Antidepressants Associated with Increased Risk for Manic Symptoms
                    An analysis of medical records in the UK reveals that the use of certain antidepressants for depression is linked to a heightened risk for mania and bipolar disorder. The research, published this week in BMJ Open, found the strongest effect for serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and the antidepressant venlafaxine.                
            Terrorism Science: 5 Insights into Jihad in Europe
                    "Terrorism researchers are trying to understand how young people in Europe become radicalized, by looking for clues in the life histories of those who have committed or planned terrorist acts in recent years, left the continent to join ISIS, or are suspected of wanting to become jihadists. A mixture of sociologists, political scientists, anthropologists and psychologists, such researchers are drawing on information generated by police, judicial inquiries and the media, and, in some cases, on interviews. They also study factors at play in prisons and socially-deprived areas. Some of their insights are summarized here.â                
            43% Increase in ADHD Diagnoses among School-Aged Children in US
                    Citing a 43 percent jump since 2003, researchers estimate that 5.8 million school-aged children and teens in the US now have an ADHD diagnosis, a staggering 12 percent of this population. The new NIH-funded analysis also found that the percentage of girls diagnosed with ADHD was up 55% and that the percentage of Hispanic children diagnosed shot up 83% over the same timeframe.                
            How the News Frames the Opioid Epidemic
                    US news coverage has primarily framed the opioid drug abuse epidemic as a criminal justice issue rather than a public health problem, according to new research published ahead of print in the Journal of Psychiatric Services. The mediaâs framing of the epidemic may increase stigma against those who develop a dependency on prescription drugs and distract political attention from public-health oriented solutions, such as increased access to substance abuse recovery treatments.                
            The Ghost of Research Future
                    Two facts about Robert Califf are beyond question. He is an expert on clinical trials, who is already seen as a leading architect of the future of medical research. And as the New York Times put it, he has âdeeper ties to the pharmaceutical industry than any FDA commissioner in recent memoryâ. A lot of senior figures in medicine support Califf in spite of his ties to Pharma. The guy is just so bright, and understands the nuts and bolts of drug research so well! Surely a person like this is more useful than some outsider who offers only a squeaky-clean resume, they argue.                
            After the Black-Box: Majority of Children Starting SSRIs Still Receiving Too High of Dose
                    In 2004, the FDA added a black-box warning to SSRI antidepressants on the increased risk of suicide among children taking these drugs. A new study suggests that this warning has increased the proportion of children who begin an antidepressant on a low dose, but the majority are still receiving higher than recommended doses.                
            âNew Pill for Boosting Female Libidos Off to a Slow Startâ
                    Ed Silverman reports that only 80 prescriptions for Addyi, or Flibanserin, were filled in the drugsâ first two weeks on the market.
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            âDoes Schizophrenia Exist on an Autism-Like Spectrum?â
                    The results of epidemiological studies of the prevalence of hallucinations strongly imply that psychosis exists on a spectrum, according to the Scientific American. This suggests âthat the standard treatment for a psychotic episode might be due for an overhaul.â                
            Experts Call on Presidential Candidates to Improve Study Transparency
                    In an open letter to all US presidential candidates published Thursday in the BMJ, a group of global health care experts assert that current research regulations allow drug companies to publish incomplete and misleading results. They ask the candidates to declare whether they support improved transparency measures that would make data on drug studies publically available and open to scrutiny.                
            Dr. Nardo on the Curse of Inselâs Legacy
                    In his reaction to Dr. Makariâs Opinion piece in the âTimes, entitled Psychiatryâs Mind-Brain Problem, Dr. Nardo articulates why the legacy of NIMH director Thomas Insel is so dangerous. âHe may have kept the researchers from spinning off and following some idiosyncratic path, but he did it by forcing them to follow his own idiosyncratic path.â                
            âA Creative Solution for Psychologyâs Replication Problemâ
                    In the Atlantic, Ed Yong reports that despite the lack of replicability of individual studies, when you get a pool of psychologists âbetting onâ the reproducibility of a study their predictions are surprisingly accurate. âWhich makes me wonder: What's going on with peer review? If people know which results are really not likely to be real, why are they allowing them to be published?â                
            Despite âFlurry of Interest,â Ketamine Remains Unproven For Depression
                    In 2014, then National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) director, Thomas Insel, speculated that ketamine âmight be the most important breakthrough in antidepressant treatment in decades.â A recent review of the research suggests that while ketamine may produce a rapid short-term improvement in depression, the effect is short-lived and the potential for addiction and dependence warrants considerable caution.
                
            âRobert Neugeboren, Survivor of Psychiatric Abuses, Dies at 72â
                    Robert Neugeboren, who âspent most of his adult life in institutions, often subject to isolation, physical punishment and numbing medication,â was âa celebrity of sorts in the world of the mentally ill: a survivor of the horrors of mistreatment, a case history for those who point to the positive effects of kindness and talk therapy, and, perhaps most of all, the embodiment of the bottomless mystery of the human mind.â                
            Relieving Poverty Significantly Improves Mental Health
                    Giving money to people diagnosed with severe mental health issues can significantly improve depression and anxiety. A new study, published in the October issue of the Journal of Community Mental Health, found that giving about $73 US dollars per month for recreational spending can also reduce social isolation and strengthen a sense of self.                
            âMedical Research: The Dangers to the Human Subjectsâ
                    Marcia Angell in the New York Review of Books writes about the inherent conflict in clinical trials between âthe search for scientific answers," on one hand, and âthe rights and welfare of human subjects,â on the other.                
            âHow Too Much Medicine Can Kill Youâ
                    In an op-ed for the Guardian, cardiologist Aseem Malhotra writes: âCorporate greed and systematic political failure have brought healthcare to its knees. There are too many misinformed doctors and misinformed patients. Itâs time for greater transparency and stronger accountability, so that doctors and nurses can provide the best quality care for the most important person in the consultation room â the patient.â
                
            Nardo on RAISE study: âSpin is for Politiciansâ
                    Dr. Mickey Nardo adds to the ongoing discussion about the RAISE study results. He writes: âIf there is âspinâ in the reporting of this study, we need to know about it. I personally think that itâs more important for RAISE to be reported completely and honestly than whether it comes out like they [or I] want it to come out. We donât need some sanitized version of RAISE to tell us we need to turn our attention to a full bodied approach to the treatment of First Episode psychotic patients. We all already know that. What we do need is to have our confidence restored in our research community â that they will honestly and clearly report their findings whether they are clean as a whistle or an unholy mess.â                
            âKids in Foster Care Three Times More Likely to be Diagnosed with ADHDâ
                    PsychCentral presents a new study from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that found that foster care children are three times more likely than other children on Medicaid to receive a diagnosis of ADHD. Overall, more than one in four children in foster care receive such a diagnosis. CDC statistician Melissa Danielson interpreted these results as revealing a âsubstantial needâ for more medical and behavioral services for kids in foster care.                
            GlaxoSmithKline Accused of Hiding Paroxetine Results
                    The UK Times reports that pharmaceutical companies are actively lobbying to limit the release of clinical trial data to the public. Rather than limiting results and data to medical journals, new transparency initiatives are pushing for making the information publically available. The push for transparency comes in the wake of the reanalysis of the Study 329 data on paroxetine (marketed as Seroxat and Paxil), which found that the industry study had misconstrued its results.                 
            âSesame Streetâ Welcomes First Character with Autism
                    Last Wednesday, Sesame Street added a new character, Julia, to its roster of characters. In an online story, Julia, who has autism, meets Elmo and Abby and Elmo explains why Julia might sometimes do things a little bit differently. The story was written by Leslie Kimmerman, who has a child with autism, and the entire series will be developed in collaboration with parents, advocates, and people with autism.                
            New York Times Issues Correction on RAISE Study Report
                    Last Tuesday, The New York Times and several other outlets (including Mad In America) reported on the highly-touted results of a study on psychosocial treatment for patients diagnosed with schizophrenia. Now, claims made about the study, which the âTimes called âthe most rigorous trial to date,â are coming under increased scrutiny.                
            RAISE Study Out Of Sync With Media Reports
                    Writing on his 1 Boring Old Man blog, Dr. Mickey Nardo reflects on the media frenzy around the RAISE study and asks why the prescription data has not been released. He adds skepticism about the political motives of the potentially overblown results, which he sees as a clear push for increased mental health funding.                 
            Confusion Over Antipsychotic Dosing Data in RAISE Study
                    Yesterday, the New York Times reported that schizophrenia patients in an experimental treatment program (RAISE) who experienced better outcomes had been on lower doses of antipsychotics than normal. However, the article published in the American Journal of Psychiatry on Tuesday did not divulge any data on the varying antipsychotic drug doses in the different study groups.                 
            Landmark Schizophrenia Study Recommends More Therapy
                    Results of a large government-funded study call into question current drug heavy approaches to treating people diagnosed with schizophrenia.  The study, which the New York Times called âby far the most rigorous trial to date conducted in the United States,â found that patients who received smaller doses of antipsychotic drugs with individual talk therapy, family training, and support for employment and education had a greater reduction in symptoms as well as increases in quality of life, and participation in work and school than those receiving the current standard of care.                
            âControversial âFemale Viagraâ Hits the Market, New Questions Ariseâ
                    Despite concerns about the drugâs necessity, effectiveness, and side-effects, Flibanserin (Addyi) has come to market as the first drug designed to increase sexual desire in women                
            
        







