Tag: Psychiatric News

Reading of the Week: PTSD Among 9/11 Responders – the New Nature Study; Also, Therapy Isn’t Psychotherapy and Physician Vacations & Burnout

From the Editor

He survived the car accident that killed his partner. Although he was physically unscathed, he struggled with PTSD, lucidly describing in our sessions the nightmares and fears that dominated his life.

How long do such symptoms last? Does time heal? Frank D. Mann (of Stony Brook University) and his co-authors attempt to answer these questions with a new study, one of the largest and longest on this disorder to date. In the first selection, we examine their Nature Mental Health paper, involving 13 000 responders to the World Trade Center attack, and spanning 20 years of data. “Our findings highlight the enduring impact of PTSD among World Trade Center responders, with substantial variability in individual trajectories. Despite overall modest declines, a subset remained highly symptomatic, underscoring the need for continued treatment.” We consider the paper and its implications.

In the second selection from Psychiatric News, Dr. Steven Reidbord, a psychiatrist based in San Francisco, notes the rising popularity of therapy and how things are changing with AI. But he suggests there is a difference between “corner-cutting” therapy and real psychotherapy, which is meant for personal change. “Psychotherapists must defend quality care against the seductive fictions that pervade social media. Our own message may be less alluring, but it has the advantage of being true…”

And in the third selection, Dr. Christine A. Sinsky (of the American Medical Association) and her co-authors look at physician vacations. Drawing on a national survey of US docs, they analyzed vacations, work during these vacations, and burnout. “These findings suggest that support for taking vacation and efforts to reduce physicians’ obligations to perform patient care-related tasks while on vacation, such as providing full electronic health record inbox coverage, should be considered to prevent physician burnout.”

Note that there will be no Readings for the next two weeks. (The discussion of vacations is inspiring.)

And, on a pivot, to those completing their residency education at the end of this month: all the best in your careers. Enjoy this remarkable moment.

DG

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Reading of the Week: Vaccines, Vaccine Hesitation & Mental Illness, with Papers from JAMA Psychiatry and NEJM, and More

From the Editor:

It’s here. Less than a year after COVID-19 arrived in North America, two vaccines have been created, approved, and given (at least to some).

In the coming months, as the supply improves, people – including our patients – will have the opportunity to get a vaccine. But what are the challenges? First, some will hesitate. In a recent essay, Dr. Nadia Alam notes that: “Vaccine hesitancy is a significant issue with only 57.5% of Canadians saying they are very likely to be vaccinated for COVID-19.” And special populations will present further challenges – such as those with major mental illness.

This week, we focus on vaccinations with two papers and an article.

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In the first selection, drawing from JAMA Psychiatry, we consider a paper by Dr. Nicola Warren (of the University of Queensland) and her co-authors. They note the challenges of reaching people with serious mental illness – just one in four get a flu vaccine. “It is vital to commence planning and development of appropriate policies to ensure rapid delivery of a COVID-19 vaccine when it becomes available.”

In a New England Journal of Medicine paper, Dr. Joshua A. Barocas (of the Boston University School of Medicine) thinks about the needs of those with substance use disorders. “Officials devising vaccination strategies and allocation plans would be wise to do so from the perspective of the virus, rather than that of stigmatizing personal beliefs.”

How to speak to our patients? In the final selection, we look at a short piece by Dr. Joshua C. Morganstein (of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences).  His advice is very practical, and emphasizes that we should tailor our approach not by diagnosis but by patient interest in the vaccination. He also urges us to be careful in our choice of language: “Health care professionals are trained to use complex medical terminology, though more understandable and down-to-earth language often serves to enhance trust and build rapport.”

DG
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