November 15, 2010
Younger Adult Cancer Patients May Have More Difficulty Coping With Pain, Emotional, Financial Issues
HealthDay (11/12, Preidt) reported, "Even though they have a better chance of survival, younger adult cancer patients have more difficulty coping with the pain and emotional and financial issues of cancer than older patients."
In fact, "compared with cancer patients in their 50s and 60s, adult patients aged 40 and younger reported more flare-ups of pain, and more trouble thinking quickly and logically six months after their diagnosis."
The study detailed in Pain Medicine "included 100 patients with advanced breast, lung, colorectal or prostate cancer, or the bone marrow cancer multiple myeloma, who were surveyed six months after diagnosis."
Posted by admin at 05:47 PM
Bereavement May Trigger Changes In Heart Rhythm
Bloomberg News (11/14, Lopatto) reported, "A bereaved spouse or parent may experience a quickened pulse and other dangerous changes in heart rhythm, according to an Australian study presented today in Chicago at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions."
After examining "78 bereaved spouses and parents two weeks after the deaths of loved ones, and again six months later," as well as volunteers who were not bereaved, researchers found that the bereaved individuals "had about twice as many episodes of rapid heartbeats in the first weeks after the deaths. After six months, the difference disappeared."
"Meanwhile, depression levels initially appeared to be more than four times higher among the bereaved," HealthDay (11/14, Mozes) reported. "These rates started to decline after half a year, but they were still three times higher than levels found among the non-grieving participants." The study's author concluded that "some bereaved...especially those already at increased cardiovascular risk, might benefit from medical review."
He also explained that the study's findings were "consistent with evidence for psychosocial triggering of cardiovascular events." BBC News (11/14) and Reuters (11/15, Pierson) also covered the story.
Posted by admin at 05:46 PM
Women With Demanding Jobs 40% More Likely To Have Heart Attack, Stroke
The CBS Evening News (11/14, story 11, 0:20, Mitchell) reported, "Findings of the longest major study on stress in women are in this evening. The 10-year study found women with demanding jobs were 40% more likely to have a heart attack or stroke as women with less stressful jobs."
The AP (11/14) reported that the study presented at the American Heart Association conference on Nov. 14 followed "17,415 participants in the Women's Health Study" for 10 years. The investigators then discovered that "women with demanding jobs and little control over how to do them were nearly twice as likely to have suffered a heart attack as women with less demanding jobs and more control."
"Women with high-stress jobs face about 88 percent more risk of a heart attack than if they had low workplace strain," Bloomberg News (11/14, Lopatto) reported. The study authors "defined the stressful positions as those with demanding tasks and little authority or creativity," Bloomberg News noted.
CNN /Health.com (11/14, Harding) quoted researcher Peter Kaufmann, PhD, of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, as saying, "This new data is among the most important to emerge in recent years concerning the relationship between job strain and cardiovascular health." Kaufmann, who is not involved with the study, added that the "finding 'emphasize that progress is needed urgently in this arena.'"
According to HealthDay (11/14, Gardner), "worrying about losing one's job also raised the odds of having cardiovascular disease risk factors, such as high blood pressure and higher cholesterol levels -- but not actual heart attacks, stroke or death, the researchers said." HealthDay also noted that the study "breaks new ground for being one of the first to look at the effect of work-related stress on women's health. Most previous studies have focused on men."
The Los Angeles Times (11/14, Roan) "Booster Shots" blog, BBC News (11/15), and the UK's Daily Mail (11/15, Borland) also covered the story.
Posted by admin at 05:44 PM
Female Veterans Less Likely Than Male Veterans To Abuse Drugs, Alcohol
The Army Times (11/14, Kennedy) said a recent study by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration "found that female veterans are much less likely to abuse drugs, cigarettes or alcohol than male veterans."
The Times added, "The findings do not mean women should be left behind as the medical community combats substance abuse among veterans, officials said - especially as rates increase for those who are also dealing with combat stress, such as post-traumatic stress disorder," or PTSD.
Posted by admin at 05:44 PM
Survey Suggests Parents' Stress Can Take A Toll On Their Kids
The Los Angeles Times (11/11, Forgione) "Booster Shots" blog reported, "Parents' stress can take a toll on their kids. Ask children, not Mom and Dad, how they are affected by their parents' stress."
According to a survey conducted by a psychological association, "children who say their parents are stressed out also say they feel that way. Some said it made them feel sad, worried or frustrated -- feelings parents seem to be unaware of, according to the survey."
Posted by admin at 05:41 PM
Severe Acne Associated With Suicide Risk
The UK's Guardian (11/12, Boseley) reports that, according to a study published Nov. 11 in the British Medical Journal, "young people with severe acne should be carefully monitored as the condition can make them suicidal, and in some cases, that may be worsened by their" medications, in particular by isotretinoin (Accutane).
"Researchers at Sweden's Karolinska Institute found the risk of suicide rose in the year before the patient was given the" medicine however, which they suggested is "clear evidence...that severe acne itself is a risk for suicide."
The UK's Press Association (11/12) reports that in the study of 5,700 people, 128 of which were hospitalized after attempting to commit suicide, investigators found that "in the six months after treatment with the drug, the risk of suicide was higher than that before treatment." Notably, "38% of 32 patients who made their first suicide attempt before treatment made a new attempt or committed suicide thereafter," and "71% of the 14 who made their first suicide attempt within six months after treatment stopped made a new attempt or committed suicide."
However, according to the UK's Telegraph (11/12, Adams), "within three years of treatment ending the attempted suicide rate among patients had dropped to the average population level," the investigators "noted, suggesting the drug could actually save lives overall."
The author of an accompanying editorial pointed out that "acne so severe that it is treated with Accutane is not a trivial disease," HealthDay (11/11, Reinberg) reported. In fact, "it is a disease associated with significant psychiatric morbidity,'" the editorialist noted. While he said it was not possible to determine whether isotretinoin or severe acne was responsible for the increase in attempted suicide, he agreed with the study authors that "physicians must monitor patients taking Accutane for evidence of psychiatric problems." Reuters (11/12, Kelland) also covers the story.
Posted by admin at 05:40 PM
FDA Provides Several Recommendations On Safe Disposal Of Old, Expired Medications
USA Today (11/11, Szabo) reports that expired or old medications "can fall into the wrong hands," like the "one in nine kids [who] abuse prescription pain relievers, says Sandra Schneider of the American College of Emergency Physicians."
They can also contaminate the "local drinking water" and "pose a risk to babies and toddlers." Thus, the Food and Drug Administration makes several recommendation for safely disposing medications, including scratching "out identifying information on the original package," and mixing "them with coffee grounds, kitty litter, or anything that makes them undesirable."
Posted by admin at 05:39 PM
CDC Survey Suggests One In 10 US Children Has Been Diagnosed With AD/HD
NBC Nightly News (11/10, story 9, 0:50, Williams) reported, "The Centers for Disease Control is out with a new survey that shows 5.4 million schoolchildren have been diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (AD/HD). That's one in ten."
In fact "from the years 2003 to 2007, the number of kids between four and...17 with AD/HD jumped by one million. That's a 22% increase."
"Scientists don't have clear answers about why there was such a significant increase," the AP (11/10) reports. Epidemiologist and "study lead author Susanna Visser of the CDC suggests greater awareness and stepped-up screening efforts as part of the explanation." Interestingly, the CDC survey, which included data on 73,000 children, "noted an increase in diagnoses was seen in kids of all races and family income levels, and across all regions of the country except the West."
For that reason, Bloomberg News (11/11, Wechsler) reports, "health-care professionals have to prepare themselves to treat the cases, particularly among older adolescents and Hispanics, said" Visser, who also pointed out that "the survey, relying on parents' reporting, isn't the only evidence of a rise in diagnoses of the disorder." Visser stated, "We have also seen even higher incidence of the disease in community-based studies that have been conducted."
According to the CNN (11/10, Hainer) "The Chart" blog, Visser pointed out that "factors including lead exposure, low birth weight, and premature birth have all been shown to contribute to AD/HD symptoms. 'This collection of risk factors could be moving in a direction that causes certain demographic groups to have higher rates of ADHD,' she says. 'We have to figure out what's driving the change.'"
Posted by admin at 05:38 PM
Maryland Lawmakers To Investigate Operations Of Baltimore Mental Health Clinic
The Baltimore Sun (11/11, Calvert) reports, "Maryland lawmakers plan to examine the operations of a Baltimore mental health clinic in the wake of an investigation by the Baltimore Sun that revealed high Medicaid billings, and a state regulator said six family members on the nonprofit's board must relinquish voting authority to comply with state law."
Former Baltimore Behavioral Health Inc. patients and employees claim "the clinic has been diagnosing mental illness -- and collecting public funds to treat it -- in some patients whose main affliction is drug addiction."
And, while "billings to Medicaid rose in recent years, so did the salaries of top BBH executives, reaching $1.4 million last year for the six family members on the company's board of directors."
Posted by admin at 05:37 PM
Teen Girls More Likely To Have Risky Sex, Study Suggests
The Time (11/9, Melnick) "Healthland" blog reported, "A doctoral candidate at Arizona State University made a surprising discovery during the course of her dissertation research on the impact of early sexual health education."
Nicole Weller "found that regardless of what type of sex-ed they received, teen girls were 30% less likely than teen boys to use protection during their first sexual encounter. She also found that black teens were 40% less likely than white teens to use protection the first time they had sex."
The researcher "presented her analysis of data from the National Survey of Family Growth, in which she looked at responses from 5,012 adolescents aged 11 to 19," at "the annual American Public Health Association Social Justice Meeting and Expo in Denver."
Posted by admin at 05:36 PM
Excessive Texting Among Teens Associated With Sex, Drugs
The AP (11/10) reports, "Teens who text 120 times a day or more -- and there seems to be a lot of them -- are more likely to have had sex or used alcohol and drugs than kids who don't send as many messages, according to provocative new research."
The authors of the study "aren't suggesting that 'hyper-texting' leads to sex, drinking or drugs, but say it's startling to see an apparent link between excessive messaging and that kind of risky behavior."
In "Vital Signs," the New York Times (11/9, Rabin) reported that "the study by researchers at Case Western Reserve University, presented Tuesday at a meeting of the American Public Health Association in Denver, is based on data from questions posed last year to more than 4,000 students at 20 urban high schools in Ohio." Approximately "one-fifth sent at least 120 text messages a day, one-tenth were on social networks for three hours or more, and four percent did both." Notably, "that four percent were at twice the risk of nonusers for fighting, smoking, binge drinking, becoming cyber victims, thinking about suicide, missing school, and dozing off in class."
"The hyper-texters were 3.5 more likely to have had sex than teens who texted less," the Time (11/9, Melnick) "Healthland" blog reported. "The hyper-networkers, however, were not more likely to have had sex compared with the hyper-texters," but "they did exceed the texters' predilection for fighting, drinking and drug use," according to the study authors.
"Hyper-texting was reported by 19.8% of teens, many of whom were female, from lower socio-economic status, a minority background, and a single-mother home," the UK's Press Association (11/9) reported.
BBC News (11/9, Briggs) quoted the study's lead author, Dr. Scott Frank, as saying, "This should be a wake-up call for parents to not only help their children stay safe by not texting and driving, but by discouraging excessive use of the cell phone or social websites in general." The UK's Daily Mail (11/9) and the UK's Telegraph (11/9, Alleyne) also covered the story.
Posted by admin at 05:35 PM
Small Study Suggests Psychiatric Disorders May Be Common In Women With PCOS
MedWire (11/10, Cowen) reports that, according to a study published in the journal Comprehensive Psychiatry, "women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) have a high prevalence of psychiatric disorders, particularly mood disorders."
After studying 72 young women undergoing treatment for PCOS and evaluating them "for DSM-IV Axis I psychiatric disorders using the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) version 4.4," researchers discovered that "56.9% of the women met criteria for at least one psychiatric disorder. Of these, 78% met criteria for a mood disorder."
Major depression was the most common disorder and was experienced by 26.4% of the patients, MedWire notes.
Posted by admin at 05:33 PM
November 10, 2010
Veterans With PTSD Train Dogs To Help Themselves, Other Service Members
In a special report in the Washington Post (11/9), Arthur Allen, a freelance science writer in Washington and author of "Vaccine: The Controversial Story of Medicine's Greatest Lifesaver," writes of a new program that "uses a canine connection to help service members with post-traumatic stress disorder and others with physical handicaps."
The program, Paws for Purple Hearts, trains "Labradors and golden retrievers" as "service dogs...for veterans who use wheelchairs."
However, "for their first two years of life, these dogs spread their love around in another way." The canines "are trained by veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder," and "for many of these psychologically damaged warriors, this human-canine connection provides them with emotional sustenance, a mission and important lessons in patience that help them get on with their lives."
Related Links:
- "Vets with PTSD train dogs to help comrades," Arthur Allen, The Washington Post, November 8, 2010.
Posted by admin at 11:56 AM
VA Helping Veterans Suffering From PTSD
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (11/7, Fuoco) began a four-part series on the mental health challenges for veterans of combat in Iraq and Afghanistan, stating that for veteran Derrick Earley and "thousands of returning soldiers like him, there are no visible wounds, but they are casualties of the Iraqi and Afghanistan wars nonetheless," suffering from "post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD."
Earley, who was "medically retired from the Marines for his PTSD" and for a traumatic brain injury (TBI), "regularly receives one-on-one PTSD counseling and TBI treatment primarily" at the James E. Van Zandt Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Altoona, Pennsylvania. The Post-Gazette quotes Earley, who says VA is helping him "out a lot."
In the second part of its four-part series, the Post-Gazette (11/8, Fuoco) reports, "Like thousands of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans," Carrie Kleeh has PTSD, a "condition some people acquire when they experience or witness an event that causes intense fear, helplessness or horror."
After noting that the National Center for PTSD says that about one in five female veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have PTSD, the Post-Gazette points out that Kleeh "has been helped greatly by therapy" at the Veterans Affairs Pittsburgh Healthcare System.
Related Links:
- "Caring for the invisible wounds that warriors bring home
Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10311/1100779-455.stm#ixzz14tpCGsRZ," Michael A. Fuoco, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, November 7, 2010.
Posted by admin at 11:53 AM
Regular Physical Activity May Lead To Decrease In Depression
Medscape (11/5, Brauser) reported, "Participating in regular leisure-time physical activities of any intensity can lead to a decrease in depression," according to a study published in the November issue of the British Journal of Psychiatry. "
In a large population study of more than 40,000 Norwegian residents, investigators found that those who were not active during their time away from work were almost twice as likely to have symptoms of depression that those who were regularly active."
Interestingly, the study authors noted that "social benefits associated with exercise, such as increased number of friends and social support, may be more important contributors to this association than biological changes."
Related Links:
- "Regular Physical Activity Significantly Reduces Depression Risk," Deborah Brauser, Medscape, November 5, 2010.
Posted by admin at 11:51 AM
Children Of Military Families Visit Mental-Health Doctors More Often As Parents Deploy
The New York Times (11/8, A13, Carey) reports, "Young children in military families are about 10 percent more likely to see a doctor for a mental difficulty when a parent is deployed than when the parent is home, researchers are reporting Monday in the most comprehensive study to date of such families' use of health insurance during wartime."
Experts said "the new study, being published in the journal Pediatrics and including more than half a million children, significantly fills out the picture of the entire family as multiple deployments have become a norm."
Researchers "found that the children saw a doctor or other health professional about six times a year and about once every two years for a mental health reason. During deployment of a parent, however, the visit rate dropped by about 11 percent for physical problems but rose by 11 percent for psychological complaints."
Related Links:
- "Mental Health Visits Rise as Parent Deploys," Benedict Carey, New York Times, November 8, 2010.
Posted by admin at 11:48 AM
November 05, 2010
Women With Anorexia Nervosa More Likely To Have Unplanned Pregnancies, Abortions
HealthDay (11/3, Preidt) reported, "Women with anorexia nervosa are much more likely to have unplanned pregnancies and abortions than women without the eating disorder," according to a study published in Obstetrics & Gynecology.
After looking at data on some 60,000 Norwegian women, researchers found that "unplanned pregnancies were reported by 50 percent of women with anorexia and 18.9 percent of other women," while "24.2 percent of women with anorexia said they had a prior abortion, compared with 14.6 percent of other women."
The study's lead author said the findings "may be due to the mistaken belief that women with anorexia can't get pregnant because they have irregular menstrual periods or no periods at all."
Related Links:
- "Anorexia Linked With Unplanned Pregnancies," Robert Preidt, Healthday News, November 3, 2010.
Posted by admin at 12:39 PM
Veterans With Bipolar Disorder May Face Increased Risk For Suicide
Medscape (11/3, Brauser) reported, "Veterans with bipolar disorder (BD) are at a significantly increased risk for suicide compared with their counterparts with other mental health conditions," according to a study published in the November issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry.
After examining "computerized records of patients who received any treatment from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) during fiscal year (FY) 1999 (n = 3,291,891)," then examining data derived from the CDC's National Death Index, researchers found that "all psychiatric diagnoses examined (including schizophrenia, substance use disorders, depression, posttraumatic stress disorder...and other anxiety disorders) showed elevated suicide risks," but "BD was associated with the highest risk for the overall patient population," particularly so for male veterans.
Related Links:
- "Bipolar Disorder Linked to Greater Suicide Risk vs Other Mental Disorders," Deborah Brauser, Medescape, November 3, 2010.
Posted by admin at 12:30 PM
November 04, 2010
Scientists Locate Brain's "Worry Center."
The UK's Press Association (11/3) reports that after using "functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to scan the brains of 12 volunteers while they played a video game designed to create feelings of threat and anxiety," UK scientists "located the brain's 'worry centre' in a region normally linked to memory."
This discovery "could lead to the development of new therapies in the treatment of generalized anxiety disorders focusing on the hippocampus."
Study co-author Adam Perkins said, "Anxiety and fear were once thought of as wholly learned disease states; however, it is now widely suspected they are useful responses to threat that keep the individual away from trouble."
Related Links:
- "Experiences link to 'worry centre'," Press Assocation, November 3, 2010.
Posted by admin at 10:36 AM
Mental Illness Stigma Still Remains Despite Changes In Public Perception
The Los Angeles Times (11/2, Roan) "Booster Shots" blog reported that, according to a study published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, although "public perception of mental illness and addiction has changed significantly...in the last 15 years," people still may not "feel comfortable working or living near or being friends with someone with mental illness."
In a study comparing how people responded in 1996 and again in 2006 "to vignettes involving mental illness and addiction to gauge public understanding of the illness and feelings toward those who are ill or addicted," researchers found that mental illness stigma still remains, even though people understand that mental disorders "and addiction are biological, brain-based, sometimes-genetic illnesses."
(ONE OF THE GOALS OF THE MARYLAND FOUNDATION FOR PSYCHIATRY IS TO REDUCE STIGMA)
Related Links:
- "Mental illness stigma lingers even though people understand it's a brain disease," Shari Roan, Los Angeles Times, November 2, 2010.
Posted by admin at 10:34 AM
November 02, 2010
Survey Finds New Risky Behaviors Prevalent Among Youth
The Boston Globe (10/31, Lefferts) reported, "A new youth survey funded by Emerson Hospital in Concord [MA] found that traditional risky behaviors such as alcohol use and smoking continue to decrease, but modern dangers such as texting while driving and cyber-bullying are prevalent among area middle and high school students."
According to the survey, "nearly one-third of the high school students completing the questionnaire reported having driven a car while using a cellphone to talk or text at least once in the previous 30 days."
In addition, "17.2 percent of high school students, 11.4 percent of sixth-graders, and 20 percent of eighth-graders reported having been threatened, humiliated, or the target of hostile behavior from others through electronic communication during the previous 12 months."
Related Links:
- "Survey finds shift in risks facing youths," Jennifer Fenn Lefferts, Boston Globe, October 31, 2010.
Posted by admin at 11:41 AM
IOM Report Recommends Study Of Psychological, Emotional Impact Of Gulf Oil Spill
.CQ HealthBeat (10/30, Norman) reported, "With the long-term health effects of the Gulf oil spill still largely unknown, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) recommended on Friday that future research" take into account "the emotional and psychological impact of the disaster."
Thus far, researchers have "found a heightened prevalence of psychiatric disorders, domestic violence, and substance abuse in the aftermath of major disasters...an IOM letter report to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) noted," and the Gulf oil spill is likely to be no exception, the report noted.
Since the spill, "mental health and substance abuse agencies in the...region have reported an increase in calls, as have domestic violence hotlines, the report said."
Posted by admin at 11:40 AM
Article Details Latest Developments In Alzheimer's Research
Time (10/31, Park) reported, "Experts are now convinced that it's crucial to treat Alzheimer's patients as early as possible, perhaps even before they show signs of memory loss or cognitive decline, rather than attempt to improve a brain already scourged by the disease," in the hope that "new therapies used early on will not only delay symptoms, but also reverse them."
The Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, "a $60 million project tasked with identifying easily detectable differences...between Alzheimer's patients and unaffected individuals," has already "isolated a few dozen intriguing protein markers in blood and spinal fluid that may herald Alzheimer's disease," while "newer, better brain scans are helping detect the amyloid patterns that previously could be verified only by autopsy."
Related Links:
- "New Research on Understanding Alzheimer's," Alice park, Time, October 31, 2010.
Posted by admin at 11:37 AM
Problems Handling Money May Indicate Alzheimer's Disease, Researchers Say
On its front page, the New York Times (10/30, A1, Kolata) "The Vanishing Mind" column discussed how problems handling money may be an early indication that someone has Alzheimer's disease.
"New research shows that one of the first signs of impending dementia is an inability to understand money and credit, contracts, and agreements." This is a growing problem as the population ages, not just to the families affected, but also to financial consultants and attorneys who "say they are finding themselves in a bind when their clients' minds seem to be slipping."
A 2009 survey of financial advisors indicated that 84 percent felt they had clients with symptoms of dementia. Many advisors felt unsure what to do about such clients and how best to help them.
Related Links:
- "The Vanishing Mind: Money Woes Can Be Early Clue to Alzheimer’s," Gina Kolata, New York Times, October 30, 2010.
Posted by admin at 11:34 AM
Sebelius Tapes "It Gets Better" Video For Bullied Teens
CQ HealthBeat (10/29, Norman) reported that HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius "has taped an 'it gets better' video aimed at lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth."
Notably, "the 'It Gets Better Project,' centered around videos, was founded by writer Dan Savage in September following the suicides of a series of teens who had been bullied."
In this video, Sebelius says, "Don't let the bullies win and don't let them cut your future short. ... We need you and your talents, and whether you feel it or not, lots of people do care about you. I promise you, it gets better . Today may seem dark. But tomorrow will be brighter."
Related Links:
- Video Message for the Anti-Bullying It Gets Better Project
Posted by admin at 11:32 AM
Survey Finds New Risky Behaviors Prevalent Among Youth
The Boston Globe (10/31, Lefferts) reported, "A new youth survey funded by Emerson Hospital in Concord [MA] found that traditional risky behaviors such as alcohol use and smoking continue to decrease, but modern dangers such as texting while driving and cyber-bullying are prevalent among area middle and high school students."
According to the survey, "nearly one-third of the high school students completing the questionnaire reported having driven a car while using a cellphone to talk or text at least once in the previous 30 days."
In addition, "17.2 percent of high school students, 11.4 percent of sixth-graders, and 20 percent of eighth-graders reported having been threatened, humiliated, or the target of hostile behavior from others through electronic communication during the previous 12 months."
Related Links:
- "Survey finds shift in risks facing youths," Jennifer Fenn Lefferts, Boston Globe, October 31, 2010.
Posted by admin at 11:30 AM
People Who Exercise Regularly During Their Free Time Less Likely To Have Symptoms Of Depression, Anxiety
BBC News (10/31) reported, "People who take regular exercise during their free time are less likely to have symptoms of depression and anxiety," according to a study published in the British Journal of Psychiatry. In a study of 40,000 people, researchers found that "people who were not active in their leisure time were almost twice as likely to have symptoms of depression compared to the most active individuals." Notably, "the intensity of the exercise did not seem to make any difference."
Related Links:
- "Leisure-time exercise 'reduces depression risk'," BBC News Health, October 31, 2010.
Posted by admin at 11:27 AM
