Tag: OTC

Reading of the Week: DBT vs Meds for BPD – the New AJP Paper; Also, OTC Naltrexone for Alcohol and Climate Change Anxiety in Canada

From the Editor

She presented to the emergency department with suicidal thoughts but no specific plan. She had been diagnosed with borderline personality disorder, and asked me a simple question: how can I do better?

In a new study published in The American Journal of Psychiatry, Beth S. Brodsky (of Columbia University) and her co-authors attempt to answer that question. 84 people with borderline personality disorder and past suicide attempts and/or self-harm behaviours were randomized and then offered either six months of therapy (DBT) or medications (SSRIs), and compared for the reduction of suicide attempts and self-harm. “DBT appears to work faster and perhaps more effectively in borderline personality disorder for suicide-related outcomes and for nonsuicidal self-injury compared with SSRIs plus clinical management.” We consider the study and its implications.

In the second selection from JAMA Psychiatry, Drs. Olga Terechin, Sofia E. Matta, and Joji Suzuki (all of Harvard University) propose that naltrexone be made available over the counter. Noting the deep problems of unhealthy alcohol use, they argue that greater availability of this medication would be important. “We believe that allowing OTC access to naltrexone would serve as a groundbreaking approach to addressing unhealthy alcohol use, particularly for individuals who are hesitant to seek help or live in areas where access to treatment is limited.”

And in the third selection, S. L. Harper (of the University of Alberta) and her co-authors look at climate change anxiety in Canada. Drawing on a survey with almost 2 500 participants, they analyzed prevalence and demographics in a Nature Mental Health paper. “Mild-to-moderate climate change anxiety in Canada is not uncommon… and certain demographic groups may require additional supports to manage and reduce the symptoms…” 

DG

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Reading of the Week: Visual Hallucinations & Outcomes – the New Schizophrenia Study; Also, Opioid Deaths in Canada and Dr. Roy Perlis on Antidepressants

From the Editor

Last week, I met a person who had deeply unsettling auditory hallucinations. I asked him the questions that we all ask: When did the voices start? How many voices do you hear? Do the voices tell you to do things? In contrast, while we know that people with psychotic illnesses can have visual hallucinations, we rarely inquire about them and if we do, it’s in a perfunctory manner, as I did with him. Clinicians aren’t the only ones to gloss over visual hallucinations; they tend to be under-researched, especially with regard to long-term outcomes.

In the first selection, Isabel Kreis (of the University of Oslo) and her co-authors look at outcomes and visual hallucinations in an impressive, new study published in Schizophrenia. They report on 184 people from Norway with first-episode psychosis, followed for ten years, with a focus on visual hallucinations and functionality, suicide attempts, and childhood trauma. “These findings highlight the relevance of assessing visual hallucinations and monitoring their development over time.” We consider the paper and its implications.

In the second selection from CMAJ, Shaleesa Ledlie (of the University of Toronto) and her co-authors report on opioid-related deaths in Canada. They drew from a national database and looked at several years of data, including over the start of the pandemic. “Across Canada, the burden of premature opioid-related deaths doubled between 2019 and 2021, representing more than one-quarter of deaths among younger adults.”

And in the third selection, Dr. Roy Perlis (of Harvard University) argues that the time has come for over-the-counter antidepressants in a STAT essay. He notes that many people with depression are untreated and that increasing the availability of these medications would be helpful. “With part of the solution hiding in plain sight, it’s time to do everything possible to give Americans another way to get treatment.”

DG

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