From the Editor

Though many years have passed, he clearly remembers his first depressive episode, which occurred before his 18th birthday. My patient often wonders how things could have been different had he been offered care earlier. School-based initiatives are much discussed – indeed, they are having a moment. Public schools, for example, in New York City, offer students a few minutes daily of teacher-led mindful breathing. Such efforts are unlikely to yield significant results, in part because they lack focus.

What if we offered psychotherapy skills to interested high school students? Could it help alleviate symptoms of mood and anxiety? Would it be cost effective? June Brown (of King’s College London) and her co-authors address these questions in a new study just published in The Lancet Psychiatry. They report on a randomized controlled trial involving 900 UK adolescents who self-referred and received CBT or treatment-as-usual. “[T]he DISCOVER intervention is modestly clinically effective and economically viable and could be a promising early intervention in schools.” We consider the paper and its implications.

In the second selection, drawing on US data, Hefei Wen (of Harvard University) and co-authors examine hospital readmissions in the United States for mental health. In this new research letter published in JAMA Psychiatry, they find that rural readmissions – historically lower than urban ones – now exceed their urban counterparts. “This reversal and worsening of rural and urban gaps in mental health readmission was primarily concentrated in schizophrenia spectrum and other psychotic disorders, bipolar and related disorders, and depressive disorders.”

And in the third selection from the Los Angeles Times, Dr. Jillian Horton (of the University of Manitoba) discusses time, aging, and resilience in a personal essay. Our internist colleague touches on the debate over the US president and his health but focuses on the story of her sister, who faced major problems after neurosurgery. She notes that her sister was able to “beat the odds” many times, until she couldn’t. “[W]e can’t change the reality of what comes next.”

DG

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