Month: October 2025

Reading of the Week: Homelessness with Papers from Lancet and JAMA; Also, Kinsella on His Recovery

From the Editor

The loss of her job. A couple of poorly timed moves, motivated by her need to help care for an ailing parent. Financial woes. These problems converged, and my patient found herself ill and homeless. What were the potential implications for mortality?

In a new paper published by The Lancet Public Health, Sandra Feodor Nilsson (of Copenhagen University) and her co-authors attempt to answer that question. Drawing on Danish data involving more than six million adults, they found that men and women live far fewer years when experiencing homelessness, 15.9 years and 15.3 years, respectively. Though past work has examined the topic, Nilsson et al. offer a more comprehensive look. “Life-years lost exceeded those observed in individuals with schizophrenia, alcohol use disorder (for males), and drug use disorder.” We consider the paper and its implications.

In the second selection, from JAMA, Drs. Kirk B. Fetters and Joshua A. Barocas (both of the University of Colorado) describe recent cuts to Housing First programs in the United States and weigh its impact. They note the evidence for this approach. “Because the health care system is already overburdened and the homelessness crisis is worsening, maintaining and expanding Housing First is not only compassionate but also imperative.”

And in the third selection, Sean Kinsella writes personally about homelessness and addiction. In an essay for the Irish Examiner, he discusses his deep problems – and his recovery. He advocates that we do more for those who are homeless. “I wasn’t seen. I wasn’t heard. I was a file. A risk to be managed.”

DG



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Reading of the Week: Brief CBT for Suicidal Vets – the JAMA Psych Study; Also, Docs & Generative AI, and Lamas on Organ Transplants & Mental Illness

From the Editor

As psychotherapies have become increasingly more practical and relevant in recent years, we may ask: could a focused therapy help individuals who are suicidal?

In a new JAMA Psychiatry paper, Craig J. Bryan (of the Ohio State University) and his co-authors attempt to answer that question, reporting on a randomized clinical trial involving military personnel and veterans. 108 participants were offered brief cognitive therapy (BCBT) or another psychotherapy, present-centred psychotherapy (PCT), building on past work that has shown the potential of BCBT for those who are suicidal. “This randomized clinical trial found that BCBT reduced suicide attempts among US military personnel and veterans reporting recent suicidal ideation and/or suicidal behaviors compared with an active comparator.” We consider the paper and its implications.

In the second selection, from JAMA Internal Medicine, Dr. Daniel J. Morgan (of the University of Maryland) and his co-authors, ask what physicians can do to prepare for generative AI. They offer several useful suggestions. “All physicians will need to understand the basics of GenAI to practice medicine in the next decade. Those without this understanding may find themselves burdened by archaic workflows or responsible for errors that GenAI could have prevented.”

And in the third selection, Dr. Daniela J. Lamas (of Harvard University), an intensivist, looks at transplantation and those who have mental disorders. In a New York Times essay, she notes an historic bias against such individuals. Still, she wonders about the difficulties of the area. Transplant is one of the most fraught decisions in medicine…”

DG

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Reading of the Week: Suicide-related Reporting – the New BJP Paper; Also, Cannabis Use & Psychosis, and Mental Health & Working from Home

From the Editor

The stakes are high: news coverage of suicide can affect suicide rates. So how responsibly do journalists report? How has this changed with time?

In a new paper for The British Journal of Psychiatry, Dr. Mark Sinyor (of the University of Toronto) and his co-authors attempt to answer these questions. Focusing on US network news, they analyzed suicide-related news segments over an 11-year period, including for putatively harmful characteristics. “Coverage of suicide stories by major US cable news networks was often inconsistent with responsible reporting guidelines.” We consider the paper and its implications.

In the second selection from JAMA Psychiatry, Dr. Andrew S. Hyatt (of Harvard University) and his co-authors look at cannabis use after legalization and those individuals with psychosis. In this brief report, they drew from a US database with almost 2 000 participants. “In this study, individuals with psychosis reported a large increase in current cannabis use following legalization and commercialization of cannabis in their state, and by larger amounts than previously reported estimates of the general population.”

Is working from home better for mental health? In the third selection, from Mental Health & Prevention, Jean-Philippe Chaput (of the University of Ottawa) and his co-authors drew on national data to analyze work location and several self-rated measures, including mental health. The dataset is impressive with almost 25 000 participants. “We observed that work location was not related to self-rated mental health, life satisfaction, or life and work stress.”

DG

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Reading of the Week: Contingency Management for Stimulant Use – the New AJP Paper; Also, LLMs as Mental Health Providers and Kumpf on Her ED Visit

From the Editor

Her housing is unstable; major relationships have ended; she is deeply in debt. She presented to the emergency department hoping for help with her crystal methamphetamine addiction. “That drug just grabs you and holds you.” No medications have demonstrated efficacy for stimulant use disorder. But could contingency management be part of a meaningful plan for her recovery?

In the first selection, a paper published last month in The American Journal of Psychiatry, Lara N. Coughlin (of the University of Michigan) and her co-authors attempt to answer that question. They did a retrospective cohort study, comparing those who received contingency management with those who didn’t, looking at outcomes and 12 months of data, and involving 1 481 patients and an equal number of people in the control group. “This study provides the first evidence that contingency management use in real-world health care settings is associated with reduced risk of mortality among patients with stimulant use disorder.” We consider the paper and its implications.

In the second selection, Tony Rousmaniere (of Sentio University) and his co-authors examine large language models as health providers. In a timely paper for The Lancet Psychiatry, they weigh the regulatory and legal contexts. “LLMs have entered everyday use for mental health. Developers who embrace transparency and collaborative research can transform the mental health landscape and define the future of digital care for the better.”

And in the third selection, Emily A. Kumpf (of Johns Hopkins University) writes personally about her first-episode psychosis in Psychiatric Services. While she is grateful for the care she received in the emergency room, she was traumatized by the experience. “When I was restrained, every part of me genuinely believed the medications they were injecting into me were chemicals intended to kill me. My scream pierced through the hospital walls; I thought I was dying. To my surprise, I woke up the next morning.”

DG

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Reading of the Week: Young in Therapy: Need But Not Great Results – the New Lancet Paper; Also, the Wellness Industry & the Rumpelstiltskin Effect

From the Editor

Therapy can be life changing – especially for young adults who may be at the beginning of illness. The stakes are high but what are the outcomes?

In a new Lancet Psychiatry paper, Rob Saunders (of University College London) and his co-authors attempt to answer this question. They drew on an impressive dataset – from the National Health Service, with more than 1.6 million participants – and compared outcomes (both scales and service specific scores) between young and working age adults. “In a dataset of all individuals receiving psychological therapies for common mental disorders in a national service programme, we found that young adults had poorer outcomes than working age adults.” We discuss the paper and its implications.

With a few clicks of the mouse, our patients can read what we read – including the latest journals. But they also can access a world of half-truths, misleading claims, and falsehoods. In the second selection, a new episode of Quick Takes, I speak with Jonathan Stea, a University of Calgary psychologist and a bestselling author, about his research on the wellness industry. “The beating heart of the wellness industry is pseudoscience.”

And in the third selection from BJPsych Bulletin, Alan Levinovitz (of James Madison University) and Dr. Awais Aftab (of Case Western Reserve University) argue that there is benefit in a diagnosis. In a clever paper, they coin the term Rumpelstiltskin effect (yes, after the Grimm story) – that is, “the therapeutic effect of a clinical diagnosis, independent of any other intervention.” Are they persuasive?

DG


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