Dr. Henry Paul, MD

Psychiatrist, Author and Educator

ALARMING JUMP IN SUICIDE RATES

April 26th, 2016

I was surprised by the latest CDC report out this week that showed suicide rates in the United States were at their highest level in three decades. The report released on Friday said that suicides have increased in the US to a rate of 13 per 100,000 people, the highest since 1986. The increase is particularly pronounced among middle-age white people who now account for a third of all US suicides.

45274094_sAccording to the CDC study, more than 14,000 middle-aged white people killed themselves in 2014, and the overall suicide rate rose by 24% from 1999 to 2014. Among white men ages 45 to 64, the rate increased 43% and increased 63% for women in the same age-range. The study did not venture to say what the causes might be for the increase, but I think we can surmise that mental health, substance abuse and difficult economic times have contributed.

The study also showed a jump in the suicides amongst girls between the ages of 10 to 14. From 1999 to 2015 the number tripled from 50 to 150. This number is still very low but the fact that it tripled is a concern.

The study did show a decline for two groups; black men and seniors over age 75.

Robert D Putnam, a professor of public policy at Harvard, told the New York Times, “This is part of the larger emerging pattern of evidence of the links between poverty, hopelessness and health.”

The New York Times also reported that since they ran their story last week, they had gotten an overwhelming response. If you need to speak with someone for yourself or a friend or loved one you can call:

National Suicide Prevention Hotline: No matter what problems you are dealing with they want to help you find a reason to keep living. By calling 1-800-273-TALK (8255) you’ll be connected to a skilled, trained counselor at a crisis center in your area, anytime 24/7. This is a confidential, free call.

Crisis Text Line: They serve anyone, in any type of crisis, providing access to free, 24/7 support and information via the medium people already use and trust: text. According to their website this is how it works:

  1. Text 741-741 from anywhere in the USA, anytime, about any type of crisis.
  2. A live, trained Crisis Counselor receives the text and responds quickly.
    The volunteer Crisis Counselor will help you move from a hot moment to a cool moment
  3. As always, if this is an emergency and someone is in crisis you should call 911.

LINKS
U.S. Suicide Rate Jumps to 30 Year High NY Times, April 2016
Crisistextline.org
National Suicide Prevention Hotline
Suicide is a Growing Epidemic in America Dr. Henry Paul Blog, November 2015

DISCLAIMER
Information contained in this blog is intended for educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical or psychiatric advice for individual conditions or treatment and does not substitute for a medical or psychiatric examination. A psychiatrist must make a determination about any treatment or prescription.

WHY SHOULD I CARE ABOUT A DRUG ADDICT?

April 15th, 2016

Addiction is similar to other diseases, such as heart disease. Both disrupt the normal, healthy functioning of the underlying organ, have serious harmful consequences, are preventable, treatable, and if left untreated, can last a lifetime. Source: From the laboratories of Drs. N. Volkow and H. Schelbert.

Last week I posted a blog about Narcan™ (naloxone), an opiate antidote that saves lives! It was brought to my attention this week that a local community coalition spreading the word about opiate and heroin addiction was offering a free Narcan training, and I was surprised by some of the online conversation about it.

33645761_sSome of the comments were about “letting the addicts die” because they (the addict) had made a choice to use drugs. Others were debating whether-or-not addiction is a disease. What these comments tell me is that there is a lot of confusion out there amongst adults about opiate addiction (including heroin, which is an opiate). So, I thought I would dry to address some of the confusion here.

First, drug addiction is a disease that develops over time as a result of the initially voluntary behavior of using drugs. While the full causes are not known drug addiction does take on a life of its own. Addiction ends up affecting a host of functions of a person’s body and mind.

In June of 2015, TIME magazine had a cover story, “Why America Can’t Kick Its Painkiller Problem.” The story makes the case that these addictions no longer start in the dark alleys with drug dealers, but rather start in doctors’ offices with everyday people seeking relief for their pain. These painkillers, known as opioids, are used to treat everything from migraine headaches to back pain, to sports injuries, to severe pelvic pain to chronic Lyme disease.

Here’s a little excerpt from the article that gives a pretty clear picture. “The longer patients stay on the drugs, which are chemically related to heroin and trigger a similar biological response, including euphoria, the higher the chances users will become addicted. When doctors, regulators and law-enforcement officials try to curb access, addicted patients buy the pills on the black market, where they are plentiful. And when those supplies run short, people who would never have dreamed of shooting up, like suburban moms and middle-class professionals, seek respite from the pain of withdrawal with the more potent method of dissolving and injecting the pills’ contents, or going straight to heroin.” (Massimo Calabresi, TIME)

This opiate epidemic is leading elected officials and the medical community to a point where we have to rethink pain management in this country. Law enforcement is on the treatment side. Yes, believe-it-or-not getting arrested leads to the beginning of treatment for many. What we need to do, and what was evident to me by reading some of the comments online, is that we have to put much more effort into awareness and prevention.

LINKS
Drugs, Brains, and Behavior: The Science of Addiction – this booklet explains scientific information about addiction that is easily understandable. Here is a link to a PDF you can download.

Why America Can’t Kick Its Painkiller Problem – You do need a TIME subscription to read this article.

How Science Has Revolutionized the Understanding of Drug Addiction

Easy to Read Drug Facts from the NIDA

DISCLAIMER
Information contained in this blog is intended for educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical or psychiatric advice for individual conditions or treatment and does not substitute for a medical or psychiatric examination. A psychiatrist must make a determination about any treatment or prescription.

BLACK BOX WARNING ON PAINKILLERS

March 25th, 2016

“They’re the most powerful painkillers ever invented, and their creating the worst addiction crisis America has ever seen.” TIME Magazine Cover June 2015

6422127_sThe US Food and Drug Administration this week announced that painkillers, such as OxyContin and Fentanyl, will now have to carry a “black box” warning stating the dangers of abuse, addiction, overdose and death.

It is called a black box warning because that is how it appears – in a black box. According to the FDA website, “it appears on a prescription drug’s label and is designed to call attention to serious or life-threatening risks.”

The FDA hopes that this warning will help to slow a growing epidemic in this country of opioid addiction that is leading to heroin addiction, overdose and death. In 2015, TIME magazine reported in their cover story that “9.4 million Americans take opioids for long-term pain and 2.1 million are estimated by the NIH (National Institutes of Health) to be hooked.”

The article went on to say that the crisis is a “tragic combination of good intentions, criminal deception and feckless oversight to turn America’s desire to relieve its pain into such widespread suffering.”

Here’s what the FDA told CNN about how this warning will work. “When a patient gets his or her prescription filled, the bottle should have a notification indicating there is a black-box warning for the drug. The consumer would need to go to the manufacturer’s website for details. In addition, pharmacists are encouraged to provide patients with a medication guide — consumer-friendly language explaining the risks of the drug. Under this new effort from the FDA, all instant-release drugs will need to have such a guide. It is up to the pharmacist to dispense this information, something the FDA encourages.”

The FDA ruling is a long-overdue step toward fighting America’s drug epidemic. I’m not sure it is realistic to assume that consumers will go to the manufacturers website for details, but I do think that pharmacists taking the time to go over the risks of painkillers will help. I have to agree with Senator Markey in what he told CNN, “It’s too little, too late.” We have a long way to go to turn this epidemic around and educating the public and doctors is key.

LINKS
Time Magazine Releases Cover Story on Pain Killers
Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing
FDA now requires ‘black box’ warning on painkillers

DISCLAIMER
Information contained in this blog is intended for educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical or psychiatric advice for individual conditions or treatment and does not substitute for a medical or psychiatric examination. A psychiatrist must make a determination about any treatment or prescription.

YOU WANT TO BULLY ME?

March 18th, 2016

Bullying is a topic that I have talked about frequently in my blog and with patients and educators. Sadly, bullying is much worse for children today. Why? Because social media created cyberbullying making it easy for bullies to taunt, tease and threaten their victims around-the-clock.

I recently came across a story online at Choices magazine by a young woman who was bullied and decided to fight back. The article tells the story of Nicole, who had hundreds of friends and never thought she’d ever be the target of bullying. Until one day she was accused of doing something that angered many in her class, and so she was now being trashed on Facebook, tormented by a barrage of nasty, hurtful texts and on the verge of falling apart. Until one day she decided to fight back. Choices chronicles her story in “The Girl Who Got Even: A True Cyberbullying Story.”

Nicole’s mom became concerned about the bullying and did some research and found Shawn Edgington, one of America’s leading experts on cyberbullying prevention. Edgington had been speaking at schools and had come to the realization that teens would respond better if he had a young person they could relate to, so he asked Nicole if she would tell her story. She told Choices, “She jumped at the opportunity. For her, there was no better way to get even with her tormenters than by telling the world what she had endured and what she had learned.”

With Nicole as his campaign spokesperson, Edgington formed the Great American NO BULL Challenge. Their website says their mission is to provide a global social media platform to promote youth leadership, cyber citizenship, and social change through peer-to-peer engagement and action. NO BULL is powered by the voices of youth (ages 13-23) through short video documentaries, PSAs, and Vines that they write and produce.

Nicole told Choices that working with Edgington on his campaign has been healing for her. She even said that one of the students who tormented her reached out to apologize for believing in the false accusations and partaking in the bullying.

It was great that Nicole confided in her mother and that her mother was proactive in helping her daughter. Parents need to educate themselves about bullying. There are effective intervention programs across the country that parents should get involved with in their children’s schools. Schools should be encouraged to create and enforce anti-bullying policies and to have class discussions about bullies.

I have counseled plenty of children over the years who have been the victims of childhood bullying. Bullying comes in many forms, but intimidation, teasing and the threat of violence are often involved. The sooner a child begins to deal with their bullying the better the outcome. For Nicole, she not only beat back the bullies she found that she “felt relief” and that her world seemed “in balance” again.

LINKS

The Girl Who Got Even: A True Cyberbullying Story – Choices
Shawn Edgington – Cyberbully Prevention Expert
Great American NO BULL Challenge
What to Do If You Think Your Child is Being Bullied – Dr. Henry Paul Blog

DISCLAIMER
Information contained in this blog is intended for educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical or psychiatric advice for individual conditions or treatment and does not substitute for a medical or psychiatric examination. A psychiatrist must make a determination about any treatment or prescription.

YES, IT CAN HAPPEN IN YOUR FAMILY!

March 9th, 2016

22616601_sThe hardest part about the heroin epidemic in this country is getting those who think “not in my family” to understand that it happens to ANY family. It happens to high school and college athletes – the “good kids” — and it occurs in higher numbers in our adult population over age 50. Why? Because painkillers are prescribed to injured athletes and adults with injuries and chronic pain, and painkillers are a gateway drug to heroin.

Let’s focus today on adolescent athletes and how an injury can lead to addiction. A 2013 study published in the American Journal of Public Health found that young athletes are 50 percent more likely to abuse painkillers. Just yesterday CBS News ran a story about college high school wrestler Robert King who was prescribed the painkiller Percocet for his broken foot and who just a few years later found himself addicted to heroin.

According to CBS, “King’s story is not an uncommon one. As the heroin epidemic continues to rage throughout the country, high school athletes are falling victim to addiction in alarming numbers.”

I have written blogs about painkiller and heroin addiction for the past year and the need in this country for more awareness, and I applaud families who are opening up about their loved one’s addiction. Now, even in obituaries families are candidly disclosing the cause of death as a drug addiction. Families are not trying to scare anyone. On the contrary, they are helping to promote awareness that just may save a life.

In the CBS story, Jack Riley, Deputy Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), emphasized that addiction cuts across every demographic group. He told CBS, “Heroin never discriminates, and athletes are no different. This dangerous drug has become a powerful weapon of mass destruction for drug addicts, some of whom are athletes who first became addicted to painkillers while rehabilitating from sports injury.”

So what should parents do? Most important is to educate yourself about the growing painkiller and heroin epidemic. If your school or community is offering drug awareness education forums — go! Encourage your friends to go with you too. Learn about Narcan™ (naloxone) an opiate antidote. Opioids include heroin and prescription pain pills like morphine, codeine, oxycodone, methadone and Vicodin. Many local communities are training first responders and school staff in the use of Narcan.

Trust your instincts. If you think something is off with your teen, you’re probably right. Ask questions and get answers. If you have a child on pain medication, ask the doctor about it. In the end, remember this is an epidemic in this country so do what you can do to prevent it from spreading to your family. Knowledge is power – always a good place to start!

LINKS

The surprising path from student athlete to heroin addict  CBS

You can make a difference in the growing heroin epidemic. Blog by Dr. Henry Paul

He died of a Heroin overdose! Blog by Dr. Henry Paul

DISCLAIMER
Information contained in this blog is intended for educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical or psychiatric advice for individual conditions or treatment and does not substitute for a medical or psychiatric examination. A psychiatrist must make a determination about any treatment or prescription.

 

“SAD” MAY BE HEREDITARY

February 26th, 2016

It probably seems odd that I’m writing about seasonal depression when spring
is right around the corner. But in October, I did a blog about Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD). 48469167_sThe symptoms mimic those of depression, and the disorder is believed to be triggered by changes in daylight, making it more prevalent in the late fall heading into the winter months when the days get shorter. Well, now it seems there might be a gene that predisposes a person to SAD. The details were published today in the in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Because SAD almost always occurs during the winter months, researchers have believed the condition was triggered by light or rather the lack of light. It is believed that the changes in sunlight affect the circadian rhythms of people with SAD messing up their biological clocks. It is also believed that the increase in the production of melatonin, which is produced at higher levels in the dark could also be a cause.

The researchers in this new study analyzed a group of patients with SAD and also with another sleep disorder called Familial Advance Sleep-Phase syndrome. They identified a mutation in a gene called PER3 suggesting that this gene might both affect sleep and mood.

You can click below to read more of the details of the study. This team of researchers actively believes that there is a gene connection. Dr. Louis Ptáček, also a professor of neurology at the UCSF School of Medicine, said to MNT, “This is the first human mutation directly linked to seasonal affective disorder, and the first clear sign of a mechanism that could link sleep to mood disorders.”
This is an exciting time in research because the more we understand what causes these disorders, the better treatment options we can offer to patients.

LINKS
Seasonal affective disorder: first human gene mutation discovered
Don’t Be Sad
Does seasonal affective disorder actually exist?

DISCLAIMER
Information contained in this blog is intended for educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical or psychiatric advice for individual conditions or treatment and does not substitute for a medical or psychiatric examination. A psychiatrist must make a determination about any treatment or prescription. Dr. Paul does not assume any responsibility or risk for the use of any information contained within this blog.

FIGHTING THE STIGMA OF MENTAL HEALTH

February 19th, 2016

39018469_sThere is a stigma surrounding mental health issues, not just here in the United States, but around the world. There always has been! Today the Huffington Post began their “Young Minds Matter” campaign to raise awareness about mental health in children, and the Dutchess of Cambridge is leading the charge. The former Kate Middleton said in the Huffington Post Wednesday that “she and Prince William wouldn’t hesitate to seek help if they thought their children, George and Charlotte, needed it.”

As a guest editor for the Huffington Post, the Dutchess of Cambridge said in her first blog post for the new series “Young Minds Matter” that she wants to “celebrate the amazing work being done to improve and understand the mental health of young children”. She discussed her charity work and how it led her to realize that unresolved issues in childhood were leading to addiction and mental health problems for many adults. She writes, “What I did not expect was to see that time and time again, the issues that led people to addiction and destructive decision making seemed to almost always stem from unresolved childhood challenges. It became clear to me that many children – even those younger than five – have to deal with complex problems without the emotional resilience, language or confidence to ask for help. And it was also clear that with mental health problems still being such a taboo, many adults are often too afraid to ask for help for the children in their care.”

The new series will explore the issues and work on the mental health of the young child.

I applaud the Huffington Post and the Dutchess of Cambridge for starting this dialogue, and I encourage you to follow and join the discussion. The mental health crisis in the UK mirrors the American crisis, and there is a lot to learn from this ongoing dialogue.

LINKS
Let’s Make a Real Difference for an Entire Generation of Young Children
Duchess of Cambridge raises mental health issues in HuffPost

LOOK THROUGH MY LENS

February 1st, 2016

43151727_sI made a great video discovery on YouTube this week. I found this 14-minute video that explained autism. Most impressive was that this video was done, start to finish, by a 16-year-old high school student who wanted to let her peers know what it was like to have autism. No she doesn’t have autism, nor does anyone in her family. But, after she met her friend Jaime with cerebral palsy, she realized that we all need a better understanding of what it is like to live with a physical disability or learning difficulties. With her single YouTube video, she has helped thousands of teens understand a complex disorder.

Alex Jackman told Choices Magazine that it all began when out of curiosity she joined a girl for lunch at summer camp. Jaime was in a wheelchair and often ate by herself. Alex and Jaime became good friends. Alex tells Choices how that might not have happened had she not approached Jaime and sat down with her for lunch.

Jackman says that through her volunteer work at a local autism organization she was inspired to create the video, specifically targeted at teens, to help them better understand the developmental disorder. She told Choices, “I wanted to make something simple that put you in someone with autism’s shoes.”

After a year of interviewing kids she had met through her volunteering, interviewing experts on Autism, and writing, filming and editing – Jackman posted “A Teens Guide to Autism.”  And, guess what? It took off. The video has been seen around the world and has won several awards! Kudos to Jackman for making a difference!

LINKS
The Autism Activist

DISCLAIMER
Information contained in this blog is intended for educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical or psychiatric advice for individual conditions or treatment and does not substitute for a medical or psychiatric examination. A psychiatrist must make a determination about any treatment or prescription. Dr. Paul does not assume any responsibility or risk for the use of any information contained within this blog.

KEEPING THE MIND OF COLLEGE ATHLETES HEALTHY

January 21st, 2016

The National Collegiate Athletic Association released last week new guidelines7537117_s on dealing with the mental health of college athletes, an issue that remains a top concern for the association’s chief medical officer, Brian Hainline.

“Concussions may be the elephant in the room, but mental health is really, I think, going to be a game changer for the NCAA,” he said. “My hope is that mental health is going to become as accessible to every student-athlete as an ankle sprain, and the NCAA is going to take a leadership role in telling the rest of the United States of America how to move away from the pathetic way it handles mental health. And it is pathetic.”

Hainline spoke on Thursday at the NCAA’s annual meeting where he emphasized the importance of mental health. Earlier this month, the NCAA’s Sports Science Institute released a new set of guidelines directing institutions on how to manage the mental health issues surrounding college athletics. Behavior on and off the field are all part of the overall well-being of an athlete.

The new guidelines outline four best practices for the mental health care for college athletes and 24 different mental health agencies weighed in and helped to create the strategies.

The guidelines suggest that colleges implement procedures and clear action plans for dealing with mental health issues including a push for annual mental health screenings for athletes, evaluation of athletes by licensed practitioners and education that will help athletes to recognize symptoms of mental health disorders. The guidelines also address substance abuse and aggressive and risky behaviors that according to a study by the American College Health Association’s National College Health Assessment, says that athletes demonstrate more aggressive behavior and risky behavior than non-athletes.
I think the study and the new guidelines are a vital step in the right direction.

LINKS
Mental Health of College Athletes

DISCLAIMER
Information contained in this blog is intended for educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical or psychiatric advice for individual conditions or treatment and does not substitute for a medical or psychiatric examination. A psychiatrist must make a determination about any treatment or prescription. Dr. Paul does not assume any responsibility or risk for the use of any information contained within this blog.

BURIED PORNOGRAPHY? BIZARRE TWIST IN SEXUAL ASSAULT CASES

January 18th, 2016

“This is the third lawsuit filed by Ponvert in recent months against prestigious Connecticut boarding schools. Ponvert has filed two similar lawsuits against the Indian Mountain School, also located in Lakeville, alleging similar instances of sexual assault and rape of young schoolboys by faculty members dating back to the 1980s.” Hartford Courant

26209317_sSince 2014, three lawsuits have been filed against Connecticut private schools; two at Indian Mountain and one at the prestigious Hotchkiss School, both in Lakeville, CT. Last week one of the cases took a bizarre turn when a judge ordered a dig on the school grounds to look for buried pornography. The Hartford Courant is reporting that a “federal judge has agreed to allow attorneys suing the Indian Mountain School in Salisbury over alleged student sex abuse to dig for evidence of child pornography claimed to be buried on school grounds.”

In the case of Indian Mountain School, former students told the Republican-American newspaper that the school failed to secure their safety from “sexual predators who had unfettered access to the school because they were teachers and even administrators.”

A Federal report in 2014 said, “The failure of U.S. schools to protect students from sexual abuse by school personnel is a story of district cover-ups, lack of training, incomplete teacher background checks and little guidance from the U.S. Department of Education.”

Many of the victims of sexual abuse are left to deal with a lifetime of anxiety, nightmares, panic, terror and other psychological issues. They struggle with sexual orientation and have trouble establishing healthy relationships. So how does this happen and why does it take so long, in many cases, for victims to come forward?

I think that a combination of denial by society and the authorities combined with devious sociopathic traits of the predators make it very hard to track these individuals. Plus, the very liberal court system that is very busy protecting predators in the name of fair and non-discriminatory treatment plus the charm and leadership roles and charisma of the perpetrators. But now there is a coming out of the victims broadly publicized which gives courage to the victim to tell what happened. Let’s hope in the end justice is served.

LINKS
Former Student Sues Hotchkiss School Over Alleged Sexual Abuse
Judge Allows Dig In Search Of Child Porn Buried At Private Connecticut School
Private school faces third suit
Federal Agencies Can Better Support State Efforts to Prevent and Respond to Sexual Abuse by School Personnel

DISCLAIMER
Information contained in this blog is intended for educational purposes only. It is not intended as medical or psychiatric advice for individual conditions or treatment and does not substitute for a medical or psychiatric examination. A psychiatrist must make a determination about any treatment or prescription. Dr. Paul does not assume any responsibility or risk for the use of any information contained within this blog.