographic continues to increase,” Dr. Loper said.

The study was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health and the Lifespan Brain Institute of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Penn Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Loper had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Experiencing cyberbullying as a victim was a significant risk factor for suicidality in early adolescents aged 10-13 years, based on data from more than 10,000 individuals.

Adolescent suicidality, defined as suicidal ideation or suicide attempts, remains a major public health issue, Shay Arnon, MA, of Reichman University, Herzliya, Israel, and colleagues wrote.

Although cyberbullying experiences and perpetration have been associated with mental health issues, their roles as specific suicidality risk factors have not been explored, they said.

In a study published in JAMA Network Open, the researchers analyzed data on cyberbullying experiences collected between July 2018 and January 2021 as part of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, with a diverse population of young adolescents aged 10-13 years.

The study population included 10,414 participants; the mean age was 12 years, 47.6% were female.

Overall, 7.6% of the participants had reported suicidality during the study period. A total of 930 (8.9%) reported experiencing cyberbullying as victims, and 96 (0.9%) reported perpetrating cyberbullying; 66 (69%) of the perpetrators also experienced cyberbullying.

Experiencing cyberbullying was associated with a fourfold increased risk of suicidality (odds ratio, 4.2), that remained significant after controlling for factors including demographics and multiple environmental risk and protective factors, including negative life events, family conflict, parental monitoring, school environment, and racial/ethnic discrimination (OR, 2.5), and after controlling for internalizing and externalizing psychopathology (OR, 1.8).

Adolescents who were both target and perpetrator of offline peer aggression had an increased risk of suicidality (OR, 1.5 for both), and cyberbullying experiences also remained associated with suicidality when included with offline bullying as target and perpetrator (OR, 1.7).

The results contradict previous studies showing an increased risk of suicidality in cyberbullying perpetrators as well as victims, the researchers noted. Some possible reasons for this difference are the anonymity of many cyberbullying perpetrators, and the tendency of many adolescents on social media to make quick-turn comments without thinking of their actions as offensive to others.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design, which prevented conclusions about causality, a low-resolution screening for cyberbullying experiences, and the effect of unmeasured confounding variables, the researchers noted. Other limitations include the collection of data before the COVID-19 pandemic, so the effects of the pandemic on peer online communication and cyberbullying could not be determined.

However, the results suggest that experiencing cyberbullying is significantly associated with suicidality in young adolescents independent of other peer aggression experiences. “Assessment of cyberbullying experiences among children and adolescents should be a component of the comprehensive suicide risk assessment,” they concluded.
 

Pandemic pushed existing cyberbullying problems

“Electronic media use has increased significantly in the early adolescent demographic, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic,” Peter L. Loper Jr., MD, of the University of South Carolina, Columbia, said in an interview.

Dr. Peter L. Loper

“In many cases, the majority of an adolescent’s peer-peer interactions are now occurring on electronic devices. This has dramatically increased the incidence and prevalence of cyberbullying, making this study very timely and relevant,” said Dr. Loper, who was not involved in the study.

“From an experiential, ethnographic standpoint working on a psychiatric acute crisis stabilization unit, we have consistently recognized cyberbullying as a common and frequent etiology of suicidal ideation or attempt in the adolescents admitted to our unit,” said Dr. Loper. 

“Unfortunately, much of the peer-peer interactions vital to supporting healthy adolescent development are now occurring on electronic devices instead of real-time and in person,” said Dr. Loper. “This comes with great risk to our adolescents and makes them susceptible to multiple potential dangers, not the least of which is cyberbullying.

“The biggest challenge in mitigating the impact of cyberbullying is that most adolescences want to have access to electronic media,” he said. “Limiting adolescents’ access to electronic media, and monitoring adolescents’ electronic media use are vital steps to preventing cyberbullying. Apps such as ‘Bark’ can used by parents to monitor their adolescents’ electronic media activity to ensure their safety and well-being.”

Additional research is needed to focus on other areas in which electronic media use may be affecting adolescents’ social, emotional, and psychological well-being and development, “which will become more and more important as electronic media use in this demographic continues to increase,” Dr. Loper said.

The study was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health and the Lifespan Brain Institute of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Penn Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Loper had no financial conflicts to disclose.

Experiencing cyberbullying as a victim was a significant risk factor for suicidality in early adolescents aged 10-13 years, based on data from more than 10,000 individuals.

Adolescent suicidality, defined as suicidal ideation or suicide attempts, remains a major public health issue, Shay Arnon, MA, of Reichman University, Herzliya, Israel, and colleagues wrote.

Although cyberbullying experiences and perpetration have been associated with mental health issues, their roles as specific suicidality risk factors have not been explored, they said.

In a study published in JAMA Network Open, the researchers analyzed data on cyberbullying experiences collected between July 2018 and January 2021 as part of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, with a diverse population of young adolescents aged 10-13 years.

The study population included 10,414 participants; the mean age was 12 years, 47.6% were female.

Overall, 7.6% of the participants had reported suicidality during the study period. A total of 930 (8.9%) reported experiencing cyberbullying as victims, and 96 (0.9%) reported perpetrating cyberbullying; 66 (69%) of the perpetrators also experienced cyberbullying.

Experiencing cyberbullying was associated with a fourfold increased risk of suicidality (odds ratio, 4.2), that remained significant after controlling for factors including demographics and multiple environmental risk and protective factors, including negative life events, family conflict, parental monitoring, school environment, and racial/ethnic discrimination (OR, 2.5), and after controlling for internalizing and externalizing psychopathology (OR, 1.8).

Adolescents who were both target and perpetrator of offline peer aggression had an increased risk of suicidality (OR, 1.5 for both), and cyberbullying experiences also remained associated with suicidality when included with offline bullying as target and perpetrator (OR, 1.7).

The results contradict previous studies showing an increased risk of suicidality in cyberbullying perpetrators as well as victims, the researchers noted. Some possible reasons for this difference are the anonymity of many cyberbullying perpetrators, and the tendency of many adolescents on social media to make quick-turn comments without thinking of their actions as offensive to others.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design, which prevented conclusions about causality, a low-resolution screening for cyberbullying experiences, and the effect of unmeasured confounding variables, the researchers noted. Other limitations include the collection of data before the COVID-19 pandemic, so the effects of the pandemic on peer online communication and cyberbullying could not be determined.

However, the results suggest that experiencing cyberbullying is significantly associated with suicidality in young adolescents independent of other peer aggression experiences. “Assessment of cyberbullying experiences among children and adolescents should be a component of the comprehensive suicide risk assessment,” they concluded.
 

Pandemic pushed existing cyberbullying problems

“Electronic media use has increased significantly in the early adolescent demographic, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic,” Peter L. Loper Jr., MD, of the University of South Carolina, Columbia, said in an interview.

Dr. Peter L. Loper

“In many cases, the majority of an adolescent’s peer-peer interactions are now occurring on electronic devices. This has dramatically increased the incidence and prevalence of cyberbullying, making this study very timely and relevant,” said Dr. Loper, who was not involved in the study.

“From an experiential, ethnographic standpoint working on a psychiatric acute crisis stabilization unit, we have consistently recognized cyberbullying as a common and frequent etiology of suicidal ideation or attempt in the adolescents admitted to our unit,” said Dr. Loper. 

“Unfortunately, much of the peer-peer interactions vital to supporting healthy adolescent development are now occurring on electronic devices instead of real-time and in person,” said Dr. Loper. “This comes with great risk to our adolescents and makes them susceptible to multiple potential dangers, not the least of which is cyberbullying.

“The biggest challenge in mitigating the impact of cyberbullying is that most adolescences want to have access to electronic media,” he said. “Limiting adolescents’ access to electronic media, and monitoring adolescents’ electronic media use are vital steps to preventing cyberbullying. Apps such as ‘Bark’ can used by parents to monitor their adolescents’ electronic media activity to ensure their safety and well-being.”

Additional research is needed to focus on other areas in which electronic media use may be affecting adolescents’ social, emotional, and psychological well-being and development, “which will become more and more important as electronic media use in this demographic continues to increase,” Dr. Loper said.

The study was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health and the Lifespan Brain Institute of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Penn Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Loper had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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