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Results for search "Psychology / Mental Health: Misc.".

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Health News Results - 944

Babies born preterm face a life of lowered prospects, a new study warns.

Adults who were preemies are less likely to achieve higher education or snag a high-paying job, researchers reported Nov. 6 in the journal PLOS One.

What’s more, the earlier preterm a baby is born, the worse his or her future prospects a...

Rates of anxiety and depression among U.S. adults, especially younger folks, continues to rise, the latest federal data shows.

Nearly 1 in every 5 (18.2%) adults reported anxiety issues in 2022, up from 15.6% in 2019, reported Emily Terlizzi and

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • November 7, 2024
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  • Many Americans experience a “winter funk” as the days grow shorter and temperatures turn colder, a new American Psychiatric Association poll reports.

    Two-fifths of Americans (41%) said their mood declines during the winter months, according to the APA's Healthy Minds Poll.

    Mi...

    Women who’ve had concussions are more likely to suffer severe mental health problems following childbirth, a new study shows.

    A history of concussion increased a new mother’s risk of severe mental illness by 25%, after adjusting for...

    The COVID-19 pandemic appears to have created a nation of homebodies in the United States, a new study finds.

    People are spending nearly an hour less each day doing activities outside the home, researchers reported Oct. 31 in the

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • October 31, 2024
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  • Most kids with attention issues won't go on to develop serious psychiatric conditions like psychosis or schizophrenia.

    However, a new study finds poor attention spans in childhood, plus certain genes, could play a role in raising the risk for these conditions.

    Of course, much more research is needed to pinpoint precursors to psychotic symptoms in a person's teens or 20s, said a t...

    Anxiety is driving more children with potentially dangerous food allergies to seek out psychological care, a new study finds.

    Focusing on one Ohio hospital, the researchers found a more than 50% jump in psychology referrals for kids with food allergies between 2018 and 2023.

    “Our c...

    A “case of the Mondays” is more perilous than just the return-to-work blues, a new study warns.

    Suicide risk is highest on Monday in the United States and around the world, an international team of researchers has discovered.

    “Mond...

    Most Americans say they’re stressed out over the future of the United States and the presidential election, a new poll shows.

    The Stress in America poll, conducted by the American Psychologica...

    Baby Boom seniors are divorcing at rates triple that of a few decades ago, a new study has found.

    “Gray divorce” among folks 65 and older increased to 15% in 2022 from 5% in 1990, according to research from the National Center for Family...

    Kids with good physical fitness are more likely to grow into teens with better mental health and brain function, a new study has found.

    Children who performed better at shuttle sprints scored better on cognitive tests as teenagers, researchers found.

    In addition, better cardio fitness in childhood added up to lower levels of

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • October 18, 2024
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  • A new diagnosis of Alzheimer's or other dementia often spurs a person to move from their home, new research shows.

    “One possible explanation is that individuals with dementia and their caregivers may choose to move closer to family or informal ca...

    Doctors might be overprescribing sedatives to stroke survivors, a new study warns.

    About 5% of people are prescribed a benzodiazepine following a stroke, to help calm anxiety and improve sleep, researchers found. Benzodiazepine meds include Valium, Ativan ...

    A young Israeli researcher who lost a sibling in the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israeli civilians said the tragedy has spurred her to study the unique aspects of grief at the sudden loss of a brother or sister.

    The research by Master of Arts student Masada Buchris, of Hebrew University in Jerusalem, hasn't yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal and will become part of her thesis....

    As with any new drug, parents and doctors may worry that the use of GLP-1 weight-loss meds by children and teens might raise psychiatric risks, including the risk for suicide and suicidal thoughts.

    But a new study involving more than 54,000 U.S. adolescents found no such link.

    In fact, obese kids who used the drugs had a 33% decline in their risk for thoughts of suicide and suicide...

    Alison Burke wanted to be there for her daughter following the girl’s diagnosis with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

    Then she noticed that a lot of what she was learning about ADHD sounded awfully familiar.

    “As I took her through that process and learned more about it, it...

    Friendships forged during a person’s turbulent teenage years lay the essential foundation for their happiness later in life, a new study suggests.

    Being broadly accepted by peers in early adolescence and forming close connections as an older teen both predict how ...

    A new study finds persistent loneliness taking a toll on aging brains and significantly raising a person's odds for dementia.

    Research funded by the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health tracked self-reports of loneliness and the neurological health of more than 600,000 people worldwide.

    The study found loneliness was linked to a 31% rise in the likelihood that a person would go...

    Some people might have Long COVID symptoms because the coronavirus is still active inside their bodies, a new study finds.

    People with wide-ranging Long COVID symptoms were twice as likely to have SARS-CoV-2 proteins in their blood, indicating a persistent infection, researchers found.

    Overall, more than 4 in 10 patients with multiple Long COVID symptoms have such evidence of persis...

    A study tracking almost 10,000 9- and 10-year olds for two years finds a link between time spent watching TV and other screens with a higher odds for ADHD and depression.

    “Screen use may replace time spent engaging in physical activity, sleep, socializing in-person and other behaviors that reduce depression and anxiety,” reasoned study lead author

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • October 9, 2024
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  • "Black Box” warnings added to antidepressants might have contributed to an increase in suicide attempts and deaths among young people, a new evidence review claims.

    The warnings say that antidepressants might be associated with suicidal thoughts and...

    Light therapy: It's long been a go-to therapy for seasonal affective disorder (SAD), a kind of depression that can beset some people when winter looms and days shorten.

    But new research is suggesting that time spent in front of light box might ease other forms of depression as w...

    Whether abusive parents, drug addiction or gun violence are to blame, the fallout from childhood traumas can reverberate until a person's final days of life, new research shows.

    "We found that early-life trauma in particular, especially physical abuse by parents, was strongly related to end-of-life pain, loneliness and

  • Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter
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  • October 4, 2024
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  • The large majority of people with food allergy, and the caregivers of kids with such allergies, say the condition has led to psychological distress, a new study finds.

    However, only about 1 in every 5 such people have ever been assessed and counseled on their anxieties, the same report also found.

    “Our research highlights a major unmet need for psychological support for food a...

    If you're a 20-something who is unattached, having good friends is a key to happiness, new research shows. 

    "The quality of your friendships is a key factor for your well-being, especially if you're single," a team led by Lisa Walsh, a postdoctoral research associate at the University of California, Los Angeles, reported Oct. 2 in the journal...

    As the southeastern United States begins to recover from Helene's devastation, a new study suggests the health impact of major storms can linger for over a decade.

    So far, more than 120 people across six states have already been confirmed dead in Helene's aftermath, although that number could rise much higher as rescue efforts continue.

    Now, a team from Stanford University reports...

    In a finding that illustrates the damage that laws targeting transgender people can cause, new research shows that trans and nonbinary youth in states with such laws are more likely to attempt suicide.

    How much more likely? The study authors found the laws triggered up to a 72% increase in suicide attempts in the past year.

    “This groundbreaking study offers robust and indisput...

    More and more, primary care doctors routinely ask patients a question that may come as a surprise: Do you ever have suicidal thoughts?

    Now, new research shows it's a simple intervention that can save lives.

    When suicide care was made a routine part of primary care visits at Kaiser Permanente clinics in Washington state, suicide attempts dropped 25% in the next 90 days, the study fou...

    Besides being useless in altering a person's sexuality or gender identity, so-called "conversion therapy" or "conversion practice" can greatly raise the odds that an LGBT person experiences mental health issues, new research finds.

    Questionnaires completed by over 4,400 LGBTQ+ Americans found that having undergone these bogus interventions was linked to higher rates of depression, post-tr...

    There's a strong link between self-esteem and good times between the sheets, a new study suggests.

    Folks ranking high in self-esteem also tended to rate their sex lives as satisfying, reported a team from the Universities of Zurich and Utrecht, in Switzerland and The Netherlands.

    The effect could work in both directions, researchers believe.

    “People with higher self-este...

    In a world where families may be more apt to interact with technology than with one another, some things never change.

    Many still struggle to get along. But just what do 21st century families fight about?

    A new survey of 593 parents with at least one child between the ages of 4 and 17 offers some clues — and the flashpoints are very familiar.

    For couples, communication ...

    A synthetic form of the active ingredient in cannabis helps reduce agitation in people with Alzheimer's, new research shows.

    Synthetic THC (dronabinol) also gave patients' caregivers a boost, according to findings presented Thursday at a meeting of the...

    Patients with opioid use disorder who receive higher doses of a drug to treat their addiction are more likely to have positive results, a new study finds. 

    Daily doses of the drug buprenorphine is a standard treatment for opioid use disorder, and the findings suggest that higher doses may be a better way to manage it. Researchers say this could be an important way to improve treatmen...

    U.S. suicide rates are ticking back upward again after a dip during the pandemic, new statistics show.

    Suicide deaths per 100,000 people had fallen from 14.2 recorded in the pre-pandemic year of 2018 to 13.5 in 2020.

    However, by 2022, the latest year for which statistics are available, the rate had climbed once more to 14.2 deaths per every 100,000 Americans, report researchers fro...

    As people living near airports probably already know, all that overhead traffic can take a huge hit to their sleep, a new study confirms.

    Night-time aircraft noise increases a person’s risk of tossing and turning in bed as engines roar overhead, researchers reported Sept. 25 in the...

    In a move that could mean more Americans in crisis get help and get it quickly, federal officials announced Tuesday that major cellphone carriers now have the technology to direct 988 callers to local mental health services based on their location instead of their area code.

    “The goal of 988 is to help people in a mental health or substance use crisis get 24/7 access to compassionat...

    Only 1 in every 4 U.S. adults struggling with schizophrenia receive "minimally adequate treatment," new data shows.

    Many of these patients also struggle with other mental health issues, such as substance abuse or depression, and they are further challenged by social and economic hardship, according to the new report.

    The data comes from the U.S. Mental and Substance Use Disorders Pr...

    Psilocybin could help people suffering from a mental health problem that can lead to eating disorders, a new study suggests.

    Psilocybin, the active chemical in “magic” mushrooms, significantly reduced symptoms in people with body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), re...

    One in three former NFL players believe they have football-related brain damage that’s doing untold harm to their lives, a new study finds.

    Unfortunately, their fears might be harming their mental health on top of whatever risks they face from

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • September 23, 2024
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  • Having a husband or boyfriend with adult ADHD can harm a woman's mental stability, a new study suggests.

    About 3 in 5 women (59%) with male partners with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) had symptoms of depression, a rate on par with caregi...

    SATURDAY, Sept. 21, 2024 (Healthday News) -- Workplace anxiety. Who hasn't experienced it?

    However, if that anxiety is so strong that it hurts your performance or lingers for months, you might have a problem, one expert says.

    Dr. Asim Shah, executive vice chair in the Menninger Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral S...

    A cavalry of sorts can come to the rescue of combat veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a new study says.

    Combat veterans who regularly care for horses experience an easing of their PTSD symptoms, as well as an overall improved mental outlook, researchers found.

    Focusing on a horse’s welfare can help a veteran shed the hypervigilance that often accom...

    Therapy dogs can help boost the spirits of health care workers in the same way they brighten the moods of hospital patients, a new study shows.

     The furry, four-legged friends reduced emotional exhaustion and job stress among a small group of workers at two surgical and two i...

    Folks who are content with what they’ve got could be less likely to suffer a heart attack or stroke, a new study suggests.

    “Our findings support a holistic approach to health care, where enhancing a person’s mental and emotional well-being is considered an ...

    As wildfires continue to burn across parts of California, a new study finds that smoke from these blazes and other air pollution could be harming kids’ mental health.

    Repeated exposure to high levels of particle pollution increases kids’ risk of depression, anxiety and other men...

    With implications for research around postpartum depression and other health issues, scientists have tracked the changes pregnancy brings to the female brain.

    These changes weren't subtle: Big shifts in what's known as the brain's "white matter" versus "gray matter" were observed, according to a team from the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB).

    “The maternal brain...

    Over 5 million Americans could benefit if the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approves the "magic mushroom" psychedelic psilocybin as a treatment for depression, researchers estimate.

    “While our analysis is a crucial first step, we've only scratched the surface in understanding the true public health impact psilocybin therapy may have,” said study co-author

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • September 13, 2024
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  • Widespread and easy access to guns is the reason behind the shockingly high rate of firearm deaths in the United States, and not any rise in mental health problems suffered by perpetrators, a new study shows.

    The United States has the same burden of mental health disorders as 40 other countries with comparable populations, researchers reported recently in the journal

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • September 11, 2024
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  • An analysis of where suicides are occurring in the United States shows that, tragically, location matters.

    People living in poorer areas with fewer resources are significantly more likely to fall victim to suicide versus those living in more affluent areas, new data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows.

    “Improving the conditions where people are born,...

    A form of psychotherapy can help women whose libidos have suffered as they go through menopause, a new study finds.

    Cognitive behavioral therapy significantly improved sexual desire and satisfaction in a small group of middle-aged and older women, researchers said.

    "To our knowledge, this is the first study that has examined the efficacy of a cognitive behavioral therapy protocol sp...

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