Tag: Qayyum

Reading of the Week: Preventing Mental Disorders After Disasters – the New BMJ Ment Health Paper; Also, Healthy Device Use and Dr. Qayyum on Regret

From the Editor

Floods. Hurricanes. Fire. Extreme weather seems to be more common these days – resulting in some experiencing PTSD and other mental disorders. In an age of climate change, what can mental health services offer? Is it possible to prevent major mental illness with interventions like CBT?

Ahlke Kip (of the University of Münster) and her co-authors attempt to answer these questions in a new meta-analysis and systematic review which assesses the efficacy of psychological and psychosocial interventions after exposure to natural hazards. In the BMJ Mental Health paper, they looked at 10 RCT studies involving more than 5 000 participants, including both civilians and disaster responders, focusing on symptoms of PTSD, depression, and anxiety. They didn’t find superiority to passive control conditions. “The current evidence does not allow for any recommendations regarding prevention programmes in the aftermath of natural hazards.” We consider the paper and its implications.

In the second selection, Joseph Firth (of the University of Manchester) and his co-authors weigh in on youth and digital device usage. In a paper for World Psychiatry, they sought “directly actionable advice” for parents and youth and then drew on the literature to create tips for teenagers. “We sought to produce a set of best-practice approaches, on the basis of available evidence and guidelines, for adolescents and their parents looking to improve their device usage patterns.”

And in this week’s third selection, Dr. Zheala Qayyum (of Harvard University) writes about guilt and time in a paper for Academic Psychiatry. The child and adolescent psychiatrist describes an unkind act in her youth – and an opportunity to make amends decades later. She also notes the tie to training and education. “Only by sharing and reflecting on our own moments, successes, failures, and vulnerabilities, can our trainees recognize and respond to such instances in their own experience.”

DG

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Reading of the Week: How to Achieve Good Mental Health During Isolation (BJP)? Also, Bipolar Meds (AJP) & Qayyum on the Way to the Morgue (WBUR)

From the Editor

Millions of people are isolating themselves in North America, and across the world. We know that quarantine is linked to mental health problems like depression. So what advice should we be giving our patients – and our family and neighbours?

The first selection seeks to answer this question.

In The British Journal of Psychiatry, Rowan Diamond (of Warneford Hospital) and Dr. John Willan (of Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust) provide six suggestions, drawing from the literature and taking into account our collective situation. “Dame Vera Lynn, at the age of 103, said of this pandemic that ‘even if we’re isolated in person we can still be united in spirit,’ and the sense of purpose that may be engendered in self-isolation may paradoxically lead to improvements in the mental health of some individuals who may otherwise feel that they have lost their role in society.”

language-2345801_1280Learning is linked to better mental health

How are we managing bipolar affective disorder? In the second selection, we look at a new American Journal of Psychiatry paper by Taeho Greg Rhee (of the University of Connecticut) and his co-authors, who draw on 20 years worth of data. “There has been a substantial increase in the use of second-generation antipsychotics in the outpatient psychiatric management of adults diagnosed with bipolar disorder, accompanied by a decrease in the use of lithium and other mood stabilizers.”

Finally, in the third selection, Dr. Zheala Qayyum (of the US Army) considers her time working in New York City during the pandemic. “The first thing that struck me when I stepped into the hospital in Queens was the smell that hung in the air, in these seemingly sterile hospital corridors. It was death and disease.”

DG

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