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In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, American Academy of Pediatrics, and Children’s Hospital Association declared a national emergency in child and adolescent mental health. Additionally, the U.S. Surgeon General issued an advisory highlighting increased prevalence of mental health challenges in youth, impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, and recommendations to address this crisis.
The pandemic required youth to isolate from peers and community supports, navigate remote learning environments, and cope with grief and loss; some 140,000 children in the United States experienced the death of a caregiver due to COVID-19.1 Virtually every system that supports children was affected. Whereas schools have historically been a main provider of child and adolescent mental health services, delivery of many school-based mental health programs was disrupted by school closures and staffing challenges. Subgroups of children (for example, those with intellectual and developmental disabilities) were particularly affected by these disruptions to daily life, and their use of emergency services increased.2 Surges in psychiatric emergency department visits among children led to increased boarding, reflecting unleveraged opportunities for early intervention. Families faced changes in child care, economic uncertainty, educational responsibilities, and increased rates of domestic violence.3 Communities of color were disproportionately affected in every way, from disease mortality to learning loss and increased school dropout rates.
To address gaps in the system, we must leverage school-based mental health programs, bolster access to and support of primary care providers, and embrace new, innovative models.
School-based mental health programs
Schools may be an ideal setting for universal mental health screening and opportunities for training, leadership, and whole school interventions. There is promising evidence that school-based interventions can decrease the incidence of suicide attempts and increase help-seeking behavior in students.4 There has long been interest in mental health screening in schools, though it has not been widely implemented given the significant resources required to both facilitate screening and effectively serve students who need additional support. Mobile apps may be one solution to scalability of both screening and interventions, but these initiatives should only be implemented within a stakeholder-engaged, family-centered multi-tiered model of behavioral support.
Other school-based initiatives include providing advice and training to teachers and school counselors and increasing access to specialized mental health professionals, including school psychologists, social workers, nurses, and behavior support workers, as well as community-based mental health providers. The 2021 American Rescue Plan Act included $170 billion for school funding, which many schools used to hire mental health workers. The Student Mental Health Helpline Act, if passed, will create helplines to support teachers as they help students address mental health issues.5 Educators can be trained to identify mental health needs, addressing mild symptoms themselves and referring students requiring more specialized services. Specific training programs for educators include Classroom Well-Being Information and Strategies for Educators (WISE), Youth Mental Health First Aid, and other resources funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. In addition to educators, other non–mental health professions interfacing with youth, including other youth, parents, clergy, coaches, and other community members, can be empowered with additional behavioral health knowledge and skills.
Increasing capacity in primary care
A number of programs are designed to improve knowledge and skills in children’s mental health among primary care providers, such as pediatricians. In Project ECHO, a “hub” of specialists, typically at an academic medical center, provides didactic lectures and case presentations for primary care “spokes” using teleconferencing.6 The REACH Institute uses interactive group learning followed by ongoing coaching and case-based training.
Collaborative care models known as Child Psychiatry Access Programs (CPAPs) engage child and adolescent psychiatrists to support primary care management of psychiatric disorders. Consultations may be direct or indirect, and involve technology or in-person care. Available in most states, these models increase access to mental health care, expand the capacity of the existing workforce, and decrease stigma and inconvenience for patients. Collaborative care models have been shown to lead to improved patient and family satisfaction, reduced utilization of emergency room and inpatient hospitalizations, and improved clinical outcomes. Off-site integrated care models may additionally serve larger and more geographically dispersed populations, minimize changes to existing infrastructure, reduce travel costs for clinicians, and decrease isolation of specialists. These programs are feasible, desirable, and sustainable. There is currently no cost to patients for their primary care providers’ participation in these models, as they are supported by the state, local, or insurance payer sources in addition to federal funding. Financially sustainable models are essential to ensure equitable access to these services in the future.
New service models
For adolescents and young adults, integrated youth service hubs such as those that have emerged in Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada, and more recently in the United States may be particularly appealing. These hubs emphasize rapid access to care and early intervention, youth and family engagement, youth-friendly settings and services, evidence-informed approaches, and partnerships and collaboration.7 In addition to mental health, these “one-stop shops” offer physical health, vocational supports, and case management to support basic needs. They address a particular system gap by providing services for transition-age youth rather than cutting off at age 18, as many children’s mental health services do.
Emerging solutions to the high utilization of emergency departments for pediatric mental health needs include utilization of pediatric Crisis Stabilization Units (CSUs). CSUs are community-based, short-term outpatient units that provide immediate care to children and families experiencing a mental health crisis. The goal of CSUs is to quickly stabilize the individual – often within 72 hours – and refer that individual to available community resources. This model may also reduce police involvement in mental health crises, which may be particularly important for racialized populations.
Conclusion
The thoughtful implementation and stable funding of evidence-based models can help schools, the health care system, and communities more effectively support children’s mental health in the post–COVID-19 pandemic era. Only with sufficient investments in the mental health system and other systems designed to support children and families, as well as careful consideration of unintended consequences on equity-deserving populations, will we see an end to this crisis.
Dr. Richards is assistant clinical professor in the department of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences; program director of the child and adolescent psychiatry fellowship; and associate medical director of the perinatal program at the University of California, Los Angeles, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior.
References
1. Hillis SD et al. COVID-19–Associated orphanhood and caregiver death in the United States. Pediatrics. 2021;148:e2021053760.
2. Edgcomb JB et al. Mental health‐related emergency department visits among children during the early COVID‐19 pandemic. Psychiatr Res Clin Pract. 2022;4:4-11.
3. Pereda N, Díaz-Faes DA. Family violence against children in the wake of COVID-19 pandemic: A review of current perspectives and risk factors. Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health. 2020;4:40.
4. Gijzen MWM et al. Effectiveness of school-based preventive programs in suicidal thoughts and behaviors: A meta-analysis. Journal of Affective Disorders. 2022;298:408-420.
5. Newman M: H.R.5235 – 117th Congress (2021-2022): Student Mental Health Helpline Act of 2021 [Internet] 2021; [cited 2023 Jan 11] Available from: http://www.congress.gov.
6. Raney L et al. Digitally driven integrated primary care and behavioral health: How technology can expand access to effective treatment. Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2017;19:86.
7. Settipani CA et al. Key attributes of integrated community-based youth service hubs for mental health: A scoping review. Int J Ment Health Syst. 2019;13:52.
In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, American Academy of Pediatrics, and Children’s Hospital Association declared a national emergency in child and adolescent mental health. Additionally, the U.S. Surgeon General issued an advisory highlighting increased prevalence of mental health challenges in youth, impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, and recommendations to address this crisis.
The pandemic required youth to isolate from peers and community supports, navigate remote learning environments, and cope with grief and loss; some 140,000 children in the United States experienced the death of a caregiver due to COVID-19.1 Virtually every system that supports children was affected. Whereas schools have historically been a main provider of child and adolescent mental health services, delivery of many school-based mental health programs was disrupted by school closures and staffing challenges. Subgroups of children (for example, those with intellectual and developmental disabilities) were particularly affected by these disruptions to daily life, and their use of emergency services increased.2 Surges in psychiatric emergency department visits among children led to increased boarding, reflecting unleveraged opportunities for early intervention. Families faced changes in child care, economic uncertainty, educational responsibilities, and increased rates of domestic violence.3 Communities of color were disproportionately affected in every way, from disease mortality to learning loss and increased school dropout rates.
To address gaps in the system, we must leverage school-based mental health programs, bolster access to and support of primary care providers, and embrace new, innovative models.
School-based mental health programs
Schools may be an ideal setting for universal mental health screening and opportunities for training, leadership, and whole school interventions. There is promising evidence that school-based interventions can decrease the incidence of suicide attempts and increase help-seeking behavior in students.4 There has long been interest in mental health screening in schools, though it has not been widely implemented given the significant resources required to both facilitate screening and effectively serve students who need additional support. Mobile apps may be one solution to scalability of both screening and interventions, but these initiatives should only be implemented within a stakeholder-engaged, family-centered multi-tiered model of behavioral support.
Other school-based initiatives include providing advice and training to teachers and school counselors and increasing access to specialized mental health professionals, including school psychologists, social workers, nurses, and behavior support workers, as well as community-based mental health providers. The 2021 American Rescue Plan Act included $170 billion for school funding, which many schools used to hire mental health workers. The Student Mental Health Helpline Act, if passed, will create helplines to support teachers as they help students address mental health issues.5 Educators can be trained to identify mental health needs, addressing mild symptoms themselves and referring students requiring more specialized services. Specific training programs for educators include Classroom Well-Being Information and Strategies for Educators (WISE), Youth Mental Health First Aid, and other resources funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. In addition to educators, other non–mental health professions interfacing with youth, including other youth, parents, clergy, coaches, and other community members, can be empowered with additional behavioral health knowledge and skills.
Increasing capacity in primary care
A number of programs are designed to improve knowledge and skills in children’s mental health among primary care providers, such as pediatricians. In Project ECHO, a “hub” of specialists, typically at an academic medical center, provides didactic lectures and case presentations for primary care “spokes” using teleconferencing.6 The REACH Institute uses interactive group learning followed by ongoing coaching and case-based training.
Collaborative care models known as Child Psychiatry Access Programs (CPAPs) engage child and adolescent psychiatrists to support primary care management of psychiatric disorders. Consultations may be direct or indirect, and involve technology or in-person care. Available in most states, these models increase access to mental health care, expand the capacity of the existing workforce, and decrease stigma and inconvenience for patients. Collaborative care models have been shown to lead to improved patient and family satisfaction, reduced utilization of emergency room and inpatient hospitalizations, and improved clinical outcomes. Off-site integrated care models may additionally serve larger and more geographically dispersed populations, minimize changes to existing infrastructure, reduce travel costs for clinicians, and decrease isolation of specialists. These programs are feasible, desirable, and sustainable. There is currently no cost to patients for their primary care providers’ participation in these models, as they are supported by the state, local, or insurance payer sources in addition to federal funding. Financially sustainable models are essential to ensure equitable access to these services in the future.
New service models
For adolescents and young adults, integrated youth service hubs such as those that have emerged in Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada, and more recently in the United States may be particularly appealing. These hubs emphasize rapid access to care and early intervention, youth and family engagement, youth-friendly settings and services, evidence-informed approaches, and partnerships and collaboration.7 In addition to mental health, these “one-stop shops” offer physical health, vocational supports, and case management to support basic needs. They address a particular system gap by providing services for transition-age youth rather than cutting off at age 18, as many children’s mental health services do.
Emerging solutions to the high utilization of emergency departments for pediatric mental health needs include utilization of pediatric Crisis Stabilization Units (CSUs). CSUs are community-based, short-term outpatient units that provide immediate care to children and families experiencing a mental health crisis. The goal of CSUs is to quickly stabilize the individual – often within 72 hours – and refer that individual to available community resources. This model may also reduce police involvement in mental health crises, which may be particularly important for racialized populations.
Conclusion
The thoughtful implementation and stable funding of evidence-based models can help schools, the health care system, and communities more effectively support children’s mental health in the post–COVID-19 pandemic era. Only with sufficient investments in the mental health system and other systems designed to support children and families, as well as careful consideration of unintended consequences on equity-deserving populations, will we see an end to this crisis.
Dr. Richards is assistant clinical professor in the department of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences; program director of the child and adolescent psychiatry fellowship; and associate medical director of the perinatal program at the University of California, Los Angeles, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior.
References
1. Hillis SD et al. COVID-19–Associated orphanhood and caregiver death in the United States. Pediatrics. 2021;148:e2021053760.
2. Edgcomb JB et al. Mental health‐related emergency department visits among children during the early COVID‐19 pandemic. Psychiatr Res Clin Pract. 2022;4:4-11.
3. Pereda N, Díaz-Faes DA. Family violence against children in the wake of COVID-19 pandemic: A review of current perspectives and risk factors. Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health. 2020;4:40.
4. Gijzen MWM et al. Effectiveness of school-based preventive programs in suicidal thoughts and behaviors: A meta-analysis. Journal of Affective Disorders. 2022;298:408-420.
5. Newman M: H.R.5235 – 117th Congress (2021-2022): Student Mental Health Helpline Act of 2021 [Internet] 2021; [cited 2023 Jan 11] Available from: http://www.congress.gov.
6. Raney L et al. Digitally driven integrated primary care and behavioral health: How technology can expand access to effective treatment. Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2017;19:86.
7. Settipani CA et al. Key attributes of integrated community-based youth service hubs for mental health: A scoping review. Int J Ment Health Syst. 2019;13:52.
In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, American Academy of Pediatrics, and Children’s Hospital Association declared a national emergency in child and adolescent mental health. Additionally, the U.S. Surgeon General issued an advisory highlighting increased prevalence of mental health challenges in youth, impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, and recommendations to address this crisis.
The pandemic required youth to isolate from peers and community supports, navigate remote learning environments, and cope with grief and loss; some 140,000 children in the United States experienced the death of a caregiver due to COVID-19.1 Virtually every system that supports children was affected. Whereas schools have historically been a main provider of child and adolescent mental health services, delivery of many school-based mental health programs was disrupted by school closures and staffing challenges. Subgroups of children (for example, those with intellectual and developmental disabilities) were particularly affected by these disruptions to daily life, and their use of emergency services increased.2 Surges in psychiatric emergency department visits among children led to increased boarding, reflecting unleveraged opportunities for early intervention. Families faced changes in child care, economic uncertainty, educational responsibilities, and increased rates of domestic violence.3 Communities of color were disproportionately affected in every way, from disease mortality to learning loss and increased school dropout rates.
To address gaps in the system, we must leverage school-based mental health programs, bolster access to and support of primary care providers, and embrace new, innovative models.
School-based mental health programs
Schools may be an ideal setting for universal mental health screening and opportunities for training, leadership, and whole school interventions. There is promising evidence that school-based interventions can decrease the incidence of suicide attempts and increase help-seeking behavior in students.4 There has long been interest in mental health screening in schools, though it has not been widely implemented given the significant resources required to both facilitate screening and effectively serve students who need additional support. Mobile apps may be one solution to scalability of both screening and interventions, but these initiatives should only be implemented within a stakeholder-engaged, family-centered multi-tiered model of behavioral support.
Other school-based initiatives include providing advice and training to teachers and school counselors and increasing access to specialized mental health professionals, including school psychologists, social workers, nurses, and behavior support workers, as well as community-based mental health providers. The 2021 American Rescue Plan Act included $170 billion for school funding, which many schools used to hire mental health workers. The Student Mental Health Helpline Act, if passed, will create helplines to support teachers as they help students address mental health issues.5 Educators can be trained to identify mental health needs, addressing mild symptoms themselves and referring students requiring more specialized services. Specific training programs for educators include Classroom Well-Being Information and Strategies for Educators (WISE), Youth Mental Health First Aid, and other resources funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. In addition to educators, other non–mental health professions interfacing with youth, including other youth, parents, clergy, coaches, and other community members, can be empowered with additional behavioral health knowledge and skills.
Increasing capacity in primary care
A number of programs are designed to improve knowledge and skills in children’s mental health among primary care providers, such as pediatricians. In Project ECHO, a “hub” of specialists, typically at an academic medical center, provides didactic lectures and case presentations for primary care “spokes” using teleconferencing.6 The REACH Institute uses interactive group learning followed by ongoing coaching and case-based training.
Collaborative care models known as Child Psychiatry Access Programs (CPAPs) engage child and adolescent psychiatrists to support primary care management of psychiatric disorders. Consultations may be direct or indirect, and involve technology or in-person care. Available in most states, these models increase access to mental health care, expand the capacity of the existing workforce, and decrease stigma and inconvenience for patients. Collaborative care models have been shown to lead to improved patient and family satisfaction, reduced utilization of emergency room and inpatient hospitalizations, and improved clinical outcomes. Off-site integrated care models may additionally serve larger and more geographically dispersed populations, minimize changes to existing infrastructure, reduce travel costs for clinicians, and decrease isolation of specialists. These programs are feasible, desirable, and sustainable. There is currently no cost to patients for their primary care providers’ participation in these models, as they are supported by the state, local, or insurance payer sources in addition to federal funding. Financially sustainable models are essential to ensure equitable access to these services in the future.
New service models
For adolescents and young adults, integrated youth service hubs such as those that have emerged in Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada, and more recently in the United States may be particularly appealing. These hubs emphasize rapid access to care and early intervention, youth and family engagement, youth-friendly settings and services, evidence-informed approaches, and partnerships and collaboration.7 In addition to mental health, these “one-stop shops” offer physical health, vocational supports, and case management to support basic needs. They address a particular system gap by providing services for transition-age youth rather than cutting off at age 18, as many children’s mental health services do.
Emerging solutions to the high utilization of emergency departments for pediatric mental health needs include utilization of pediatric Crisis Stabilization Units (CSUs). CSUs are community-based, short-term outpatient units that provide immediate care to children and families experiencing a mental health crisis. The goal of CSUs is to quickly stabilize the individual – often within 72 hours – and refer that individual to available community resources. This model may also reduce police involvement in mental health crises, which may be particularly important for racialized populations.
Conclusion
The thoughtful implementation and stable funding of evidence-based models can help schools, the health care system, and communities more effectively support children’s mental health in the post–COVID-19 pandemic era. Only with sufficient investments in the mental health system and other systems designed to support children and families, as well as careful consideration of unintended consequences on equity-deserving populations, will we see an end to this crisis.
Dr. Richards is assistant clinical professor in the department of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences; program director of the child and adolescent psychiatry fellowship; and associate medical director of the perinatal program at the University of California, Los Angeles, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior.
References
1. Hillis SD et al. COVID-19–Associated orphanhood and caregiver death in the United States. Pediatrics. 2021;148:e2021053760.
2. Edgcomb JB et al. Mental health‐related emergency department visits among children during the early COVID‐19 pandemic. Psychiatr Res Clin Pract. 2022;4:4-11.
3. Pereda N, Díaz-Faes DA. Family violence against children in the wake of COVID-19 pandemic: A review of current perspectives and risk factors. Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health. 2020;4:40.
4. Gijzen MWM et al. Effectiveness of school-based preventive programs in suicidal thoughts and behaviors: A meta-analysis. Journal of Affective Disorders. 2022;298:408-420.
5. Newman M: H.R.5235 – 117th Congress (2021-2022): Student Mental Health Helpline Act of 2021 [Internet] 2021; [cited 2023 Jan 11] Available from: http://www.congress.gov.
6. Raney L et al. Digitally driven integrated primary care and behavioral health: How technology can expand access to effective treatment. Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2017;19:86.
7. Settipani CA et al. Key attributes of integrated community-based youth service hubs for mental health: A scoping review. Int J Ment Health Syst. 2019;13:52.
Stress, insomnia tied to increased AFib risk for older women
TOPLINE:
Eight psychosocial factors, grouped into two distinct clusters, are significantly associated with risk for atrial fibrillation in postmenopausal women, with insomnia and stressful life events (SLEs) being the most strongly associated with AFib, a large new study has found.
METHODOLOGY:
- In addition to traditional risk factors such as obesity, advanced age, ethnicity, smoking, alcohol, hypertension, diabetes, coronary artery disease, heart failure, and emotional and psychological distress may also affect AFib.
- The study included 83,736 postmenopausal women in the Women’s Health Initiative (mean age, 63.9 years; 88.1% White) who did not have AFib at baseline.
- From questionnaires, researchers collected information on psychosocial stressors and used hierarchical cluster analysis to identify patterns of psychosocial predictors.
- They separated these clusters into quartiles, identified associations between psychosocial exposure variables, and adjusted for traditional risk factors.
- Over an average follow-up of 10.5 years, 23,954 participants (28.6%) developed incident AFib.
TAKEAWAY:
- The analysis generated two clusters of distinct psychosocial variables that were significantly associated with AFib: the Stress Cluster, including SLEs, depressive symptoms, and insomnia; and the Strain Cluster, including three personality traits: optimism, cynical hostility, and emotional expressiveness; and two social measures: social support, and social strain.
- Those in the highest quartiles of both the Stress Cluster and the Strain Cluster had greater rates of AFib, compared with those in the lowest quartiles.
- In a final model, the association between SLEs (hazard ratio, 1.02; 95% confidence interval, 1.01-1.04) and insomnia (HR, 1.04; 95% CI, 1.03-1.06) were most strongly linked to increased incidence of AFib, and a sensitivity analysis using snoring as a surrogate marker for sleep apnea didn’t change this outcome, supporting the independent effect of insomnia on AFib.
- In subgroup analyses, the Stress Cluster had a stronger association with AFib incidence in younger (50-69 years) versus older women (70-79 years), and in non-Hispanic White and Asian women versus Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black women.
IN PRACTICE:
The results support the hypothesis that psychosocial predictors account for additional risk for AFib “above and beyond” traditional risk factors, the authors wrote. Identifying and addressing sex-specific, modifiable risk factors, including insomnia, “may help reduce the burden of AF[ib] in aging women.”
SOURCE:
The study was conducted by Susan X. Zhao, MD, division of cardiology, department of medicine, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, San Jose, Calif., and colleagues. It was published online in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
LIMITATIONS:
The psychometric questionnaires were administered only at study entry, but psychosocial variables may change over time. Data on sleep apnea and other sleep disorders, which may confound the relationship between insomnia and AFib, were not available, and although the study included a sensitivity analysis controlling for snoring, this is an imperfect surrogate for sleep apnea. Generalizability to other demographic, racial, and ethnic groups is limited.
DISCLOSURES:
The Women’s Health Initiative program is funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; and the Department of Health & Human Services. The authors have no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
Eight psychosocial factors, grouped into two distinct clusters, are significantly associated with risk for atrial fibrillation in postmenopausal women, with insomnia and stressful life events (SLEs) being the most strongly associated with AFib, a large new study has found.
METHODOLOGY:
- In addition to traditional risk factors such as obesity, advanced age, ethnicity, smoking, alcohol, hypertension, diabetes, coronary artery disease, heart failure, and emotional and psychological distress may also affect AFib.
- The study included 83,736 postmenopausal women in the Women’s Health Initiative (mean age, 63.9 years; 88.1% White) who did not have AFib at baseline.
- From questionnaires, researchers collected information on psychosocial stressors and used hierarchical cluster analysis to identify patterns of psychosocial predictors.
- They separated these clusters into quartiles, identified associations between psychosocial exposure variables, and adjusted for traditional risk factors.
- Over an average follow-up of 10.5 years, 23,954 participants (28.6%) developed incident AFib.
TAKEAWAY:
- The analysis generated two clusters of distinct psychosocial variables that were significantly associated with AFib: the Stress Cluster, including SLEs, depressive symptoms, and insomnia; and the Strain Cluster, including three personality traits: optimism, cynical hostility, and emotional expressiveness; and two social measures: social support, and social strain.
- Those in the highest quartiles of both the Stress Cluster and the Strain Cluster had greater rates of AFib, compared with those in the lowest quartiles.
- In a final model, the association between SLEs (hazard ratio, 1.02; 95% confidence interval, 1.01-1.04) and insomnia (HR, 1.04; 95% CI, 1.03-1.06) were most strongly linked to increased incidence of AFib, and a sensitivity analysis using snoring as a surrogate marker for sleep apnea didn’t change this outcome, supporting the independent effect of insomnia on AFib.
- In subgroup analyses, the Stress Cluster had a stronger association with AFib incidence in younger (50-69 years) versus older women (70-79 years), and in non-Hispanic White and Asian women versus Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black women.
IN PRACTICE:
The results support the hypothesis that psychosocial predictors account for additional risk for AFib “above and beyond” traditional risk factors, the authors wrote. Identifying and addressing sex-specific, modifiable risk factors, including insomnia, “may help reduce the burden of AF[ib] in aging women.”
SOURCE:
The study was conducted by Susan X. Zhao, MD, division of cardiology, department of medicine, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, San Jose, Calif., and colleagues. It was published online in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
LIMITATIONS:
The psychometric questionnaires were administered only at study entry, but psychosocial variables may change over time. Data on sleep apnea and other sleep disorders, which may confound the relationship between insomnia and AFib, were not available, and although the study included a sensitivity analysis controlling for snoring, this is an imperfect surrogate for sleep apnea. Generalizability to other demographic, racial, and ethnic groups is limited.
DISCLOSURES:
The Women’s Health Initiative program is funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; and the Department of Health & Human Services. The authors have no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
Eight psychosocial factors, grouped into two distinct clusters, are significantly associated with risk for atrial fibrillation in postmenopausal women, with insomnia and stressful life events (SLEs) being the most strongly associated with AFib, a large new study has found.
METHODOLOGY:
- In addition to traditional risk factors such as obesity, advanced age, ethnicity, smoking, alcohol, hypertension, diabetes, coronary artery disease, heart failure, and emotional and psychological distress may also affect AFib.
- The study included 83,736 postmenopausal women in the Women’s Health Initiative (mean age, 63.9 years; 88.1% White) who did not have AFib at baseline.
- From questionnaires, researchers collected information on psychosocial stressors and used hierarchical cluster analysis to identify patterns of psychosocial predictors.
- They separated these clusters into quartiles, identified associations between psychosocial exposure variables, and adjusted for traditional risk factors.
- Over an average follow-up of 10.5 years, 23,954 participants (28.6%) developed incident AFib.
TAKEAWAY:
- The analysis generated two clusters of distinct psychosocial variables that were significantly associated with AFib: the Stress Cluster, including SLEs, depressive symptoms, and insomnia; and the Strain Cluster, including three personality traits: optimism, cynical hostility, and emotional expressiveness; and two social measures: social support, and social strain.
- Those in the highest quartiles of both the Stress Cluster and the Strain Cluster had greater rates of AFib, compared with those in the lowest quartiles.
- In a final model, the association between SLEs (hazard ratio, 1.02; 95% confidence interval, 1.01-1.04) and insomnia (HR, 1.04; 95% CI, 1.03-1.06) were most strongly linked to increased incidence of AFib, and a sensitivity analysis using snoring as a surrogate marker for sleep apnea didn’t change this outcome, supporting the independent effect of insomnia on AFib.
- In subgroup analyses, the Stress Cluster had a stronger association with AFib incidence in younger (50-69 years) versus older women (70-79 years), and in non-Hispanic White and Asian women versus Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black women.
IN PRACTICE:
The results support the hypothesis that psychosocial predictors account for additional risk for AFib “above and beyond” traditional risk factors, the authors wrote. Identifying and addressing sex-specific, modifiable risk factors, including insomnia, “may help reduce the burden of AF[ib] in aging women.”
SOURCE:
The study was conducted by Susan X. Zhao, MD, division of cardiology, department of medicine, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, San Jose, Calif., and colleagues. It was published online in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
LIMITATIONS:
The psychometric questionnaires were administered only at study entry, but psychosocial variables may change over time. Data on sleep apnea and other sleep disorders, which may confound the relationship between insomnia and AFib, were not available, and although the study included a sensitivity analysis controlling for snoring, this is an imperfect surrogate for sleep apnea. Generalizability to other demographic, racial, and ethnic groups is limited.
DISCLOSURES:
The Women’s Health Initiative program is funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; and the Department of Health & Human Services. The authors have no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION
Service dogs help veterans with PTSD lead better lives
When Ryan (not his real name), 37, returned home from two deployments with the 101st Airborne Division in Iraq from 2005 to 2008, he began withdrawing from social situations and experienced chronic anxiety. Nights brought no respite – his sleep was interrupted by punishing nightmares.
“I had every calling card of a veteran in distress,” he said in an interview. When his wife told him she thought he may have posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), he shrugged it off. “I wasn’t automatically going to accept [the diagnosis] because as an infantry veteran, we’re big tough guys. We don’t need help with anything.”
The dogs, mostly recruited from rescue organizations, receive 5-7 months of specialized training to assist the veterans.
Life-changing help
While Ryan was skeptical about the program and whether it would work for him, he agreed to try it. After working with Bullet, a cream-colored golden retriever, he realized his life was improving.
“I stopped self-medicating, started advocating for myself, and became more comfortable socializing in public.” In his 3 years with Bullet, Ryan was able to work on his marriage, advance his career, and become a homeowner.
“The dreams I never thought were attainable started coming to fruition, and I was happy and comfortable for the first time in as long as I could remember.”
Unfortunately, Bullet died from a rare heart condition after a few years, and when that happened, NWBB immediately began working with Ryan to find him a new dog to fill the void left by Bullet.
Soon, Ryan began working with Twitch, who, like Bullet, knew when Ryan was becoming anxious, angry, or depressed before he did, he said.
“These dogs pick up on PTSD symptoms and come over and press themselves against you, push their faces into yours, and give you those big puppy dog eyes as if to say, ‘I got you. Everything is going to be okay.’ ”
The same thing happened when Ryan had night terrors and nightmares. “These dogs wake you up, and again, you’re greeted with this sweet puppy dog face.”
NWBB founder and CEO Shannon Walker, who has been training dogs for 25 years and whose father served in the U.S. Air Force in the 1950s, leads a 5-week training course for the veterans and their “battle buddies” so that the veterans can learn how to bond with and benefit from their new service dogs.
Finding the perfect match
Veterans are paired with trained service dogs based on their lifestyle and personality. For instance, a Vietnam veteran who is having trouble walking may be paired with a calm dog while a younger veteran who runs each morning is paired with a more active dog.
NWBB operates on funds from private donors and nonprofit organizations that make it financially feasible for the veterans to travel to Washington State and stay for the time required to train with their service dogs.
“Our service dogs are there in the midnight hour when no one else is,” she said. “Our veterans are fighting internal battles that no one else sees but the dogs. The dogs alert on their adrenaline and bring them back to the moment of now, interrupting suicidal ideations, panic attacks, and night terrors.”
Joshua Morganstein, MD, chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s Committee on the Psychiatric Dimensions of Disaster, said in an interview that “PTSD can be devastating for service members and veterans and is often associated with comorbid mental health conditions, such as anxiety and substance use.”
He noted that for many people, dogs and other animals can be an important source of physical, emotional, and psychological comfort.
“Programs like the Northwest Battle Buddies are important for us to study and better understand the extent to which trained animals are able to help alleviate the symptoms of PTSD and associated disorders and, perhaps most importantly, enhance the ability of service members and veterans to function and live in ways that feel healthy and productive to them,” said Dr. Morganstein.
He added that the concept of a “battle buddy” is a term pioneered by the U.S. Army in 2002 and describes a “formal, rather than ad hoc, system of peer support in which service members are assigned buddies.
“Buddies look out for each other, encourage self-care and self-advocacy and, when needed, help their buddy to seek help. Buddies remind us that someone is looking out for us and there is someone we look out for as well, both of which are protective during difficult times,” he said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
When Ryan (not his real name), 37, returned home from two deployments with the 101st Airborne Division in Iraq from 2005 to 2008, he began withdrawing from social situations and experienced chronic anxiety. Nights brought no respite – his sleep was interrupted by punishing nightmares.
“I had every calling card of a veteran in distress,” he said in an interview. When his wife told him she thought he may have posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), he shrugged it off. “I wasn’t automatically going to accept [the diagnosis] because as an infantry veteran, we’re big tough guys. We don’t need help with anything.”
The dogs, mostly recruited from rescue organizations, receive 5-7 months of specialized training to assist the veterans.
Life-changing help
While Ryan was skeptical about the program and whether it would work for him, he agreed to try it. After working with Bullet, a cream-colored golden retriever, he realized his life was improving.
“I stopped self-medicating, started advocating for myself, and became more comfortable socializing in public.” In his 3 years with Bullet, Ryan was able to work on his marriage, advance his career, and become a homeowner.
“The dreams I never thought were attainable started coming to fruition, and I was happy and comfortable for the first time in as long as I could remember.”
Unfortunately, Bullet died from a rare heart condition after a few years, and when that happened, NWBB immediately began working with Ryan to find him a new dog to fill the void left by Bullet.
Soon, Ryan began working with Twitch, who, like Bullet, knew when Ryan was becoming anxious, angry, or depressed before he did, he said.
“These dogs pick up on PTSD symptoms and come over and press themselves against you, push their faces into yours, and give you those big puppy dog eyes as if to say, ‘I got you. Everything is going to be okay.’ ”
The same thing happened when Ryan had night terrors and nightmares. “These dogs wake you up, and again, you’re greeted with this sweet puppy dog face.”
NWBB founder and CEO Shannon Walker, who has been training dogs for 25 years and whose father served in the U.S. Air Force in the 1950s, leads a 5-week training course for the veterans and their “battle buddies” so that the veterans can learn how to bond with and benefit from their new service dogs.
Finding the perfect match
Veterans are paired with trained service dogs based on their lifestyle and personality. For instance, a Vietnam veteran who is having trouble walking may be paired with a calm dog while a younger veteran who runs each morning is paired with a more active dog.
NWBB operates on funds from private donors and nonprofit organizations that make it financially feasible for the veterans to travel to Washington State and stay for the time required to train with their service dogs.
“Our service dogs are there in the midnight hour when no one else is,” she said. “Our veterans are fighting internal battles that no one else sees but the dogs. The dogs alert on their adrenaline and bring them back to the moment of now, interrupting suicidal ideations, panic attacks, and night terrors.”
Joshua Morganstein, MD, chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s Committee on the Psychiatric Dimensions of Disaster, said in an interview that “PTSD can be devastating for service members and veterans and is often associated with comorbid mental health conditions, such as anxiety and substance use.”
He noted that for many people, dogs and other animals can be an important source of physical, emotional, and psychological comfort.
“Programs like the Northwest Battle Buddies are important for us to study and better understand the extent to which trained animals are able to help alleviate the symptoms of PTSD and associated disorders and, perhaps most importantly, enhance the ability of service members and veterans to function and live in ways that feel healthy and productive to them,” said Dr. Morganstein.
He added that the concept of a “battle buddy” is a term pioneered by the U.S. Army in 2002 and describes a “formal, rather than ad hoc, system of peer support in which service members are assigned buddies.
“Buddies look out for each other, encourage self-care and self-advocacy and, when needed, help their buddy to seek help. Buddies remind us that someone is looking out for us and there is someone we look out for as well, both of which are protective during difficult times,” he said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
When Ryan (not his real name), 37, returned home from two deployments with the 101st Airborne Division in Iraq from 2005 to 2008, he began withdrawing from social situations and experienced chronic anxiety. Nights brought no respite – his sleep was interrupted by punishing nightmares.
“I had every calling card of a veteran in distress,” he said in an interview. When his wife told him she thought he may have posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), he shrugged it off. “I wasn’t automatically going to accept [the diagnosis] because as an infantry veteran, we’re big tough guys. We don’t need help with anything.”
The dogs, mostly recruited from rescue organizations, receive 5-7 months of specialized training to assist the veterans.
Life-changing help
While Ryan was skeptical about the program and whether it would work for him, he agreed to try it. After working with Bullet, a cream-colored golden retriever, he realized his life was improving.
“I stopped self-medicating, started advocating for myself, and became more comfortable socializing in public.” In his 3 years with Bullet, Ryan was able to work on his marriage, advance his career, and become a homeowner.
“The dreams I never thought were attainable started coming to fruition, and I was happy and comfortable for the first time in as long as I could remember.”
Unfortunately, Bullet died from a rare heart condition after a few years, and when that happened, NWBB immediately began working with Ryan to find him a new dog to fill the void left by Bullet.
Soon, Ryan began working with Twitch, who, like Bullet, knew when Ryan was becoming anxious, angry, or depressed before he did, he said.
“These dogs pick up on PTSD symptoms and come over and press themselves against you, push their faces into yours, and give you those big puppy dog eyes as if to say, ‘I got you. Everything is going to be okay.’ ”
The same thing happened when Ryan had night terrors and nightmares. “These dogs wake you up, and again, you’re greeted with this sweet puppy dog face.”
NWBB founder and CEO Shannon Walker, who has been training dogs for 25 years and whose father served in the U.S. Air Force in the 1950s, leads a 5-week training course for the veterans and their “battle buddies” so that the veterans can learn how to bond with and benefit from their new service dogs.
Finding the perfect match
Veterans are paired with trained service dogs based on their lifestyle and personality. For instance, a Vietnam veteran who is having trouble walking may be paired with a calm dog while a younger veteran who runs each morning is paired with a more active dog.
NWBB operates on funds from private donors and nonprofit organizations that make it financially feasible for the veterans to travel to Washington State and stay for the time required to train with their service dogs.
“Our service dogs are there in the midnight hour when no one else is,” she said. “Our veterans are fighting internal battles that no one else sees but the dogs. The dogs alert on their adrenaline and bring them back to the moment of now, interrupting suicidal ideations, panic attacks, and night terrors.”
Joshua Morganstein, MD, chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s Committee on the Psychiatric Dimensions of Disaster, said in an interview that “PTSD can be devastating for service members and veterans and is often associated with comorbid mental health conditions, such as anxiety and substance use.”
He noted that for many people, dogs and other animals can be an important source of physical, emotional, and psychological comfort.
“Programs like the Northwest Battle Buddies are important for us to study and better understand the extent to which trained animals are able to help alleviate the symptoms of PTSD and associated disorders and, perhaps most importantly, enhance the ability of service members and veterans to function and live in ways that feel healthy and productive to them,” said Dr. Morganstein.
He added that the concept of a “battle buddy” is a term pioneered by the U.S. Army in 2002 and describes a “formal, rather than ad hoc, system of peer support in which service members are assigned buddies.
“Buddies look out for each other, encourage self-care and self-advocacy and, when needed, help their buddy to seek help. Buddies remind us that someone is looking out for us and there is someone we look out for as well, both of which are protective during difficult times,” he said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Probing the link between GERD and anxiety and depression
Anxiety and depression are prevalent in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), according to a large-scale analysis that also found evidence for a possible underlying causal link between GERD and the common psychiatric conditions.
In a systematic review and meta-analysis, researchers found that anxiety and depressive symptoms were more than twice as likely in patients with GERD than in healthy controls. Among individuals with GERD, up to one-third and one-fourth were affected by anxiety and depressive symptoms, respectively.
Moreover, a Mendelian randomization analysis suggested that a genetic risk for GERD increased the risk of developing depression or anxiety and vice versa.
A genetic predisposition seems to underlie GERD and anxiety or depression, said Nicholas J. Talley, MD, PhD, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, Australia, and corresponding author of the review, published online in the American Journal of Gastroenterology.
Scientifically, the possible underlying link “suggests there are different disease subsets within reflux that probably have a different pathogenesis, and these relationships are an expression of whatever the underlying causal pathways are,” Dr. Talley told this news organization.
Clinically, “if you’ve got a patient with reflux, you should be asking one or two questions about anxiety and particularly depression ... because it may impact on how well patients respond to therapy, and how well they do in the longer term,” Dr. Talley said.
A deeper look
In the review, the authors note that GERD affects about 15% of the general population worldwide and has a negative impact on the health-related quality of life.
The pathogenesis is complex and may be associated with psychological distress alongside the well-known predisposing anatomical factors, aggravated by lifestyle factors such as obesity and smoking.
Individual studies examining the association between GERD and the prevalence of anxiety or depressive symptoms have had mixed results, “perhaps limited by heterogeneous study design, the severity of disease included, and diagnostic criteria for depression and anxiety,” the researchers wrote.
They therefore set out to perform a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the issue in greater depth. They looked at three primary outcomes – the prevalence of symptoms of anxiety and depression in individuals with GERD, the epidemiological risk of developing GERD in people with anxiety or depression and vice versa, and the cause-and-effect relationship between anxiety or depression and GERD.
They searched the Embase, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases, and found 36 eligible studies published between 2003 and 2023.
Of the total, 30 were observational studies that examined the prevalence of anxiety and/or depressive symptoms using validated questionnaires in ≥ 100 individuals aged 18 years or older.
These included 26 studies of anxiety symptoms among 10,378 individuals with GERD, 30 that looked at depressive symptoms among 14,030 subjects with GERD, and four that reported the prevalence of simultaneous anxiety and depressive symptoms in 3,878 patients with GERD. Some studies were population based and others were hospital based. The extracted data were combined using a random-effects model.
The overall pooled analyses revealed a prevalence of anxiety symptoms of 34.4% among individuals with GERD, at an adjusted odds ratio versus healthy controls of 4.46 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.94-10.25).
The pooled prevalence of depressive symptoms among those with GERD was 24.2%, at an adjusted odds ratio compared with healthy controls of 2.56 (95% CI, 1.11-5.87).
The pooled prevalence of simultaneous anxiety and depression in people with GERD was 22.3% (95% CI, 7.0-37.7).
Next, the team added three cohort studies that explored the risk for GERD in individuals with anxiety or depression in the vice versa scenario, as well as three Mendelian randomization studies that assessed the cause-and-effect relationship between anxiety or depression and GERD.
The cohort studies could not be pooled, but individuals with depression had a significantly increased risk for GERD versus those without depression, at an adjusted odds ratio in one study of 2.01 (95% CI, 1.96-2.07) and an adjusted hazard ratio in another study of 1.72 (95% CI, 1.60-1.85). A similar pattern was seen for anxiety.
The Mendelian randomization studies suggested that a genetic risk for depression was associated with an increased risk of developing GERD, at an odds ratio of 1.36 (95% CI, 1.21-1.51), and that a genetic risk for GERD was linked to an increased risk of developing depression, at an odds ratio of 1.30 (95% CI, 1.17-1.43).
One study reported a similar effect of a genetic risk for GERD on the risk for anxiety.
“We don’t really know what causes reflux disease. We know the pathophysiology, but we don’t really know what the etiology is, and depression is the same,” Dr. Talley noted. “It’s obviously thought to be a brain disease, but sometimes it might be coming from the gut as well, for all we know, and there is certainly evidence for that.”
The ‘chicken and egg’ question
Experts welcomed the findings, saying they supported their observations and validated the idea of looking outside the gut for complicating factors in patients with GERD, but some questioned the clinical relevance of the Mendelian randomization.
Approached for comment, Amir E. Masoud, MD, medical codirector, Hartford HealthCare Neurogastroenterology and Motility Center, Fairfield, Conn., said the study’s most important contribution is increased recognition of the connection between GERD and anxiety or depression.
“There is a psychological component” to GERD, he said, and it is an “important area for investigation and possible intervention for patients who don’t respond to traditional therapies.”
Dr. Masoud singled out the study design. The researchers “tried to tee this up with something we’ve always thought about,” he told this news organization, referring to the “chicken and egg” question about the relationship between GERD and anxiety or depressive symptoms.
As such, it provides evidence for a common observation in the clinic, he said. “A lot of times, when a therapy that should work does not work for something like GERD, for example, we tend to think of psychological factors that could be playing a role.”
No longer a taboo topic
Rena Yadlapati, MD, medical director, Center for Esophageal Diseases, UC San Diego Health, told this news organization that the study is “validating, in terms of the conversations with patients and some of the nontraditional methods we are trying to explore in their management.”
She noted the bidirectional relationship revealed by the Mendelian randomization, but cautioned that the approach relied on a small number of studies and hasn’t been utilized in gastroenterology as much as in other fields.
“We need to understand that this is hypothesis generating, and there are probably some important limitations,” she added, even if the results “certainly make sense.”
From a clinical perspective, the idea of anxiety or depression being linked to GERD has been a “taboo topic” for a long time, Dr. Yadlapati said.
“But if we can effectively communicate that relationship between the brain and gut and this whole cyclical process [to patients], there’s power to gain patient insight and engagement.”
Another key aspect is to consider a psychological referral for patients, as well as engaging them with “simple things like relaxation strategies and diaphragmatic breathing and referring them to people who can do cognitive behavioral therapy.”
Dr. Yadlapati emphasized that “it doesn’t necessarily have to be a psychologist. There are a lot of other ways to provide that access to patients.”
Practical clinical implications
Philip O. Katz, MD, director of motility laboratories, division of gastroenterology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, said that the study, like many of its kind, reinforces that there are multiple cofactors associated with managing patients with reflux disease.
As for the bidirectional relationship identified through the Mendelian randomization, he was skeptical about its clinical value and pointed out that the odds ratios are “relatively small.”
“It is commonplace for people to look for genetic predispositions to a lot of disease,” Katz told Medscape Medical News, but, “in clinical practice, I don’t believe that it’s particularly meaningful, to be honest.”
However, there is no doubt that GERD symptoms are augmented by times of what is generically called “stress,” he added.
“Regardless of those findings, it doesn’t change the way I view the importance of this article, which is when someone’s not responding to medication to look for reasons other than the original diagnosis,” Dr. Katz said.
“There is so much overlap between true GERD and symptoms that sound like GERD” that clinicians need “to be aware that both anxiety and depression are cofactors,” he said.
Dr. Talley is supported by funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) to the Centre of Research Excellence in Digestive Health, and he holds an NHMRC Investigator grant. He declared relationships with Norgine, Bristol Myers Squibb, Allakos, Bayer, Planet Innovation, twoXAR, Viscera Labs, Dr Falk Pharma, Sanofi, Glutagen, ISOVive, BluMaiden, Rose Pharma, Intrinsic Medicine, Comvita Manuka Honey, GlaxoSmithKline Australia, and AstraZeneca; and holds numerous patents. Dr. Masoud declared no relevant relationships. Dr. Yadlapati declared relationships with Medtronic, Phathom Pharmaceuticals, Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, and RJS Mediagnostix. Dr. Katz declared relationships with Phathom Pharma, Sebella, and Syneos.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Anxiety and depression are prevalent in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), according to a large-scale analysis that also found evidence for a possible underlying causal link between GERD and the common psychiatric conditions.
In a systematic review and meta-analysis, researchers found that anxiety and depressive symptoms were more than twice as likely in patients with GERD than in healthy controls. Among individuals with GERD, up to one-third and one-fourth were affected by anxiety and depressive symptoms, respectively.
Moreover, a Mendelian randomization analysis suggested that a genetic risk for GERD increased the risk of developing depression or anxiety and vice versa.
A genetic predisposition seems to underlie GERD and anxiety or depression, said Nicholas J. Talley, MD, PhD, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, Australia, and corresponding author of the review, published online in the American Journal of Gastroenterology.
Scientifically, the possible underlying link “suggests there are different disease subsets within reflux that probably have a different pathogenesis, and these relationships are an expression of whatever the underlying causal pathways are,” Dr. Talley told this news organization.
Clinically, “if you’ve got a patient with reflux, you should be asking one or two questions about anxiety and particularly depression ... because it may impact on how well patients respond to therapy, and how well they do in the longer term,” Dr. Talley said.
A deeper look
In the review, the authors note that GERD affects about 15% of the general population worldwide and has a negative impact on the health-related quality of life.
The pathogenesis is complex and may be associated with psychological distress alongside the well-known predisposing anatomical factors, aggravated by lifestyle factors such as obesity and smoking.
Individual studies examining the association between GERD and the prevalence of anxiety or depressive symptoms have had mixed results, “perhaps limited by heterogeneous study design, the severity of disease included, and diagnostic criteria for depression and anxiety,” the researchers wrote.
They therefore set out to perform a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the issue in greater depth. They looked at three primary outcomes – the prevalence of symptoms of anxiety and depression in individuals with GERD, the epidemiological risk of developing GERD in people with anxiety or depression and vice versa, and the cause-and-effect relationship between anxiety or depression and GERD.
They searched the Embase, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases, and found 36 eligible studies published between 2003 and 2023.
Of the total, 30 were observational studies that examined the prevalence of anxiety and/or depressive symptoms using validated questionnaires in ≥ 100 individuals aged 18 years or older.
These included 26 studies of anxiety symptoms among 10,378 individuals with GERD, 30 that looked at depressive symptoms among 14,030 subjects with GERD, and four that reported the prevalence of simultaneous anxiety and depressive symptoms in 3,878 patients with GERD. Some studies were population based and others were hospital based. The extracted data were combined using a random-effects model.
The overall pooled analyses revealed a prevalence of anxiety symptoms of 34.4% among individuals with GERD, at an adjusted odds ratio versus healthy controls of 4.46 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.94-10.25).
The pooled prevalence of depressive symptoms among those with GERD was 24.2%, at an adjusted odds ratio compared with healthy controls of 2.56 (95% CI, 1.11-5.87).
The pooled prevalence of simultaneous anxiety and depression in people with GERD was 22.3% (95% CI, 7.0-37.7).
Next, the team added three cohort studies that explored the risk for GERD in individuals with anxiety or depression in the vice versa scenario, as well as three Mendelian randomization studies that assessed the cause-and-effect relationship between anxiety or depression and GERD.
The cohort studies could not be pooled, but individuals with depression had a significantly increased risk for GERD versus those without depression, at an adjusted odds ratio in one study of 2.01 (95% CI, 1.96-2.07) and an adjusted hazard ratio in another study of 1.72 (95% CI, 1.60-1.85). A similar pattern was seen for anxiety.
The Mendelian randomization studies suggested that a genetic risk for depression was associated with an increased risk of developing GERD, at an odds ratio of 1.36 (95% CI, 1.21-1.51), and that a genetic risk for GERD was linked to an increased risk of developing depression, at an odds ratio of 1.30 (95% CI, 1.17-1.43).
One study reported a similar effect of a genetic risk for GERD on the risk for anxiety.
“We don’t really know what causes reflux disease. We know the pathophysiology, but we don’t really know what the etiology is, and depression is the same,” Dr. Talley noted. “It’s obviously thought to be a brain disease, but sometimes it might be coming from the gut as well, for all we know, and there is certainly evidence for that.”
The ‘chicken and egg’ question
Experts welcomed the findings, saying they supported their observations and validated the idea of looking outside the gut for complicating factors in patients with GERD, but some questioned the clinical relevance of the Mendelian randomization.
Approached for comment, Amir E. Masoud, MD, medical codirector, Hartford HealthCare Neurogastroenterology and Motility Center, Fairfield, Conn., said the study’s most important contribution is increased recognition of the connection between GERD and anxiety or depression.
“There is a psychological component” to GERD, he said, and it is an “important area for investigation and possible intervention for patients who don’t respond to traditional therapies.”
Dr. Masoud singled out the study design. The researchers “tried to tee this up with something we’ve always thought about,” he told this news organization, referring to the “chicken and egg” question about the relationship between GERD and anxiety or depressive symptoms.
As such, it provides evidence for a common observation in the clinic, he said. “A lot of times, when a therapy that should work does not work for something like GERD, for example, we tend to think of psychological factors that could be playing a role.”
No longer a taboo topic
Rena Yadlapati, MD, medical director, Center for Esophageal Diseases, UC San Diego Health, told this news organization that the study is “validating, in terms of the conversations with patients and some of the nontraditional methods we are trying to explore in their management.”
She noted the bidirectional relationship revealed by the Mendelian randomization, but cautioned that the approach relied on a small number of studies and hasn’t been utilized in gastroenterology as much as in other fields.
“We need to understand that this is hypothesis generating, and there are probably some important limitations,” she added, even if the results “certainly make sense.”
From a clinical perspective, the idea of anxiety or depression being linked to GERD has been a “taboo topic” for a long time, Dr. Yadlapati said.
“But if we can effectively communicate that relationship between the brain and gut and this whole cyclical process [to patients], there’s power to gain patient insight and engagement.”
Another key aspect is to consider a psychological referral for patients, as well as engaging them with “simple things like relaxation strategies and diaphragmatic breathing and referring them to people who can do cognitive behavioral therapy.”
Dr. Yadlapati emphasized that “it doesn’t necessarily have to be a psychologist. There are a lot of other ways to provide that access to patients.”
Practical clinical implications
Philip O. Katz, MD, director of motility laboratories, division of gastroenterology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, said that the study, like many of its kind, reinforces that there are multiple cofactors associated with managing patients with reflux disease.
As for the bidirectional relationship identified through the Mendelian randomization, he was skeptical about its clinical value and pointed out that the odds ratios are “relatively small.”
“It is commonplace for people to look for genetic predispositions to a lot of disease,” Katz told Medscape Medical News, but, “in clinical practice, I don’t believe that it’s particularly meaningful, to be honest.”
However, there is no doubt that GERD symptoms are augmented by times of what is generically called “stress,” he added.
“Regardless of those findings, it doesn’t change the way I view the importance of this article, which is when someone’s not responding to medication to look for reasons other than the original diagnosis,” Dr. Katz said.
“There is so much overlap between true GERD and symptoms that sound like GERD” that clinicians need “to be aware that both anxiety and depression are cofactors,” he said.
Dr. Talley is supported by funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) to the Centre of Research Excellence in Digestive Health, and he holds an NHMRC Investigator grant. He declared relationships with Norgine, Bristol Myers Squibb, Allakos, Bayer, Planet Innovation, twoXAR, Viscera Labs, Dr Falk Pharma, Sanofi, Glutagen, ISOVive, BluMaiden, Rose Pharma, Intrinsic Medicine, Comvita Manuka Honey, GlaxoSmithKline Australia, and AstraZeneca; and holds numerous patents. Dr. Masoud declared no relevant relationships. Dr. Yadlapati declared relationships with Medtronic, Phathom Pharmaceuticals, Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, and RJS Mediagnostix. Dr. Katz declared relationships with Phathom Pharma, Sebella, and Syneos.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Anxiety and depression are prevalent in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), according to a large-scale analysis that also found evidence for a possible underlying causal link between GERD and the common psychiatric conditions.
In a systematic review and meta-analysis, researchers found that anxiety and depressive symptoms were more than twice as likely in patients with GERD than in healthy controls. Among individuals with GERD, up to one-third and one-fourth were affected by anxiety and depressive symptoms, respectively.
Moreover, a Mendelian randomization analysis suggested that a genetic risk for GERD increased the risk of developing depression or anxiety and vice versa.
A genetic predisposition seems to underlie GERD and anxiety or depression, said Nicholas J. Talley, MD, PhD, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, Australia, and corresponding author of the review, published online in the American Journal of Gastroenterology.
Scientifically, the possible underlying link “suggests there are different disease subsets within reflux that probably have a different pathogenesis, and these relationships are an expression of whatever the underlying causal pathways are,” Dr. Talley told this news organization.
Clinically, “if you’ve got a patient with reflux, you should be asking one or two questions about anxiety and particularly depression ... because it may impact on how well patients respond to therapy, and how well they do in the longer term,” Dr. Talley said.
A deeper look
In the review, the authors note that GERD affects about 15% of the general population worldwide and has a negative impact on the health-related quality of life.
The pathogenesis is complex and may be associated with psychological distress alongside the well-known predisposing anatomical factors, aggravated by lifestyle factors such as obesity and smoking.
Individual studies examining the association between GERD and the prevalence of anxiety or depressive symptoms have had mixed results, “perhaps limited by heterogeneous study design, the severity of disease included, and diagnostic criteria for depression and anxiety,” the researchers wrote.
They therefore set out to perform a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the issue in greater depth. They looked at three primary outcomes – the prevalence of symptoms of anxiety and depression in individuals with GERD, the epidemiological risk of developing GERD in people with anxiety or depression and vice versa, and the cause-and-effect relationship between anxiety or depression and GERD.
They searched the Embase, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases, and found 36 eligible studies published between 2003 and 2023.
Of the total, 30 were observational studies that examined the prevalence of anxiety and/or depressive symptoms using validated questionnaires in ≥ 100 individuals aged 18 years or older.
These included 26 studies of anxiety symptoms among 10,378 individuals with GERD, 30 that looked at depressive symptoms among 14,030 subjects with GERD, and four that reported the prevalence of simultaneous anxiety and depressive symptoms in 3,878 patients with GERD. Some studies were population based and others were hospital based. The extracted data were combined using a random-effects model.
The overall pooled analyses revealed a prevalence of anxiety symptoms of 34.4% among individuals with GERD, at an adjusted odds ratio versus healthy controls of 4.46 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.94-10.25).
The pooled prevalence of depressive symptoms among those with GERD was 24.2%, at an adjusted odds ratio compared with healthy controls of 2.56 (95% CI, 1.11-5.87).
The pooled prevalence of simultaneous anxiety and depression in people with GERD was 22.3% (95% CI, 7.0-37.7).
Next, the team added three cohort studies that explored the risk for GERD in individuals with anxiety or depression in the vice versa scenario, as well as three Mendelian randomization studies that assessed the cause-and-effect relationship between anxiety or depression and GERD.
The cohort studies could not be pooled, but individuals with depression had a significantly increased risk for GERD versus those without depression, at an adjusted odds ratio in one study of 2.01 (95% CI, 1.96-2.07) and an adjusted hazard ratio in another study of 1.72 (95% CI, 1.60-1.85). A similar pattern was seen for anxiety.
The Mendelian randomization studies suggested that a genetic risk for depression was associated with an increased risk of developing GERD, at an odds ratio of 1.36 (95% CI, 1.21-1.51), and that a genetic risk for GERD was linked to an increased risk of developing depression, at an odds ratio of 1.30 (95% CI, 1.17-1.43).
One study reported a similar effect of a genetic risk for GERD on the risk for anxiety.
“We don’t really know what causes reflux disease. We know the pathophysiology, but we don’t really know what the etiology is, and depression is the same,” Dr. Talley noted. “It’s obviously thought to be a brain disease, but sometimes it might be coming from the gut as well, for all we know, and there is certainly evidence for that.”
The ‘chicken and egg’ question
Experts welcomed the findings, saying they supported their observations and validated the idea of looking outside the gut for complicating factors in patients with GERD, but some questioned the clinical relevance of the Mendelian randomization.
Approached for comment, Amir E. Masoud, MD, medical codirector, Hartford HealthCare Neurogastroenterology and Motility Center, Fairfield, Conn., said the study’s most important contribution is increased recognition of the connection between GERD and anxiety or depression.
“There is a psychological component” to GERD, he said, and it is an “important area for investigation and possible intervention for patients who don’t respond to traditional therapies.”
Dr. Masoud singled out the study design. The researchers “tried to tee this up with something we’ve always thought about,” he told this news organization, referring to the “chicken and egg” question about the relationship between GERD and anxiety or depressive symptoms.
As such, it provides evidence for a common observation in the clinic, he said. “A lot of times, when a therapy that should work does not work for something like GERD, for example, we tend to think of psychological factors that could be playing a role.”
No longer a taboo topic
Rena Yadlapati, MD, medical director, Center for Esophageal Diseases, UC San Diego Health, told this news organization that the study is “validating, in terms of the conversations with patients and some of the nontraditional methods we are trying to explore in their management.”
She noted the bidirectional relationship revealed by the Mendelian randomization, but cautioned that the approach relied on a small number of studies and hasn’t been utilized in gastroenterology as much as in other fields.
“We need to understand that this is hypothesis generating, and there are probably some important limitations,” she added, even if the results “certainly make sense.”
From a clinical perspective, the idea of anxiety or depression being linked to GERD has been a “taboo topic” for a long time, Dr. Yadlapati said.
“But if we can effectively communicate that relationship between the brain and gut and this whole cyclical process [to patients], there’s power to gain patient insight and engagement.”
Another key aspect is to consider a psychological referral for patients, as well as engaging them with “simple things like relaxation strategies and diaphragmatic breathing and referring them to people who can do cognitive behavioral therapy.”
Dr. Yadlapati emphasized that “it doesn’t necessarily have to be a psychologist. There are a lot of other ways to provide that access to patients.”
Practical clinical implications
Philip O. Katz, MD, director of motility laboratories, division of gastroenterology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, said that the study, like many of its kind, reinforces that there are multiple cofactors associated with managing patients with reflux disease.
As for the bidirectional relationship identified through the Mendelian randomization, he was skeptical about its clinical value and pointed out that the odds ratios are “relatively small.”
“It is commonplace for people to look for genetic predispositions to a lot of disease,” Katz told Medscape Medical News, but, “in clinical practice, I don’t believe that it’s particularly meaningful, to be honest.”
However, there is no doubt that GERD symptoms are augmented by times of what is generically called “stress,” he added.
“Regardless of those findings, it doesn’t change the way I view the importance of this article, which is when someone’s not responding to medication to look for reasons other than the original diagnosis,” Dr. Katz said.
“There is so much overlap between true GERD and symptoms that sound like GERD” that clinicians need “to be aware that both anxiety and depression are cofactors,” he said.
Dr. Talley is supported by funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) to the Centre of Research Excellence in Digestive Health, and he holds an NHMRC Investigator grant. He declared relationships with Norgine, Bristol Myers Squibb, Allakos, Bayer, Planet Innovation, twoXAR, Viscera Labs, Dr Falk Pharma, Sanofi, Glutagen, ISOVive, BluMaiden, Rose Pharma, Intrinsic Medicine, Comvita Manuka Honey, GlaxoSmithKline Australia, and AstraZeneca; and holds numerous patents. Dr. Masoud declared no relevant relationships. Dr. Yadlapati declared relationships with Medtronic, Phathom Pharmaceuticals, Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, and RJS Mediagnostix. Dr. Katz declared relationships with Phathom Pharma, Sebella, and Syneos.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Navigating chronic cough in primary care
Chronic cough took center stage at the European Respiratory Society Congress session titled “Conditions We Are Just Dealing With the Tip of the Iceberg in Primary Care: Frequently Mismanaged Conditions in Primary Health Care.”
“When it comes to chronic cough, general practitioners often feel lost,” Miguel Román Rodríguez, family doctor and an associate professor of family medicine at the University of the Balearic Islands, Palma, Mallorca, Spain, and one of the chairs of the session, said to this news organization.
“GPs are central in diagnosing conditions like chronic cough. We bring something that the specialists don’t bring: the knowledge of the context, of the family, the longitudinal history,” echoed the second chair of the session, Hilary Pinnock, family physician and professor of primary care respiratory medicine at the University of Edinburgh.
Understanding the multifaceted nature of chronic cough
Imran Satia, an assistant professor at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., guided attendees at the Milan, Italy, meeting through a comprehensive exploration of chronic cough. The first issue he addressed was the definition of the condition, emphasizing that it is defined by its duration, with chronic cough typically lasting for more than 8 weeks. Prof. Satia pointed out common associations of chronic cough, including asthma, nasal disease, and reflux disease.
Delving into epidemiology, he cited a meta-analysis indicating a global prevalence of approximately 10% in the adult population, with significant regional variability: from 18.1% in Australia to 2.3% in Africa. Notably, the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging found an overall prevalence of 16% at baseline. “The most common risk factor was smoke, but even in nonsmokers the prevalence reached 10%,” Prof. Satia added, highlighting that it increased with age and changed depending on location. “The most common associated comorbidities were heart failure and hypertension, but also conditions related to chronic pain, mood, and anxiety,” he explained.
Mental health was identified as a crucial factor in chronic cough, with psychological distress and depressive symptoms emerging as risk factors for developing chronic cough over the next 3 years, contributing to a 20% increased risk.
Effective management strategies
Prof. Satia proposed the use of algorithms to aid in the management of patients with chronic cough in primary care. He introduced a Canadian algorithm that offers specific recommendations for both primary and secondary care.
The algorithm’s primary care assessment, step 1, includes a comprehensive evaluation of the cough history (duration, severity, triggers, nature, location); cardiorespiratory, gastrointestinal, and nasal symptoms; and use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and smoking status. Essential diagnostic tests, such as chest radiography (to check for structural disease), complete blood cell count, and spirometry (with or without bronchodilator reversibility), were emphasized. Urgent referral criteria encompassed symptoms like hemoptysis, weight loss, fever, or abnormal chest radiography findings.
“When checking for cough history, GPs should always consider factors like the presence of dry or productive cough, mental health, presence of chronic pain, stroke, and swallowing,” said Prof. Satia, stressing the importance of documenting the impact of chronic cough on quality of life, work life, social life, and family life. “This is something that doctors sometimes do not ask about. They may think that these are not major problems, but acknowledging their importance can help the patient,” he added.
Step 2 of the algorithm focuses on treatment options tailored to specific diagnoses, such as asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Prof. Satia urged caution, emphasizing that treatment should only be initiated when evidence of these conditions is present. Additionally, he encouraged early consideration of cough hypersensitivity syndrome when patients exhibit coughing in response to low levels of mechanical stimulation.
Current treatments and future prospects
Prof. Satia presented an overview of existing treatments for chronic cough, outlining their respective advantages and disadvantages. For instance, speech therapy is a patient-led approach with no side effects but entails challenges related to access, costs, and patient motivation. On the other hand, low-dose morphine offers rapid relief but is associated with issues like nausea, stigma, and constipation.
Looking ahead, Prof. Satia shared the results of COUGH-1 and COUGH-2, pivotal phase 3 trials evaluating the oral, peripherally acting P2X3-receptor antagonist gefapixant. This drug, currently approved in Switzerland and Japan, demonstrated a significant reduction in cough frequency, compared with placebo, with rapid and sustained effects. “The estimated relative reduction for 45 mg was 18.45% in COUGH-1 (12 weeks) and 14.64% in COUGH-2 (24 weeks). Of note, cough reduction is very quick and sustained with gefapixant, but a 40% reduction is observed in the placebo arm,” commented Prof. Satia.
Experts unanimously stressed the importance for specialists and GPs of effective communication in managing chronic cough, involving both patients and their families.
“As GPs, we are crucial to manage the common problems, but we are also crucial to spot the needle in the haystack: this is extremely difficult and challenging, and we need support from our colleagues,” Dr. Pinnock concluded.
Prof. Satia reported funding from Merck MSD, AstraZeneca, and GSK; consulting fees from Merck MSD, Genentech, and Respiplus; and speaker fees from AstraZeneca, GSK, and Merck MSD.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Chronic cough took center stage at the European Respiratory Society Congress session titled “Conditions We Are Just Dealing With the Tip of the Iceberg in Primary Care: Frequently Mismanaged Conditions in Primary Health Care.”
“When it comes to chronic cough, general practitioners often feel lost,” Miguel Román Rodríguez, family doctor and an associate professor of family medicine at the University of the Balearic Islands, Palma, Mallorca, Spain, and one of the chairs of the session, said to this news organization.
“GPs are central in diagnosing conditions like chronic cough. We bring something that the specialists don’t bring: the knowledge of the context, of the family, the longitudinal history,” echoed the second chair of the session, Hilary Pinnock, family physician and professor of primary care respiratory medicine at the University of Edinburgh.
Understanding the multifaceted nature of chronic cough
Imran Satia, an assistant professor at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., guided attendees at the Milan, Italy, meeting through a comprehensive exploration of chronic cough. The first issue he addressed was the definition of the condition, emphasizing that it is defined by its duration, with chronic cough typically lasting for more than 8 weeks. Prof. Satia pointed out common associations of chronic cough, including asthma, nasal disease, and reflux disease.
Delving into epidemiology, he cited a meta-analysis indicating a global prevalence of approximately 10% in the adult population, with significant regional variability: from 18.1% in Australia to 2.3% in Africa. Notably, the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging found an overall prevalence of 16% at baseline. “The most common risk factor was smoke, but even in nonsmokers the prevalence reached 10%,” Prof. Satia added, highlighting that it increased with age and changed depending on location. “The most common associated comorbidities were heart failure and hypertension, but also conditions related to chronic pain, mood, and anxiety,” he explained.
Mental health was identified as a crucial factor in chronic cough, with psychological distress and depressive symptoms emerging as risk factors for developing chronic cough over the next 3 years, contributing to a 20% increased risk.
Effective management strategies
Prof. Satia proposed the use of algorithms to aid in the management of patients with chronic cough in primary care. He introduced a Canadian algorithm that offers specific recommendations for both primary and secondary care.
The algorithm’s primary care assessment, step 1, includes a comprehensive evaluation of the cough history (duration, severity, triggers, nature, location); cardiorespiratory, gastrointestinal, and nasal symptoms; and use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and smoking status. Essential diagnostic tests, such as chest radiography (to check for structural disease), complete blood cell count, and spirometry (with or without bronchodilator reversibility), were emphasized. Urgent referral criteria encompassed symptoms like hemoptysis, weight loss, fever, or abnormal chest radiography findings.
“When checking for cough history, GPs should always consider factors like the presence of dry or productive cough, mental health, presence of chronic pain, stroke, and swallowing,” said Prof. Satia, stressing the importance of documenting the impact of chronic cough on quality of life, work life, social life, and family life. “This is something that doctors sometimes do not ask about. They may think that these are not major problems, but acknowledging their importance can help the patient,” he added.
Step 2 of the algorithm focuses on treatment options tailored to specific diagnoses, such as asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Prof. Satia urged caution, emphasizing that treatment should only be initiated when evidence of these conditions is present. Additionally, he encouraged early consideration of cough hypersensitivity syndrome when patients exhibit coughing in response to low levels of mechanical stimulation.
Current treatments and future prospects
Prof. Satia presented an overview of existing treatments for chronic cough, outlining their respective advantages and disadvantages. For instance, speech therapy is a patient-led approach with no side effects but entails challenges related to access, costs, and patient motivation. On the other hand, low-dose morphine offers rapid relief but is associated with issues like nausea, stigma, and constipation.
Looking ahead, Prof. Satia shared the results of COUGH-1 and COUGH-2, pivotal phase 3 trials evaluating the oral, peripherally acting P2X3-receptor antagonist gefapixant. This drug, currently approved in Switzerland and Japan, demonstrated a significant reduction in cough frequency, compared with placebo, with rapid and sustained effects. “The estimated relative reduction for 45 mg was 18.45% in COUGH-1 (12 weeks) and 14.64% in COUGH-2 (24 weeks). Of note, cough reduction is very quick and sustained with gefapixant, but a 40% reduction is observed in the placebo arm,” commented Prof. Satia.
Experts unanimously stressed the importance for specialists and GPs of effective communication in managing chronic cough, involving both patients and their families.
“As GPs, we are crucial to manage the common problems, but we are also crucial to spot the needle in the haystack: this is extremely difficult and challenging, and we need support from our colleagues,” Dr. Pinnock concluded.
Prof. Satia reported funding from Merck MSD, AstraZeneca, and GSK; consulting fees from Merck MSD, Genentech, and Respiplus; and speaker fees from AstraZeneca, GSK, and Merck MSD.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Chronic cough took center stage at the European Respiratory Society Congress session titled “Conditions We Are Just Dealing With the Tip of the Iceberg in Primary Care: Frequently Mismanaged Conditions in Primary Health Care.”
“When it comes to chronic cough, general practitioners often feel lost,” Miguel Román Rodríguez, family doctor and an associate professor of family medicine at the University of the Balearic Islands, Palma, Mallorca, Spain, and one of the chairs of the session, said to this news organization.
“GPs are central in diagnosing conditions like chronic cough. We bring something that the specialists don’t bring: the knowledge of the context, of the family, the longitudinal history,” echoed the second chair of the session, Hilary Pinnock, family physician and professor of primary care respiratory medicine at the University of Edinburgh.
Understanding the multifaceted nature of chronic cough
Imran Satia, an assistant professor at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., guided attendees at the Milan, Italy, meeting through a comprehensive exploration of chronic cough. The first issue he addressed was the definition of the condition, emphasizing that it is defined by its duration, with chronic cough typically lasting for more than 8 weeks. Prof. Satia pointed out common associations of chronic cough, including asthma, nasal disease, and reflux disease.
Delving into epidemiology, he cited a meta-analysis indicating a global prevalence of approximately 10% in the adult population, with significant regional variability: from 18.1% in Australia to 2.3% in Africa. Notably, the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging found an overall prevalence of 16% at baseline. “The most common risk factor was smoke, but even in nonsmokers the prevalence reached 10%,” Prof. Satia added, highlighting that it increased with age and changed depending on location. “The most common associated comorbidities were heart failure and hypertension, but also conditions related to chronic pain, mood, and anxiety,” he explained.
Mental health was identified as a crucial factor in chronic cough, with psychological distress and depressive symptoms emerging as risk factors for developing chronic cough over the next 3 years, contributing to a 20% increased risk.
Effective management strategies
Prof. Satia proposed the use of algorithms to aid in the management of patients with chronic cough in primary care. He introduced a Canadian algorithm that offers specific recommendations for both primary and secondary care.
The algorithm’s primary care assessment, step 1, includes a comprehensive evaluation of the cough history (duration, severity, triggers, nature, location); cardiorespiratory, gastrointestinal, and nasal symptoms; and use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and smoking status. Essential diagnostic tests, such as chest radiography (to check for structural disease), complete blood cell count, and spirometry (with or without bronchodilator reversibility), were emphasized. Urgent referral criteria encompassed symptoms like hemoptysis, weight loss, fever, or abnormal chest radiography findings.
“When checking for cough history, GPs should always consider factors like the presence of dry or productive cough, mental health, presence of chronic pain, stroke, and swallowing,” said Prof. Satia, stressing the importance of documenting the impact of chronic cough on quality of life, work life, social life, and family life. “This is something that doctors sometimes do not ask about. They may think that these are not major problems, but acknowledging their importance can help the patient,” he added.
Step 2 of the algorithm focuses on treatment options tailored to specific diagnoses, such as asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Prof. Satia urged caution, emphasizing that treatment should only be initiated when evidence of these conditions is present. Additionally, he encouraged early consideration of cough hypersensitivity syndrome when patients exhibit coughing in response to low levels of mechanical stimulation.
Current treatments and future prospects
Prof. Satia presented an overview of existing treatments for chronic cough, outlining their respective advantages and disadvantages. For instance, speech therapy is a patient-led approach with no side effects but entails challenges related to access, costs, and patient motivation. On the other hand, low-dose morphine offers rapid relief but is associated with issues like nausea, stigma, and constipation.
Looking ahead, Prof. Satia shared the results of COUGH-1 and COUGH-2, pivotal phase 3 trials evaluating the oral, peripherally acting P2X3-receptor antagonist gefapixant. This drug, currently approved in Switzerland and Japan, demonstrated a significant reduction in cough frequency, compared with placebo, with rapid and sustained effects. “The estimated relative reduction for 45 mg was 18.45% in COUGH-1 (12 weeks) and 14.64% in COUGH-2 (24 weeks). Of note, cough reduction is very quick and sustained with gefapixant, but a 40% reduction is observed in the placebo arm,” commented Prof. Satia.
Experts unanimously stressed the importance for specialists and GPs of effective communication in managing chronic cough, involving both patients and their families.
“As GPs, we are crucial to manage the common problems, but we are also crucial to spot the needle in the haystack: this is extremely difficult and challenging, and we need support from our colleagues,” Dr. Pinnock concluded.
Prof. Satia reported funding from Merck MSD, AstraZeneca, and GSK; consulting fees from Merck MSD, Genentech, and Respiplus; and speaker fees from AstraZeneca, GSK, and Merck MSD.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM ERS 2023
Pandemic tied to significant drop in residents’ PTSD rates
TOPLINE
First-year medical residents training during COVID-19 were significantly less likely to have posttraumatic stress disorder and workplace trauma, compared with their counterparts who trained before the pandemic, and reported fewer work hours, higher workload satisfaction, and fewer medical errors, new research shows.
METHODOLOGY
- Studies have reported a high prevalence of PTSD symptoms among residents during the pandemic, but it’s unclear if this prevalence differs from prepandemic levels.
- Using the Intern Health Study, a longitudinal cohort study of 1st-year residents, researchers investigated differences in PTSD symptoms among those training before the pandemic (2018-2019) and during its first wave (March to June, 2020).
- The study included 1,957 first-year residents (48.2% female; mean age, 27.6 years) who completed a baseline survey 2 months before their residency start, and then quarterly surveys during their intern year, with the fourth quarterly survey including a screen for PTSD.
- Researchers assessed differences in nonresidency factors and residency-related factors before and during the pandemic and examined exposure to workplace trauma.
TAKEAWAY
- (7.1% vs. 10.7%; odds ratio, 0.64; 95% confidence interval, 0.46-0.88; P = .01).
- They were also less likely to have workplace trauma exposure (50.9% vs. 56.6%; OR, 0.80; 95% CI, 0.66-0.95; P = .01).
- Residents training during the pandemic compared to prepandemic reported significantly lower weekly duty hours (score mean difference –3.1 hours; 95% CI, –4.1 to −2.0 hours), lower mean reports of medical errors (MD, −0.04; 95% CI, –0.06 to –0.01), and higher workload satisfaction (MD, 0.2; 95% CI, 0.2-0.3).
- However, after accounting for these residency-related factors, training during the pandemic was no longer associated with lower odds of presenting PTSD symptoms.
IN PRACTICE
While the findings show residents training during the first pandemic wave were less likely to have PTSD, future studies should further follow these residents’ PTSD symptoms and investigate whether interventions targeting residency-related factors could reduce their PTSD risk moving forward, the investigators note.
SOURCE
The study was carried out by Michelle K. Ptak, BA, department of psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and colleagues. It was published online Aug. 22 in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS
The study used self-reports and included only the first pandemic wave, 1st-year residents, and prepandemic data for a single academic year. Survey participation decreased during the pandemic, and it’s possible there were unmeasured factors associated with PTSD risk.
DISCLOSURES
The study was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health and the National Institutes of Health. The authors report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE
First-year medical residents training during COVID-19 were significantly less likely to have posttraumatic stress disorder and workplace trauma, compared with their counterparts who trained before the pandemic, and reported fewer work hours, higher workload satisfaction, and fewer medical errors, new research shows.
METHODOLOGY
- Studies have reported a high prevalence of PTSD symptoms among residents during the pandemic, but it’s unclear if this prevalence differs from prepandemic levels.
- Using the Intern Health Study, a longitudinal cohort study of 1st-year residents, researchers investigated differences in PTSD symptoms among those training before the pandemic (2018-2019) and during its first wave (March to June, 2020).
- The study included 1,957 first-year residents (48.2% female; mean age, 27.6 years) who completed a baseline survey 2 months before their residency start, and then quarterly surveys during their intern year, with the fourth quarterly survey including a screen for PTSD.
- Researchers assessed differences in nonresidency factors and residency-related factors before and during the pandemic and examined exposure to workplace trauma.
TAKEAWAY
- (7.1% vs. 10.7%; odds ratio, 0.64; 95% confidence interval, 0.46-0.88; P = .01).
- They were also less likely to have workplace trauma exposure (50.9% vs. 56.6%; OR, 0.80; 95% CI, 0.66-0.95; P = .01).
- Residents training during the pandemic compared to prepandemic reported significantly lower weekly duty hours (score mean difference –3.1 hours; 95% CI, –4.1 to −2.0 hours), lower mean reports of medical errors (MD, −0.04; 95% CI, –0.06 to –0.01), and higher workload satisfaction (MD, 0.2; 95% CI, 0.2-0.3).
- However, after accounting for these residency-related factors, training during the pandemic was no longer associated with lower odds of presenting PTSD symptoms.
IN PRACTICE
While the findings show residents training during the first pandemic wave were less likely to have PTSD, future studies should further follow these residents’ PTSD symptoms and investigate whether interventions targeting residency-related factors could reduce their PTSD risk moving forward, the investigators note.
SOURCE
The study was carried out by Michelle K. Ptak, BA, department of psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and colleagues. It was published online Aug. 22 in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS
The study used self-reports and included only the first pandemic wave, 1st-year residents, and prepandemic data for a single academic year. Survey participation decreased during the pandemic, and it’s possible there were unmeasured factors associated with PTSD risk.
DISCLOSURES
The study was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health and the National Institutes of Health. The authors report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE
First-year medical residents training during COVID-19 were significantly less likely to have posttraumatic stress disorder and workplace trauma, compared with their counterparts who trained before the pandemic, and reported fewer work hours, higher workload satisfaction, and fewer medical errors, new research shows.
METHODOLOGY
- Studies have reported a high prevalence of PTSD symptoms among residents during the pandemic, but it’s unclear if this prevalence differs from prepandemic levels.
- Using the Intern Health Study, a longitudinal cohort study of 1st-year residents, researchers investigated differences in PTSD symptoms among those training before the pandemic (2018-2019) and during its first wave (March to June, 2020).
- The study included 1,957 first-year residents (48.2% female; mean age, 27.6 years) who completed a baseline survey 2 months before their residency start, and then quarterly surveys during their intern year, with the fourth quarterly survey including a screen for PTSD.
- Researchers assessed differences in nonresidency factors and residency-related factors before and during the pandemic and examined exposure to workplace trauma.
TAKEAWAY
- (7.1% vs. 10.7%; odds ratio, 0.64; 95% confidence interval, 0.46-0.88; P = .01).
- They were also less likely to have workplace trauma exposure (50.9% vs. 56.6%; OR, 0.80; 95% CI, 0.66-0.95; P = .01).
- Residents training during the pandemic compared to prepandemic reported significantly lower weekly duty hours (score mean difference –3.1 hours; 95% CI, –4.1 to −2.0 hours), lower mean reports of medical errors (MD, −0.04; 95% CI, –0.06 to –0.01), and higher workload satisfaction (MD, 0.2; 95% CI, 0.2-0.3).
- However, after accounting for these residency-related factors, training during the pandemic was no longer associated with lower odds of presenting PTSD symptoms.
IN PRACTICE
While the findings show residents training during the first pandemic wave were less likely to have PTSD, future studies should further follow these residents’ PTSD symptoms and investigate whether interventions targeting residency-related factors could reduce their PTSD risk moving forward, the investigators note.
SOURCE
The study was carried out by Michelle K. Ptak, BA, department of psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and colleagues. It was published online Aug. 22 in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS
The study used self-reports and included only the first pandemic wave, 1st-year residents, and prepandemic data for a single academic year. Survey participation decreased during the pandemic, and it’s possible there were unmeasured factors associated with PTSD risk.
DISCLOSURES
The study was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health and the National Institutes of Health. The authors report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM JAMA NETWORK OPEN
Enhancing Health Psychology Services in Oncology
PURPOSE
This workforce project evaluated potential enhancement of health psychology services with the establishment of a dedicated and integrated psychooncology position at one VA.
BACKGROUND
Broad health psychology services have been offered across this VA healthcare system with some success (Bloor et al., 2017; Bloor et al., 2022). Previously, some services were enhanced when a dedicated psychology position was funded and integrated with the interdisciplinary pain team (Dadabeyev et al., 2019).
METHODS
We reviewed utilization of services with clinic data for a 4-month period prior to the new position, compared to the first 4-months the health psychologist integrated with Oncology. We also conducted a “perceptions of referring providers” survey, assessing Utility and Quality.
DATA ANALYSIS
For utilization of health psychology services, we explored descriptive statistics. An independent samples t-test was conducted to evaluate perceptions of the services’ Utility and Quality, comparing perceptions of referring providers across the healthcare system (Bloor et al., 2017) to Oncology providers’ perceptions when a dedicated psychologist became available.
RESULTS
For the first 4 months psychology services were dedicated to Oncology, 82 Veterans received 1 or more sessions for a total of 222 encounters compared to 44 Veterans receiving health psychology services for a total of 98 sessions in the 4-month period prior. Also, during the first 4-month period with integrated care, previously unavailable same-day services were offered to Veterans, ranging from 4-9 same-day sessions each week. For the referring providers’ survey, perceptions of Utility increased significantly from m=13.70 (SD=1.36) to m=14.90 (SD=0.32), t=2.76, (p-value=.0076).
IMPLICATIONS
These data suggest increased availability and usage of services, and enhanced perceptions of the Utility of health psychology services when funding for a dedicated position was implemented. Additional measures of service enhancement can be explored in the future to understand better the added value of integrated health psychology. This could explore improvement in distress and suicide risk screening, availability to identify and outreach to Veterans at risk, and/or enhancement for survivorship, prevention or other cancer care standards. Moreover, it is important to capture Veterans’ perceptions of services, including changes in mood, functioning and quality of life.
PURPOSE
This workforce project evaluated potential enhancement of health psychology services with the establishment of a dedicated and integrated psychooncology position at one VA.
BACKGROUND
Broad health psychology services have been offered across this VA healthcare system with some success (Bloor et al., 2017; Bloor et al., 2022). Previously, some services were enhanced when a dedicated psychology position was funded and integrated with the interdisciplinary pain team (Dadabeyev et al., 2019).
METHODS
We reviewed utilization of services with clinic data for a 4-month period prior to the new position, compared to the first 4-months the health psychologist integrated with Oncology. We also conducted a “perceptions of referring providers” survey, assessing Utility and Quality.
DATA ANALYSIS
For utilization of health psychology services, we explored descriptive statistics. An independent samples t-test was conducted to evaluate perceptions of the services’ Utility and Quality, comparing perceptions of referring providers across the healthcare system (Bloor et al., 2017) to Oncology providers’ perceptions when a dedicated psychologist became available.
RESULTS
For the first 4 months psychology services were dedicated to Oncology, 82 Veterans received 1 or more sessions for a total of 222 encounters compared to 44 Veterans receiving health psychology services for a total of 98 sessions in the 4-month period prior. Also, during the first 4-month period with integrated care, previously unavailable same-day services were offered to Veterans, ranging from 4-9 same-day sessions each week. For the referring providers’ survey, perceptions of Utility increased significantly from m=13.70 (SD=1.36) to m=14.90 (SD=0.32), t=2.76, (p-value=.0076).
IMPLICATIONS
These data suggest increased availability and usage of services, and enhanced perceptions of the Utility of health psychology services when funding for a dedicated position was implemented. Additional measures of service enhancement can be explored in the future to understand better the added value of integrated health psychology. This could explore improvement in distress and suicide risk screening, availability to identify and outreach to Veterans at risk, and/or enhancement for survivorship, prevention or other cancer care standards. Moreover, it is important to capture Veterans’ perceptions of services, including changes in mood, functioning and quality of life.
PURPOSE
This workforce project evaluated potential enhancement of health psychology services with the establishment of a dedicated and integrated psychooncology position at one VA.
BACKGROUND
Broad health psychology services have been offered across this VA healthcare system with some success (Bloor et al., 2017; Bloor et al., 2022). Previously, some services were enhanced when a dedicated psychology position was funded and integrated with the interdisciplinary pain team (Dadabeyev et al., 2019).
METHODS
We reviewed utilization of services with clinic data for a 4-month period prior to the new position, compared to the first 4-months the health psychologist integrated with Oncology. We also conducted a “perceptions of referring providers” survey, assessing Utility and Quality.
DATA ANALYSIS
For utilization of health psychology services, we explored descriptive statistics. An independent samples t-test was conducted to evaluate perceptions of the services’ Utility and Quality, comparing perceptions of referring providers across the healthcare system (Bloor et al., 2017) to Oncology providers’ perceptions when a dedicated psychologist became available.
RESULTS
For the first 4 months psychology services were dedicated to Oncology, 82 Veterans received 1 or more sessions for a total of 222 encounters compared to 44 Veterans receiving health psychology services for a total of 98 sessions in the 4-month period prior. Also, during the first 4-month period with integrated care, previously unavailable same-day services were offered to Veterans, ranging from 4-9 same-day sessions each week. For the referring providers’ survey, perceptions of Utility increased significantly from m=13.70 (SD=1.36) to m=14.90 (SD=0.32), t=2.76, (p-value=.0076).
IMPLICATIONS
These data suggest increased availability and usage of services, and enhanced perceptions of the Utility of health psychology services when funding for a dedicated position was implemented. Additional measures of service enhancement can be explored in the future to understand better the added value of integrated health psychology. This could explore improvement in distress and suicide risk screening, availability to identify and outreach to Veterans at risk, and/or enhancement for survivorship, prevention or other cancer care standards. Moreover, it is important to capture Veterans’ perceptions of services, including changes in mood, functioning and quality of life.
Nurses maintain more stigma toward pregnant women with OUD
Opioid use disorder among pregnant women continues to rise, and untreated opioid use is associated with complications including preterm delivery, placental abruption, and stillbirth, wrote Alexis Braverman, MD, of the University of Illinois, Chicago, and colleagues. However, many perinatal women who seek care and medications for opioid use disorder (OUD) report stigma that limits their ability to reduce these risks.
In a study published in the American Journal on Addictions , the researchers conducted an anonymous survey of 132 health care workers at six outpatient locations and a main hospital of an urban medical center. The survey was designed to assess attitudes toward pregnant women who were using opioids. The 119 complete responses in the final analysis included 40 nurses and 79 clinicians across ob.gyn., family medicine, and pediatrics. A total of 19 respondents were waivered to prescribe outpatient buprenorphine for OUD.
Nurses were significantly less likely than clinicians to agree that OUD is a chronic illness, to feel sympathy for women who use opioids during pregnancy, and to see pregnancy as an opportunity for behavior change (P = .000, P = .003, and P = .001, respectively).
Overall, family medicine providers and clinicians with 11-20 years of practice experience were significantly more sympathetic to pregnant women who used opioids, compared with providers from other departments and with fewer years of practice (P = .025 and P = .039, respectively).
Providers in pediatrics departments were significantly more likely than those from other departments to agree strongly with feeling anger at pregnant women who use opioids (P = .009), and that these women should not be allowed to parent (P = .013). However, providers in pediatrics were significantly more comfortable than those in other departments with discussing the involvement of social services in patient care (P = .020) and with counseling patients on neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome, known as NOWS (P = .027).
“We hypothesize that nurses who perform more acute, inpatient work rather than outpatient work may not be exposed as frequently to a patient’s personal progress on their journey with OUD,” and therefore might not be exposed to the rewarding experiences and progress made by patients, the researchers wrote in their discussion.
However, the overall low level of comfort in discussing NOWS and social service involvement across provider groups (one-quarter for pediatrics, one-fifth for ob.gyn, and one-sixth for family medicine) highlights the need for further training in this area, they said.
The findings were limited by several factors, including the potential for responder bias; however, the results identify a need for greater training in stigma reduction and in counseling families on issues related to OUD, the researchers said. More studies are needed to examine attitude changes after the implementation of stigma reduction strategies, they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Opioid use disorder among pregnant women continues to rise, and untreated opioid use is associated with complications including preterm delivery, placental abruption, and stillbirth, wrote Alexis Braverman, MD, of the University of Illinois, Chicago, and colleagues. However, many perinatal women who seek care and medications for opioid use disorder (OUD) report stigma that limits their ability to reduce these risks.
In a study published in the American Journal on Addictions , the researchers conducted an anonymous survey of 132 health care workers at six outpatient locations and a main hospital of an urban medical center. The survey was designed to assess attitudes toward pregnant women who were using opioids. The 119 complete responses in the final analysis included 40 nurses and 79 clinicians across ob.gyn., family medicine, and pediatrics. A total of 19 respondents were waivered to prescribe outpatient buprenorphine for OUD.
Nurses were significantly less likely than clinicians to agree that OUD is a chronic illness, to feel sympathy for women who use opioids during pregnancy, and to see pregnancy as an opportunity for behavior change (P = .000, P = .003, and P = .001, respectively).
Overall, family medicine providers and clinicians with 11-20 years of practice experience were significantly more sympathetic to pregnant women who used opioids, compared with providers from other departments and with fewer years of practice (P = .025 and P = .039, respectively).
Providers in pediatrics departments were significantly more likely than those from other departments to agree strongly with feeling anger at pregnant women who use opioids (P = .009), and that these women should not be allowed to parent (P = .013). However, providers in pediatrics were significantly more comfortable than those in other departments with discussing the involvement of social services in patient care (P = .020) and with counseling patients on neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome, known as NOWS (P = .027).
“We hypothesize that nurses who perform more acute, inpatient work rather than outpatient work may not be exposed as frequently to a patient’s personal progress on their journey with OUD,” and therefore might not be exposed to the rewarding experiences and progress made by patients, the researchers wrote in their discussion.
However, the overall low level of comfort in discussing NOWS and social service involvement across provider groups (one-quarter for pediatrics, one-fifth for ob.gyn, and one-sixth for family medicine) highlights the need for further training in this area, they said.
The findings were limited by several factors, including the potential for responder bias; however, the results identify a need for greater training in stigma reduction and in counseling families on issues related to OUD, the researchers said. More studies are needed to examine attitude changes after the implementation of stigma reduction strategies, they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Opioid use disorder among pregnant women continues to rise, and untreated opioid use is associated with complications including preterm delivery, placental abruption, and stillbirth, wrote Alexis Braverman, MD, of the University of Illinois, Chicago, and colleagues. However, many perinatal women who seek care and medications for opioid use disorder (OUD) report stigma that limits their ability to reduce these risks.
In a study published in the American Journal on Addictions , the researchers conducted an anonymous survey of 132 health care workers at six outpatient locations and a main hospital of an urban medical center. The survey was designed to assess attitudes toward pregnant women who were using opioids. The 119 complete responses in the final analysis included 40 nurses and 79 clinicians across ob.gyn., family medicine, and pediatrics. A total of 19 respondents were waivered to prescribe outpatient buprenorphine for OUD.
Nurses were significantly less likely than clinicians to agree that OUD is a chronic illness, to feel sympathy for women who use opioids during pregnancy, and to see pregnancy as an opportunity for behavior change (P = .000, P = .003, and P = .001, respectively).
Overall, family medicine providers and clinicians with 11-20 years of practice experience were significantly more sympathetic to pregnant women who used opioids, compared with providers from other departments and with fewer years of practice (P = .025 and P = .039, respectively).
Providers in pediatrics departments were significantly more likely than those from other departments to agree strongly with feeling anger at pregnant women who use opioids (P = .009), and that these women should not be allowed to parent (P = .013). However, providers in pediatrics were significantly more comfortable than those in other departments with discussing the involvement of social services in patient care (P = .020) and with counseling patients on neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome, known as NOWS (P = .027).
“We hypothesize that nurses who perform more acute, inpatient work rather than outpatient work may not be exposed as frequently to a patient’s personal progress on their journey with OUD,” and therefore might not be exposed to the rewarding experiences and progress made by patients, the researchers wrote in their discussion.
However, the overall low level of comfort in discussing NOWS and social service involvement across provider groups (one-quarter for pediatrics, one-fifth for ob.gyn, and one-sixth for family medicine) highlights the need for further training in this area, they said.
The findings were limited by several factors, including the potential for responder bias; however, the results identify a need for greater training in stigma reduction and in counseling families on issues related to OUD, the researchers said. More studies are needed to examine attitude changes after the implementation of stigma reduction strategies, they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM THE AMERICAN JOURNAL ON ADDICTIONS
Barbie has an anxiety disorder
And it’s a great time to be a therapist
The Barbie movie is generating a lot of feelings, ranging from praise to vitriol. However one feels about the movie, let’s all pause and reflect for a moment on the fact that the number-one grossing film of 2023 is about our childhood doll trying to treat her anxiety disorder.
“Life imitates art more than art imitates life.” So said Oscar Wilde in 1889.
When my adult daughter, a childhood Barbie enthusiast, asked me to see the film, we put on pink and went. Twice. Little did I know that it would stir up so many thoughts and feelings. The one I want to share is how blessed I feel at this moment in time to be a mental health care provider! No longer is mental health something to be whispered about at the water cooler; instead, even Barbie is suffering. And with all the controversy in the press about the movie, no one seems at all surprised by this storyline.
I was raised by two child psychiatrists and have been practicing as an adult psychiatrist since 1991. The start of the pandemic was the most difficult time of my career, as almost every patient was struggling simultaneously, as was I. Three long years later, we are gradually emerging from our shared trauma. How ironic, now with the opportunity to go back to work, I have elected to maintain the majority of my practice online from home. It seems that most patients and providers prefer this mode of treatment, with a full 90 percent of practitioners saying they are using a hybrid model.
As mental health professionals, we know that anywhere from 3% to 49% of those experiencing trauma will develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and we have been trained to treat them.
But what happens when an entire global population is exposed simultaneously to trauma? Historians and social scientists refer to such events by many different names, such as: Singularity, Black Swan Event, and Tipping Point. These events are incredibly rare, and afterwards everything is different. These global traumas always lead to massive change.
I think we are at that tipping point. This is the singularity. This is our Black Swan Event. Within a 3-year span, we have experienced the following:
- A global traumatic event (COVID-19).
- A sudden and seemingly permanent shift from office to remote video meetings mostly from home.
- Upending of traditional fundamentals of the stock market as the game literally stopped in January 2021.
- Rapid and widespread availability of Artificial Intelligence.
- The first generation to be fully raised on the Internet and social media (Gen Z) is now entering the workforce.
- Ongoing war in Ukraine.
That’s already an overwhelming list, and I could go on, but let’s get back to Barbie’s anxiety disorder.
The awareness about and acceptance of mental health issues has never been higher. The access to treatment never greater. There are now more online therapy options than ever. Treatment options have dramatically expanded in recent years, from Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) to ketamine centers and psychedelics, as well as more mainstream options such as dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), and so many more.
What is particularly unique about this moment is the direct access to care. Self-help books abound with many making it to the New York Times bestseller list. YouTube is loaded with fantastic content on overcoming many mental health issues, although one should be careful with selecting reliable sources. Apps like HeadSpace and Calm are being downloaded by millions of people around the globe. Investors provided a record-breaking $1.5 billion to mental health startups in 2020 alone.
For most practitioners, our phones have been ringing off the hook since 2020. Applications to psychology, psychiatric residency, social work, and counseling degree programs are on the rise, with workforce shortages expected to continue for decades. Psychological expertise has been embraced by businesses especially for DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion). Mental health experts are the most asked-for experts through media request services. Elite athletes are talking openly about bringing us on their teams.
In this unique moment, when everything seems set to transform into something else, it is time for mental health professionals to exert some agency and influence over where mental health will go from here. I think the next frontier for mental health specialists is to figure out how to speak collectively and help guide society.
Neil Howe, in his sweeping book “The Fourth Turning is Here,” says we have another 10 years in this “Millennial Crisis” phase. He calls this our “winter,” and it remains to be seen how we will emerge from our current challenges. I think we can make a difference.
If the Barbie movie is indeed a canary in the coal mine, I see positive trends ahead as we move past some of the societal and structural issues facing us, and work together to create a more open and egalitarian society. We must find creative solutions that will solve truly massive problems threatening our well-being and perhaps even our existence.
I am so grateful to be able to continue to practice and share my thoughts with you here from my home office, and I hope you can take a break and see this movie, which is not only entertaining but also thought- and emotion-provoking.
Dr. Ritvo has almost 30 years’ experience in psychiatry and is currently practicing telemedicine. She is the author of “Bekindr – The Transformative Power of Kindness” (Hellertown, Pa.: Momosa Publishing, 2018). She has no conflicts of interest.
And it’s a great time to be a therapist
And it’s a great time to be a therapist
The Barbie movie is generating a lot of feelings, ranging from praise to vitriol. However one feels about the movie, let’s all pause and reflect for a moment on the fact that the number-one grossing film of 2023 is about our childhood doll trying to treat her anxiety disorder.
“Life imitates art more than art imitates life.” So said Oscar Wilde in 1889.
When my adult daughter, a childhood Barbie enthusiast, asked me to see the film, we put on pink and went. Twice. Little did I know that it would stir up so many thoughts and feelings. The one I want to share is how blessed I feel at this moment in time to be a mental health care provider! No longer is mental health something to be whispered about at the water cooler; instead, even Barbie is suffering. And with all the controversy in the press about the movie, no one seems at all surprised by this storyline.
I was raised by two child psychiatrists and have been practicing as an adult psychiatrist since 1991. The start of the pandemic was the most difficult time of my career, as almost every patient was struggling simultaneously, as was I. Three long years later, we are gradually emerging from our shared trauma. How ironic, now with the opportunity to go back to work, I have elected to maintain the majority of my practice online from home. It seems that most patients and providers prefer this mode of treatment, with a full 90 percent of practitioners saying they are using a hybrid model.
As mental health professionals, we know that anywhere from 3% to 49% of those experiencing trauma will develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and we have been trained to treat them.
But what happens when an entire global population is exposed simultaneously to trauma? Historians and social scientists refer to such events by many different names, such as: Singularity, Black Swan Event, and Tipping Point. These events are incredibly rare, and afterwards everything is different. These global traumas always lead to massive change.
I think we are at that tipping point. This is the singularity. This is our Black Swan Event. Within a 3-year span, we have experienced the following:
- A global traumatic event (COVID-19).
- A sudden and seemingly permanent shift from office to remote video meetings mostly from home.
- Upending of traditional fundamentals of the stock market as the game literally stopped in January 2021.
- Rapid and widespread availability of Artificial Intelligence.
- The first generation to be fully raised on the Internet and social media (Gen Z) is now entering the workforce.
- Ongoing war in Ukraine.
That’s already an overwhelming list, and I could go on, but let’s get back to Barbie’s anxiety disorder.
The awareness about and acceptance of mental health issues has never been higher. The access to treatment never greater. There are now more online therapy options than ever. Treatment options have dramatically expanded in recent years, from Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) to ketamine centers and psychedelics, as well as more mainstream options such as dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), and so many more.
What is particularly unique about this moment is the direct access to care. Self-help books abound with many making it to the New York Times bestseller list. YouTube is loaded with fantastic content on overcoming many mental health issues, although one should be careful with selecting reliable sources. Apps like HeadSpace and Calm are being downloaded by millions of people around the globe. Investors provided a record-breaking $1.5 billion to mental health startups in 2020 alone.
For most practitioners, our phones have been ringing off the hook since 2020. Applications to psychology, psychiatric residency, social work, and counseling degree programs are on the rise, with workforce shortages expected to continue for decades. Psychological expertise has been embraced by businesses especially for DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion). Mental health experts are the most asked-for experts through media request services. Elite athletes are talking openly about bringing us on their teams.
In this unique moment, when everything seems set to transform into something else, it is time for mental health professionals to exert some agency and influence over where mental health will go from here. I think the next frontier for mental health specialists is to figure out how to speak collectively and help guide society.
Neil Howe, in his sweeping book “The Fourth Turning is Here,” says we have another 10 years in this “Millennial Crisis” phase. He calls this our “winter,” and it remains to be seen how we will emerge from our current challenges. I think we can make a difference.
If the Barbie movie is indeed a canary in the coal mine, I see positive trends ahead as we move past some of the societal and structural issues facing us, and work together to create a more open and egalitarian society. We must find creative solutions that will solve truly massive problems threatening our well-being and perhaps even our existence.
I am so grateful to be able to continue to practice and share my thoughts with you here from my home office, and I hope you can take a break and see this movie, which is not only entertaining but also thought- and emotion-provoking.
Dr. Ritvo has almost 30 years’ experience in psychiatry and is currently practicing telemedicine. She is the author of “Bekindr – The Transformative Power of Kindness” (Hellertown, Pa.: Momosa Publishing, 2018). She has no conflicts of interest.
The Barbie movie is generating a lot of feelings, ranging from praise to vitriol. However one feels about the movie, let’s all pause and reflect for a moment on the fact that the number-one grossing film of 2023 is about our childhood doll trying to treat her anxiety disorder.
“Life imitates art more than art imitates life.” So said Oscar Wilde in 1889.
When my adult daughter, a childhood Barbie enthusiast, asked me to see the film, we put on pink and went. Twice. Little did I know that it would stir up so many thoughts and feelings. The one I want to share is how blessed I feel at this moment in time to be a mental health care provider! No longer is mental health something to be whispered about at the water cooler; instead, even Barbie is suffering. And with all the controversy in the press about the movie, no one seems at all surprised by this storyline.
I was raised by two child psychiatrists and have been practicing as an adult psychiatrist since 1991. The start of the pandemic was the most difficult time of my career, as almost every patient was struggling simultaneously, as was I. Three long years later, we are gradually emerging from our shared trauma. How ironic, now with the opportunity to go back to work, I have elected to maintain the majority of my practice online from home. It seems that most patients and providers prefer this mode of treatment, with a full 90 percent of practitioners saying they are using a hybrid model.
As mental health professionals, we know that anywhere from 3% to 49% of those experiencing trauma will develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and we have been trained to treat them.
But what happens when an entire global population is exposed simultaneously to trauma? Historians and social scientists refer to such events by many different names, such as: Singularity, Black Swan Event, and Tipping Point. These events are incredibly rare, and afterwards everything is different. These global traumas always lead to massive change.
I think we are at that tipping point. This is the singularity. This is our Black Swan Event. Within a 3-year span, we have experienced the following:
- A global traumatic event (COVID-19).
- A sudden and seemingly permanent shift from office to remote video meetings mostly from home.
- Upending of traditional fundamentals of the stock market as the game literally stopped in January 2021.
- Rapid and widespread availability of Artificial Intelligence.
- The first generation to be fully raised on the Internet and social media (Gen Z) is now entering the workforce.
- Ongoing war in Ukraine.
That’s already an overwhelming list, and I could go on, but let’s get back to Barbie’s anxiety disorder.
The awareness about and acceptance of mental health issues has never been higher. The access to treatment never greater. There are now more online therapy options than ever. Treatment options have dramatically expanded in recent years, from Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) to ketamine centers and psychedelics, as well as more mainstream options such as dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), and so many more.
What is particularly unique about this moment is the direct access to care. Self-help books abound with many making it to the New York Times bestseller list. YouTube is loaded with fantastic content on overcoming many mental health issues, although one should be careful with selecting reliable sources. Apps like HeadSpace and Calm are being downloaded by millions of people around the globe. Investors provided a record-breaking $1.5 billion to mental health startups in 2020 alone.
For most practitioners, our phones have been ringing off the hook since 2020. Applications to psychology, psychiatric residency, social work, and counseling degree programs are on the rise, with workforce shortages expected to continue for decades. Psychological expertise has been embraced by businesses especially for DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion). Mental health experts are the most asked-for experts through media request services. Elite athletes are talking openly about bringing us on their teams.
In this unique moment, when everything seems set to transform into something else, it is time for mental health professionals to exert some agency and influence over where mental health will go from here. I think the next frontier for mental health specialists is to figure out how to speak collectively and help guide society.
Neil Howe, in his sweeping book “The Fourth Turning is Here,” says we have another 10 years in this “Millennial Crisis” phase. He calls this our “winter,” and it remains to be seen how we will emerge from our current challenges. I think we can make a difference.
If the Barbie movie is indeed a canary in the coal mine, I see positive trends ahead as we move past some of the societal and structural issues facing us, and work together to create a more open and egalitarian society. We must find creative solutions that will solve truly massive problems threatening our well-being and perhaps even our existence.
I am so grateful to be able to continue to practice and share my thoughts with you here from my home office, and I hope you can take a break and see this movie, which is not only entertaining but also thought- and emotion-provoking.
Dr. Ritvo has almost 30 years’ experience in psychiatry and is currently practicing telemedicine. She is the author of “Bekindr – The Transformative Power of Kindness” (Hellertown, Pa.: Momosa Publishing, 2018). She has no conflicts of interest.
Can a decrease in dopamine lead to binge eating?
In medical school, we were repeatedly advised that there is both a science and an art to the practice of medicine. In these days of doc-in-a-box online consultations for obesity, it’s tempting to think that there’s a one-size-fits-all purely scientific approach for these new weight loss medications. Yet, for every nine patients who lose weight seemingly effortlessly on this class of medication, there is always one whose body stubbornly refuses to submit.
Adam is a 58-year-old man who came to me recently because he was having difficulty losing weight. Over the past 20 years, he’d been steadily gaining weight and now, technically has morbid obesity (a term which should arguably be obsolete). His weight gain is complicated by high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and obstructive sleep apnea. His sleep apnea has caused such profound exhaustion that he no longer has the energy to work out. He also has significant ADHD, which has been left untreated because of his ability to white-knuckle it through his many daily meetings and calls. A married father of three, he is a successful portfolio manager at a high-yield bond fund.
Adam tends to eat minimally during the day, thereby baffling his colleagues with the stark contrast between his minimal caloric intake and his large belly. However, when he returns from work late at night (kids safely tucked into bed), the floodgates open. He reports polishing off pints of ice cream, scarfing down bags of cookies, inhaling trays of brownies. No carbohydrate is off limits to him once he steps off the Metro North train and crosses the threshold from work to home.
Does Adam simply lack the desire or common-sense willpower to make the necessary changes in his lifestyle or is there something more complicated at play?
I would argue that Adam’s ADHD triggered a binge-eating disorder (BED) that festered unchecked over the past 20 years. Patients with BED typically eat massive quantities of food over short periods of time – often when they’re not even hungry. Adam admitted that he would generally continue to eat well after feeling stuffed to the brim.
The answer probably lies with dopamine, a neurotransmitter produced in the reward centers of the brain that regulates how people experience pleasure and control impulses. We believe that people with ADHD have low levels of dopamine (it’s actually a bit more complicated, but this is the general idea). These low levels of dopamine lead people to self-medicate with sugars, salt, and fats to increase dopamine levels.
Lisdexamfetamine (Vyvanse) is a Food and Drug Administration–approved treatment option for both ADHD and binge eating. It raises the levels of dopamine (as well as norepinephrine) in the brain’s reward center. Often, the strong urge to binge subsides rapidly once ADHD is properly treated.
Rather than starting Adam on a semaglutide or similar agent, I opted to start him on lisdexamfetamine. When I spoke to him 1 week later, he confided that the world suddenly shifted into focus, and he was able to plan his meals throughout the day and resist the urge to binge late at night.
I may eventually add a semaglutide-like medication if his weight loss plateaus, but for now, I will focus on raising his dopamine levels to tackle the underlying cause of his weight gain.
Dr. Messer is a clinical assistant professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York. She disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
In medical school, we were repeatedly advised that there is both a science and an art to the practice of medicine. In these days of doc-in-a-box online consultations for obesity, it’s tempting to think that there’s a one-size-fits-all purely scientific approach for these new weight loss medications. Yet, for every nine patients who lose weight seemingly effortlessly on this class of medication, there is always one whose body stubbornly refuses to submit.
Adam is a 58-year-old man who came to me recently because he was having difficulty losing weight. Over the past 20 years, he’d been steadily gaining weight and now, technically has morbid obesity (a term which should arguably be obsolete). His weight gain is complicated by high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and obstructive sleep apnea. His sleep apnea has caused such profound exhaustion that he no longer has the energy to work out. He also has significant ADHD, which has been left untreated because of his ability to white-knuckle it through his many daily meetings and calls. A married father of three, he is a successful portfolio manager at a high-yield bond fund.
Adam tends to eat minimally during the day, thereby baffling his colleagues with the stark contrast between his minimal caloric intake and his large belly. However, when he returns from work late at night (kids safely tucked into bed), the floodgates open. He reports polishing off pints of ice cream, scarfing down bags of cookies, inhaling trays of brownies. No carbohydrate is off limits to him once he steps off the Metro North train and crosses the threshold from work to home.
Does Adam simply lack the desire or common-sense willpower to make the necessary changes in his lifestyle or is there something more complicated at play?
I would argue that Adam’s ADHD triggered a binge-eating disorder (BED) that festered unchecked over the past 20 years. Patients with BED typically eat massive quantities of food over short periods of time – often when they’re not even hungry. Adam admitted that he would generally continue to eat well after feeling stuffed to the brim.
The answer probably lies with dopamine, a neurotransmitter produced in the reward centers of the brain that regulates how people experience pleasure and control impulses. We believe that people with ADHD have low levels of dopamine (it’s actually a bit more complicated, but this is the general idea). These low levels of dopamine lead people to self-medicate with sugars, salt, and fats to increase dopamine levels.
Lisdexamfetamine (Vyvanse) is a Food and Drug Administration–approved treatment option for both ADHD and binge eating. It raises the levels of dopamine (as well as norepinephrine) in the brain’s reward center. Often, the strong urge to binge subsides rapidly once ADHD is properly treated.
Rather than starting Adam on a semaglutide or similar agent, I opted to start him on lisdexamfetamine. When I spoke to him 1 week later, he confided that the world suddenly shifted into focus, and he was able to plan his meals throughout the day and resist the urge to binge late at night.
I may eventually add a semaglutide-like medication if his weight loss plateaus, but for now, I will focus on raising his dopamine levels to tackle the underlying cause of his weight gain.
Dr. Messer is a clinical assistant professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York. She disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
In medical school, we were repeatedly advised that there is both a science and an art to the practice of medicine. In these days of doc-in-a-box online consultations for obesity, it’s tempting to think that there’s a one-size-fits-all purely scientific approach for these new weight loss medications. Yet, for every nine patients who lose weight seemingly effortlessly on this class of medication, there is always one whose body stubbornly refuses to submit.
Adam is a 58-year-old man who came to me recently because he was having difficulty losing weight. Over the past 20 years, he’d been steadily gaining weight and now, technically has morbid obesity (a term which should arguably be obsolete). His weight gain is complicated by high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and obstructive sleep apnea. His sleep apnea has caused such profound exhaustion that he no longer has the energy to work out. He also has significant ADHD, which has been left untreated because of his ability to white-knuckle it through his many daily meetings and calls. A married father of three, he is a successful portfolio manager at a high-yield bond fund.
Adam tends to eat minimally during the day, thereby baffling his colleagues with the stark contrast between his minimal caloric intake and his large belly. However, when he returns from work late at night (kids safely tucked into bed), the floodgates open. He reports polishing off pints of ice cream, scarfing down bags of cookies, inhaling trays of brownies. No carbohydrate is off limits to him once he steps off the Metro North train and crosses the threshold from work to home.
Does Adam simply lack the desire or common-sense willpower to make the necessary changes in his lifestyle or is there something more complicated at play?
I would argue that Adam’s ADHD triggered a binge-eating disorder (BED) that festered unchecked over the past 20 years. Patients with BED typically eat massive quantities of food over short periods of time – often when they’re not even hungry. Adam admitted that he would generally continue to eat well after feeling stuffed to the brim.
The answer probably lies with dopamine, a neurotransmitter produced in the reward centers of the brain that regulates how people experience pleasure and control impulses. We believe that people with ADHD have low levels of dopamine (it’s actually a bit more complicated, but this is the general idea). These low levels of dopamine lead people to self-medicate with sugars, salt, and fats to increase dopamine levels.
Lisdexamfetamine (Vyvanse) is a Food and Drug Administration–approved treatment option for both ADHD and binge eating. It raises the levels of dopamine (as well as norepinephrine) in the brain’s reward center. Often, the strong urge to binge subsides rapidly once ADHD is properly treated.
Rather than starting Adam on a semaglutide or similar agent, I opted to start him on lisdexamfetamine. When I spoke to him 1 week later, he confided that the world suddenly shifted into focus, and he was able to plan his meals throughout the day and resist the urge to binge late at night.
I may eventually add a semaglutide-like medication if his weight loss plateaus, but for now, I will focus on raising his dopamine levels to tackle the underlying cause of his weight gain.
Dr. Messer is a clinical assistant professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York. She disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.