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Trauma, Racism Linked to Increased Suicide Risk in Black Men

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Changed
Mon, 04/08/2024 - 12:04

One in three Black men in rural America experienced suicidal or death ideation (SDI) in the past week, new research showed.

A developmental model used in the study showed a direct association between experiences pertaining to threat, deprivation, and racial discrimination during childhood and suicide risk in adulthood, suggesting that a broad range of adverse experiences in early life may affect SDI risk among Black men.

“During the past 20-30 years, young Black men have evinced increasing levels of suicidal behavior and related cognitions,” lead author Steven Kogan, PhD, professor of family and consumer sciences at the University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, and colleagues wrote.

“By controlling for depressive symptoms in assessing increases in SDI over time, our study’s design directly informed the extent to which social adversities affect SDI independent of other depressive problems,” they added.

The findings were published online in Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology.
 

Second Leading Cause of Death

Suicide is the second leading cause of death for Black Americans ages 15-24, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The outlook is worse for Black men, whose death rate from suicide is about four times greater than for Black women.

Previous research suggests Black men are disproportionately exposed to social adversity, including poverty and discrimination, which may increase the risk for SDI. In addition, racial discrimination has been shown to increase the risks for depression, anxiety, and psychological distress among Black youth and adults.

But little research exists to better understand how these negative experiences affect vulnerability to SDI. The new study tested a model linking adversity during childhood and emerging exposure to racial discrimination to increases in suicidal thoughts.

Researchers analyzed data from 504 participants in the African American Men’s Project, which included a series of surveys completed by young men in rural Georgia at three different time points over a period of about 3 years.

Composite scores for childhood threat and deprivation were developed using the Adverse Childhood Experiences Scale and Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Everyday discrimination was measured on the Schedule of Racist Events response scale.

To assess their experience with childhood threats, the men in the study, who were about 21 years old on average when they enrolled, were asked if they experienced a series of adverse childhood experiences and deprivation through age 16. Questions explored issues such as directly experiencing physical violence or witnessing abuse in the home and whether the men felt loved and “important or special” as children.

The investigators also asked the men about their experiences of racial discrimination, the quality of their relationships, their belief that aggression is a means of gaining respect, and their cynicism regarding romantic relationships.
 

Targeted Prevention

Overall, 33.6% of participants reported SDI in the previous week. A history of childhood threats and deprivation was associated with an increased likelihood of SDI (P < .001).

Researchers also found that a history of racial discrimination was significantly associated with the development of negative relational schemas, which are characterized by beliefs that other people are untrustworthy, uncaring, and/or hostile. Negative schemas were in turn associated with an increased risk for suicidal thoughts (P = .03).

“Clinical and preventive interventions for suicidality should target the influence of racism and adverse experiences and the negative relational schemas they induce,” the investigators noted.

“Policy efforts designed to dismantle systemic racism are critically needed. Interventions that address SDI, including programming designed to support Black men through their experiences with racial discrimination and processing of childhood experiences of adversity, may help young Black men resist the psychological impacts of racism, expand their positive support networks, and decrease their risk of SDI,” they added.

The study authors reported no funding sources or relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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One in three Black men in rural America experienced suicidal or death ideation (SDI) in the past week, new research showed.

A developmental model used in the study showed a direct association between experiences pertaining to threat, deprivation, and racial discrimination during childhood and suicide risk in adulthood, suggesting that a broad range of adverse experiences in early life may affect SDI risk among Black men.

“During the past 20-30 years, young Black men have evinced increasing levels of suicidal behavior and related cognitions,” lead author Steven Kogan, PhD, professor of family and consumer sciences at the University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, and colleagues wrote.

“By controlling for depressive symptoms in assessing increases in SDI over time, our study’s design directly informed the extent to which social adversities affect SDI independent of other depressive problems,” they added.

The findings were published online in Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology.
 

Second Leading Cause of Death

Suicide is the second leading cause of death for Black Americans ages 15-24, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The outlook is worse for Black men, whose death rate from suicide is about four times greater than for Black women.

Previous research suggests Black men are disproportionately exposed to social adversity, including poverty and discrimination, which may increase the risk for SDI. In addition, racial discrimination has been shown to increase the risks for depression, anxiety, and psychological distress among Black youth and adults.

But little research exists to better understand how these negative experiences affect vulnerability to SDI. The new study tested a model linking adversity during childhood and emerging exposure to racial discrimination to increases in suicidal thoughts.

Researchers analyzed data from 504 participants in the African American Men’s Project, which included a series of surveys completed by young men in rural Georgia at three different time points over a period of about 3 years.

Composite scores for childhood threat and deprivation were developed using the Adverse Childhood Experiences Scale and Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Everyday discrimination was measured on the Schedule of Racist Events response scale.

To assess their experience with childhood threats, the men in the study, who were about 21 years old on average when they enrolled, were asked if they experienced a series of adverse childhood experiences and deprivation through age 16. Questions explored issues such as directly experiencing physical violence or witnessing abuse in the home and whether the men felt loved and “important or special” as children.

The investigators also asked the men about their experiences of racial discrimination, the quality of their relationships, their belief that aggression is a means of gaining respect, and their cynicism regarding romantic relationships.
 

Targeted Prevention

Overall, 33.6% of participants reported SDI in the previous week. A history of childhood threats and deprivation was associated with an increased likelihood of SDI (P < .001).

Researchers also found that a history of racial discrimination was significantly associated with the development of negative relational schemas, which are characterized by beliefs that other people are untrustworthy, uncaring, and/or hostile. Negative schemas were in turn associated with an increased risk for suicidal thoughts (P = .03).

“Clinical and preventive interventions for suicidality should target the influence of racism and adverse experiences and the negative relational schemas they induce,” the investigators noted.

“Policy efforts designed to dismantle systemic racism are critically needed. Interventions that address SDI, including programming designed to support Black men through their experiences with racial discrimination and processing of childhood experiences of adversity, may help young Black men resist the psychological impacts of racism, expand their positive support networks, and decrease their risk of SDI,” they added.

The study authors reported no funding sources or relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

One in three Black men in rural America experienced suicidal or death ideation (SDI) in the past week, new research showed.

A developmental model used in the study showed a direct association between experiences pertaining to threat, deprivation, and racial discrimination during childhood and suicide risk in adulthood, suggesting that a broad range of adverse experiences in early life may affect SDI risk among Black men.

“During the past 20-30 years, young Black men have evinced increasing levels of suicidal behavior and related cognitions,” lead author Steven Kogan, PhD, professor of family and consumer sciences at the University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, and colleagues wrote.

“By controlling for depressive symptoms in assessing increases in SDI over time, our study’s design directly informed the extent to which social adversities affect SDI independent of other depressive problems,” they added.

The findings were published online in Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology.
 

Second Leading Cause of Death

Suicide is the second leading cause of death for Black Americans ages 15-24, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The outlook is worse for Black men, whose death rate from suicide is about four times greater than for Black women.

Previous research suggests Black men are disproportionately exposed to social adversity, including poverty and discrimination, which may increase the risk for SDI. In addition, racial discrimination has been shown to increase the risks for depression, anxiety, and psychological distress among Black youth and adults.

But little research exists to better understand how these negative experiences affect vulnerability to SDI. The new study tested a model linking adversity during childhood and emerging exposure to racial discrimination to increases in suicidal thoughts.

Researchers analyzed data from 504 participants in the African American Men’s Project, which included a series of surveys completed by young men in rural Georgia at three different time points over a period of about 3 years.

Composite scores for childhood threat and deprivation were developed using the Adverse Childhood Experiences Scale and Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Everyday discrimination was measured on the Schedule of Racist Events response scale.

To assess their experience with childhood threats, the men in the study, who were about 21 years old on average when they enrolled, were asked if they experienced a series of adverse childhood experiences and deprivation through age 16. Questions explored issues such as directly experiencing physical violence or witnessing abuse in the home and whether the men felt loved and “important or special” as children.

The investigators also asked the men about their experiences of racial discrimination, the quality of their relationships, their belief that aggression is a means of gaining respect, and their cynicism regarding romantic relationships.
 

Targeted Prevention

Overall, 33.6% of participants reported SDI in the previous week. A history of childhood threats and deprivation was associated with an increased likelihood of SDI (P < .001).

Researchers also found that a history of racial discrimination was significantly associated with the development of negative relational schemas, which are characterized by beliefs that other people are untrustworthy, uncaring, and/or hostile. Negative schemas were in turn associated with an increased risk for suicidal thoughts (P = .03).

“Clinical and preventive interventions for suicidality should target the influence of racism and adverse experiences and the negative relational schemas they induce,” the investigators noted.

“Policy efforts designed to dismantle systemic racism are critically needed. Interventions that address SDI, including programming designed to support Black men through their experiences with racial discrimination and processing of childhood experiences of adversity, may help young Black men resist the psychological impacts of racism, expand their positive support networks, and decrease their risk of SDI,” they added.

The study authors reported no funding sources or relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Will Your Next Prescription Be 20 Minutes of Nature a Day?

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 04/08/2024 - 09:35

What if a walk in a green environment could reshape brains, recalibrate sense of time, and stave off mental health conditions? If the research trends are true, you might soon find yourself writing prescriptions of 20 minutes of nature per day.

Evidence for the health benefits of exposure to green spaces, like parks, open spaces, gardens, outdoor gyms, and woodland trails, has been mostly interventional and observational, but that has not stopped global recognition that these exposures are important. 

In the wake of the pandemic, the British government allocated more than £5 million to pandemic recovery efforts that specifically involved green spaces. Since then, it has committed even more funding toward an expansive social prescribing program that connects patients to “link workers” who determine personal care needs and facilitate community and volunteer-based interventions. These can include group walking and volunteering to help out in community gardens or conservation efforts. Similar green programs can be found in Japan, where shinrin-yoku (forest bathing) was recently adopted as a national health strategy, and in the United States and Canada.

“Disconnection from nature is a major part of the health problems that we have on this planet,” said William Bird, a UK-based general practitioner, green prescriber, and CEO of Intelligent Health, which is geared toward building healthy, active, and connected communities. Dr. Bird received the prestigious Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 2010 for services related to physical activity and health. 

“Our brains are designed to connect to nature ... and we haven’t lost that instinct,” he explained. “Once we are with birdsong and water flowing and greenery, cortisol levels drop, our central vagus nerve improves, our fight and flight [response] disappears, and we start to be more receptive to other people.” 
 

Shifting Time Perception and Health

Ricardo A. Correia, PhD, a biologist and researcher at the University of Helsinki in Finland, said he believed that the mechanism for at least some of these outcomes might be differences in how time is perceived. In a perspective that appeared in March in People and Nature, Dr. Correia explored how the “services” that nature provides shift time perceptions and, in turn, regulate overall well-being. 

“I reached the realization that there was some evidence for the shift in some of the dimensions that we use to make sense of time in urban vs natural environments,” he told this news organization. 

Dr. Correia explained that human time perception facilitates understanding cause and effect, so we can act in a way that allows us to survive. 

“Time perception in humans is really complex and multifaceted,” he said. “The way that we make sense of time is not directly attached to any sensory organ, but rather goes through a range of cognitive, emotional, and bodily processes, all of which vary from person to person.” 

Dr. Correia pointed to evidence showing that time perception is shorter in urban environments and longer in natural ones. This, in turn, influences attention and attention restoration. “When we live in cities, we are exposed to similar sorts of demanding environments, increased time pressures, less time for oneself and for recreational purposes,” he said. “Ever-mounting pressure on daily demands plus processes we use to make sense of time, especially attention, means that we pay a cognitive toll.”

Dr. Correia posits that it might be possible to recalibrate time perception, but only by breaking the cycle of exposure. 

“If we are always exposed to fast-paced lifestyles, we become attuned to them and get caught up in an endless loop.” This cycle can be broken, Dr. Correia explained, by increasing exposure to natural environments. This leads to positive emotions, a sense of being in the present, and a heightened sense of mindfulness, all of which help mitigate the physical and mental health outcomes commonly associated with time scarcity. 
 

 

 

Brain-Mental Health Benefits

To date, there is quite a bit of research exploring the impacts of exposure to nature on the brain. For example, data have shown that adolescents raised exclusively in rural environments have a larger hippocampus and better spatial processing than children exclusively raised in cities. Other research demonstrated that spending just an hour in the forest led to a decline in amygdala activity in adults, whereas it remained stable after walking in an urban setting, underscoring the salutogenic effects on brain regions related to stress. There is also evidence from a 10-year longitudinal study of more than 2 million Welsh adults that highlights the value of proximity to green or blue (eg, lakes and rivers) spaces and common mental health conditions, with every additional 360 meters to the nearest green or blue space associated with 10% greater odds of anxiety and depression.

Dr. Bird said there has been a massive sea change in attitudes among general practitioners, who have come around to embracing the concept of nature as medicine. This shift among peers, who teased him in the 1990s about his green walking and conservation prescriptions, portends a bandwagon of epic proportions that could benefit patients. He said that he was especially hopeful that green prescriptions will become mainstream in certain conditions, especially those like depression and anxiety that are resistant to medication.

But Dr. Bird cautions that primary care professionals need to be mindful. “Patients need to know that it’s real science, otherwise they’ll think that they’re being pawned off or dismissed,” he said. “I try to put real evidence behind it and explain that there’s no contraindication. The main thing is to start where patients are, what they’re feeling, and what they need. Some people just don’t like nature,” he said.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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What if a walk in a green environment could reshape brains, recalibrate sense of time, and stave off mental health conditions? If the research trends are true, you might soon find yourself writing prescriptions of 20 minutes of nature per day.

Evidence for the health benefits of exposure to green spaces, like parks, open spaces, gardens, outdoor gyms, and woodland trails, has been mostly interventional and observational, but that has not stopped global recognition that these exposures are important. 

In the wake of the pandemic, the British government allocated more than £5 million to pandemic recovery efforts that specifically involved green spaces. Since then, it has committed even more funding toward an expansive social prescribing program that connects patients to “link workers” who determine personal care needs and facilitate community and volunteer-based interventions. These can include group walking and volunteering to help out in community gardens or conservation efforts. Similar green programs can be found in Japan, where shinrin-yoku (forest bathing) was recently adopted as a national health strategy, and in the United States and Canada.

“Disconnection from nature is a major part of the health problems that we have on this planet,” said William Bird, a UK-based general practitioner, green prescriber, and CEO of Intelligent Health, which is geared toward building healthy, active, and connected communities. Dr. Bird received the prestigious Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 2010 for services related to physical activity and health. 

“Our brains are designed to connect to nature ... and we haven’t lost that instinct,” he explained. “Once we are with birdsong and water flowing and greenery, cortisol levels drop, our central vagus nerve improves, our fight and flight [response] disappears, and we start to be more receptive to other people.” 
 

Shifting Time Perception and Health

Ricardo A. Correia, PhD, a biologist and researcher at the University of Helsinki in Finland, said he believed that the mechanism for at least some of these outcomes might be differences in how time is perceived. In a perspective that appeared in March in People and Nature, Dr. Correia explored how the “services” that nature provides shift time perceptions and, in turn, regulate overall well-being. 

“I reached the realization that there was some evidence for the shift in some of the dimensions that we use to make sense of time in urban vs natural environments,” he told this news organization. 

Dr. Correia explained that human time perception facilitates understanding cause and effect, so we can act in a way that allows us to survive. 

“Time perception in humans is really complex and multifaceted,” he said. “The way that we make sense of time is not directly attached to any sensory organ, but rather goes through a range of cognitive, emotional, and bodily processes, all of which vary from person to person.” 

Dr. Correia pointed to evidence showing that time perception is shorter in urban environments and longer in natural ones. This, in turn, influences attention and attention restoration. “When we live in cities, we are exposed to similar sorts of demanding environments, increased time pressures, less time for oneself and for recreational purposes,” he said. “Ever-mounting pressure on daily demands plus processes we use to make sense of time, especially attention, means that we pay a cognitive toll.”

Dr. Correia posits that it might be possible to recalibrate time perception, but only by breaking the cycle of exposure. 

“If we are always exposed to fast-paced lifestyles, we become attuned to them and get caught up in an endless loop.” This cycle can be broken, Dr. Correia explained, by increasing exposure to natural environments. This leads to positive emotions, a sense of being in the present, and a heightened sense of mindfulness, all of which help mitigate the physical and mental health outcomes commonly associated with time scarcity. 
 

 

 

Brain-Mental Health Benefits

To date, there is quite a bit of research exploring the impacts of exposure to nature on the brain. For example, data have shown that adolescents raised exclusively in rural environments have a larger hippocampus and better spatial processing than children exclusively raised in cities. Other research demonstrated that spending just an hour in the forest led to a decline in amygdala activity in adults, whereas it remained stable after walking in an urban setting, underscoring the salutogenic effects on brain regions related to stress. There is also evidence from a 10-year longitudinal study of more than 2 million Welsh adults that highlights the value of proximity to green or blue (eg, lakes and rivers) spaces and common mental health conditions, with every additional 360 meters to the nearest green or blue space associated with 10% greater odds of anxiety and depression.

Dr. Bird said there has been a massive sea change in attitudes among general practitioners, who have come around to embracing the concept of nature as medicine. This shift among peers, who teased him in the 1990s about his green walking and conservation prescriptions, portends a bandwagon of epic proportions that could benefit patients. He said that he was especially hopeful that green prescriptions will become mainstream in certain conditions, especially those like depression and anxiety that are resistant to medication.

But Dr. Bird cautions that primary care professionals need to be mindful. “Patients need to know that it’s real science, otherwise they’ll think that they’re being pawned off or dismissed,” he said. “I try to put real evidence behind it and explain that there’s no contraindication. The main thing is to start where patients are, what they’re feeling, and what they need. Some people just don’t like nature,” he said.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

What if a walk in a green environment could reshape brains, recalibrate sense of time, and stave off mental health conditions? If the research trends are true, you might soon find yourself writing prescriptions of 20 minutes of nature per day.

Evidence for the health benefits of exposure to green spaces, like parks, open spaces, gardens, outdoor gyms, and woodland trails, has been mostly interventional and observational, but that has not stopped global recognition that these exposures are important. 

In the wake of the pandemic, the British government allocated more than £5 million to pandemic recovery efforts that specifically involved green spaces. Since then, it has committed even more funding toward an expansive social prescribing program that connects patients to “link workers” who determine personal care needs and facilitate community and volunteer-based interventions. These can include group walking and volunteering to help out in community gardens or conservation efforts. Similar green programs can be found in Japan, where shinrin-yoku (forest bathing) was recently adopted as a national health strategy, and in the United States and Canada.

“Disconnection from nature is a major part of the health problems that we have on this planet,” said William Bird, a UK-based general practitioner, green prescriber, and CEO of Intelligent Health, which is geared toward building healthy, active, and connected communities. Dr. Bird received the prestigious Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 2010 for services related to physical activity and health. 

“Our brains are designed to connect to nature ... and we haven’t lost that instinct,” he explained. “Once we are with birdsong and water flowing and greenery, cortisol levels drop, our central vagus nerve improves, our fight and flight [response] disappears, and we start to be more receptive to other people.” 
 

Shifting Time Perception and Health

Ricardo A. Correia, PhD, a biologist and researcher at the University of Helsinki in Finland, said he believed that the mechanism for at least some of these outcomes might be differences in how time is perceived. In a perspective that appeared in March in People and Nature, Dr. Correia explored how the “services” that nature provides shift time perceptions and, in turn, regulate overall well-being. 

“I reached the realization that there was some evidence for the shift in some of the dimensions that we use to make sense of time in urban vs natural environments,” he told this news organization. 

Dr. Correia explained that human time perception facilitates understanding cause and effect, so we can act in a way that allows us to survive. 

“Time perception in humans is really complex and multifaceted,” he said. “The way that we make sense of time is not directly attached to any sensory organ, but rather goes through a range of cognitive, emotional, and bodily processes, all of which vary from person to person.” 

Dr. Correia pointed to evidence showing that time perception is shorter in urban environments and longer in natural ones. This, in turn, influences attention and attention restoration. “When we live in cities, we are exposed to similar sorts of demanding environments, increased time pressures, less time for oneself and for recreational purposes,” he said. “Ever-mounting pressure on daily demands plus processes we use to make sense of time, especially attention, means that we pay a cognitive toll.”

Dr. Correia posits that it might be possible to recalibrate time perception, but only by breaking the cycle of exposure. 

“If we are always exposed to fast-paced lifestyles, we become attuned to them and get caught up in an endless loop.” This cycle can be broken, Dr. Correia explained, by increasing exposure to natural environments. This leads to positive emotions, a sense of being in the present, and a heightened sense of mindfulness, all of which help mitigate the physical and mental health outcomes commonly associated with time scarcity. 
 

 

 

Brain-Mental Health Benefits

To date, there is quite a bit of research exploring the impacts of exposure to nature on the brain. For example, data have shown that adolescents raised exclusively in rural environments have a larger hippocampus and better spatial processing than children exclusively raised in cities. Other research demonstrated that spending just an hour in the forest led to a decline in amygdala activity in adults, whereas it remained stable after walking in an urban setting, underscoring the salutogenic effects on brain regions related to stress. There is also evidence from a 10-year longitudinal study of more than 2 million Welsh adults that highlights the value of proximity to green or blue (eg, lakes and rivers) spaces and common mental health conditions, with every additional 360 meters to the nearest green or blue space associated with 10% greater odds of anxiety and depression.

Dr. Bird said there has been a massive sea change in attitudes among general practitioners, who have come around to embracing the concept of nature as medicine. This shift among peers, who teased him in the 1990s about his green walking and conservation prescriptions, portends a bandwagon of epic proportions that could benefit patients. He said that he was especially hopeful that green prescriptions will become mainstream in certain conditions, especially those like depression and anxiety that are resistant to medication.

But Dr. Bird cautions that primary care professionals need to be mindful. “Patients need to know that it’s real science, otherwise they’ll think that they’re being pawned off or dismissed,” he said. “I try to put real evidence behind it and explain that there’s no contraindication. The main thing is to start where patients are, what they’re feeling, and what they need. Some people just don’t like nature,” he said.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Why We Need to Know About Our Patients’ History of Trauma

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Mon, 04/15/2024 - 19:25

This case is a little out of the ordinary, but we would love to find out how readers would handle it.

Diana is a 51-year-old woman with a history of depression, obesity, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and coronary artery disease. She has come in for a routine visit for her chronic illnesses. She seems very distant and has a flat affect during the initial interview. When you ask about any recent stressful events, she begins crying and explains that her daughter was just deported, leaving behind a child and boyfriend.

Their country of origin suffers from chronic instability and violence. Diana’s father was murdered there, and Diana was the victim of sexual assault. “I escaped when I was 18, and I tried to never look back. Until now.” Diana is very worried about her daughter’s return to that country. “I don’t want her to have to endure what I have endured.”

You spend some time discussing the patient’s mental health burden and identify a counselor and online resources that might help. You wonder if Diana’s adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) might have contributed to some of her physical illnesses.

ACEs and Adult Health

The effects of trauma run long and deep. ACEs have been associated with higher risks for multiple chronic conditions, even among adults aged 60 years or older. Therefore, clinicians should consider a patient’s history of ACEs as part of their evaluation of risk for chronic illness.

One of the most pronounced and straightforward links is that between ACEs and depression. In the Southern Community Cohort Study of more than 38,200 US adults, the highest odds ratio between ACEs and chronic disease was for depression. Persons who reported more than three ACEs had about a twofold increase in the risk for depression compared with persons without ACEs. There was a monotonic increase in the risk for depression and other chronic illnesses as the burden of ACEs increased.

In another study from the United Kingdom, each additional ACE was associated with a significant 11% increase in the risk for incident diabetes during adulthood. Researchers found that both depression symptoms and cardiometabolic dysfunction mediated the effects of ACEs in promoting higher rates of diabetes.

Depression and diabetes are significant risk factors for coronary artery disease, so it is not surprising that ACEs are also associated with a higher risk for coronary events. A review by Godoy and colleagues described how ACEs promote neuroendocrine, autonomic, and inflammatory dysfunction, which in turn leads to higher rates of traditional cardiovascular risk factors such as diabetes and obesity. Ultimately, the presence of four or more ACEs is associated with more than a twofold higher risk for cardiovascular disease compared with no ACEs.

Many of the pathologic processes that promote cardiovascular disease also increase the risk for dementia. Could the reach of ACEs span decades to promote a higher risk for dementia among older adults? A study by Yuan and colleagues of 7222 Chinese adults suggests that the answer is yes. This study divided the cohort into persons with a history of no ACEs, household dysfunction during childhood, or mistreatment during childhood. Child mistreatment was associated with higher rates of diabetes, depression, and cardiovascular disease, as well as an odds ratio of 1.37 (95% CI, 1.12 to 1.68) for cognitive impairment.

The magnitude of the effects ACEs can have on well-being is reinforced by epidemiologic data surrounding ACEs. According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 64% of US adults report at least one ACE and 17% experienced at least four ACEs. Risk factors for ACEs include being female, American Indian or Alaska Native, or unemployed.

How do we reduce the impact of ACEs? Prevention is key. The CDC estimates that nearly 2 million cases of adult heart disease and more than 20 million cases of adult depression could be avoided if ACEs were eliminated.

But what is the best means to pragmatically reduce ACEs in our current practice models? How do we discover a history of ACEs in patients, and what are the best practices in managing persons with a positive history? We will cover these critical subjects in a future article, but for now, please provide your own comments and pearls regarding the prevention and management of ACEs.

Dr. Vega, health sciences clinical professor, family medicine, University of California, Irvine, disclosed ties with GlaxoSmithKline and Johnson and Johnson. Ms. Hurtado, MD candidate, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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This case is a little out of the ordinary, but we would love to find out how readers would handle it.

Diana is a 51-year-old woman with a history of depression, obesity, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and coronary artery disease. She has come in for a routine visit for her chronic illnesses. She seems very distant and has a flat affect during the initial interview. When you ask about any recent stressful events, she begins crying and explains that her daughter was just deported, leaving behind a child and boyfriend.

Their country of origin suffers from chronic instability and violence. Diana’s father was murdered there, and Diana was the victim of sexual assault. “I escaped when I was 18, and I tried to never look back. Until now.” Diana is very worried about her daughter’s return to that country. “I don’t want her to have to endure what I have endured.”

You spend some time discussing the patient’s mental health burden and identify a counselor and online resources that might help. You wonder if Diana’s adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) might have contributed to some of her physical illnesses.

ACEs and Adult Health

The effects of trauma run long and deep. ACEs have been associated with higher risks for multiple chronic conditions, even among adults aged 60 years or older. Therefore, clinicians should consider a patient’s history of ACEs as part of their evaluation of risk for chronic illness.

One of the most pronounced and straightforward links is that between ACEs and depression. In the Southern Community Cohort Study of more than 38,200 US adults, the highest odds ratio between ACEs and chronic disease was for depression. Persons who reported more than three ACEs had about a twofold increase in the risk for depression compared with persons without ACEs. There was a monotonic increase in the risk for depression and other chronic illnesses as the burden of ACEs increased.

In another study from the United Kingdom, each additional ACE was associated with a significant 11% increase in the risk for incident diabetes during adulthood. Researchers found that both depression symptoms and cardiometabolic dysfunction mediated the effects of ACEs in promoting higher rates of diabetes.

Depression and diabetes are significant risk factors for coronary artery disease, so it is not surprising that ACEs are also associated with a higher risk for coronary events. A review by Godoy and colleagues described how ACEs promote neuroendocrine, autonomic, and inflammatory dysfunction, which in turn leads to higher rates of traditional cardiovascular risk factors such as diabetes and obesity. Ultimately, the presence of four or more ACEs is associated with more than a twofold higher risk for cardiovascular disease compared with no ACEs.

Many of the pathologic processes that promote cardiovascular disease also increase the risk for dementia. Could the reach of ACEs span decades to promote a higher risk for dementia among older adults? A study by Yuan and colleagues of 7222 Chinese adults suggests that the answer is yes. This study divided the cohort into persons with a history of no ACEs, household dysfunction during childhood, or mistreatment during childhood. Child mistreatment was associated with higher rates of diabetes, depression, and cardiovascular disease, as well as an odds ratio of 1.37 (95% CI, 1.12 to 1.68) for cognitive impairment.

The magnitude of the effects ACEs can have on well-being is reinforced by epidemiologic data surrounding ACEs. According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 64% of US adults report at least one ACE and 17% experienced at least four ACEs. Risk factors for ACEs include being female, American Indian or Alaska Native, or unemployed.

How do we reduce the impact of ACEs? Prevention is key. The CDC estimates that nearly 2 million cases of adult heart disease and more than 20 million cases of adult depression could be avoided if ACEs were eliminated.

But what is the best means to pragmatically reduce ACEs in our current practice models? How do we discover a history of ACEs in patients, and what are the best practices in managing persons with a positive history? We will cover these critical subjects in a future article, but for now, please provide your own comments and pearls regarding the prevention and management of ACEs.

Dr. Vega, health sciences clinical professor, family medicine, University of California, Irvine, disclosed ties with GlaxoSmithKline and Johnson and Johnson. Ms. Hurtado, MD candidate, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

This case is a little out of the ordinary, but we would love to find out how readers would handle it.

Diana is a 51-year-old woman with a history of depression, obesity, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and coronary artery disease. She has come in for a routine visit for her chronic illnesses. She seems very distant and has a flat affect during the initial interview. When you ask about any recent stressful events, she begins crying and explains that her daughter was just deported, leaving behind a child and boyfriend.

Their country of origin suffers from chronic instability and violence. Diana’s father was murdered there, and Diana was the victim of sexual assault. “I escaped when I was 18, and I tried to never look back. Until now.” Diana is very worried about her daughter’s return to that country. “I don’t want her to have to endure what I have endured.”

You spend some time discussing the patient’s mental health burden and identify a counselor and online resources that might help. You wonder if Diana’s adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) might have contributed to some of her physical illnesses.

ACEs and Adult Health

The effects of trauma run long and deep. ACEs have been associated with higher risks for multiple chronic conditions, even among adults aged 60 years or older. Therefore, clinicians should consider a patient’s history of ACEs as part of their evaluation of risk for chronic illness.

One of the most pronounced and straightforward links is that between ACEs and depression. In the Southern Community Cohort Study of more than 38,200 US adults, the highest odds ratio between ACEs and chronic disease was for depression. Persons who reported more than three ACEs had about a twofold increase in the risk for depression compared with persons without ACEs. There was a monotonic increase in the risk for depression and other chronic illnesses as the burden of ACEs increased.

In another study from the United Kingdom, each additional ACE was associated with a significant 11% increase in the risk for incident diabetes during adulthood. Researchers found that both depression symptoms and cardiometabolic dysfunction mediated the effects of ACEs in promoting higher rates of diabetes.

Depression and diabetes are significant risk factors for coronary artery disease, so it is not surprising that ACEs are also associated with a higher risk for coronary events. A review by Godoy and colleagues described how ACEs promote neuroendocrine, autonomic, and inflammatory dysfunction, which in turn leads to higher rates of traditional cardiovascular risk factors such as diabetes and obesity. Ultimately, the presence of four or more ACEs is associated with more than a twofold higher risk for cardiovascular disease compared with no ACEs.

Many of the pathologic processes that promote cardiovascular disease also increase the risk for dementia. Could the reach of ACEs span decades to promote a higher risk for dementia among older adults? A study by Yuan and colleagues of 7222 Chinese adults suggests that the answer is yes. This study divided the cohort into persons with a history of no ACEs, household dysfunction during childhood, or mistreatment during childhood. Child mistreatment was associated with higher rates of diabetes, depression, and cardiovascular disease, as well as an odds ratio of 1.37 (95% CI, 1.12 to 1.68) for cognitive impairment.

The magnitude of the effects ACEs can have on well-being is reinforced by epidemiologic data surrounding ACEs. According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 64% of US adults report at least one ACE and 17% experienced at least four ACEs. Risk factors for ACEs include being female, American Indian or Alaska Native, or unemployed.

How do we reduce the impact of ACEs? Prevention is key. The CDC estimates that nearly 2 million cases of adult heart disease and more than 20 million cases of adult depression could be avoided if ACEs were eliminated.

But what is the best means to pragmatically reduce ACEs in our current practice models? How do we discover a history of ACEs in patients, and what are the best practices in managing persons with a positive history? We will cover these critical subjects in a future article, but for now, please provide your own comments and pearls regarding the prevention and management of ACEs.

Dr. Vega, health sciences clinical professor, family medicine, University of California, Irvine, disclosed ties with GlaxoSmithKline and Johnson and Johnson. Ms. Hurtado, MD candidate, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Single Session Mindfulness Intervention Linked to Reduced Depression

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Tue, 04/02/2024 - 13:07

 

TOPLINE:

One session of a telehealth intervention combining mindfulness and compassion significantly lowered self-perceived stress and symptoms of depression and anxiety compared with a waitlist control group, results of a new trial showed. 

METHODOLOGY:

  • The randomized clinical trial (RCT) included 91 participants aged 18-70 years recruited from the community and the University of Texas at Austin and followed from 2020 to 2021.
  • To be included in the trial, participants had to be sheltering at home during the pandemic and endorse loneliness as one of the top issues affecting them.
  • Participants were randomized to one of three groups that received single-session online interventions. These included mindfulness-only (MO), mindfulness and compassion (MC), and a waitlist control (WL) group.
  • During the compassion component, participants were instructed to focus on a person, place, object, or spiritual figure that evoked feelings of warmth, love, and kindness in them. The primary outcome was self-reported loneliness and secondary outcomes were self-reported stress, depression, and anxiety.

TAKEAWAY:

  • At 1-week follow-up, the MC group led to reductions in perceived stress (b = −3.75), anxiety (b = −3.79), and depression (b = −3.01) but not loneliness compared with control individuals.
  • Compared with the MO group alone, the MC group had no meaningful differences in perceived depression (b = −1.08) or anxiety (b = −1.50), and the same was true at the 2-week follow-up.
  • Researchers speculated that the lack of difference between outcomes in the two mindfulness groups probably meant that the MC group may have only been effective in reducing self-perceived symptoms of stress, anxiety, and depression compared with the control group.

IN PRACTICE:

“This brief single session mindfulness intervention offers an approach that can be easily adopted in a range of contexts. It is important for future research to evaluate this approach with larger samples and to examine whether changes in symptoms are maintained over longer periods of time,” the researchers wrote. 

SOURCE:

Mikael Rubin, PhD, of Palo Alto University in Palo Alto, California, led the study, which was published online in PLOS ONE.

LIMITATIONS:

The study was limited by its small sample size and short follow-up period.

DISCLOSURES:

There was no funding listed for the study nor were there any reported disclosures. 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

One session of a telehealth intervention combining mindfulness and compassion significantly lowered self-perceived stress and symptoms of depression and anxiety compared with a waitlist control group, results of a new trial showed. 

METHODOLOGY:

  • The randomized clinical trial (RCT) included 91 participants aged 18-70 years recruited from the community and the University of Texas at Austin and followed from 2020 to 2021.
  • To be included in the trial, participants had to be sheltering at home during the pandemic and endorse loneliness as one of the top issues affecting them.
  • Participants were randomized to one of three groups that received single-session online interventions. These included mindfulness-only (MO), mindfulness and compassion (MC), and a waitlist control (WL) group.
  • During the compassion component, participants were instructed to focus on a person, place, object, or spiritual figure that evoked feelings of warmth, love, and kindness in them. The primary outcome was self-reported loneliness and secondary outcomes were self-reported stress, depression, and anxiety.

TAKEAWAY:

  • At 1-week follow-up, the MC group led to reductions in perceived stress (b = −3.75), anxiety (b = −3.79), and depression (b = −3.01) but not loneliness compared with control individuals.
  • Compared with the MO group alone, the MC group had no meaningful differences in perceived depression (b = −1.08) or anxiety (b = −1.50), and the same was true at the 2-week follow-up.
  • Researchers speculated that the lack of difference between outcomes in the two mindfulness groups probably meant that the MC group may have only been effective in reducing self-perceived symptoms of stress, anxiety, and depression compared with the control group.

IN PRACTICE:

“This brief single session mindfulness intervention offers an approach that can be easily adopted in a range of contexts. It is important for future research to evaluate this approach with larger samples and to examine whether changes in symptoms are maintained over longer periods of time,” the researchers wrote. 

SOURCE:

Mikael Rubin, PhD, of Palo Alto University in Palo Alto, California, led the study, which was published online in PLOS ONE.

LIMITATIONS:

The study was limited by its small sample size and short follow-up period.

DISCLOSURES:

There was no funding listed for the study nor were there any reported disclosures. 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

One session of a telehealth intervention combining mindfulness and compassion significantly lowered self-perceived stress and symptoms of depression and anxiety compared with a waitlist control group, results of a new trial showed. 

METHODOLOGY:

  • The randomized clinical trial (RCT) included 91 participants aged 18-70 years recruited from the community and the University of Texas at Austin and followed from 2020 to 2021.
  • To be included in the trial, participants had to be sheltering at home during the pandemic and endorse loneliness as one of the top issues affecting them.
  • Participants were randomized to one of three groups that received single-session online interventions. These included mindfulness-only (MO), mindfulness and compassion (MC), and a waitlist control (WL) group.
  • During the compassion component, participants were instructed to focus on a person, place, object, or spiritual figure that evoked feelings of warmth, love, and kindness in them. The primary outcome was self-reported loneliness and secondary outcomes were self-reported stress, depression, and anxiety.

TAKEAWAY:

  • At 1-week follow-up, the MC group led to reductions in perceived stress (b = −3.75), anxiety (b = −3.79), and depression (b = −3.01) but not loneliness compared with control individuals.
  • Compared with the MO group alone, the MC group had no meaningful differences in perceived depression (b = −1.08) or anxiety (b = −1.50), and the same was true at the 2-week follow-up.
  • Researchers speculated that the lack of difference between outcomes in the two mindfulness groups probably meant that the MC group may have only been effective in reducing self-perceived symptoms of stress, anxiety, and depression compared with the control group.

IN PRACTICE:

“This brief single session mindfulness intervention offers an approach that can be easily adopted in a range of contexts. It is important for future research to evaluate this approach with larger samples and to examine whether changes in symptoms are maintained over longer periods of time,” the researchers wrote. 

SOURCE:

Mikael Rubin, PhD, of Palo Alto University in Palo Alto, California, led the study, which was published online in PLOS ONE.

LIMITATIONS:

The study was limited by its small sample size and short follow-up period.

DISCLOSURES:

There was no funding listed for the study nor were there any reported disclosures. 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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ADHD Meds Linked to Lower Suicide, Hospitalization Risk

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 04/01/2024 - 16:04

 

TOPLINE:

Certain stimulants prescribed for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are associated with a decreased risk for psychiatric and nonpsychiatric hospitalization and suicide, new data from a national cohort study showed.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Investigators used various medical and administrative databases in Sweden to identify individuals aged 16-65 years who were diagnosed with ADHD between January 2006 and December 2021.
  • Participants were followed for up to 15 years (mean duration, 7 years) from date of diagnosis until death, emigration, or end of data linkage in December 2021.
  • Researchers wanted to explore the link between ADHD meds and psychiatric hospitalization, nonpsychiatric hospitalization, and suicidal behavior.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The cohort included 221,700 individuals with ADHD (mean age, 25 years; 54% male), and 56% had a psychiatric comorbidity such as an anxiety or stress-related disorder (24%), and depression or bipolar disorder (20%).
  • Investigators found significantly lower risk for psychiatric hospitalization for the several medications. These included amphetamine (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 0.74), lisdexamphetamine (aHR, 0.80), dexamphetamine (aHR, 0.88), methylphenidate (aHR, 0.93), and polytherapy (aHR, 0.85). All but atomoxetine was significant at the P < .001 level.
  • ADHD medications associated with a significantly lower risk for nonpsychiatric hospitalization included amphetamine (aHR, 0.62), lisdexamphetamine (aHR, 0.64), polytherapy (aHR, 0.67), dexamphetamine (aHR, 0.72), methylphenidate (aHR, 0.80), and atomoxetine (aHR, 0.84). All but atomoxetine was significant at the P < .001 level.
  • Use of dexamphetamine (aHR, 0.69; P < .001), lisdexamphetamine (aHR, 0.76; P = .43), polytherapy (aHR, 0.85; P = .02), and methylphenidate (aHR, 0.92; P = .007) were associated with a significantly lower risk for suicidal behavior.

IN PRACTICE:

“Although concerns have been raised about the potential of amphetamines and methylphenidate for increasing the risk of adverse psychiatric outcomes, such as psychosis and mania, our results show that overall, the net effect on psychiatric outcomes is positive,” study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

Heidi Taipale, PhD, of Karolinska Institutet, led the study, which was published online in JAMA Network Open

LIMITATIONS:

Due to the use of nationwide registers, there was a lack of detailed clinical data, including type and severity of symptoms. There was also no data on nonpharmacologic treatments.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the AFA Insurance Agency. Dr. Taipale reported receiving personal fees from Gedeon Richter, Janssen, Lundbeck, and Otsuka and grants from Janssen and Eli Lilly outside of the submitted work. Other disclosures are noted in the original article.

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

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TOPLINE:

Certain stimulants prescribed for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are associated with a decreased risk for psychiatric and nonpsychiatric hospitalization and suicide, new data from a national cohort study showed.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Investigators used various medical and administrative databases in Sweden to identify individuals aged 16-65 years who were diagnosed with ADHD between January 2006 and December 2021.
  • Participants were followed for up to 15 years (mean duration, 7 years) from date of diagnosis until death, emigration, or end of data linkage in December 2021.
  • Researchers wanted to explore the link between ADHD meds and psychiatric hospitalization, nonpsychiatric hospitalization, and suicidal behavior.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The cohort included 221,700 individuals with ADHD (mean age, 25 years; 54% male), and 56% had a psychiatric comorbidity such as an anxiety or stress-related disorder (24%), and depression or bipolar disorder (20%).
  • Investigators found significantly lower risk for psychiatric hospitalization for the several medications. These included amphetamine (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 0.74), lisdexamphetamine (aHR, 0.80), dexamphetamine (aHR, 0.88), methylphenidate (aHR, 0.93), and polytherapy (aHR, 0.85). All but atomoxetine was significant at the P < .001 level.
  • ADHD medications associated with a significantly lower risk for nonpsychiatric hospitalization included amphetamine (aHR, 0.62), lisdexamphetamine (aHR, 0.64), polytherapy (aHR, 0.67), dexamphetamine (aHR, 0.72), methylphenidate (aHR, 0.80), and atomoxetine (aHR, 0.84). All but atomoxetine was significant at the P < .001 level.
  • Use of dexamphetamine (aHR, 0.69; P < .001), lisdexamphetamine (aHR, 0.76; P = .43), polytherapy (aHR, 0.85; P = .02), and methylphenidate (aHR, 0.92; P = .007) were associated with a significantly lower risk for suicidal behavior.

IN PRACTICE:

“Although concerns have been raised about the potential of amphetamines and methylphenidate for increasing the risk of adverse psychiatric outcomes, such as psychosis and mania, our results show that overall, the net effect on psychiatric outcomes is positive,” study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

Heidi Taipale, PhD, of Karolinska Institutet, led the study, which was published online in JAMA Network Open

LIMITATIONS:

Due to the use of nationwide registers, there was a lack of detailed clinical data, including type and severity of symptoms. There was also no data on nonpharmacologic treatments.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the AFA Insurance Agency. Dr. Taipale reported receiving personal fees from Gedeon Richter, Janssen, Lundbeck, and Otsuka and grants from Janssen and Eli Lilly outside of the submitted work. Other disclosures are noted in the original article.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Certain stimulants prescribed for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are associated with a decreased risk for psychiatric and nonpsychiatric hospitalization and suicide, new data from a national cohort study showed.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Investigators used various medical and administrative databases in Sweden to identify individuals aged 16-65 years who were diagnosed with ADHD between January 2006 and December 2021.
  • Participants were followed for up to 15 years (mean duration, 7 years) from date of diagnosis until death, emigration, or end of data linkage in December 2021.
  • Researchers wanted to explore the link between ADHD meds and psychiatric hospitalization, nonpsychiatric hospitalization, and suicidal behavior.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The cohort included 221,700 individuals with ADHD (mean age, 25 years; 54% male), and 56% had a psychiatric comorbidity such as an anxiety or stress-related disorder (24%), and depression or bipolar disorder (20%).
  • Investigators found significantly lower risk for psychiatric hospitalization for the several medications. These included amphetamine (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 0.74), lisdexamphetamine (aHR, 0.80), dexamphetamine (aHR, 0.88), methylphenidate (aHR, 0.93), and polytherapy (aHR, 0.85). All but atomoxetine was significant at the P < .001 level.
  • ADHD medications associated with a significantly lower risk for nonpsychiatric hospitalization included amphetamine (aHR, 0.62), lisdexamphetamine (aHR, 0.64), polytherapy (aHR, 0.67), dexamphetamine (aHR, 0.72), methylphenidate (aHR, 0.80), and atomoxetine (aHR, 0.84). All but atomoxetine was significant at the P < .001 level.
  • Use of dexamphetamine (aHR, 0.69; P < .001), lisdexamphetamine (aHR, 0.76; P = .43), polytherapy (aHR, 0.85; P = .02), and methylphenidate (aHR, 0.92; P = .007) were associated with a significantly lower risk for suicidal behavior.

IN PRACTICE:

“Although concerns have been raised about the potential of amphetamines and methylphenidate for increasing the risk of adverse psychiatric outcomes, such as psychosis and mania, our results show that overall, the net effect on psychiatric outcomes is positive,” study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

Heidi Taipale, PhD, of Karolinska Institutet, led the study, which was published online in JAMA Network Open

LIMITATIONS:

Due to the use of nationwide registers, there was a lack of detailed clinical data, including type and severity of symptoms. There was also no data on nonpharmacologic treatments.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the AFA Insurance Agency. Dr. Taipale reported receiving personal fees from Gedeon Richter, Janssen, Lundbeck, and Otsuka and grants from Janssen and Eli Lilly outside of the submitted work. Other disclosures are noted in the original article.

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

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Perinatal Mood and Anxiety Disorder Increasing Rapidly

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Tue, 03/26/2024 - 12:55

The number of women with perinatal mood and anxiety disorder (PMAD) has spiked sharply in the United States. A new study explores trends by state and time period.

Between 2008 and 2020, in a national cohort of 750,004 commercially insured women with a live birth, nearly 1 in 5 (144,037 [19.2%]) were diagnosed with PMAD, according to a paper published in Health Affairs. PMAD diagnoses among privately insured women increased by 93.3% over those years, wrote lead author Kara Zivin, PhD, of the University of Michigan, Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System, and colleagues.

PMAD describes a spectrum of emotional complications with mild to severe symptoms that can affect women while pregnant and through the first year after giving birth.

The total number of perinatal women decreased from a high of 64,842 in 2008 to a low of 52,479 in 2020, a 19.1% decrease, but over the same time, women with diagnosed PMAD increased 56.4% from 9,520 in 2008 to 14,890 in 2020. Prevalence of PMAD doubled from 1,468 per 10,000 deliveries to 2,837 per 10,000 deliveries in 2020, according to the analysis.
 

Differences by State

Increases differed substantially by state. Though average annual changes across all states reached 109 additional PMAD diagnoses per 10,000 deliveries, Iowa had the greatest increase with an additional 163 PMAD diagnoses per 10,000 deliveries annually. New Mexico had the smallest annual growth, at an additional 49 per 10,000 deliveries.

The increases were accompanied by maternal health improvement efforts. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) required insurance companies to cover maternity and preventive services, which likely increased PMAD screening and detection, the researchers noted.

“Diagnosis of PMAD is rising due to increased awareness and in all likelihood, decrease in stigma, but availability of providers is so challenging,” said Lee S. Cohen, MD, who was not part of the study. Dr. Cohen is director of the Ammon-Pinizzotto Center for Women’s Mental Health and Perinatal and Reproductive Psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. “The navigation to providers by women who are suffering is beyond challenging,” he said.

The authors reported that all states except Vermont saw increasing rates of PMAD diagnoses post-ACA vs. pre-ACA. The researchers also found that relative to the period from 2008 to 2014, psychotherapy rates continued rising from 2015 to 2020 and suicidality (suicidal ideation or self-harm diagnoses) rates declined.
 

States’ Suicidality Rates Vary Widely

“Overall, access to psychotherapy may have stemmed suicidality despite increasing PMAD diagnoses. But although more PMAD diagnoses may have led to increased psychotherapy, therapy access depends on provider availability, which varies by geographic region and insurance coverage network,” the authors wrote.

Suicidality rates differed greatly by state. Louisiana’s annual rate of increase was greatest, at 22 per 10,000 while Maryland had the greatest negative annual rate of change, at −15 per 10,000 deliveries, the authors explained.

“Observed trends in PMAD diagnoses among privately insured people during 2008-2020 and in associated suicidality and psychotherapy use suggest an increasingly rapid worsening of US maternal mental health,” the authors wrote.

The authors noted that this study did not include those on public insurance, a group that may experience disproportionate maternal morbidity and mortality burden, and urged that future studies include them.
 

 

 

Strengths of Study

Kimberly McKee, PhD, MPH, assistant professor in the department of family medicine at University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, who was not part of this research, said this paper gives a broader look than prior work because it includes the year before and after birth, rather than delivery and hospitalization.

“It’s really important to look out at least 12 months postpartum,” she noted.

Another strength is that the study was able to look at use of services such as psychotherapy before and post ACA. She noted the increased use of psychotherapy and the decrease in suicidal ideation was an association, but said, “I think it’s reasonable to assume that there was a benefit.”

She noted that these data go through 2020 and the COVID-19 pandemic has even further stressed the healthcare system, which could affect these numbers.



Primary Care’s Role

“The opportunity for primary care to really be the medical home for reproductive-age women is key here,” Dr. McKee said, adding that primary care can provide the continuity if women go off and on insurance around pregnancy and make sure the women get follow-up care and referrals to specialty care.

Models that integrate behavioral health and primary care are particularly promising, she said. Inclusion of social workers at the point of care can also help meet needs regarding social determinants of health.

Telehealth is another avenue for expansion extending the reach for following perinatal women, she said. “Using every tool we have to reach individuals where they are can allow for more frequent check-ins, which is really important here.”

Dr. McKee said the paper highlights an important reality: Mental health is a leading cause and contributor to maternal mortality, which “is 100% preventable.” Yet, current literature continues to show increases.

“This is a fairly common problem that affects not just women, but the fetus, their children, their families,” she noted.

The authors and Dr. Cohen and Dr. McKee reported no relevant financial relationships.

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The number of women with perinatal mood and anxiety disorder (PMAD) has spiked sharply in the United States. A new study explores trends by state and time period.

Between 2008 and 2020, in a national cohort of 750,004 commercially insured women with a live birth, nearly 1 in 5 (144,037 [19.2%]) were diagnosed with PMAD, according to a paper published in Health Affairs. PMAD diagnoses among privately insured women increased by 93.3% over those years, wrote lead author Kara Zivin, PhD, of the University of Michigan, Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System, and colleagues.

PMAD describes a spectrum of emotional complications with mild to severe symptoms that can affect women while pregnant and through the first year after giving birth.

The total number of perinatal women decreased from a high of 64,842 in 2008 to a low of 52,479 in 2020, a 19.1% decrease, but over the same time, women with diagnosed PMAD increased 56.4% from 9,520 in 2008 to 14,890 in 2020. Prevalence of PMAD doubled from 1,468 per 10,000 deliveries to 2,837 per 10,000 deliveries in 2020, according to the analysis.
 

Differences by State

Increases differed substantially by state. Though average annual changes across all states reached 109 additional PMAD diagnoses per 10,000 deliveries, Iowa had the greatest increase with an additional 163 PMAD diagnoses per 10,000 deliveries annually. New Mexico had the smallest annual growth, at an additional 49 per 10,000 deliveries.

The increases were accompanied by maternal health improvement efforts. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) required insurance companies to cover maternity and preventive services, which likely increased PMAD screening and detection, the researchers noted.

“Diagnosis of PMAD is rising due to increased awareness and in all likelihood, decrease in stigma, but availability of providers is so challenging,” said Lee S. Cohen, MD, who was not part of the study. Dr. Cohen is director of the Ammon-Pinizzotto Center for Women’s Mental Health and Perinatal and Reproductive Psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. “The navigation to providers by women who are suffering is beyond challenging,” he said.

The authors reported that all states except Vermont saw increasing rates of PMAD diagnoses post-ACA vs. pre-ACA. The researchers also found that relative to the period from 2008 to 2014, psychotherapy rates continued rising from 2015 to 2020 and suicidality (suicidal ideation or self-harm diagnoses) rates declined.
 

States’ Suicidality Rates Vary Widely

“Overall, access to psychotherapy may have stemmed suicidality despite increasing PMAD diagnoses. But although more PMAD diagnoses may have led to increased psychotherapy, therapy access depends on provider availability, which varies by geographic region and insurance coverage network,” the authors wrote.

Suicidality rates differed greatly by state. Louisiana’s annual rate of increase was greatest, at 22 per 10,000 while Maryland had the greatest negative annual rate of change, at −15 per 10,000 deliveries, the authors explained.

“Observed trends in PMAD diagnoses among privately insured people during 2008-2020 and in associated suicidality and psychotherapy use suggest an increasingly rapid worsening of US maternal mental health,” the authors wrote.

The authors noted that this study did not include those on public insurance, a group that may experience disproportionate maternal morbidity and mortality burden, and urged that future studies include them.
 

 

 

Strengths of Study

Kimberly McKee, PhD, MPH, assistant professor in the department of family medicine at University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, who was not part of this research, said this paper gives a broader look than prior work because it includes the year before and after birth, rather than delivery and hospitalization.

“It’s really important to look out at least 12 months postpartum,” she noted.

Another strength is that the study was able to look at use of services such as psychotherapy before and post ACA. She noted the increased use of psychotherapy and the decrease in suicidal ideation was an association, but said, “I think it’s reasonable to assume that there was a benefit.”

She noted that these data go through 2020 and the COVID-19 pandemic has even further stressed the healthcare system, which could affect these numbers.



Primary Care’s Role

“The opportunity for primary care to really be the medical home for reproductive-age women is key here,” Dr. McKee said, adding that primary care can provide the continuity if women go off and on insurance around pregnancy and make sure the women get follow-up care and referrals to specialty care.

Models that integrate behavioral health and primary care are particularly promising, she said. Inclusion of social workers at the point of care can also help meet needs regarding social determinants of health.

Telehealth is another avenue for expansion extending the reach for following perinatal women, she said. “Using every tool we have to reach individuals where they are can allow for more frequent check-ins, which is really important here.”

Dr. McKee said the paper highlights an important reality: Mental health is a leading cause and contributor to maternal mortality, which “is 100% preventable.” Yet, current literature continues to show increases.

“This is a fairly common problem that affects not just women, but the fetus, their children, their families,” she noted.

The authors and Dr. Cohen and Dr. McKee reported no relevant financial relationships.

The number of women with perinatal mood and anxiety disorder (PMAD) has spiked sharply in the United States. A new study explores trends by state and time period.

Between 2008 and 2020, in a national cohort of 750,004 commercially insured women with a live birth, nearly 1 in 5 (144,037 [19.2%]) were diagnosed with PMAD, according to a paper published in Health Affairs. PMAD diagnoses among privately insured women increased by 93.3% over those years, wrote lead author Kara Zivin, PhD, of the University of Michigan, Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System, and colleagues.

PMAD describes a spectrum of emotional complications with mild to severe symptoms that can affect women while pregnant and through the first year after giving birth.

The total number of perinatal women decreased from a high of 64,842 in 2008 to a low of 52,479 in 2020, a 19.1% decrease, but over the same time, women with diagnosed PMAD increased 56.4% from 9,520 in 2008 to 14,890 in 2020. Prevalence of PMAD doubled from 1,468 per 10,000 deliveries to 2,837 per 10,000 deliveries in 2020, according to the analysis.
 

Differences by State

Increases differed substantially by state. Though average annual changes across all states reached 109 additional PMAD diagnoses per 10,000 deliveries, Iowa had the greatest increase with an additional 163 PMAD diagnoses per 10,000 deliveries annually. New Mexico had the smallest annual growth, at an additional 49 per 10,000 deliveries.

The increases were accompanied by maternal health improvement efforts. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) required insurance companies to cover maternity and preventive services, which likely increased PMAD screening and detection, the researchers noted.

“Diagnosis of PMAD is rising due to increased awareness and in all likelihood, decrease in stigma, but availability of providers is so challenging,” said Lee S. Cohen, MD, who was not part of the study. Dr. Cohen is director of the Ammon-Pinizzotto Center for Women’s Mental Health and Perinatal and Reproductive Psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. “The navigation to providers by women who are suffering is beyond challenging,” he said.

The authors reported that all states except Vermont saw increasing rates of PMAD diagnoses post-ACA vs. pre-ACA. The researchers also found that relative to the period from 2008 to 2014, psychotherapy rates continued rising from 2015 to 2020 and suicidality (suicidal ideation or self-harm diagnoses) rates declined.
 

States’ Suicidality Rates Vary Widely

“Overall, access to psychotherapy may have stemmed suicidality despite increasing PMAD diagnoses. But although more PMAD diagnoses may have led to increased psychotherapy, therapy access depends on provider availability, which varies by geographic region and insurance coverage network,” the authors wrote.

Suicidality rates differed greatly by state. Louisiana’s annual rate of increase was greatest, at 22 per 10,000 while Maryland had the greatest negative annual rate of change, at −15 per 10,000 deliveries, the authors explained.

“Observed trends in PMAD diagnoses among privately insured people during 2008-2020 and in associated suicidality and psychotherapy use suggest an increasingly rapid worsening of US maternal mental health,” the authors wrote.

The authors noted that this study did not include those on public insurance, a group that may experience disproportionate maternal morbidity and mortality burden, and urged that future studies include them.
 

 

 

Strengths of Study

Kimberly McKee, PhD, MPH, assistant professor in the department of family medicine at University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, who was not part of this research, said this paper gives a broader look than prior work because it includes the year before and after birth, rather than delivery and hospitalization.

“It’s really important to look out at least 12 months postpartum,” she noted.

Another strength is that the study was able to look at use of services such as psychotherapy before and post ACA. She noted the increased use of psychotherapy and the decrease in suicidal ideation was an association, but said, “I think it’s reasonable to assume that there was a benefit.”

She noted that these data go through 2020 and the COVID-19 pandemic has even further stressed the healthcare system, which could affect these numbers.



Primary Care’s Role

“The opportunity for primary care to really be the medical home for reproductive-age women is key here,” Dr. McKee said, adding that primary care can provide the continuity if women go off and on insurance around pregnancy and make sure the women get follow-up care and referrals to specialty care.

Models that integrate behavioral health and primary care are particularly promising, she said. Inclusion of social workers at the point of care can also help meet needs regarding social determinants of health.

Telehealth is another avenue for expansion extending the reach for following perinatal women, she said. “Using every tool we have to reach individuals where they are can allow for more frequent check-ins, which is really important here.”

Dr. McKee said the paper highlights an important reality: Mental health is a leading cause and contributor to maternal mortality, which “is 100% preventable.” Yet, current literature continues to show increases.

“This is a fairly common problem that affects not just women, but the fetus, their children, their families,” she noted.

The authors and Dr. Cohen and Dr. McKee reported no relevant financial relationships.

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Remote CBT as Effective as In-Person Therapy for Mental Illness

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Changed
Mon, 03/25/2024 - 10:24

Remote cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is just as effective as in-person CBT for a range of mental health and somatic disorders, a new review of more than 50 randomized clinical trials (RCTs) showed.

The RCTs included more than 5000 patients receiving CBT for conditions such as mood, anxiety, and body dysmorphic disorders, as well as chronic pain, insomnia, and alcohol use disorder.

“The World Health Organization has designated CBT as essential healthcare, but access remains an important barrier for many people in Canada. Our findings suggest that therapist-guided, remotely delivered CBT can be used to facilitate greater access to evidence-based care,” lead investigator Jason Busse, PhD, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, said in a press release.

The findings were published online on March 18 in CMAJ.
 

Access Problematic

In Canada, CBT may be provided within existing government-funded healthcare services and by private providers such as registered psychotherapists, social worker, and psychologists who require out-of-pocket expenses.

Access to evidence-based mental healthcare such as CBT can be challenging in a country as geographically large, and as sparsely populated, as Canada. To increase access, some of the provinces have funded Internet-based CBT, but the efficacy of in-person vs remote CBT remains uncertain.

The investigators searched the medical literature for RCTs that enrolled adult patients randomized to receive either therapist-guided remote or in-person CBT.

The study included 52 RCTs with 5463 participants with a mean age of 43 years, and 3354 (61%) were female.

A total of 17 studies focused on the treatment of anxiety and related disorders, 14 on depression and mood disorders, seven on insomnia, six on chronic pain or fatigue syndromes, five on body image or eating disorders, three on tinnitus, and one on alcohol use disorder.

CBT was provided on an individual and group basis. Treatment duration ranged from 5 to 21 sessions, with the median follow-up of 180 days.

Investigators found little to no difference in effectiveness between in-person and therapist-guided remote CBT on primary outcomes (standardized mean difference [SMD], −0.02; 95% CI, −0.11 to 0.07).

Analysis using end scores also showed little to no difference in efficacy between in-person and remote CBT (SMD, −0.01; 95% CI, −0.11 to 0.08).
 

Policy Implications

The authors noted that remote CBT can potentially expand access to care as it is more convenient for patients and potentially more cost-effective.

“Our finding that remote CBT is an effective alternative to in-person delivery has potential policy implications,” they wrote.

The researchers recommended Canadian provinces and territories increase funding to boost access to therapist-guided remote CBT, thereby expanding access to evidence-based care.

Study limitations included the fact that most of the eligible RCTs reviewed in the analysis were conducted in high-income countries with middle-aged patients and followed them for a median 180 days, so generalizability of the findings to older patients living in lower-income patients or for longer follow-up periods was uncertain.

The study was partially funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Disclosures were noted in the original article.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

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Remote cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is just as effective as in-person CBT for a range of mental health and somatic disorders, a new review of more than 50 randomized clinical trials (RCTs) showed.

The RCTs included more than 5000 patients receiving CBT for conditions such as mood, anxiety, and body dysmorphic disorders, as well as chronic pain, insomnia, and alcohol use disorder.

“The World Health Organization has designated CBT as essential healthcare, but access remains an important barrier for many people in Canada. Our findings suggest that therapist-guided, remotely delivered CBT can be used to facilitate greater access to evidence-based care,” lead investigator Jason Busse, PhD, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, said in a press release.

The findings were published online on March 18 in CMAJ.
 

Access Problematic

In Canada, CBT may be provided within existing government-funded healthcare services and by private providers such as registered psychotherapists, social worker, and psychologists who require out-of-pocket expenses.

Access to evidence-based mental healthcare such as CBT can be challenging in a country as geographically large, and as sparsely populated, as Canada. To increase access, some of the provinces have funded Internet-based CBT, but the efficacy of in-person vs remote CBT remains uncertain.

The investigators searched the medical literature for RCTs that enrolled adult patients randomized to receive either therapist-guided remote or in-person CBT.

The study included 52 RCTs with 5463 participants with a mean age of 43 years, and 3354 (61%) were female.

A total of 17 studies focused on the treatment of anxiety and related disorders, 14 on depression and mood disorders, seven on insomnia, six on chronic pain or fatigue syndromes, five on body image or eating disorders, three on tinnitus, and one on alcohol use disorder.

CBT was provided on an individual and group basis. Treatment duration ranged from 5 to 21 sessions, with the median follow-up of 180 days.

Investigators found little to no difference in effectiveness between in-person and therapist-guided remote CBT on primary outcomes (standardized mean difference [SMD], −0.02; 95% CI, −0.11 to 0.07).

Analysis using end scores also showed little to no difference in efficacy between in-person and remote CBT (SMD, −0.01; 95% CI, −0.11 to 0.08).
 

Policy Implications

The authors noted that remote CBT can potentially expand access to care as it is more convenient for patients and potentially more cost-effective.

“Our finding that remote CBT is an effective alternative to in-person delivery has potential policy implications,” they wrote.

The researchers recommended Canadian provinces and territories increase funding to boost access to therapist-guided remote CBT, thereby expanding access to evidence-based care.

Study limitations included the fact that most of the eligible RCTs reviewed in the analysis were conducted in high-income countries with middle-aged patients and followed them for a median 180 days, so generalizability of the findings to older patients living in lower-income patients or for longer follow-up periods was uncertain.

The study was partially funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Disclosures were noted in the original article.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

Remote cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is just as effective as in-person CBT for a range of mental health and somatic disorders, a new review of more than 50 randomized clinical trials (RCTs) showed.

The RCTs included more than 5000 patients receiving CBT for conditions such as mood, anxiety, and body dysmorphic disorders, as well as chronic pain, insomnia, and alcohol use disorder.

“The World Health Organization has designated CBT as essential healthcare, but access remains an important barrier for many people in Canada. Our findings suggest that therapist-guided, remotely delivered CBT can be used to facilitate greater access to evidence-based care,” lead investigator Jason Busse, PhD, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, said in a press release.

The findings were published online on March 18 in CMAJ.
 

Access Problematic

In Canada, CBT may be provided within existing government-funded healthcare services and by private providers such as registered psychotherapists, social worker, and psychologists who require out-of-pocket expenses.

Access to evidence-based mental healthcare such as CBT can be challenging in a country as geographically large, and as sparsely populated, as Canada. To increase access, some of the provinces have funded Internet-based CBT, but the efficacy of in-person vs remote CBT remains uncertain.

The investigators searched the medical literature for RCTs that enrolled adult patients randomized to receive either therapist-guided remote or in-person CBT.

The study included 52 RCTs with 5463 participants with a mean age of 43 years, and 3354 (61%) were female.

A total of 17 studies focused on the treatment of anxiety and related disorders, 14 on depression and mood disorders, seven on insomnia, six on chronic pain or fatigue syndromes, five on body image or eating disorders, three on tinnitus, and one on alcohol use disorder.

CBT was provided on an individual and group basis. Treatment duration ranged from 5 to 21 sessions, with the median follow-up of 180 days.

Investigators found little to no difference in effectiveness between in-person and therapist-guided remote CBT on primary outcomes (standardized mean difference [SMD], −0.02; 95% CI, −0.11 to 0.07).

Analysis using end scores also showed little to no difference in efficacy between in-person and remote CBT (SMD, −0.01; 95% CI, −0.11 to 0.08).
 

Policy Implications

The authors noted that remote CBT can potentially expand access to care as it is more convenient for patients and potentially more cost-effective.

“Our finding that remote CBT is an effective alternative to in-person delivery has potential policy implications,” they wrote.

The researchers recommended Canadian provinces and territories increase funding to boost access to therapist-guided remote CBT, thereby expanding access to evidence-based care.

Study limitations included the fact that most of the eligible RCTs reviewed in the analysis were conducted in high-income countries with middle-aged patients and followed them for a median 180 days, so generalizability of the findings to older patients living in lower-income patients or for longer follow-up periods was uncertain.

The study was partially funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Disclosures were noted in the original article.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

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What Do Sex Therapists Do? (Hint: It’s Not What You Think)

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Changed
Thu, 03/21/2024 - 15:41

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Rachel S. Rubin, MD: We are here at the Harvard Continuing Medical Education Course in Orlando, Florida. It’s all about testosterone therapy and sexual medicine. I have with me today the wonderful Dr. Marianne Brandon, who is an amazing sex therapist. Could you introduce yourself?

Marianne Brandon, PhD: I am a clinical psychologist and sex therapist. I’ve been in practice for more than 25 years. I’m currently located in Sarasota. I have a Psychology Today blog called The Future of Intimacy, which I have a lot of fun with.

Dr. Rubin: It’s very important, when taking care of patients, that we work in a biopsychosocial model. Yes, we can fix erectile dysfunction. We can help with menopause symptoms and that helps sexual function. But what I find makes my patients able to live their best lives is when they have a team, including a mental health professional — often a sex therapist or a couples’ therapist — where they can learn communication skills. Why is it important for primary care doctors to talk to their patients about sex? My primary care doctor has never asked me about sex.  

Dr. Brandon: For most people, sexual intimacy is critical for their experience of life. It correlates with their relationship satisfaction and life satisfaction. It’s much bigger than what’s happening in the bedroom. People have more struggles than you realize. Sexual dysfunction correlates with emotional issues such as depression and anxiety, with medical problems, and with medication use. Chances are that your patients have some kind of sexual concern, even if that’s not to the degree that it would be classified as a sexual dysfunction.

But sexual concerns wreak havoc. Believing they have a sexual problem, they stop touching, they stop relating to their partner. It becomes a really big deal in their lives. If you can open the door for a conversation about sex with your patients, it could do them a great deal of good. It’s also good for the practitioner, because if your patients think they can talk with you about anything, that’s going to establish your relationship with them. Practitioners avoid these conversations because they don’t have the time or the training to offer help.

Dr. Rubin: You don’t have to know all the answers. You just have to show empathy and compassion and say, “I hear you.” That’s the magic in the doctor-patient relationship. We refer patients to specialists when we don’t know what to do. What happens when I send a patient to a sex therapist? Do they watch them have sex? Of course not, but everyone thinks that is what sex therapists do.

Dr. Brandon: Sex therapy is just like any other type of therapy, but we discuss sexual issues. And because just about anything that’s happening in your patient’s life can trickle down into the bedroom, we end up talking about a lot of stuff that’s not directly related to sex but ultimately impacts the patient’s sex life.

Dr. Rubin: It’s true. Most medical conditions that we treat — from diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, and obesity to depression and anxiety — are strongly correlated with sexual health. We treat the underlying condition, but our patients don’t care about their A1c levels. They care about the fact that they cannot get aroused; their genitals don’t feel the same way they used to.

Dr. Brandon: I love that point because people make meaning out of their sexual concerns and dysfunction. Suddenly their body isn’t responding the way it used to. They think something’s wrong with them, or maybe they are with the wrong partner. This meaning becomes very powerful in their mind and perpetuates the sexual problem.

Dr. Rubin: First and foremost, we are educators. We can say, “You have pretty out-of-control diabetes,” or, “You’re a smoker, which can affect the health of your genitals. Have you noticed any issues going on there?” If you don’t ask, patients will not bring up their concerns with their doctors.

So how do people find a sex therapist?

Dr. Brandon: There are a few fabulous organizations that provide on their websites ways to find a therapist: the American Association of Sex Educators, Counselors and Therapists (AASECT) and Sex Therapy and Research (STAR). Giving patients this information is a huge intervention.

Other places to find a therapist include the International Society for Sexual Medicine, and the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health.

Since COVID, many therapists have gone virtual. Encourage your patients to look within their states to find options for therapists and psychologists. Recent legislation allows psychologists who have signed up for PSYPACT to practice almost throughout the entire United States. We used to think if we didn’t have a therapist in the community, we couldn’t make a referral. That›s not the case anymore.

Dr. Rubin: All doctors are really sexual medicine doctors. We can change the whole world by giving our patients a better quality of life.
 

Dr. Rubin, Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Urology, Georgetown University, Washington, disclosed ties to Sprout, Maternal Medical, Absorption Pharmaceuticals, GlaxoSmithKline, and Endo.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Rachel S. Rubin, MD: We are here at the Harvard Continuing Medical Education Course in Orlando, Florida. It’s all about testosterone therapy and sexual medicine. I have with me today the wonderful Dr. Marianne Brandon, who is an amazing sex therapist. Could you introduce yourself?

Marianne Brandon, PhD: I am a clinical psychologist and sex therapist. I’ve been in practice for more than 25 years. I’m currently located in Sarasota. I have a Psychology Today blog called The Future of Intimacy, which I have a lot of fun with.

Dr. Rubin: It’s very important, when taking care of patients, that we work in a biopsychosocial model. Yes, we can fix erectile dysfunction. We can help with menopause symptoms and that helps sexual function. But what I find makes my patients able to live their best lives is when they have a team, including a mental health professional — often a sex therapist or a couples’ therapist — where they can learn communication skills. Why is it important for primary care doctors to talk to their patients about sex? My primary care doctor has never asked me about sex.  

Dr. Brandon: For most people, sexual intimacy is critical for their experience of life. It correlates with their relationship satisfaction and life satisfaction. It’s much bigger than what’s happening in the bedroom. People have more struggles than you realize. Sexual dysfunction correlates with emotional issues such as depression and anxiety, with medical problems, and with medication use. Chances are that your patients have some kind of sexual concern, even if that’s not to the degree that it would be classified as a sexual dysfunction.

But sexual concerns wreak havoc. Believing they have a sexual problem, they stop touching, they stop relating to their partner. It becomes a really big deal in their lives. If you can open the door for a conversation about sex with your patients, it could do them a great deal of good. It’s also good for the practitioner, because if your patients think they can talk with you about anything, that’s going to establish your relationship with them. Practitioners avoid these conversations because they don’t have the time or the training to offer help.

Dr. Rubin: You don’t have to know all the answers. You just have to show empathy and compassion and say, “I hear you.” That’s the magic in the doctor-patient relationship. We refer patients to specialists when we don’t know what to do. What happens when I send a patient to a sex therapist? Do they watch them have sex? Of course not, but everyone thinks that is what sex therapists do.

Dr. Brandon: Sex therapy is just like any other type of therapy, but we discuss sexual issues. And because just about anything that’s happening in your patient’s life can trickle down into the bedroom, we end up talking about a lot of stuff that’s not directly related to sex but ultimately impacts the patient’s sex life.

Dr. Rubin: It’s true. Most medical conditions that we treat — from diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, and obesity to depression and anxiety — are strongly correlated with sexual health. We treat the underlying condition, but our patients don’t care about their A1c levels. They care about the fact that they cannot get aroused; their genitals don’t feel the same way they used to.

Dr. Brandon: I love that point because people make meaning out of their sexual concerns and dysfunction. Suddenly their body isn’t responding the way it used to. They think something’s wrong with them, or maybe they are with the wrong partner. This meaning becomes very powerful in their mind and perpetuates the sexual problem.

Dr. Rubin: First and foremost, we are educators. We can say, “You have pretty out-of-control diabetes,” or, “You’re a smoker, which can affect the health of your genitals. Have you noticed any issues going on there?” If you don’t ask, patients will not bring up their concerns with their doctors.

So how do people find a sex therapist?

Dr. Brandon: There are a few fabulous organizations that provide on their websites ways to find a therapist: the American Association of Sex Educators, Counselors and Therapists (AASECT) and Sex Therapy and Research (STAR). Giving patients this information is a huge intervention.

Other places to find a therapist include the International Society for Sexual Medicine, and the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health.

Since COVID, many therapists have gone virtual. Encourage your patients to look within their states to find options for therapists and psychologists. Recent legislation allows psychologists who have signed up for PSYPACT to practice almost throughout the entire United States. We used to think if we didn’t have a therapist in the community, we couldn’t make a referral. That›s not the case anymore.

Dr. Rubin: All doctors are really sexual medicine doctors. We can change the whole world by giving our patients a better quality of life.
 

Dr. Rubin, Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Urology, Georgetown University, Washington, disclosed ties to Sprout, Maternal Medical, Absorption Pharmaceuticals, GlaxoSmithKline, and Endo.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Rachel S. Rubin, MD: We are here at the Harvard Continuing Medical Education Course in Orlando, Florida. It’s all about testosterone therapy and sexual medicine. I have with me today the wonderful Dr. Marianne Brandon, who is an amazing sex therapist. Could you introduce yourself?

Marianne Brandon, PhD: I am a clinical psychologist and sex therapist. I’ve been in practice for more than 25 years. I’m currently located in Sarasota. I have a Psychology Today blog called The Future of Intimacy, which I have a lot of fun with.

Dr. Rubin: It’s very important, when taking care of patients, that we work in a biopsychosocial model. Yes, we can fix erectile dysfunction. We can help with menopause symptoms and that helps sexual function. But what I find makes my patients able to live their best lives is when they have a team, including a mental health professional — often a sex therapist or a couples’ therapist — where they can learn communication skills. Why is it important for primary care doctors to talk to their patients about sex? My primary care doctor has never asked me about sex.  

Dr. Brandon: For most people, sexual intimacy is critical for their experience of life. It correlates with their relationship satisfaction and life satisfaction. It’s much bigger than what’s happening in the bedroom. People have more struggles than you realize. Sexual dysfunction correlates with emotional issues such as depression and anxiety, with medical problems, and with medication use. Chances are that your patients have some kind of sexual concern, even if that’s not to the degree that it would be classified as a sexual dysfunction.

But sexual concerns wreak havoc. Believing they have a sexual problem, they stop touching, they stop relating to their partner. It becomes a really big deal in their lives. If you can open the door for a conversation about sex with your patients, it could do them a great deal of good. It’s also good for the practitioner, because if your patients think they can talk with you about anything, that’s going to establish your relationship with them. Practitioners avoid these conversations because they don’t have the time or the training to offer help.

Dr. Rubin: You don’t have to know all the answers. You just have to show empathy and compassion and say, “I hear you.” That’s the magic in the doctor-patient relationship. We refer patients to specialists when we don’t know what to do. What happens when I send a patient to a sex therapist? Do they watch them have sex? Of course not, but everyone thinks that is what sex therapists do.

Dr. Brandon: Sex therapy is just like any other type of therapy, but we discuss sexual issues. And because just about anything that’s happening in your patient’s life can trickle down into the bedroom, we end up talking about a lot of stuff that’s not directly related to sex but ultimately impacts the patient’s sex life.

Dr. Rubin: It’s true. Most medical conditions that we treat — from diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, and obesity to depression and anxiety — are strongly correlated with sexual health. We treat the underlying condition, but our patients don’t care about their A1c levels. They care about the fact that they cannot get aroused; their genitals don’t feel the same way they used to.

Dr. Brandon: I love that point because people make meaning out of their sexual concerns and dysfunction. Suddenly their body isn’t responding the way it used to. They think something’s wrong with them, or maybe they are with the wrong partner. This meaning becomes very powerful in their mind and perpetuates the sexual problem.

Dr. Rubin: First and foremost, we are educators. We can say, “You have pretty out-of-control diabetes,” or, “You’re a smoker, which can affect the health of your genitals. Have you noticed any issues going on there?” If you don’t ask, patients will not bring up their concerns with their doctors.

So how do people find a sex therapist?

Dr. Brandon: There are a few fabulous organizations that provide on their websites ways to find a therapist: the American Association of Sex Educators, Counselors and Therapists (AASECT) and Sex Therapy and Research (STAR). Giving patients this information is a huge intervention.

Other places to find a therapist include the International Society for Sexual Medicine, and the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health.

Since COVID, many therapists have gone virtual. Encourage your patients to look within their states to find options for therapists and psychologists. Recent legislation allows psychologists who have signed up for PSYPACT to practice almost throughout the entire United States. We used to think if we didn’t have a therapist in the community, we couldn’t make a referral. That›s not the case anymore.

Dr. Rubin: All doctors are really sexual medicine doctors. We can change the whole world by giving our patients a better quality of life.
 

Dr. Rubin, Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Urology, Georgetown University, Washington, disclosed ties to Sprout, Maternal Medical, Absorption Pharmaceuticals, GlaxoSmithKline, and Endo.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Can Treating Depression Mitigate CVD Risk?

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Tue, 03/19/2024 - 15:33

 

TOPLINE:

Depression is linked to a significantly increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), particularly in women, new data from a large retrospective cohort study show. Researchers suggest that screening and treating patients for depression may lead to a decreased incidence of CVD.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed health insurance claims from more than 4 million Japanese patients filed between 2005 and 2022.
  • Participants were 18-75 (median age, 44) without a history of CVD or stroke, heart failure, or atrial fibrillation.
  • Investigators followed participants for a mean period of 2.5-3.5 years to observe the number of CVD events in those who had a diagnosis of depression.
  • During the follow-up period, there were 119,000 CVD events in men (14 per 10,000 person-years) and 61,800 CVD events in women (111 per 10,000 person-years).

TAKEAWAY:

  • Compared with women without depression, those with depression had a 64% higher risk for CVD (hazard ratio [HR], 1.64), while men with depression had a 39% higher risk for CVD vs their counterparts without depression (HR, 1.39; P < .001).
  • This association was significant even after controlling for various factors such as body mass index, diabetes, smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity.
  • Investigators offered several theories about the increased risk for CVD in women with depression, including how depression during hormonal shifts can contribute to a greater impact on cardiovascular health.

IN PRACTICE:

“Healthcare professionals must recognize the important role of depression in the development of CVD and emphasize the importance of a comprehensive, patient-centered approach to its prevention and management,” study author Hidehiro Kaneko, MD, said in a press release. “Assessing the risk of CVD in depressed patients and treating and preventing depression may lead to a decrease of CVD cases.”

SOURCE:

Keitaro Senoo, MD, of the Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan, led the study, which was published online on March 12 in JACC: Asia.

LIMITATIONS:

The study is observational, so causality between depression and subsequent CVD events cannot be established. In addition, depression severity is unknown.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare, Japan, and the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, Japan. There were no disclosures reported.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Depression is linked to a significantly increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), particularly in women, new data from a large retrospective cohort study show. Researchers suggest that screening and treating patients for depression may lead to a decreased incidence of CVD.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed health insurance claims from more than 4 million Japanese patients filed between 2005 and 2022.
  • Participants were 18-75 (median age, 44) without a history of CVD or stroke, heart failure, or atrial fibrillation.
  • Investigators followed participants for a mean period of 2.5-3.5 years to observe the number of CVD events in those who had a diagnosis of depression.
  • During the follow-up period, there were 119,000 CVD events in men (14 per 10,000 person-years) and 61,800 CVD events in women (111 per 10,000 person-years).

TAKEAWAY:

  • Compared with women without depression, those with depression had a 64% higher risk for CVD (hazard ratio [HR], 1.64), while men with depression had a 39% higher risk for CVD vs their counterparts without depression (HR, 1.39; P < .001).
  • This association was significant even after controlling for various factors such as body mass index, diabetes, smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity.
  • Investigators offered several theories about the increased risk for CVD in women with depression, including how depression during hormonal shifts can contribute to a greater impact on cardiovascular health.

IN PRACTICE:

“Healthcare professionals must recognize the important role of depression in the development of CVD and emphasize the importance of a comprehensive, patient-centered approach to its prevention and management,” study author Hidehiro Kaneko, MD, said in a press release. “Assessing the risk of CVD in depressed patients and treating and preventing depression may lead to a decrease of CVD cases.”

SOURCE:

Keitaro Senoo, MD, of the Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan, led the study, which was published online on March 12 in JACC: Asia.

LIMITATIONS:

The study is observational, so causality between depression and subsequent CVD events cannot be established. In addition, depression severity is unknown.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare, Japan, and the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, Japan. There were no disclosures reported.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Depression is linked to a significantly increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), particularly in women, new data from a large retrospective cohort study show. Researchers suggest that screening and treating patients for depression may lead to a decreased incidence of CVD.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed health insurance claims from more than 4 million Japanese patients filed between 2005 and 2022.
  • Participants were 18-75 (median age, 44) without a history of CVD or stroke, heart failure, or atrial fibrillation.
  • Investigators followed participants for a mean period of 2.5-3.5 years to observe the number of CVD events in those who had a diagnosis of depression.
  • During the follow-up period, there were 119,000 CVD events in men (14 per 10,000 person-years) and 61,800 CVD events in women (111 per 10,000 person-years).

TAKEAWAY:

  • Compared with women without depression, those with depression had a 64% higher risk for CVD (hazard ratio [HR], 1.64), while men with depression had a 39% higher risk for CVD vs their counterparts without depression (HR, 1.39; P < .001).
  • This association was significant even after controlling for various factors such as body mass index, diabetes, smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity.
  • Investigators offered several theories about the increased risk for CVD in women with depression, including how depression during hormonal shifts can contribute to a greater impact on cardiovascular health.

IN PRACTICE:

“Healthcare professionals must recognize the important role of depression in the development of CVD and emphasize the importance of a comprehensive, patient-centered approach to its prevention and management,” study author Hidehiro Kaneko, MD, said in a press release. “Assessing the risk of CVD in depressed patients and treating and preventing depression may lead to a decrease of CVD cases.”

SOURCE:

Keitaro Senoo, MD, of the Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan, led the study, which was published online on March 12 in JACC: Asia.

LIMITATIONS:

The study is observational, so causality between depression and subsequent CVD events cannot be established. In addition, depression severity is unknown.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare, Japan, and the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, Japan. There were no disclosures reported.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Paid Parental Leave: Impact on Maternal Mental Health and Child Wellbeing

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Changed
Tue, 03/19/2024 - 13:22

Maternal mental health has a profound impact on the health and wellbeing of the child. Since the onset of the pandemic, rates of postpartum depression have increased, affecting an estimated 1 in 5 women.1 Numerous studies show the impact of postpartum depression on the newborn child across multiple domains, from bonding to healthy weight gain to meeting developmental milestones.

Chelsea Shannon, MD, is a second-year psychiatry resident at UCLA.
Dr. Chelsea L. Shannon

While new medications are being studied and approved to specifically target postpartum depression, these treatments are inaccessible to many because of high costs and long wait lists. Beyond medication, structural changes such as paid parental leave have been shown to have a substantial impact on maternal mental health, thus impacting the health of children as well. As physicians, it is imperative that we advocate for systems-level policy changes that have been shown to improve the health of both parent and child.

Implications for Mothers and Children

Psychiatric diagnoses such as postpartum depression are on the rise.1,2 This is likely attributable to a combination of factors, including increased isolation since the start of the pandemic, worsening health inequities across race and socioeconomic status, and difficulty accessing mental health care.3-5 The effect that postpartum depression has on the family is significant for the newborn as well as other children in the home.

Dr. Misty C. Richards, University of California, Los Angeles
Dr. Misty C. Richards

Data suggest that postpartum depression impacts both the physical and mental health of the child. Infants of mothers with postpartum depression may experience challenges with weight gain, decreased breastfeeding, sleep disruptions, and delays in achieving developmental milestones.6-9 They may also show decreased maternal infant bonding, challenges with cognitive development including language and IQ, and increased risk of behavioral disturbances.10,11 These effects are likely attributable to a combination of factors, including decreased maternal responsiveness to infant cues.7,12 Many of these effects are mediated by the chronicity and severity of depressive symptoms, suggesting the importance of screening and treatment of postpartum depression.10,11 However, treatment for postpartum depression can be difficult to access, particularly given the increased level of need.

It is therefore critical to consider what structural interventions and policy changes can decrease the risk of developing postpartum depression. Data consistently show that access to paid parental leave improves maternal mental health outcomes. Among patients with access to parental leave, research shows that paid leave of longer duration, at least 2-3 months, is the most protective.13 Studies have identified decreased depressive symptoms, decreased stress, decreased use of mental health services, and decreased hospital admissions among women with longer parental leave.13 The positive effects of paid parental leave on maternal mental health can extend beyond the postpartum period, solidifying its impact on the long-term health outcomes of both mother and child.13
 

Advocacy Is Imperative

In 2024, the United States is the only high-income country, and one of only seven countries in the world, that does not guarantee access to paid parental leave. The Family Medical Leave Act is a 31-year-old federal law that requires some employers to provide unpaid leave to eligible employees. It is narrow in scope, and it excludes many low-wage workers and LGBTQ+ families. Thirteen states — California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, and Washington — as well as the District of Columbia, have enacted their own paid leave policies. However, there are no federal laws requiring access to paid parental leave. As of 2023, fewer than 30% of workers in the United States have access to paid parental leave, and only 16% of employees in the service industry have access to paid parental leave.14 This disproportionately affects families from lower income backgrounds, and further exacerbates socioeconomic, racial, and gender inequities. From a health systems lens, this increases risk of adverse maternal mental health outcomes among those who already have decreased access to mental health services, worsening health disparities.

Paid parental leave has strong public support across party lines, with polls showing the majority of Americans support comprehensive paid family and medical leave.15 Despite this, the United States has failed to enact legislation on this issue since 1993. Multiple attempts at expanding leave have not come to fruition. In the past year, both the house and the senate have announced bipartisan efforts to expand access to paid parental leave. However, legislative frameworks are still in early stages.

As physicians, it is crucial that we advocate for expanded access to paid parental leave. We must use our expertise to speak to the impact that paid parental leave can have on the mental and physical health of parents, children, and families. By advocating for paid parental leave, we can help create a more just and equitable healthcare system.
 

Dr. Shannon is a second-year psychiatry resident at University of California, Los Angeles. She attended Stanford University for her undergraduate degree and Dartmouth Geisel School of Medicine for medical school. Her interests include perinatal psychiatry, health systems research, and mental health policy advocacy. 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 UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, Los Angeles.

References

1. Wang Z et al. Mapping Global Prevalence of Depression Among Postpartum Women. Transl Psychiatry. 2021 Oct 20. doi: 10.1038/s41398-021-01663-6.

2. Iyengar U et al. One Year Into the Pandemic: A Systematic Review of Perinatal Mental Health Outcomes During COVID-19. Front Psychiatry. 2021 Jun 24. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.674194.

3. World Health Organization. Mental Health and COVID-19: Early Evidence of the Pandemic’s Impact: Scientific Brief. 2022 Mar 2. www.who.int/publications/i/item/WHO-2019-nCoV-Sci_Brief-Mental_health-2022.1.

4. Masters GA et al. Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Mental Health, Access to Care, and Health Disparities in the Perinatal Period. J Psychiatr Res. 2021 May. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2021.02.056.

5. Shuffrey LC et al. Improving Perinatal Maternal Mental Health Starts With Addressing Structural Inequities. JAMA Psychiatry. 2022 May 1. doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2022.0097.

6. Lubotzky-Gete S et al. Postpartum Depression and Infant Development Up to 24 months: A Nationwide Population-Based Study. J Affect Disord. 2021 Apr 15. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.02.042.

7. Saharoy R et al. Postpartum Depression and Maternal Care: Exploring the Complex Effects on Mothers and Infants. Cureus. 2023 Jul 4. doi: 10.7759/cureus.41381..

8. Gress-Smith JL et al. Postpartum Depression Prevalence and Impact on Infant Health, Weight, and Sleep in Low-Income and Ethnic Minority Women and Infants. Matern Child Health J. 2012 May. doi: 10.1007/s10995-011-0812-y.

9. Kim S et al. The Impact of Antepartum Depression and Postpartum Depression on Exclusive Breastfeeding: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Clin Nurs Res. 2022 Jun. doi: 10.1177/10547738211053507.

10. Mirhosseini H et al. Cognitive Behavioral Development in Children Following Maternal Postpartum Depression: A Review Article. Electron Physician. 2015 Dec 20. doi: 10.19082/1673.

11. Grace SL et al. The Effect of Postpartum Depression on Child Cognitive Development and Behavior: A Review and Critical Analysis of the Literature. Arch Womens Ment Health. 2003 Nov. doi: 10.1007/s00737-003-0024-6.

12. Milgrom J et al. The Mediating Role of Maternal Responsiveness in Some Longer Term Effects of Postnatal Depression on Infant Development. Infant Behavior and Development. 2004 Sep 11. doi.org/10.1016/j.infbeh.2004.03.003.

13. Heshmati A et al. The Effect of Parental Leave on Parents’ Mental Health: A Systematic Review. Lancet Public Health. 2023 Jan. doi: 10.1016/S2468-2667(22)00311-5.

14. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, What Data Does the BLS Publish on Family Leave? 2023 Sept 21. www.bls.gov/ebs/factsheets/family-leave-benefits-fact-sheet.htm.

15. Horowitz JM et al. Americans Widely Support Paid Family and Medical Leave, But Differ Over Specific Policies. Pew Research Center’s Social & Demographic Trends Project, Pew Research Center. 2017 Mar 23. www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2017/03/23/americans-widely-support-paid-family-and-medical-leave-but-differ-over-specific-policies/.

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Maternal mental health has a profound impact on the health and wellbeing of the child. Since the onset of the pandemic, rates of postpartum depression have increased, affecting an estimated 1 in 5 women.1 Numerous studies show the impact of postpartum depression on the newborn child across multiple domains, from bonding to healthy weight gain to meeting developmental milestones.

Chelsea Shannon, MD, is a second-year psychiatry resident at UCLA.
Dr. Chelsea L. Shannon

While new medications are being studied and approved to specifically target postpartum depression, these treatments are inaccessible to many because of high costs and long wait lists. Beyond medication, structural changes such as paid parental leave have been shown to have a substantial impact on maternal mental health, thus impacting the health of children as well. As physicians, it is imperative that we advocate for systems-level policy changes that have been shown to improve the health of both parent and child.

Implications for Mothers and Children

Psychiatric diagnoses such as postpartum depression are on the rise.1,2 This is likely attributable to a combination of factors, including increased isolation since the start of the pandemic, worsening health inequities across race and socioeconomic status, and difficulty accessing mental health care.3-5 The effect that postpartum depression has on the family is significant for the newborn as well as other children in the home.

Dr. Misty C. Richards, University of California, Los Angeles
Dr. Misty C. Richards

Data suggest that postpartum depression impacts both the physical and mental health of the child. Infants of mothers with postpartum depression may experience challenges with weight gain, decreased breastfeeding, sleep disruptions, and delays in achieving developmental milestones.6-9 They may also show decreased maternal infant bonding, challenges with cognitive development including language and IQ, and increased risk of behavioral disturbances.10,11 These effects are likely attributable to a combination of factors, including decreased maternal responsiveness to infant cues.7,12 Many of these effects are mediated by the chronicity and severity of depressive symptoms, suggesting the importance of screening and treatment of postpartum depression.10,11 However, treatment for postpartum depression can be difficult to access, particularly given the increased level of need.

It is therefore critical to consider what structural interventions and policy changes can decrease the risk of developing postpartum depression. Data consistently show that access to paid parental leave improves maternal mental health outcomes. Among patients with access to parental leave, research shows that paid leave of longer duration, at least 2-3 months, is the most protective.13 Studies have identified decreased depressive symptoms, decreased stress, decreased use of mental health services, and decreased hospital admissions among women with longer parental leave.13 The positive effects of paid parental leave on maternal mental health can extend beyond the postpartum period, solidifying its impact on the long-term health outcomes of both mother and child.13
 

Advocacy Is Imperative

In 2024, the United States is the only high-income country, and one of only seven countries in the world, that does not guarantee access to paid parental leave. The Family Medical Leave Act is a 31-year-old federal law that requires some employers to provide unpaid leave to eligible employees. It is narrow in scope, and it excludes many low-wage workers and LGBTQ+ families. Thirteen states — California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, and Washington — as well as the District of Columbia, have enacted their own paid leave policies. However, there are no federal laws requiring access to paid parental leave. As of 2023, fewer than 30% of workers in the United States have access to paid parental leave, and only 16% of employees in the service industry have access to paid parental leave.14 This disproportionately affects families from lower income backgrounds, and further exacerbates socioeconomic, racial, and gender inequities. From a health systems lens, this increases risk of adverse maternal mental health outcomes among those who already have decreased access to mental health services, worsening health disparities.

Paid parental leave has strong public support across party lines, with polls showing the majority of Americans support comprehensive paid family and medical leave.15 Despite this, the United States has failed to enact legislation on this issue since 1993. Multiple attempts at expanding leave have not come to fruition. In the past year, both the house and the senate have announced bipartisan efforts to expand access to paid parental leave. However, legislative frameworks are still in early stages.

As physicians, it is crucial that we advocate for expanded access to paid parental leave. We must use our expertise to speak to the impact that paid parental leave can have on the mental and physical health of parents, children, and families. By advocating for paid parental leave, we can help create a more just and equitable healthcare system.
 

Dr. Shannon is a second-year psychiatry resident at University of California, Los Angeles. She attended Stanford University for her undergraduate degree and Dartmouth Geisel School of Medicine for medical school. Her interests include perinatal psychiatry, health systems research, and mental health policy advocacy. 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 UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, Los Angeles.

References

1. Wang Z et al. Mapping Global Prevalence of Depression Among Postpartum Women. Transl Psychiatry. 2021 Oct 20. doi: 10.1038/s41398-021-01663-6.

2. Iyengar U et al. One Year Into the Pandemic: A Systematic Review of Perinatal Mental Health Outcomes During COVID-19. Front Psychiatry. 2021 Jun 24. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.674194.

3. World Health Organization. Mental Health and COVID-19: Early Evidence of the Pandemic’s Impact: Scientific Brief. 2022 Mar 2. www.who.int/publications/i/item/WHO-2019-nCoV-Sci_Brief-Mental_health-2022.1.

4. Masters GA et al. Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Mental Health, Access to Care, and Health Disparities in the Perinatal Period. J Psychiatr Res. 2021 May. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2021.02.056.

5. Shuffrey LC et al. Improving Perinatal Maternal Mental Health Starts With Addressing Structural Inequities. JAMA Psychiatry. 2022 May 1. doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2022.0097.

6. Lubotzky-Gete S et al. Postpartum Depression and Infant Development Up to 24 months: A Nationwide Population-Based Study. J Affect Disord. 2021 Apr 15. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.02.042.

7. Saharoy R et al. Postpartum Depression and Maternal Care: Exploring the Complex Effects on Mothers and Infants. Cureus. 2023 Jul 4. doi: 10.7759/cureus.41381..

8. Gress-Smith JL et al. Postpartum Depression Prevalence and Impact on Infant Health, Weight, and Sleep in Low-Income and Ethnic Minority Women and Infants. Matern Child Health J. 2012 May. doi: 10.1007/s10995-011-0812-y.

9. Kim S et al. The Impact of Antepartum Depression and Postpartum Depression on Exclusive Breastfeeding: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Clin Nurs Res. 2022 Jun. doi: 10.1177/10547738211053507.

10. Mirhosseini H et al. Cognitive Behavioral Development in Children Following Maternal Postpartum Depression: A Review Article. Electron Physician. 2015 Dec 20. doi: 10.19082/1673.

11. Grace SL et al. The Effect of Postpartum Depression on Child Cognitive Development and Behavior: A Review and Critical Analysis of the Literature. Arch Womens Ment Health. 2003 Nov. doi: 10.1007/s00737-003-0024-6.

12. Milgrom J et al. The Mediating Role of Maternal Responsiveness in Some Longer Term Effects of Postnatal Depression on Infant Development. Infant Behavior and Development. 2004 Sep 11. doi.org/10.1016/j.infbeh.2004.03.003.

13. Heshmati A et al. The Effect of Parental Leave on Parents’ Mental Health: A Systematic Review. Lancet Public Health. 2023 Jan. doi: 10.1016/S2468-2667(22)00311-5.

14. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, What Data Does the BLS Publish on Family Leave? 2023 Sept 21. www.bls.gov/ebs/factsheets/family-leave-benefits-fact-sheet.htm.

15. Horowitz JM et al. Americans Widely Support Paid Family and Medical Leave, But Differ Over Specific Policies. Pew Research Center’s Social & Demographic Trends Project, Pew Research Center. 2017 Mar 23. www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2017/03/23/americans-widely-support-paid-family-and-medical-leave-but-differ-over-specific-policies/.

Maternal mental health has a profound impact on the health and wellbeing of the child. Since the onset of the pandemic, rates of postpartum depression have increased, affecting an estimated 1 in 5 women.1 Numerous studies show the impact of postpartum depression on the newborn child across multiple domains, from bonding to healthy weight gain to meeting developmental milestones.

Chelsea Shannon, MD, is a second-year psychiatry resident at UCLA.
Dr. Chelsea L. Shannon

While new medications are being studied and approved to specifically target postpartum depression, these treatments are inaccessible to many because of high costs and long wait lists. Beyond medication, structural changes such as paid parental leave have been shown to have a substantial impact on maternal mental health, thus impacting the health of children as well. As physicians, it is imperative that we advocate for systems-level policy changes that have been shown to improve the health of both parent and child.

Implications for Mothers and Children

Psychiatric diagnoses such as postpartum depression are on the rise.1,2 This is likely attributable to a combination of factors, including increased isolation since the start of the pandemic, worsening health inequities across race and socioeconomic status, and difficulty accessing mental health care.3-5 The effect that postpartum depression has on the family is significant for the newborn as well as other children in the home.

Dr. Misty C. Richards, University of California, Los Angeles
Dr. Misty C. Richards

Data suggest that postpartum depression impacts both the physical and mental health of the child. Infants of mothers with postpartum depression may experience challenges with weight gain, decreased breastfeeding, sleep disruptions, and delays in achieving developmental milestones.6-9 They may also show decreased maternal infant bonding, challenges with cognitive development including language and IQ, and increased risk of behavioral disturbances.10,11 These effects are likely attributable to a combination of factors, including decreased maternal responsiveness to infant cues.7,12 Many of these effects are mediated by the chronicity and severity of depressive symptoms, suggesting the importance of screening and treatment of postpartum depression.10,11 However, treatment for postpartum depression can be difficult to access, particularly given the increased level of need.

It is therefore critical to consider what structural interventions and policy changes can decrease the risk of developing postpartum depression. Data consistently show that access to paid parental leave improves maternal mental health outcomes. Among patients with access to parental leave, research shows that paid leave of longer duration, at least 2-3 months, is the most protective.13 Studies have identified decreased depressive symptoms, decreased stress, decreased use of mental health services, and decreased hospital admissions among women with longer parental leave.13 The positive effects of paid parental leave on maternal mental health can extend beyond the postpartum period, solidifying its impact on the long-term health outcomes of both mother and child.13
 

Advocacy Is Imperative

In 2024, the United States is the only high-income country, and one of only seven countries in the world, that does not guarantee access to paid parental leave. The Family Medical Leave Act is a 31-year-old federal law that requires some employers to provide unpaid leave to eligible employees. It is narrow in scope, and it excludes many low-wage workers and LGBTQ+ families. Thirteen states — California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, and Washington — as well as the District of Columbia, have enacted their own paid leave policies. However, there are no federal laws requiring access to paid parental leave. As of 2023, fewer than 30% of workers in the United States have access to paid parental leave, and only 16% of employees in the service industry have access to paid parental leave.14 This disproportionately affects families from lower income backgrounds, and further exacerbates socioeconomic, racial, and gender inequities. From a health systems lens, this increases risk of adverse maternal mental health outcomes among those who already have decreased access to mental health services, worsening health disparities.

Paid parental leave has strong public support across party lines, with polls showing the majority of Americans support comprehensive paid family and medical leave.15 Despite this, the United States has failed to enact legislation on this issue since 1993. Multiple attempts at expanding leave have not come to fruition. In the past year, both the house and the senate have announced bipartisan efforts to expand access to paid parental leave. However, legislative frameworks are still in early stages.

As physicians, it is crucial that we advocate for expanded access to paid parental leave. We must use our expertise to speak to the impact that paid parental leave can have on the mental and physical health of parents, children, and families. By advocating for paid parental leave, we can help create a more just and equitable healthcare system.
 

Dr. Shannon is a second-year psychiatry resident at University of California, Los Angeles. She attended Stanford University for her undergraduate degree and Dartmouth Geisel School of Medicine for medical school. Her interests include perinatal psychiatry, health systems research, and mental health policy advocacy. 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 UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, Los Angeles.

References

1. Wang Z et al. Mapping Global Prevalence of Depression Among Postpartum Women. Transl Psychiatry. 2021 Oct 20. doi: 10.1038/s41398-021-01663-6.

2. Iyengar U et al. One Year Into the Pandemic: A Systematic Review of Perinatal Mental Health Outcomes During COVID-19. Front Psychiatry. 2021 Jun 24. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.674194.

3. World Health Organization. Mental Health and COVID-19: Early Evidence of the Pandemic’s Impact: Scientific Brief. 2022 Mar 2. www.who.int/publications/i/item/WHO-2019-nCoV-Sci_Brief-Mental_health-2022.1.

4. Masters GA et al. Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Mental Health, Access to Care, and Health Disparities in the Perinatal Period. J Psychiatr Res. 2021 May. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2021.02.056.

5. Shuffrey LC et al. Improving Perinatal Maternal Mental Health Starts With Addressing Structural Inequities. JAMA Psychiatry. 2022 May 1. doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2022.0097.

6. Lubotzky-Gete S et al. Postpartum Depression and Infant Development Up to 24 months: A Nationwide Population-Based Study. J Affect Disord. 2021 Apr 15. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.02.042.

7. Saharoy R et al. Postpartum Depression and Maternal Care: Exploring the Complex Effects on Mothers and Infants. Cureus. 2023 Jul 4. doi: 10.7759/cureus.41381..

8. Gress-Smith JL et al. Postpartum Depression Prevalence and Impact on Infant Health, Weight, and Sleep in Low-Income and Ethnic Minority Women and Infants. Matern Child Health J. 2012 May. doi: 10.1007/s10995-011-0812-y.

9. Kim S et al. The Impact of Antepartum Depression and Postpartum Depression on Exclusive Breastfeeding: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Clin Nurs Res. 2022 Jun. doi: 10.1177/10547738211053507.

10. Mirhosseini H et al. Cognitive Behavioral Development in Children Following Maternal Postpartum Depression: A Review Article. Electron Physician. 2015 Dec 20. doi: 10.19082/1673.

11. Grace SL et al. The Effect of Postpartum Depression on Child Cognitive Development and Behavior: A Review and Critical Analysis of the Literature. Arch Womens Ment Health. 2003 Nov. doi: 10.1007/s00737-003-0024-6.

12. Milgrom J et al. The Mediating Role of Maternal Responsiveness in Some Longer Term Effects of Postnatal Depression on Infant Development. Infant Behavior and Development. 2004 Sep 11. doi.org/10.1016/j.infbeh.2004.03.003.

13. Heshmati A et al. The Effect of Parental Leave on Parents’ Mental Health: A Systematic Review. Lancet Public Health. 2023 Jan. doi: 10.1016/S2468-2667(22)00311-5.

14. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, What Data Does the BLS Publish on Family Leave? 2023 Sept 21. www.bls.gov/ebs/factsheets/family-leave-benefits-fact-sheet.htm.

15. Horowitz JM et al. Americans Widely Support Paid Family and Medical Leave, But Differ Over Specific Policies. Pew Research Center’s Social & Demographic Trends Project, Pew Research Center. 2017 Mar 23. www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2017/03/23/americans-widely-support-paid-family-and-medical-leave-but-differ-over-specific-policies/.

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