African Americans Face Hurdles In Seeking Mental Healthcare.

The Minneapolis Star Tribune (6/21, Griffin) reports, “Only about 30 percent of African-Americans who have been diagnosed with a mental illness seek counseling, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and only one in three who need psychiatric care receive it.” Researchers have found issues of poverty, community violence, and unemployment could put African Americans at higher risk for mental illness, but a history of mistrust for the medical establishment, as well fears of being stigmatized can keep many from getting treatment.

Related Links:

— “For African-Americans, many hurdles in seeking mental health care, “Ashley Griffin, The Minneapolis Star Tribune, June 20, 2013.

Study Associates QoL In Schizophrenia With Treatment Adherence.

Medwire (6/21, Piper) reports that treatment adherence directly improves the quality of life for schizophrenia patients, according to the results of a study published online June 11 in the journal European Psychiatry. Using the Quality of Life Scale, the researchers at the University of Manchester, UK, assessed the “363 patients who had had schizophrenia for a median of 12 years” and found that over the course of one year, the compliant patients’ “scores improved by an average 9.18 points.” The study team also noted improvements on the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale and the Calgary Depression Scale for Schizophrenia, among the patients who followed their treatment regimens, with “average decreases of 2.79 for positive symptoms, 3.03 for negative symptoms, and 2.56 for depressive symptoms.”

Related Links:

— “Treatment adherence predicts QoL in schizophrenia, “Lucy Piper, Medwire, June 21, 2013.

Researchers Create High-Resolution Atlas Of Human Brain.

The New York Times (6/21, Gorman, Subscription Publication) reports, “Researchers in Germany and Canada have produced a new map of the human brain…that shows a three-dimensional reconstruction of a human brain in unprecedented detail.”

The AP (6/21, Ritter) reports, “To make the atlas, researchers sliced a cadaver brain from a 65-year-old woman into 7,400 thin sections, stained them to reveal tiny features, and photographed each one.” The researchers “then…used computers to combine the data into a 3-D digital model.”

The Los Angeles Times (6/21, Healy) reports, “The BigBrain atlas, produced after a five-year effort, was hailed by neuroscientists as a technological tour de force that promises to speed discoveries in an increasingly important field.”

The Washington Post (6/21, Kim) reports, “The atlas creators, who are from Canada and Germany, have made the ultrahigh-resolution model – 50 times more detailed than a typical scan – publicly available in a free online format.” The research was also published in Science.

The CNN (6/21) “The Chart” blog reports, “Researchers who study neuroscience can use BigBrain to simulate how a brain develops normally or how it degenerates in conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease, said Alan Evans of the Montreal Neurological Institute at McGill University and senior author on the paper.”

The Time (6/21, Sifferlin) “Healthland” blog reports, “The reference brains that have existed before have generally not been able to provide microscopic level detail, and have stopped at about 1 mm resolution, the limit of MRI images.” But, “BigBrain…has the potential of providing a better understanding how the brain’s cells are assembled and interact with each other.” Also covering the story are AFP (6/21) reports, HealthDay (6/21, Goodman), BBC News (6/21, Ghosh), and MedPage Today (6/21, Smith).

Related Links:

— “3-D Map of Human Brain Gives Unprecedented Detail, “James Gorman, The New York Times, June 20, 2013.

Daycare May Benefit Kids Of Depressed Moms.

HealthDay (6/20, Dotinga) reports that a study published online June 19 in JAMA Psychiatry suggests that children of depressed mothers may develop fewer emotional problems by spending time at a daycare facility. After following “1,759 children between the ages of five months and five years,” researchers found that around 12 percent of the children of non-depressed mothers showed signs of emotional problems, whereas 32 percent of the children of depressed mothers showed signs of emotional problems. However, when put in daycare, only seven percent of children whose mothers were depressed showed signs of emotional problems, which the researchers attributed to the structured environment and opportunities to socialize daycare provides.

Related Links:

— “Day Care May Help Kids of Depressed Moms, “Randy Dotinga, HealthDay, June 19, 2013.

Study: Stroke May Leave Some Survivors With PTSD.

USA Today (6/20, Payne) reports, “A stroke may leave some survivors with post-traumatic stress disorder [PTSD], which may hinder their recovery, according to a study” published online yesterday in the journal PLoS One. Approximately “23% of patients who survive a stroke or transient ischemic attack, a brief interruption of blood flow to the brain, have PTSD symptoms within a year, the study finds.” Approximately “11% have chronic PTSD, in which symptoms last three months or longer, more than a year later,” the study found.

The Los Angeles Times (6/20, Balukjian) “Science Now” blog reports that study lead author Donald Edmondson, PhD, MPH, “an assistant professor at Columbia University, previously established that PTSD is common among heart attack survivors and that it is linked to an increased risk of later developing heart disease. This led his team to question how often stroke victims develop PTSD.”

HealthDay (6/20, Gray) reports, “For the study, the researchers analyzed nine prior studies of stroke or transient ischemic attacks (TIAs).” HealthDay Adds, “Together, the studies included more than 1,100 survivors who were either interviewed or given questionnaires.”

Related Links:

— “Nearly 1 in 4 stroke survivors develop PTSD, study shows, “Cathy Payne, USA Today, June 19, 2013.

Air Pollution Associated With Autism.

Bloomberg News (6/18, Lopatto, Ostrow) reports, “Researchers from Harvard University’s School of Public Health found that pregnant women exposed to high levels of diesel particulates or mercury were twice as likely to have an autistic child compared with peers in low-pollution areas.” Bloomberg News adds, “The findings, published today in Environmental Health Perspectives, are from the largest US study to examine the ties between air pollution and autism.”

Related Links:

— “Autism Tied to Air Pollution, Brain-Wiring Disconnection, “Elizabeth Lopatto & Nicole Ostrow, Bloomberg News, June 17, 2013.

Researchers Find Biological Evidence of Gulf War Illness.

The New York Times (6/15, Dao, Subscription Publication) reported that in the “two decades since the 1991 Persian Gulf war, medical researchers have struggled to explain a mysterious amalgam of problems in thousands of gulf war veterans, including joint pain, physical malaise and gastrointestinal disorders. In some medical circles, the symptoms were thought to be psychological, the result of combat stress. But recent research is bolstering the view” that the symptoms of Gulf War illness “are fundamentally biological in nature.”

The Los Angeles Times (6/14, Zarembo) reported, “Their bodies reacted differently to physical exertion, and their brains had atrophied in different regions. None of the patterns were seen in a control group of healthy subjects.” Two separate groups of veterans emerged from the researchers data. One had increased pain levels after exercise, and the other suffered from a condition that caused the heart the race after exercise.

Related Links:

— “Researchers Find Biological Evidence of Gulf War Illnesses, “James Dao, The New York Times, June 14, 2013.

Pentagon Data On Suicides Suggest Some Troops Predisposed.

The Los Angeles Times (6/16, Zarembo) reports that “the most recent Pentagon data show that a slight majority – 52% – of troops who have committed suicide while on active duty were never assigned to Afghanistan or Iraq,” numbers that “upend the popular belief that a large increase in suicides over the last decade stems from the psychological toll of combat and repeated deployments to war.” It adds that “the statistics suggest that the mental health and life circumstances of new recruits are at least as important – and possibly more so – than the pressures of being in the military,” and “it is clear that some enter with a predisposition to suicide.”

Related Links:

— “Deployment to war doesn’t figure in majority of military suicides, “Alan Zarembo, Los Angeles Times, June 15, 2013.

Sibling Bullying May Be As Damaging As Bullying By Others.

USA Today (6/17, Healy) reports, “Bullying and aggressive behavior by a sibling can be as damaging as bullying by a classmate, neighbor or other peer,” according to a study published online in the journal Pediatrics. What’s more, “that association holds true for the various types of aggressive behavior studied, both mild and severe, from physical and psychological aggression to property victimization, researchers say.”

The New York Times (6/17, O’Connor) “Well” blog reports, “The new study, which involved thousands of children and adolescents around the country, found that those who were attacked, threatened or intimidated by a sibling had increased levels of depression, anger and anxiety.” The study examined “physical assaults with and without weapons and the destruction or stealing of property, as well as threats, name-calling and other forms of psychological intimidation.”

Related Links:

— “Bullying by siblings just as damaging, research finds, “Michelle Healy, USA Today, June 17, 2013.

Eating Disorders Among Young Men May Be Rising.

The Los Angeles Times (6/14, Alpert) reports, “High school boys in Los Angeles are twice as likely to induce vomiting or use laxatives to control their weight as the national average, with 5.2% of those surveyed saying they had recently done so,” according to a new CDC survey. Chicago and Houston also saw rates that exceeded the average. “Some experts say they are unsure whether more boys and men are in fact suffering such disorders or whether more are now willing to seek help.”

Related Links:

— “Eating disorders plague teenage boys, too, “Emily Alpert, Los Angeles Times, June 13, 2013.