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Psychiatrists with expertise in delusional infestation have some advice for dermatologists, infectious disease specialists, and primary care physicians who encounter affected patients: If you want to try to help them, initiate treatment yourself.
Dr. Peter Lepping
“If you see it, try and treat it. These patients are unlikely to agree to see a psychiatrist,” Peter Lepping, MD, said at the Entomology 2020 annual meeting.
Indeed, one of the hallmarks of delusional infestation (DI) is a refusal to even consider referral to a mental health professional, noted Dr. Lepping, a consultation-liaison psychiatrist at Bangor (Wales) University who, together with an infectious disease specialist, codirects one of the world’s few DI multispecialty referral clinics, located at the University of Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.
That being said, he offered another piece of advice: “Accept that it is not easy to help these patients.”
Dr. Lepping was among a group of distinguished psychiatrists, dermatologists, entomologists, and a neurologist at the annual meeting who participated in a comprehensive session devoted to DI. The experts shared tips on making the diagnosis, establishing the rapport necessary to persuade affected patients to try taking a very-low-dose antipsychotic agent for their delusion, and how to achieve a high rate of therapeutic success. They also highlighted recent research advances in the field, including brain MRI evidence suggesting that impaired somatosensory neural networks mediate symptoms in DI, but not in nonsomatic delusional disorders.
COVID-19 pandemic triggers surge in DI
Entomologist Gail E. Ridge, PhD, has taken notes on all of her thousands of consultations with individuals with suspected DI since the late 1990s. A sharp jump in such contacts occurred during the Great Recession of 2008 in conjunction with the widespread social distress of job loss and threatened economic ruin. Now the same thing is happening as the catastrophic COVID-19 pandemic stretches on. Indeed, during the first 8 months of the pandemic she documented 500 interactions involving people with suspected DI. She’s learned to identify the clues, including a chattering mind, defensiveness, physician avoidance, and rigid body tension.
Courtesy Dr. Gale E. Ridge
Dr. Gale E. Ridge
“They’re fearful of judgment and suggestions of madness. And they’ll pounce on any perceived negativity. I never debunk beliefs; that can immediately backfire. If the medical profession was educated about DI, then many cases could be caught early. I, as the entomologist, and the mental health professionals are often last in line to be seen,” said Dr. Ridge, director of the Insect Information Office at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station in New Haven.
She has noticed a recurring theme in her interactions with these patients: DI often starts with a real underlying medical condition, such as, for example, a cutaneous drug reaction, which over time, progresses to gain a psychiatric component. And she has found that a tipping point often occurs after roughly 6 months of unrelieved symptoms and sensations. Prior to that, affected individuals are concerned about their condition and will seek medical help in a genuine effort to understand what’s going on. They can be redirected. After about 6 months, however, Dr. Ridge has observed “they slide into the rabbit hole of fanaticism and despair.”
Arriving at the diagnosis
In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5), DI is classified as a “delusional disorder, somatic type 297.1 F22.” The diagnosis requires that the delusion be present for at least 1 month, criteria for schizophrenia are not met, and the condition cannot be attributed to other medical or neuropsychiatric conditions.
“Many of these people are very high-functioning. I have corporate CEOs who fly in to see me in their private jets. At work, they’re king of their domain. At home, their family is falling apart because of their delusion,” said Dirk M. Elston, MD, professor and chair of the department of dermatology and dermatologic surgery at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.
Dr. Dirk M. Elston
“These people suffer, and the people around them suffer,” he emphasized.
Dozens of medical conditions can cause intractable itching or biting sensations. Far and away at the top of the medical differential diagnosis is thyroid disease, given its high incidence and frequent presentation with anxiety and itch. Other possibilities that can readily be ruled out via lab tests include substance use – especially involving amphetamine/methamphetamine, cocaine, or opioids – liver or kidney disease, diabetes and other sources of peripheral neuropathy, polycythemia, dermatitis herpetiformis, and pemphigus, Dr. Elston said.
Scott A. Norton, MD, MPH, MSc, a dermatologist and preventive medicine specialist at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md., noted that a diagnosis of DI requires three elements: The presence of abnormal sensations in the skin, a patient’s tenacious conviction that the sensations are caused by an infestation, and a lack of supporting evidence for that conviction.
Dr. Scott A. Norton
Taking an accurate medical history can be a challenge in these patients because they are often so guarded. They won’t disclose that they’ve already seen other health care providers, or that they’ve been self-treating with OTC veterinary medicine products, such as high-dose topical or oral ivermectin. They’ll often even deny repeated scratching despite clear evidence to the contrary from the skin exam.
As a dermatologist, Dr. Norton considers his first task to be a search for evidence of an infestation. Scabies is usually the first diagnosis proposed to account for the uncomfortable skin sensations. The presentation can be subtle. While the classic teaching is that the telltale signs of infestation by Sarcoptes scabiei are burrows in the skin and a rash in the web spaces between the fingers, he finds these features are often absent or equivocal.
“I think there are two more reliable presentations of scabies: Check to see if there’s symmetric involvement of the volar or palm side of the wrists; if there isn’t, I’m skeptical of the diagnosis. And every male older than 1 year of age with scabies will have scabies nodules on their genitalia. If the penis, the glans, or the scrotum aren’t involved with the nodules, I discard scabies as a possible diagnosis and look for evidence of other skin conditions that can plausibly explain the sensations and skin lesions, like eczema, contact dermatitis, scalp folliculitis, or dry skin,” he said.
If he can’t find evidence of infestation, he next systematically looks for another dermatologic cause of the patient’s sensations. When that proves fruitless, he tries to determine if there might be a biomedical or neuropsychiatric cause, such as depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, or dementia.
Taking a personal hygiene history is helpful. Patients who believe they have an infestation may bathe or shower three to five times daily with harsh soaps, causing dry, inflamed, itchy and uncomfortable skin.
“Many patients are thrilled to hear the good news that the history, physical examination, and lab tests do not show an infestation and that we have another explanation to account for their unwanted sensations. However, there are some patients who vehemently reject that idea and immediately return to their unwavering, unalterable belief that they are in fact infested. At this point, the possible diagnosis of DI looms large,” the dermatologist said.
Clues suggestive of DI include a patient’s obsessive focus on collecting “specimens” of the offending pathogen in Ziplock bags for assessment during the office visit – “usually a mix of unhelpful household debris and environmental detritus” – and eager presentation of a lengthy and detailed infestation diary, Dr. Norton said.
“Among the most distinctive signs that the patient is detached from reality are the biologically implausible descriptions and explanations of the supposed attacking organism. It’s a fanciful amalgamation of mutable features, behaviors, and life cycles composed of a composite of taxonomically unrelated organisms – for example, fungal hyphae with wings – that shapeshift at will to evade detection,” he said.
Dr. Elston observed that DI skin lesions are typically excoriated, sometimes because of a patient’s systematic use of a sharp object in an effort to dig out the infestation.
“One of the clues is the angularity of the lesion,” the dermatologist noted. “We always say round-to-oval lesions suggest an inside job; angulated lesions suggest an outside job, like fingernail work. There’s often a row of good healing border showing there’s really nothing wrong with wound healing, but a fibrinoid base where the excoriations have occurred. And the lesions are often in various stages of healing.”
Don’t forget neuropathic itch in nondelusional individuals as a potential cause of sensations of infestation and self-injury due to relentless scratching, urged Anne Louise Oaklander, MD, PhD, associate professor of neurology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, who is director of the nerve unit and the neurodiagnostic skin biopsy lab at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.
Dr. Anne Louise Oaklander
“There’s no one cause of patients’ impressions that they may have insects. Let’s be sympathetic: It is a normal assumption that insects may be present if the skin itches. One problem is that when patients don’t get good medical diagnoses they make up their own explanations, and sometimes these include persistent ideas of infestation. Many of them don’t realize that their scratching is a cause, not a result, of their skin lesions,” said Dr. Oaklander, who has conducted pioneering research on unintentional self-injury due to neuropathic itch accompanied by loss of pain signaling.
“Rapport first, medication later”
“The office visits are typically difficult to conclude, but skills can be learned and make it much easier to help these people,” Dr. Elston said.
John Koo, MD, emphasized that establishing rapport is “by far” the most important part of managing patients with DI.
Dr. John Koo
“Rapport first, medication later. This may require multiple visits,” said Dr. Koo, professor of dermatology at the University of California, San Francisco, who is a board-certified psychiatrist.
He makes sure he walks into the examination room all smiles and positivity. Patients with DI are eager to expound on their ailment; he lets them talk for a while, then when the timing is right, he actively encourages them to shift their focus away from etiology to treatment.
Dr. Koo and coworkers have described a spectrum of mental fixation in DI ranging from having only crawling and biting sensations, progressing to holding an overvalued idea as to their cause, then on to DSM-5 somatic preoccupation, followed by becoming truly delusional, and finally terminal delusion, where the patient doesn’t care about getting better, but only wants the physician to agree there is an infestation (J Clin Exp Dermatol Res. 2014 Oct. 3. doi: 10.4172/2155-9554.1000241).
“You cannot argue with people with delusions. How you talk to them as a clinician depends on whether they are entirely delusional or not,” he advised. “I cannot agree with their ideation, but I can agree with their misery – and that’s how I make a connection.”
Declining a DI patient’s request for a skin biopsy when it’s obvious there is no infestation can lead to a counterproductive power struggle. Instead, Dr. Koo turns the patient request into an opportunity to form a verbal contract: “I ask, ‘If the result comes back negative, can you be open-minded about the possibility of other etiologies besides parasites?’ ”
As for Dr. Norton, when his schedule shows a patient is coming in for a first visit for a supposed skin infestation, he tells his staff to expect a lengthy session as he works at establishing a good relationship.
“When my patients arrive with bags of specimens, I ask them to select two or three that they’re most confident will have a creature in them. Then I bring a two-headed microscope into the exam room and ask the patient to join me in examining the material. It helps with rapport by showing that I genuinely want to determine if there’s an infestation,” he explained.
He then sends the specimens to a laboratory, which provides a full report of the findings.
In performing a skin biopsy in a patient with suspected DI, Dr. Norton routinely biopsies two sites so the patient can’t claim sampling error when the pathology report comes back with no pathogens or parasites found. Also, he asks the patient to choose biopsy sites with intact skin where he or she believes the infestation exists. There is no point in biopsying excoriated lesions because they often contain snagged textile fibers.
Another rapport-building strategy: “I try to design a treatment regimen that will palliate the uncomfortable sensations and help relieve the patient’s misery while we continue working towards treating those delusions,” Dr. Norton said.
This might entail cutting back to one lukewarm shower per day with gentle or no soap, coupled with moisturizing, oral antihistamines or doxepin for itch, topical corticosteroids for the associated inflammation, and oral or topical antibiotics for any secondary bacterial skin infection.
What he doesn’t recommend as a rapport-building strategy or simply in order to get the patient out of the office is offering a therapeutic trial of an antiparasitic agent. That’s counterproductive. It may reinforce the false belief of infestation, and when the medication doesn’t bring lasting belief, the patient may conclude the infestation is resistant to conventional treatment.
Dr. Koo tells affected patients that he suspects they have Morgellons syndrome. He doesn’t call it DI in their presence.
“These people would not like their condition to be called delusional,” he explained. “Morgellons is a more neutral term. I tell them it’s a mysterious condition, and that what I’m really interested in is in trying to get them out of their misery.”
Treatment tips
Dr. Koo’s first-line medication for DI is pimozide (Orap), which in the United States has the advantage of being approved only for Tourette syndrome; it’s an antipsychotic without the perceived stigma of a psychiatric indication.
“Many of these patients will not consider taking any medication that has any psychiatric indication,” he noted.
Low-dose pimozide is highly effective, according to Dr. Koo, who recommends starting at 0.5 mg to 1 mg/day, increasing by 0.5 mg/day every 2-4 weeks. The drug is usually effective at a dose of 3 mg/day or less. Once a patient’s symptoms become clear or almost clear, the patient is maintained on that dose for another 3-4 months, then tapered by 0.5 mg/day every 2-4 weeks.
“In 35 years of seeing a new patient on average every week or two, I’ve had only five patients with one recurrence and one patient with two recurrences. All six responded to repeat therapy,” Dr. Koo said.
Side effects at these low doses are “very rare,” he added. Diphenhydramine (Benadryl) at 25 mg up to four times daily is effective for complaints of stiffness or restlessness. Prolongation of the QT interval is a potential concern, but Dr. Koo has never encountered it despite routinely ordering ECGs for patients on pimozide with known heart disease or who are over age 50.
When a patient can’t tolerate pimozide, Dr. Koo’s second-line antipsychotic for DI is low-dose risperidone (Risperdal), which is also highly effective.
Dr. Lepping noted that the European situation is different. There, unlike in the United States, pimozide has regulatory approval as an antipsychotic, so it loses the advantage of being an under-the-radar neuroleptic. His go-to medication is the first-generation antipsychotic sulpiride (Dogmatil), which he finds has a more favorable side effect profile than pimozide, particularly in the elderly. (Sulpiride is not approved in the United States.)
In treating DI, he prefers more dopaminergic-focused antipsychotics over those covering a broader spectrum of receptors. His alternatives to sulpiride include risperidone and olanzapine, atypical antipsychotics. He explains to patients that just as aspirin is used in low doses for its antiplatelet effect and in higher doses for pain relief, these medications can help them feel better at much lower doses than for schizophrenia.
“Once we get some rapport and a trusting relationship going, we normally try to persuade people to basically try something against their better judgment. We know that they don’t believe in it, but you try to get them to at least try something because everything else has failed,” Dr. Lepping explained. “We tell them it’s a condition we have seen before, and we have seen these medications to be useful because they are good for their distress, they help with making them calmer, and they might help with their symptoms. We say, ‘What do you have to lose if you trust us?’
“About 60% of our patients take the medication and almost invariably they all get better,” the psychiatrist said. “The others we either lose to follow-up or they just refuse to take the medication.”
A patient’s first visit to the Liverpool multispecialty DI referral clinic is 1 hour long. “They know that in advance, and we very much stick to that hour. We say to people up front, ‘We have an hour – that’s a lot, but we don’t have more,’ ” he said.
The initial visit is typically followed by two to four 30-minute follow-up visits. Dr. Lepping recommends that when possible, patients with DI should be seen jointly by a psychiatrist and a nonpsychiatrist physician. He finds this approach leads to substantially better clinical outcomes than with a single health care provider.
“If you have two people in the clinic with the patient, when you get really annoyed and your amygdala really starts going, that’s the time when you can then turn to your colleague and say, ‘Oh yes, and Professor Squire, what do you have to say to that?’ So as you see the red mist rising in yourself because you’re getting so exasperated, you have the other person there to take over so you can calm down. And then the other person does the same. That can be really important to deescalate a heated situation,” Dr. Lepping explained.
Roughly 10% of patients with DI have what is termed folie à deux, where the delusion of infestation is shared by another person.
“Anecdotally, I would say those are much more difficult to treat,” said Jason S. Reichenberg, MD, MBA, professor of medicine (dermatology) at the University of Texas at Austin and president of the Ascension Medical Group Texas.
Dr. Jason S. Reichenberg
“It’s like getting somebody to quit smoking when everybody else in the house is still smoking. It’s very hard to convince a single family member that they’re wrong when everybody else in their family keeps telling them they’re right,” he said.
Recent advances in DI research
Dr. Lepping and coinvestigators at multispecialist DI clinics in London, Italy, and Moscow reported in an unusually large observational study of 236 affected patients that longer duration of untreated psychosis was associated with significantly worse clinical outcome. It’s a finding consistent with Dr. Koo’s construct of progressive stages of delusionality, and it underscores the need for early treatment.
“Having said that, improvement is still possible, even if people have had quite a long time of untreated psychosis,” Dr. Lepping said. The same study also showed that older age at illness onset was inversely associated with good outcome.
In another study, Dr. Lepping and colleagues reported that substance use involving amphetamines, cocaine, opioids, and other drugs that can cause itch was roughly twice as common in a group of patients with DI compared to the general population. “I highly recommend, if at all possible, a drug screen in suspected DI,” he said.
In a large survey of U.S. and Canadian veterinarians, Dr. Lepping and coinvestigators found that these practitioners not infrequently encountered delusional infestation among pet owners who claimed their dog or cat is infested when it’s not. This is called “delusion by proxy,” and it often leads to unwarranted animal euthanasia. Some of these pet owners claim they, too, are infested, which the investigators termed “double delusional infestation.”
MRI studies
Recent structural brain MRI studies support the concept that impaired somatosensory neural networks mediate the delusional symptoms of DI, but not in delusional disorders without somatic content. This was demonstrated in an MRI study by Dr. Lepping and others conducted in 18 patients with DI, 19 others with nonsomatic delusional disorders centered on themes of persecution or jealousy, and 20 healthy volunteers. The DI group had lower gray matter volume in prefrontal, thalamic, striatal, and insular regions of the brain compared to the other two groups.
Of note, mapping of the insula and dorsal striatum indicates they are part of the peripersonal space network, which integrates tactile and visual perceptions involving the area near the body surface. The insula also mediates feelings of pain and disgust.
Some of the same investigators have also recently reported brain MRI evidence specifically of cerebellar dysfunction in patients with DI, who displayed decreased gray matter volume in left lobule VIIa of the cerebellum and increased gray matter volume in bilateral lobule VIIa/crus II compared to patients with non-somatic delusions. This points to a role for impaired cerebellar neural networks related to somatosensory perception in patients with DI but not in those with non-somatic delusions.
Delusional infestation: What’s in a name?
Ekbom syndrome. Delusional parasitosis. Morgellons syndrome. These and other terms are increasingly giving way to ‘delusional infestation’ as the preferred moniker for the disorder. That’s in part because the delusional focus in patients with this condition has shifted over time. In the 19th century, for example, affected patients often attributed their infestation to typhus.
In contemporary practice, roughly one-quarter of affected patients think they are infested by small inanimate objects, most commonly fibers or threads emerging from the skin, rather than by parasites, insects, or worms. In a study of 148 consecutive European patients with suspected DI, Dr. Lepping and coinvestigators reported only 35% believed they were infested by parasites.
“The name ‘delusional infestation’ emphasizes the constantly changing pathogens and covers all present and future variations of the theme that are bound to occur,” Dr. Lepping observed.
All speakers reported having no conflicts of interest.
Psychiatrists with expertise in delusional infestation have some advice for dermatologists, infectious disease specialists, and primary care physicians who encounter affected patients: If you want to try to help them, initiate treatment yourself.
Dr. Peter Lepping
“If you see it, try and treat it. These patients are unlikely to agree to see a psychiatrist,” Peter Lepping, MD, said at the Entomology 2020 annual meeting.
Indeed, one of the hallmarks of delusional infestation (DI) is a refusal to even consider referral to a mental health professional, noted Dr. Lepping, a consultation-liaison psychiatrist at Bangor (Wales) University who, together with an infectious disease specialist, codirects one of the world’s few DI multispecialty referral clinics, located at the University of Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.
That being said, he offered another piece of advice: “Accept that it is not easy to help these patients.”
Dr. Lepping was among a group of distinguished psychiatrists, dermatologists, entomologists, and a neurologist at the annual meeting who participated in a comprehensive session devoted to DI. The experts shared tips on making the diagnosis, establishing the rapport necessary to persuade affected patients to try taking a very-low-dose antipsychotic agent for their delusion, and how to achieve a high rate of therapeutic success. They also highlighted recent research advances in the field, including brain MRI evidence suggesting that impaired somatosensory neural networks mediate symptoms in DI, but not in nonsomatic delusional disorders.
COVID-19 pandemic triggers surge in DI
Entomologist Gail E. Ridge, PhD, has taken notes on all of her thousands of consultations with individuals with suspected DI since the late 1990s. A sharp jump in such contacts occurred during the Great Recession of 2008 in conjunction with the widespread social distress of job loss and threatened economic ruin. Now the same thing is happening as the catastrophic COVID-19 pandemic stretches on. Indeed, during the first 8 months of the pandemic she documented 500 interactions involving people with suspected DI. She’s learned to identify the clues, including a chattering mind, defensiveness, physician avoidance, and rigid body tension.
Courtesy Dr. Gale E. Ridge
Dr. Gale E. Ridge
“They’re fearful of judgment and suggestions of madness. And they’ll pounce on any perceived negativity. I never debunk beliefs; that can immediately backfire. If the medical profession was educated about DI, then many cases could be caught early. I, as the entomologist, and the mental health professionals are often last in line to be seen,” said Dr. Ridge, director of the Insect Information Office at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station in New Haven.
She has noticed a recurring theme in her interactions with these patients: DI often starts with a real underlying medical condition, such as, for example, a cutaneous drug reaction, which over time, progresses to gain a psychiatric component. And she has found that a tipping point often occurs after roughly 6 months of unrelieved symptoms and sensations. Prior to that, affected individuals are concerned about their condition and will seek medical help in a genuine effort to understand what’s going on. They can be redirected. After about 6 months, however, Dr. Ridge has observed “they slide into the rabbit hole of fanaticism and despair.”
Arriving at the diagnosis
In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5), DI is classified as a “delusional disorder, somatic type 297.1 F22.” The diagnosis requires that the delusion be present for at least 1 month, criteria for schizophrenia are not met, and the condition cannot be attributed to other medical or neuropsychiatric conditions.
“Many of these people are very high-functioning. I have corporate CEOs who fly in to see me in their private jets. At work, they’re king of their domain. At home, their family is falling apart because of their delusion,” said Dirk M. Elston, MD, professor and chair of the department of dermatology and dermatologic surgery at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.
Dr. Dirk M. Elston
“These people suffer, and the people around them suffer,” he emphasized.
Dozens of medical conditions can cause intractable itching or biting sensations. Far and away at the top of the medical differential diagnosis is thyroid disease, given its high incidence and frequent presentation with anxiety and itch. Other possibilities that can readily be ruled out via lab tests include substance use – especially involving amphetamine/methamphetamine, cocaine, or opioids – liver or kidney disease, diabetes and other sources of peripheral neuropathy, polycythemia, dermatitis herpetiformis, and pemphigus, Dr. Elston said.
Scott A. Norton, MD, MPH, MSc, a dermatologist and preventive medicine specialist at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md., noted that a diagnosis of DI requires three elements: The presence of abnormal sensations in the skin, a patient’s tenacious conviction that the sensations are caused by an infestation, and a lack of supporting evidence for that conviction.
Dr. Scott A. Norton
Taking an accurate medical history can be a challenge in these patients because they are often so guarded. They won’t disclose that they’ve already seen other health care providers, or that they’ve been self-treating with OTC veterinary medicine products, such as high-dose topical or oral ivermectin. They’ll often even deny repeated scratching despite clear evidence to the contrary from the skin exam.
As a dermatologist, Dr. Norton considers his first task to be a search for evidence of an infestation. Scabies is usually the first diagnosis proposed to account for the uncomfortable skin sensations. The presentation can be subtle. While the classic teaching is that the telltale signs of infestation by Sarcoptes scabiei are burrows in the skin and a rash in the web spaces between the fingers, he finds these features are often absent or equivocal.
“I think there are two more reliable presentations of scabies: Check to see if there’s symmetric involvement of the volar or palm side of the wrists; if there isn’t, I’m skeptical of the diagnosis. And every male older than 1 year of age with scabies will have scabies nodules on their genitalia. If the penis, the glans, or the scrotum aren’t involved with the nodules, I discard scabies as a possible diagnosis and look for evidence of other skin conditions that can plausibly explain the sensations and skin lesions, like eczema, contact dermatitis, scalp folliculitis, or dry skin,” he said.
If he can’t find evidence of infestation, he next systematically looks for another dermatologic cause of the patient’s sensations. When that proves fruitless, he tries to determine if there might be a biomedical or neuropsychiatric cause, such as depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, or dementia.
Taking a personal hygiene history is helpful. Patients who believe they have an infestation may bathe or shower three to five times daily with harsh soaps, causing dry, inflamed, itchy and uncomfortable skin.
“Many patients are thrilled to hear the good news that the history, physical examination, and lab tests do not show an infestation and that we have another explanation to account for their unwanted sensations. However, there are some patients who vehemently reject that idea and immediately return to their unwavering, unalterable belief that they are in fact infested. At this point, the possible diagnosis of DI looms large,” the dermatologist said.
Clues suggestive of DI include a patient’s obsessive focus on collecting “specimens” of the offending pathogen in Ziplock bags for assessment during the office visit – “usually a mix of unhelpful household debris and environmental detritus” – and eager presentation of a lengthy and detailed infestation diary, Dr. Norton said.
“Among the most distinctive signs that the patient is detached from reality are the biologically implausible descriptions and explanations of the supposed attacking organism. It’s a fanciful amalgamation of mutable features, behaviors, and life cycles composed of a composite of taxonomically unrelated organisms – for example, fungal hyphae with wings – that shapeshift at will to evade detection,” he said.
Dr. Elston observed that DI skin lesions are typically excoriated, sometimes because of a patient’s systematic use of a sharp object in an effort to dig out the infestation.
“One of the clues is the angularity of the lesion,” the dermatologist noted. “We always say round-to-oval lesions suggest an inside job; angulated lesions suggest an outside job, like fingernail work. There’s often a row of good healing border showing there’s really nothing wrong with wound healing, but a fibrinoid base where the excoriations have occurred. And the lesions are often in various stages of healing.”
Don’t forget neuropathic itch in nondelusional individuals as a potential cause of sensations of infestation and self-injury due to relentless scratching, urged Anne Louise Oaklander, MD, PhD, associate professor of neurology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, who is director of the nerve unit and the neurodiagnostic skin biopsy lab at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.
Dr. Anne Louise Oaklander
“There’s no one cause of patients’ impressions that they may have insects. Let’s be sympathetic: It is a normal assumption that insects may be present if the skin itches. One problem is that when patients don’t get good medical diagnoses they make up their own explanations, and sometimes these include persistent ideas of infestation. Many of them don’t realize that their scratching is a cause, not a result, of their skin lesions,” said Dr. Oaklander, who has conducted pioneering research on unintentional self-injury due to neuropathic itch accompanied by loss of pain signaling.
“Rapport first, medication later”
“The office visits are typically difficult to conclude, but skills can be learned and make it much easier to help these people,” Dr. Elston said.
John Koo, MD, emphasized that establishing rapport is “by far” the most important part of managing patients with DI.
Dr. John Koo
“Rapport first, medication later. This may require multiple visits,” said Dr. Koo, professor of dermatology at the University of California, San Francisco, who is a board-certified psychiatrist.
He makes sure he walks into the examination room all smiles and positivity. Patients with DI are eager to expound on their ailment; he lets them talk for a while, then when the timing is right, he actively encourages them to shift their focus away from etiology to treatment.
Dr. Koo and coworkers have described a spectrum of mental fixation in DI ranging from having only crawling and biting sensations, progressing to holding an overvalued idea as to their cause, then on to DSM-5 somatic preoccupation, followed by becoming truly delusional, and finally terminal delusion, where the patient doesn’t care about getting better, but only wants the physician to agree there is an infestation (J Clin Exp Dermatol Res. 2014 Oct. 3. doi: 10.4172/2155-9554.1000241).
“You cannot argue with people with delusions. How you talk to them as a clinician depends on whether they are entirely delusional or not,” he advised. “I cannot agree with their ideation, but I can agree with their misery – and that’s how I make a connection.”
Declining a DI patient’s request for a skin biopsy when it’s obvious there is no infestation can lead to a counterproductive power struggle. Instead, Dr. Koo turns the patient request into an opportunity to form a verbal contract: “I ask, ‘If the result comes back negative, can you be open-minded about the possibility of other etiologies besides parasites?’ ”
As for Dr. Norton, when his schedule shows a patient is coming in for a first visit for a supposed skin infestation, he tells his staff to expect a lengthy session as he works at establishing a good relationship.
“When my patients arrive with bags of specimens, I ask them to select two or three that they’re most confident will have a creature in them. Then I bring a two-headed microscope into the exam room and ask the patient to join me in examining the material. It helps with rapport by showing that I genuinely want to determine if there’s an infestation,” he explained.
He then sends the specimens to a laboratory, which provides a full report of the findings.
In performing a skin biopsy in a patient with suspected DI, Dr. Norton routinely biopsies two sites so the patient can’t claim sampling error when the pathology report comes back with no pathogens or parasites found. Also, he asks the patient to choose biopsy sites with intact skin where he or she believes the infestation exists. There is no point in biopsying excoriated lesions because they often contain snagged textile fibers.
Another rapport-building strategy: “I try to design a treatment regimen that will palliate the uncomfortable sensations and help relieve the patient’s misery while we continue working towards treating those delusions,” Dr. Norton said.
This might entail cutting back to one lukewarm shower per day with gentle or no soap, coupled with moisturizing, oral antihistamines or doxepin for itch, topical corticosteroids for the associated inflammation, and oral or topical antibiotics for any secondary bacterial skin infection.
What he doesn’t recommend as a rapport-building strategy or simply in order to get the patient out of the office is offering a therapeutic trial of an antiparasitic agent. That’s counterproductive. It may reinforce the false belief of infestation, and when the medication doesn’t bring lasting belief, the patient may conclude the infestation is resistant to conventional treatment.
Dr. Koo tells affected patients that he suspects they have Morgellons syndrome. He doesn’t call it DI in their presence.
“These people would not like their condition to be called delusional,” he explained. “Morgellons is a more neutral term. I tell them it’s a mysterious condition, and that what I’m really interested in is in trying to get them out of their misery.”
Treatment tips
Dr. Koo’s first-line medication for DI is pimozide (Orap), which in the United States has the advantage of being approved only for Tourette syndrome; it’s an antipsychotic without the perceived stigma of a psychiatric indication.
“Many of these patients will not consider taking any medication that has any psychiatric indication,” he noted.
Low-dose pimozide is highly effective, according to Dr. Koo, who recommends starting at 0.5 mg to 1 mg/day, increasing by 0.5 mg/day every 2-4 weeks. The drug is usually effective at a dose of 3 mg/day or less. Once a patient’s symptoms become clear or almost clear, the patient is maintained on that dose for another 3-4 months, then tapered by 0.5 mg/day every 2-4 weeks.
“In 35 years of seeing a new patient on average every week or two, I’ve had only five patients with one recurrence and one patient with two recurrences. All six responded to repeat therapy,” Dr. Koo said.
Side effects at these low doses are “very rare,” he added. Diphenhydramine (Benadryl) at 25 mg up to four times daily is effective for complaints of stiffness or restlessness. Prolongation of the QT interval is a potential concern, but Dr. Koo has never encountered it despite routinely ordering ECGs for patients on pimozide with known heart disease or who are over age 50.
When a patient can’t tolerate pimozide, Dr. Koo’s second-line antipsychotic for DI is low-dose risperidone (Risperdal), which is also highly effective.
Dr. Lepping noted that the European situation is different. There, unlike in the United States, pimozide has regulatory approval as an antipsychotic, so it loses the advantage of being an under-the-radar neuroleptic. His go-to medication is the first-generation antipsychotic sulpiride (Dogmatil), which he finds has a more favorable side effect profile than pimozide, particularly in the elderly. (Sulpiride is not approved in the United States.)
In treating DI, he prefers more dopaminergic-focused antipsychotics over those covering a broader spectrum of receptors. His alternatives to sulpiride include risperidone and olanzapine, atypical antipsychotics. He explains to patients that just as aspirin is used in low doses for its antiplatelet effect and in higher doses for pain relief, these medications can help them feel better at much lower doses than for schizophrenia.
“Once we get some rapport and a trusting relationship going, we normally try to persuade people to basically try something against their better judgment. We know that they don’t believe in it, but you try to get them to at least try something because everything else has failed,” Dr. Lepping explained. “We tell them it’s a condition we have seen before, and we have seen these medications to be useful because they are good for their distress, they help with making them calmer, and they might help with their symptoms. We say, ‘What do you have to lose if you trust us?’
“About 60% of our patients take the medication and almost invariably they all get better,” the psychiatrist said. “The others we either lose to follow-up or they just refuse to take the medication.”
A patient’s first visit to the Liverpool multispecialty DI referral clinic is 1 hour long. “They know that in advance, and we very much stick to that hour. We say to people up front, ‘We have an hour – that’s a lot, but we don’t have more,’ ” he said.
The initial visit is typically followed by two to four 30-minute follow-up visits. Dr. Lepping recommends that when possible, patients with DI should be seen jointly by a psychiatrist and a nonpsychiatrist physician. He finds this approach leads to substantially better clinical outcomes than with a single health care provider.
“If you have two people in the clinic with the patient, when you get really annoyed and your amygdala really starts going, that’s the time when you can then turn to your colleague and say, ‘Oh yes, and Professor Squire, what do you have to say to that?’ So as you see the red mist rising in yourself because you’re getting so exasperated, you have the other person there to take over so you can calm down. And then the other person does the same. That can be really important to deescalate a heated situation,” Dr. Lepping explained.
Roughly 10% of patients with DI have what is termed folie à deux, where the delusion of infestation is shared by another person.
“Anecdotally, I would say those are much more difficult to treat,” said Jason S. Reichenberg, MD, MBA, professor of medicine (dermatology) at the University of Texas at Austin and president of the Ascension Medical Group Texas.
Dr. Jason S. Reichenberg
“It’s like getting somebody to quit smoking when everybody else in the house is still smoking. It’s very hard to convince a single family member that they’re wrong when everybody else in their family keeps telling them they’re right,” he said.
Recent advances in DI research
Dr. Lepping and coinvestigators at multispecialist DI clinics in London, Italy, and Moscow reported in an unusually large observational study of 236 affected patients that longer duration of untreated psychosis was associated with significantly worse clinical outcome. It’s a finding consistent with Dr. Koo’s construct of progressive stages of delusionality, and it underscores the need for early treatment.
“Having said that, improvement is still possible, even if people have had quite a long time of untreated psychosis,” Dr. Lepping said. The same study also showed that older age at illness onset was inversely associated with good outcome.
In another study, Dr. Lepping and colleagues reported that substance use involving amphetamines, cocaine, opioids, and other drugs that can cause itch was roughly twice as common in a group of patients with DI compared to the general population. “I highly recommend, if at all possible, a drug screen in suspected DI,” he said.
In a large survey of U.S. and Canadian veterinarians, Dr. Lepping and coinvestigators found that these practitioners not infrequently encountered delusional infestation among pet owners who claimed their dog or cat is infested when it’s not. This is called “delusion by proxy,” and it often leads to unwarranted animal euthanasia. Some of these pet owners claim they, too, are infested, which the investigators termed “double delusional infestation.”
MRI studies
Recent structural brain MRI studies support the concept that impaired somatosensory neural networks mediate the delusional symptoms of DI, but not in delusional disorders without somatic content. This was demonstrated in an MRI study by Dr. Lepping and others conducted in 18 patients with DI, 19 others with nonsomatic delusional disorders centered on themes of persecution or jealousy, and 20 healthy volunteers. The DI group had lower gray matter volume in prefrontal, thalamic, striatal, and insular regions of the brain compared to the other two groups.
Of note, mapping of the insula and dorsal striatum indicates they are part of the peripersonal space network, which integrates tactile and visual perceptions involving the area near the body surface. The insula also mediates feelings of pain and disgust.
Some of the same investigators have also recently reported brain MRI evidence specifically of cerebellar dysfunction in patients with DI, who displayed decreased gray matter volume in left lobule VIIa of the cerebellum and increased gray matter volume in bilateral lobule VIIa/crus II compared to patients with non-somatic delusions. This points to a role for impaired cerebellar neural networks related to somatosensory perception in patients with DI but not in those with non-somatic delusions.
Delusional infestation: What’s in a name?
Ekbom syndrome. Delusional parasitosis. Morgellons syndrome. These and other terms are increasingly giving way to ‘delusional infestation’ as the preferred moniker for the disorder. That’s in part because the delusional focus in patients with this condition has shifted over time. In the 19th century, for example, affected patients often attributed their infestation to typhus.
In contemporary practice, roughly one-quarter of affected patients think they are infested by small inanimate objects, most commonly fibers or threads emerging from the skin, rather than by parasites, insects, or worms. In a study of 148 consecutive European patients with suspected DI, Dr. Lepping and coinvestigators reported only 35% believed they were infested by parasites.
“The name ‘delusional infestation’ emphasizes the constantly changing pathogens and covers all present and future variations of the theme that are bound to occur,” Dr. Lepping observed.
All speakers reported having no conflicts of interest.
Psychiatrists with expertise in delusional infestation have some advice for dermatologists, infectious disease specialists, and primary care physicians who encounter affected patients: If you want to try to help them, initiate treatment yourself.
Dr. Peter Lepping
“If you see it, try and treat it. These patients are unlikely to agree to see a psychiatrist,” Peter Lepping, MD, said at the Entomology 2020 annual meeting.
Indeed, one of the hallmarks of delusional infestation (DI) is a refusal to even consider referral to a mental health professional, noted Dr. Lepping, a consultation-liaison psychiatrist at Bangor (Wales) University who, together with an infectious disease specialist, codirects one of the world’s few DI multispecialty referral clinics, located at the University of Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.
That being said, he offered another piece of advice: “Accept that it is not easy to help these patients.”
Dr. Lepping was among a group of distinguished psychiatrists, dermatologists, entomologists, and a neurologist at the annual meeting who participated in a comprehensive session devoted to DI. The experts shared tips on making the diagnosis, establishing the rapport necessary to persuade affected patients to try taking a very-low-dose antipsychotic agent for their delusion, and how to achieve a high rate of therapeutic success. They also highlighted recent research advances in the field, including brain MRI evidence suggesting that impaired somatosensory neural networks mediate symptoms in DI, but not in nonsomatic delusional disorders.
COVID-19 pandemic triggers surge in DI
Entomologist Gail E. Ridge, PhD, has taken notes on all of her thousands of consultations with individuals with suspected DI since the late 1990s. A sharp jump in such contacts occurred during the Great Recession of 2008 in conjunction with the widespread social distress of job loss and threatened economic ruin. Now the same thing is happening as the catastrophic COVID-19 pandemic stretches on. Indeed, during the first 8 months of the pandemic she documented 500 interactions involving people with suspected DI. She’s learned to identify the clues, including a chattering mind, defensiveness, physician avoidance, and rigid body tension.
Courtesy Dr. Gale E. Ridge
Dr. Gale E. Ridge
“They’re fearful of judgment and suggestions of madness. And they’ll pounce on any perceived negativity. I never debunk beliefs; that can immediately backfire. If the medical profession was educated about DI, then many cases could be caught early. I, as the entomologist, and the mental health professionals are often last in line to be seen,” said Dr. Ridge, director of the Insect Information Office at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station in New Haven.
She has noticed a recurring theme in her interactions with these patients: DI often starts with a real underlying medical condition, such as, for example, a cutaneous drug reaction, which over time, progresses to gain a psychiatric component. And she has found that a tipping point often occurs after roughly 6 months of unrelieved symptoms and sensations. Prior to that, affected individuals are concerned about their condition and will seek medical help in a genuine effort to understand what’s going on. They can be redirected. After about 6 months, however, Dr. Ridge has observed “they slide into the rabbit hole of fanaticism and despair.”
Arriving at the diagnosis
In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5), DI is classified as a “delusional disorder, somatic type 297.1 F22.” The diagnosis requires that the delusion be present for at least 1 month, criteria for schizophrenia are not met, and the condition cannot be attributed to other medical or neuropsychiatric conditions.
“Many of these people are very high-functioning. I have corporate CEOs who fly in to see me in their private jets. At work, they’re king of their domain. At home, their family is falling apart because of their delusion,” said Dirk M. Elston, MD, professor and chair of the department of dermatology and dermatologic surgery at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.
Dr. Dirk M. Elston
“These people suffer, and the people around them suffer,” he emphasized.
Dozens of medical conditions can cause intractable itching or biting sensations. Far and away at the top of the medical differential diagnosis is thyroid disease, given its high incidence and frequent presentation with anxiety and itch. Other possibilities that can readily be ruled out via lab tests include substance use – especially involving amphetamine/methamphetamine, cocaine, or opioids – liver or kidney disease, diabetes and other sources of peripheral neuropathy, polycythemia, dermatitis herpetiformis, and pemphigus, Dr. Elston said.
Scott A. Norton, MD, MPH, MSc, a dermatologist and preventive medicine specialist at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md., noted that a diagnosis of DI requires three elements: The presence of abnormal sensations in the skin, a patient’s tenacious conviction that the sensations are caused by an infestation, and a lack of supporting evidence for that conviction.
Dr. Scott A. Norton
Taking an accurate medical history can be a challenge in these patients because they are often so guarded. They won’t disclose that they’ve already seen other health care providers, or that they’ve been self-treating with OTC veterinary medicine products, such as high-dose topical or oral ivermectin. They’ll often even deny repeated scratching despite clear evidence to the contrary from the skin exam.
As a dermatologist, Dr. Norton considers his first task to be a search for evidence of an infestation. Scabies is usually the first diagnosis proposed to account for the uncomfortable skin sensations. The presentation can be subtle. While the classic teaching is that the telltale signs of infestation by Sarcoptes scabiei are burrows in the skin and a rash in the web spaces between the fingers, he finds these features are often absent or equivocal.
“I think there are two more reliable presentations of scabies: Check to see if there’s symmetric involvement of the volar or palm side of the wrists; if there isn’t, I’m skeptical of the diagnosis. And every male older than 1 year of age with scabies will have scabies nodules on their genitalia. If the penis, the glans, or the scrotum aren’t involved with the nodules, I discard scabies as a possible diagnosis and look for evidence of other skin conditions that can plausibly explain the sensations and skin lesions, like eczema, contact dermatitis, scalp folliculitis, or dry skin,” he said.
If he can’t find evidence of infestation, he next systematically looks for another dermatologic cause of the patient’s sensations. When that proves fruitless, he tries to determine if there might be a biomedical or neuropsychiatric cause, such as depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, or dementia.
Taking a personal hygiene history is helpful. Patients who believe they have an infestation may bathe or shower three to five times daily with harsh soaps, causing dry, inflamed, itchy and uncomfortable skin.
“Many patients are thrilled to hear the good news that the history, physical examination, and lab tests do not show an infestation and that we have another explanation to account for their unwanted sensations. However, there are some patients who vehemently reject that idea and immediately return to their unwavering, unalterable belief that they are in fact infested. At this point, the possible diagnosis of DI looms large,” the dermatologist said.
Clues suggestive of DI include a patient’s obsessive focus on collecting “specimens” of the offending pathogen in Ziplock bags for assessment during the office visit – “usually a mix of unhelpful household debris and environmental detritus” – and eager presentation of a lengthy and detailed infestation diary, Dr. Norton said.
“Among the most distinctive signs that the patient is detached from reality are the biologically implausible descriptions and explanations of the supposed attacking organism. It’s a fanciful amalgamation of mutable features, behaviors, and life cycles composed of a composite of taxonomically unrelated organisms – for example, fungal hyphae with wings – that shapeshift at will to evade detection,” he said.
Dr. Elston observed that DI skin lesions are typically excoriated, sometimes because of a patient’s systematic use of a sharp object in an effort to dig out the infestation.
“One of the clues is the angularity of the lesion,” the dermatologist noted. “We always say round-to-oval lesions suggest an inside job; angulated lesions suggest an outside job, like fingernail work. There’s often a row of good healing border showing there’s really nothing wrong with wound healing, but a fibrinoid base where the excoriations have occurred. And the lesions are often in various stages of healing.”
Don’t forget neuropathic itch in nondelusional individuals as a potential cause of sensations of infestation and self-injury due to relentless scratching, urged Anne Louise Oaklander, MD, PhD, associate professor of neurology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, who is director of the nerve unit and the neurodiagnostic skin biopsy lab at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.
Dr. Anne Louise Oaklander
“There’s no one cause of patients’ impressions that they may have insects. Let’s be sympathetic: It is a normal assumption that insects may be present if the skin itches. One problem is that when patients don’t get good medical diagnoses they make up their own explanations, and sometimes these include persistent ideas of infestation. Many of them don’t realize that their scratching is a cause, not a result, of their skin lesions,” said Dr. Oaklander, who has conducted pioneering research on unintentional self-injury due to neuropathic itch accompanied by loss of pain signaling.
“Rapport first, medication later”
“The office visits are typically difficult to conclude, but skills can be learned and make it much easier to help these people,” Dr. Elston said.
John Koo, MD, emphasized that establishing rapport is “by far” the most important part of managing patients with DI.
Dr. John Koo
“Rapport first, medication later. This may require multiple visits,” said Dr. Koo, professor of dermatology at the University of California, San Francisco, who is a board-certified psychiatrist.
He makes sure he walks into the examination room all smiles and positivity. Patients with DI are eager to expound on their ailment; he lets them talk for a while, then when the timing is right, he actively encourages them to shift their focus away from etiology to treatment.
Dr. Koo and coworkers have described a spectrum of mental fixation in DI ranging from having only crawling and biting sensations, progressing to holding an overvalued idea as to their cause, then on to DSM-5 somatic preoccupation, followed by becoming truly delusional, and finally terminal delusion, where the patient doesn’t care about getting better, but only wants the physician to agree there is an infestation (J Clin Exp Dermatol Res. 2014 Oct. 3. doi: 10.4172/2155-9554.1000241).
“You cannot argue with people with delusions. How you talk to them as a clinician depends on whether they are entirely delusional or not,” he advised. “I cannot agree with their ideation, but I can agree with their misery – and that’s how I make a connection.”
Declining a DI patient’s request for a skin biopsy when it’s obvious there is no infestation can lead to a counterproductive power struggle. Instead, Dr. Koo turns the patient request into an opportunity to form a verbal contract: “I ask, ‘If the result comes back negative, can you be open-minded about the possibility of other etiologies besides parasites?’ ”
As for Dr. Norton, when his schedule shows a patient is coming in for a first visit for a supposed skin infestation, he tells his staff to expect a lengthy session as he works at establishing a good relationship.
“When my patients arrive with bags of specimens, I ask them to select two or three that they’re most confident will have a creature in them. Then I bring a two-headed microscope into the exam room and ask the patient to join me in examining the material. It helps with rapport by showing that I genuinely want to determine if there’s an infestation,” he explained.
He then sends the specimens to a laboratory, which provides a full report of the findings.
In performing a skin biopsy in a patient with suspected DI, Dr. Norton routinely biopsies two sites so the patient can’t claim sampling error when the pathology report comes back with no pathogens or parasites found. Also, he asks the patient to choose biopsy sites with intact skin where he or she believes the infestation exists. There is no point in biopsying excoriated lesions because they often contain snagged textile fibers.
Another rapport-building strategy: “I try to design a treatment regimen that will palliate the uncomfortable sensations and help relieve the patient’s misery while we continue working towards treating those delusions,” Dr. Norton said.
This might entail cutting back to one lukewarm shower per day with gentle or no soap, coupled with moisturizing, oral antihistamines or doxepin for itch, topical corticosteroids for the associated inflammation, and oral or topical antibiotics for any secondary bacterial skin infection.
What he doesn’t recommend as a rapport-building strategy or simply in order to get the patient out of the office is offering a therapeutic trial of an antiparasitic agent. That’s counterproductive. It may reinforce the false belief of infestation, and when the medication doesn’t bring lasting belief, the patient may conclude the infestation is resistant to conventional treatment.
Dr. Koo tells affected patients that he suspects they have Morgellons syndrome. He doesn’t call it DI in their presence.
“These people would not like their condition to be called delusional,” he explained. “Morgellons is a more neutral term. I tell them it’s a mysterious condition, and that what I’m really interested in is in trying to get them out of their misery.”
Treatment tips
Dr. Koo’s first-line medication for DI is pimozide (Orap), which in the United States has the advantage of being approved only for Tourette syndrome; it’s an antipsychotic without the perceived stigma of a psychiatric indication.
“Many of these patients will not consider taking any medication that has any psychiatric indication,” he noted.
Low-dose pimozide is highly effective, according to Dr. Koo, who recommends starting at 0.5 mg to 1 mg/day, increasing by 0.5 mg/day every 2-4 weeks. The drug is usually effective at a dose of 3 mg/day or less. Once a patient’s symptoms become clear or almost clear, the patient is maintained on that dose for another 3-4 months, then tapered by 0.5 mg/day every 2-4 weeks.
“In 35 years of seeing a new patient on average every week or two, I’ve had only five patients with one recurrence and one patient with two recurrences. All six responded to repeat therapy,” Dr. Koo said.
Side effects at these low doses are “very rare,” he added. Diphenhydramine (Benadryl) at 25 mg up to four times daily is effective for complaints of stiffness or restlessness. Prolongation of the QT interval is a potential concern, but Dr. Koo has never encountered it despite routinely ordering ECGs for patients on pimozide with known heart disease or who are over age 50.
When a patient can’t tolerate pimozide, Dr. Koo’s second-line antipsychotic for DI is low-dose risperidone (Risperdal), which is also highly effective.
Dr. Lepping noted that the European situation is different. There, unlike in the United States, pimozide has regulatory approval as an antipsychotic, so it loses the advantage of being an under-the-radar neuroleptic. His go-to medication is the first-generation antipsychotic sulpiride (Dogmatil), which he finds has a more favorable side effect profile than pimozide, particularly in the elderly. (Sulpiride is not approved in the United States.)
In treating DI, he prefers more dopaminergic-focused antipsychotics over those covering a broader spectrum of receptors. His alternatives to sulpiride include risperidone and olanzapine, atypical antipsychotics. He explains to patients that just as aspirin is used in low doses for its antiplatelet effect and in higher doses for pain relief, these medications can help them feel better at much lower doses than for schizophrenia.
“Once we get some rapport and a trusting relationship going, we normally try to persuade people to basically try something against their better judgment. We know that they don’t believe in it, but you try to get them to at least try something because everything else has failed,” Dr. Lepping explained. “We tell them it’s a condition we have seen before, and we have seen these medications to be useful because they are good for their distress, they help with making them calmer, and they might help with their symptoms. We say, ‘What do you have to lose if you trust us?’
“About 60% of our patients take the medication and almost invariably they all get better,” the psychiatrist said. “The others we either lose to follow-up or they just refuse to take the medication.”
A patient’s first visit to the Liverpool multispecialty DI referral clinic is 1 hour long. “They know that in advance, and we very much stick to that hour. We say to people up front, ‘We have an hour – that’s a lot, but we don’t have more,’ ” he said.
The initial visit is typically followed by two to four 30-minute follow-up visits. Dr. Lepping recommends that when possible, patients with DI should be seen jointly by a psychiatrist and a nonpsychiatrist physician. He finds this approach leads to substantially better clinical outcomes than with a single health care provider.
“If you have two people in the clinic with the patient, when you get really annoyed and your amygdala really starts going, that’s the time when you can then turn to your colleague and say, ‘Oh yes, and Professor Squire, what do you have to say to that?’ So as you see the red mist rising in yourself because you’re getting so exasperated, you have the other person there to take over so you can calm down. And then the other person does the same. That can be really important to deescalate a heated situation,” Dr. Lepping explained.
Roughly 10% of patients with DI have what is termed folie à deux, where the delusion of infestation is shared by another person.
“Anecdotally, I would say those are much more difficult to treat,” said Jason S. Reichenberg, MD, MBA, professor of medicine (dermatology) at the University of Texas at Austin and president of the Ascension Medical Group Texas.
Dr. Jason S. Reichenberg
“It’s like getting somebody to quit smoking when everybody else in the house is still smoking. It’s very hard to convince a single family member that they’re wrong when everybody else in their family keeps telling them they’re right,” he said.
Recent advances in DI research
Dr. Lepping and coinvestigators at multispecialist DI clinics in London, Italy, and Moscow reported in an unusually large observational study of 236 affected patients that longer duration of untreated psychosis was associated with significantly worse clinical outcome. It’s a finding consistent with Dr. Koo’s construct of progressive stages of delusionality, and it underscores the need for early treatment.
“Having said that, improvement is still possible, even if people have had quite a long time of untreated psychosis,” Dr. Lepping said. The same study also showed that older age at illness onset was inversely associated with good outcome.
In another study, Dr. Lepping and colleagues reported that substance use involving amphetamines, cocaine, opioids, and other drugs that can cause itch was roughly twice as common in a group of patients with DI compared to the general population. “I highly recommend, if at all possible, a drug screen in suspected DI,” he said.
In a large survey of U.S. and Canadian veterinarians, Dr. Lepping and coinvestigators found that these practitioners not infrequently encountered delusional infestation among pet owners who claimed their dog or cat is infested when it’s not. This is called “delusion by proxy,” and it often leads to unwarranted animal euthanasia. Some of these pet owners claim they, too, are infested, which the investigators termed “double delusional infestation.”
MRI studies
Recent structural brain MRI studies support the concept that impaired somatosensory neural networks mediate the delusional symptoms of DI, but not in delusional disorders without somatic content. This was demonstrated in an MRI study by Dr. Lepping and others conducted in 18 patients with DI, 19 others with nonsomatic delusional disorders centered on themes of persecution or jealousy, and 20 healthy volunteers. The DI group had lower gray matter volume in prefrontal, thalamic, striatal, and insular regions of the brain compared to the other two groups.
Of note, mapping of the insula and dorsal striatum indicates they are part of the peripersonal space network, which integrates tactile and visual perceptions involving the area near the body surface. The insula also mediates feelings of pain and disgust.
Some of the same investigators have also recently reported brain MRI evidence specifically of cerebellar dysfunction in patients with DI, who displayed decreased gray matter volume in left lobule VIIa of the cerebellum and increased gray matter volume in bilateral lobule VIIa/crus II compared to patients with non-somatic delusions. This points to a role for impaired cerebellar neural networks related to somatosensory perception in patients with DI but not in those with non-somatic delusions.
Delusional infestation: What’s in a name?
Ekbom syndrome. Delusional parasitosis. Morgellons syndrome. These and other terms are increasingly giving way to ‘delusional infestation’ as the preferred moniker for the disorder. That’s in part because the delusional focus in patients with this condition has shifted over time. In the 19th century, for example, affected patients often attributed their infestation to typhus.
In contemporary practice, roughly one-quarter of affected patients think they are infested by small inanimate objects, most commonly fibers or threads emerging from the skin, rather than by parasites, insects, or worms. In a study of 148 consecutive European patients with suspected DI, Dr. Lepping and coinvestigators reported only 35% believed they were infested by parasites.
“The name ‘delusional infestation’ emphasizes the constantly changing pathogens and covers all present and future variations of the theme that are bound to occur,” Dr. Lepping observed.
All speakers reported having no conflicts of interest.
Adolescents and young adults with mood disorders and cannabis use disorder (CUD) are at significantly increased risk for self-harm, all-cause mortality, homicide, and death by unintentional overdose, new research suggests.
Dr. Cynthia Fontanella
Investigators found the risk for self-harm was three times higher, all-cause mortality was 59% higher, unintentional overdose was 2.5 times higher, and homicide was more than three times higher in those with versus without CUD.
“The take-home message of these findings is that we need to be aware of the perception that cannabis use is harmless, when it’s actually not,” lead author Cynthia Fontanella, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry, Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, said in an interview.
“We need to educate parents and clinicians that there are risks associated with cannabis, including increased risk for self-harm and death, and we need to effectively treat both cannabis use disorder and mood disorders,” she said.
The study was published online Jan. 19, 2021, in JAMA Pediatrics.
Little research in youth
“There has been very little research conducted on CUD in the adolescent population, and most studies have been conducted with adults,” Dr. Fontanella said.
Research on adults has shown that, even in people without mood disorders, cannabis use is associated with the early onset of mood disorders, psychosis, and anxiety disorders and has also been linked with suicidal behavior and increased risk for motor vehicle accidents, Dr. Fontanella said.
iStock/ThinkStockPhotos.com
“We were motivated to conduct this study because we treat kids with depression and bipolar disorder and we noticed a high prevalence of CUD in this population, so we were curious about what its negative effects might be,” Dr. Fontanella recounted.
The researchers analyzed 7-year data drawn from Ohio Medicaid claims and linked to data from death certificates in 204,780 youths between the ages of 10 and 24 years (mean age was 17.2 years at the time of mood disorder diagnosis). Most were female, non-Hispanic White, enrolled in Medicaid because of poverty, and living in a metropolitan area (65.0%, 66.9%, 87.6%, and 77.1%, respectively).
Participants were followed up to 1 year from diagnosis until the end of enrollment, a self-harm event, or death.
Researchers included demographic, clinical, and treatment factors as covariates.
Close to three-quarters (72.7%) of the cohort had a depressive disorder, followed by unspecified/persistent mood disorder and bipolar disorder (14.9% and 12.4%, respectively). Comorbidities included ADHD (12.4%), anxiety disorder (12.3%), and other mental disorders (13.1%).
One -tenth of the cohort (10.3%) were diagnosed with CUD.
CUD treatment referrals
“Although CUD was associated with suicide in the unadjusted model, it was not significantly associated in adjusted models,” the authors reported.
Dr. Fontanella noted that the risk for these adverse outcomes is greater among those who engage in heavy, frequent use or who use cannabis that has higher-potency tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) content.
Reasons why CUD might be associated with these adverse outcomes are that it can increase impulsivity, poor judgment, and clouded thinking, which may in turn increase the risk for self-harm behaviors, she said.
She recommended that clinicians refer youth with CUD for “effective treatments,” including family-based models and individual approaches, such as cognitive behavioral therapy and motivational enhancement therapy.
Open dialogue
In a comment, Wilfrid Noel Raby, MD, PhD, adjunct clinical professor, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, noted that psychosis can occur in patients with CUD and mood disorders – especially bipolar disorder – but was not included as a study outcome. “I would have liked to see more data about that,” he said.
However, a strength of the study was that it included children aged as young as 10 years. “The trend is that cannabis use is starting at younger and younger ages, which has all kinds of ramifications in terms of cerebral development.”
Christopher Hammond, MD, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said: “Three major strengths of the study are the size of the sample, its longitudinal analysis, and that the authors controlled for a number of potential confounding variables.”
In light of the findings, Dr. Hammond recommended clinicians and other health professionals who work with young people “should screen for cannabis-related problems in youth with mood disorders.”
Dr. Hammond, who is the director of the Co-occurring Disorders in Adolescents and Young Adults Clinical and Research Program, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, Baltimore, and was not involved with the study, recommended counseling youth with mood disorders and their parents and families “regarding the potential adverse health effects related to cannabis use.”
He also recommended “open dialogue with youth with and without mental health conditions about misleading reports in the national media and advertising about cannabis’ health benefits.”
The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health. Dr. Fontanella reported receiving grants from the National Institute of Mental Health during the conduct of the study. Dr. Raby reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Hammond reported receiving research grant funding from the National Institutes of Health, the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Substance Abuse Mental Health Services Administration, the National Network of Depression Centers, and the Armstrong Institute at Johns Hopkins Bayview and serves as a scientific adviser for the National Courts and Science Institute and as a subject matter expert for SAMHSA related to co-occurring substance use disorders and severe emotional disturbance in youth.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Adolescents and young adults with mood disorders and cannabis use disorder (CUD) are at significantly increased risk for self-harm, all-cause mortality, homicide, and death by unintentional overdose, new research suggests.
Dr. Cynthia Fontanella
Investigators found the risk for self-harm was three times higher, all-cause mortality was 59% higher, unintentional overdose was 2.5 times higher, and homicide was more than three times higher in those with versus without CUD.
“The take-home message of these findings is that we need to be aware of the perception that cannabis use is harmless, when it’s actually not,” lead author Cynthia Fontanella, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry, Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, said in an interview.
“We need to educate parents and clinicians that there are risks associated with cannabis, including increased risk for self-harm and death, and we need to effectively treat both cannabis use disorder and mood disorders,” she said.
The study was published online Jan. 19, 2021, in JAMA Pediatrics.
Little research in youth
“There has been very little research conducted on CUD in the adolescent population, and most studies have been conducted with adults,” Dr. Fontanella said.
Research on adults has shown that, even in people without mood disorders, cannabis use is associated with the early onset of mood disorders, psychosis, and anxiety disorders and has also been linked with suicidal behavior and increased risk for motor vehicle accidents, Dr. Fontanella said.
iStock/ThinkStockPhotos.com
“We were motivated to conduct this study because we treat kids with depression and bipolar disorder and we noticed a high prevalence of CUD in this population, so we were curious about what its negative effects might be,” Dr. Fontanella recounted.
The researchers analyzed 7-year data drawn from Ohio Medicaid claims and linked to data from death certificates in 204,780 youths between the ages of 10 and 24 years (mean age was 17.2 years at the time of mood disorder diagnosis). Most were female, non-Hispanic White, enrolled in Medicaid because of poverty, and living in a metropolitan area (65.0%, 66.9%, 87.6%, and 77.1%, respectively).
Participants were followed up to 1 year from diagnosis until the end of enrollment, a self-harm event, or death.
Researchers included demographic, clinical, and treatment factors as covariates.
Close to three-quarters (72.7%) of the cohort had a depressive disorder, followed by unspecified/persistent mood disorder and bipolar disorder (14.9% and 12.4%, respectively). Comorbidities included ADHD (12.4%), anxiety disorder (12.3%), and other mental disorders (13.1%).
One -tenth of the cohort (10.3%) were diagnosed with CUD.
CUD treatment referrals
“Although CUD was associated with suicide in the unadjusted model, it was not significantly associated in adjusted models,” the authors reported.
Dr. Fontanella noted that the risk for these adverse outcomes is greater among those who engage in heavy, frequent use or who use cannabis that has higher-potency tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) content.
Reasons why CUD might be associated with these adverse outcomes are that it can increase impulsivity, poor judgment, and clouded thinking, which may in turn increase the risk for self-harm behaviors, she said.
She recommended that clinicians refer youth with CUD for “effective treatments,” including family-based models and individual approaches, such as cognitive behavioral therapy and motivational enhancement therapy.
Open dialogue
In a comment, Wilfrid Noel Raby, MD, PhD, adjunct clinical professor, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, noted that psychosis can occur in patients with CUD and mood disorders – especially bipolar disorder – but was not included as a study outcome. “I would have liked to see more data about that,” he said.
However, a strength of the study was that it included children aged as young as 10 years. “The trend is that cannabis use is starting at younger and younger ages, which has all kinds of ramifications in terms of cerebral development.”
Christopher Hammond, MD, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said: “Three major strengths of the study are the size of the sample, its longitudinal analysis, and that the authors controlled for a number of potential confounding variables.”
In light of the findings, Dr. Hammond recommended clinicians and other health professionals who work with young people “should screen for cannabis-related problems in youth with mood disorders.”
Dr. Hammond, who is the director of the Co-occurring Disorders in Adolescents and Young Adults Clinical and Research Program, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, Baltimore, and was not involved with the study, recommended counseling youth with mood disorders and their parents and families “regarding the potential adverse health effects related to cannabis use.”
He also recommended “open dialogue with youth with and without mental health conditions about misleading reports in the national media and advertising about cannabis’ health benefits.”
The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health. Dr. Fontanella reported receiving grants from the National Institute of Mental Health during the conduct of the study. Dr. Raby reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Hammond reported receiving research grant funding from the National Institutes of Health, the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Substance Abuse Mental Health Services Administration, the National Network of Depression Centers, and the Armstrong Institute at Johns Hopkins Bayview and serves as a scientific adviser for the National Courts and Science Institute and as a subject matter expert for SAMHSA related to co-occurring substance use disorders and severe emotional disturbance in youth.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Adolescents and young adults with mood disorders and cannabis use disorder (CUD) are at significantly increased risk for self-harm, all-cause mortality, homicide, and death by unintentional overdose, new research suggests.
Dr. Cynthia Fontanella
Investigators found the risk for self-harm was three times higher, all-cause mortality was 59% higher, unintentional overdose was 2.5 times higher, and homicide was more than three times higher in those with versus without CUD.
“The take-home message of these findings is that we need to be aware of the perception that cannabis use is harmless, when it’s actually not,” lead author Cynthia Fontanella, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry, Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, said in an interview.
“We need to educate parents and clinicians that there are risks associated with cannabis, including increased risk for self-harm and death, and we need to effectively treat both cannabis use disorder and mood disorders,” she said.
The study was published online Jan. 19, 2021, in JAMA Pediatrics.
Little research in youth
“There has been very little research conducted on CUD in the adolescent population, and most studies have been conducted with adults,” Dr. Fontanella said.
Research on adults has shown that, even in people without mood disorders, cannabis use is associated with the early onset of mood disorders, psychosis, and anxiety disorders and has also been linked with suicidal behavior and increased risk for motor vehicle accidents, Dr. Fontanella said.
iStock/ThinkStockPhotos.com
“We were motivated to conduct this study because we treat kids with depression and bipolar disorder and we noticed a high prevalence of CUD in this population, so we were curious about what its negative effects might be,” Dr. Fontanella recounted.
The researchers analyzed 7-year data drawn from Ohio Medicaid claims and linked to data from death certificates in 204,780 youths between the ages of 10 and 24 years (mean age was 17.2 years at the time of mood disorder diagnosis). Most were female, non-Hispanic White, enrolled in Medicaid because of poverty, and living in a metropolitan area (65.0%, 66.9%, 87.6%, and 77.1%, respectively).
Participants were followed up to 1 year from diagnosis until the end of enrollment, a self-harm event, or death.
Researchers included demographic, clinical, and treatment factors as covariates.
Close to three-quarters (72.7%) of the cohort had a depressive disorder, followed by unspecified/persistent mood disorder and bipolar disorder (14.9% and 12.4%, respectively). Comorbidities included ADHD (12.4%), anxiety disorder (12.3%), and other mental disorders (13.1%).
One -tenth of the cohort (10.3%) were diagnosed with CUD.
CUD treatment referrals
“Although CUD was associated with suicide in the unadjusted model, it was not significantly associated in adjusted models,” the authors reported.
Dr. Fontanella noted that the risk for these adverse outcomes is greater among those who engage in heavy, frequent use or who use cannabis that has higher-potency tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) content.
Reasons why CUD might be associated with these adverse outcomes are that it can increase impulsivity, poor judgment, and clouded thinking, which may in turn increase the risk for self-harm behaviors, she said.
She recommended that clinicians refer youth with CUD for “effective treatments,” including family-based models and individual approaches, such as cognitive behavioral therapy and motivational enhancement therapy.
Open dialogue
In a comment, Wilfrid Noel Raby, MD, PhD, adjunct clinical professor, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, noted that psychosis can occur in patients with CUD and mood disorders – especially bipolar disorder – but was not included as a study outcome. “I would have liked to see more data about that,” he said.
However, a strength of the study was that it included children aged as young as 10 years. “The trend is that cannabis use is starting at younger and younger ages, which has all kinds of ramifications in terms of cerebral development.”
Christopher Hammond, MD, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said: “Three major strengths of the study are the size of the sample, its longitudinal analysis, and that the authors controlled for a number of potential confounding variables.”
In light of the findings, Dr. Hammond recommended clinicians and other health professionals who work with young people “should screen for cannabis-related problems in youth with mood disorders.”
Dr. Hammond, who is the director of the Co-occurring Disorders in Adolescents and Young Adults Clinical and Research Program, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, Baltimore, and was not involved with the study, recommended counseling youth with mood disorders and their parents and families “regarding the potential adverse health effects related to cannabis use.”
He also recommended “open dialogue with youth with and without mental health conditions about misleading reports in the national media and advertising about cannabis’ health benefits.”
The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health. Dr. Fontanella reported receiving grants from the National Institute of Mental Health during the conduct of the study. Dr. Raby reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Hammond reported receiving research grant funding from the National Institutes of Health, the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Substance Abuse Mental Health Services Administration, the National Network of Depression Centers, and the Armstrong Institute at Johns Hopkins Bayview and serves as a scientific adviser for the National Courts and Science Institute and as a subject matter expert for SAMHSA related to co-occurring substance use disorders and severe emotional disturbance in youth.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Food and Drug Administration has extended the review period for aducanumab, the investigational amyloid-clearing treatment for Alzheimer’s disease, by 3 months, the drug’s manufacturers have announced. The updated prescription drug user fee act (PDUFA) action date has been pushed forward from March 7 to June 7, 2021.
“As part of the ongoing review, Biogen submitted a response to an information request by the FDA, including additional analyses and clinical data, which the FDA considered a major amendment to the application that will require additional time for review,” Biogen and Eisai said in a statement.
“We are committed to working with the FDA as it completes its review of the aducanumab application. We want to thank the FDA for its continued diligence during the review,” said Biogen CEO Michel Vounatsos.
Biogen submitted the aducanumab application for approval to the FDA in July 2020. The FDA accepted it in August and granted priority review.
Aducanumab is a recombinant human monoclonal antibody targeting beta-amyloid (Abeta). If approved, it would be the first disease-modifying treatment for Alzheimer’s disease.
However, the road to approval has been bumpy. In November, despite high expectations and pleas from patients, caregivers, and advocacy groups, an FDA advisory panel declined to recommend approval of aducanumab.
As previously reported by this news organization, members of the FDA’s Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee determined that results from Biogen’s one large positive trial did not provide strong enough evidence of efficacy for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Food and Drug Administration has extended the review period for aducanumab, the investigational amyloid-clearing treatment for Alzheimer’s disease, by 3 months, the drug’s manufacturers have announced. The updated prescription drug user fee act (PDUFA) action date has been pushed forward from March 7 to June 7, 2021.
“As part of the ongoing review, Biogen submitted a response to an information request by the FDA, including additional analyses and clinical data, which the FDA considered a major amendment to the application that will require additional time for review,” Biogen and Eisai said in a statement.
“We are committed to working with the FDA as it completes its review of the aducanumab application. We want to thank the FDA for its continued diligence during the review,” said Biogen CEO Michel Vounatsos.
Biogen submitted the aducanumab application for approval to the FDA in July 2020. The FDA accepted it in August and granted priority review.
Aducanumab is a recombinant human monoclonal antibody targeting beta-amyloid (Abeta). If approved, it would be the first disease-modifying treatment for Alzheimer’s disease.
However, the road to approval has been bumpy. In November, despite high expectations and pleas from patients, caregivers, and advocacy groups, an FDA advisory panel declined to recommend approval of aducanumab.
As previously reported by this news organization, members of the FDA’s Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee determined that results from Biogen’s one large positive trial did not provide strong enough evidence of efficacy for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Food and Drug Administration has extended the review period for aducanumab, the investigational amyloid-clearing treatment for Alzheimer’s disease, by 3 months, the drug’s manufacturers have announced. The updated prescription drug user fee act (PDUFA) action date has been pushed forward from March 7 to June 7, 2021.
“As part of the ongoing review, Biogen submitted a response to an information request by the FDA, including additional analyses and clinical data, which the FDA considered a major amendment to the application that will require additional time for review,” Biogen and Eisai said in a statement.
“We are committed to working with the FDA as it completes its review of the aducanumab application. We want to thank the FDA for its continued diligence during the review,” said Biogen CEO Michel Vounatsos.
Biogen submitted the aducanumab application for approval to the FDA in July 2020. The FDA accepted it in August and granted priority review.
Aducanumab is a recombinant human monoclonal antibody targeting beta-amyloid (Abeta). If approved, it would be the first disease-modifying treatment for Alzheimer’s disease.
However, the road to approval has been bumpy. In November, despite high expectations and pleas from patients, caregivers, and advocacy groups, an FDA advisory panel declined to recommend approval of aducanumab.
As previously reported by this news organization, members of the FDA’s Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee determined that results from Biogen’s one large positive trial did not provide strong enough evidence of efficacy for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The final numbers won’t look much different, but the 2021 Match results will be unlike any before. As of mid-January, only 16 more institutions were confirmed to be participating in Match Day this year, resulting in about 800 more positions, said Donna Lamb, president and CEO of the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP). The Electronic Residency Application Service reported about 50,000 individual applicant submissions, a slight increase from prior years.
The stats may be similar, but the current residency application cycle may lead to wildly different results after the pandemic forced interviews to be conducted virtually and caused the cancellation of most away clinical rotations. Troy Amen, a fifth-year MD-MBA student at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and copresident of his student class, says the lack of on-campus, in-person experiences means students feel more in the dark than ever. The same is true for institutions. “The programs are also suffering because now they don’t know which students are a good ‘cultural fit’ for them,” he said.
Standing out has always been a concern for prospective residents, but Mr. Amen says fears are even higher this year. “[Institutions are] struggling to vet out 850 applicants, and they have no connection to us.”
Organizations have scrambled to keep the process as fair and informative as possible. “Everyone is trying to do the right thing here,” said Alison J. Whelan, MD, chief academic officer of the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC). She says that although the process has significantly changed, the heart of it remains the same. “The bottom line is directors really want to fill their intern class, and schools and students really want to match.”
Since the NRMP was established in 1952, it has never had to contend with a pandemic of this scale. The unprecedented circumstances have led to some much-feared and some unexpected changes, like top candidates “stealing” interview slots, “swag bags” sent to entice residents, beefed-up online profiles, as well as “Zoom fatigue,” a spike in home-field advantage for institutions, and massive anxiety for those students staking their future to a city they may have never seen in person.
What was lost and what was gained
“It’s really hard to get a real feel for the program when you’ve not been there in person,” said Christopher Smith, MD, director of the internal medicine residency program at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Dr. Smith recalled interviewing for residencies 25 years ago. His wife, a teacher, took time off to travel with him.
“She would ‘interview the town’ while I interviewed the program, and we compared notes at night,” he said. Because of COVID-19-related travel restrictions, just physically seeing the city in which they may live for years wasn’t an option for many. “I have a lot of sympathy for students applying right now,” Dr. Smith said.
For the residency class of 2021, the first shoe really dropped last March, when the AAMC issued guidance strongly recommending that programs pause clinical rotations away from their home schools. As established doctors know well, and as graduating medical students confirmed, these rotations are crucial to understanding a program’s culture and gaining experience that can boost candidacy. “I’m applying to orthopedic surgery, where away rotations are the gold standard for impressing attendees and residents at institutions away from home,” said Mr. Amen.
The pandemic completely cut off that key source of information to determine the right fit. It also meant applicants couldn’t have as diverse a portfolio of recommendation letters, something many worry may be detrimental to their soon-to-be-released Match rankings.
Unlike the loss of away rotations, the forced shift from in-person to virtual interviews had some meaningful benefits. Students no longer incurred expenses for airline flights, hotel rooms, and rental cars. Many organizations and programs have been trying for years to figure out how to lower the financial burden of interviews to make the process more equitable for those at economic or other disadvantage.
“The equity piece of this is huge – decreasing barriers and leveling the field a little bit is a really huge advantage,” said Kate Shaw, MD, residency program director and associate chair of education for the obstetrics and gynecology program at Stanford (Calif.) University. In some ways, this latest change is an extension of a strategy Dr. Shaw and others had already begun implementing.
“Over the last 5 to 10 years, we’ve been working to address the implicit bias in the application process, so we’ve gone to a holistic review of applicants, where we don’t have score cutoffs. We look at the whole person,” she said. “And we did that in an effort to increase diversity and equity.” Dr. Shaw and others hope that the accidental positive changes from COVID restrictions may be intentionally preserved long after the pandemic ends.
Home-field advantage vs. swag bags
Many medical students applying to residencies this year say they have given greater weight to their home programs than they might have without the pandemic. “I didn’t get a sense of anyone’s culture other than my home institution,” said Alex Skidmore, a fourth-year medical student at Washington University in St. Louis. “I definitely am ranking Wash-U higher.”
The desire to emphasize the known quality of a student’s home institution isn’t surprising to program directors. Dr. Shaw said she thinks this year’s Match could well end with a higher percentage of students matching either in their home programs or in programs close to loved ones. “The value of being close to family has come up in our conversations, where students are considering the right program for them but also the other life factors,” she said.
To overcome this home-field advantage, many programs have beefed up their websites, including providing video tours of their facilities. They also “upped their social media game” and encouraged residents to create online groups for prospective residents to share information about programs and life outside of work. Some residents even offered video tours of their personal apartments to applicants.
Without in-person access to facilities and staff, a program’s online presence became a deciding factor, applicants said. “If you have a bad website, it’s like having a dirty building to interview applicants in,” Mr. Skidmore said. For many prospective residents, an institution’s Internet presence was a “make or break” factor. “It’s the only thing I saw for many programs, and when we are doing the amount of research we are doing remotely, when I saw a program with a bad website, it made me not like the program as much,” he said.
Some programs, hoping to woo candidates as well as to provide them with more insight into what they and their cities have to offer, sent “swag bags” to candidates. These included things like gift cards for food delivery and offerings from local businesses. Washington University’s pediatrics residency program sent gooey butter cakes – a St. Louis staple – along with other treats from small businesses and copies of magazines that showcased the city’s dining and entertainment scene.
Other programs, even those at the same medical institution, felt quite strongly that those types of packages shouldn’t be sent. “We interviewed almost 500 applicants, so there was no way we could have afforded that,” said Dominique Cosco, MD, director of Washington University’s internal medicine residency program. “Our normal recruitment budget is almost $100,000 in a normal year, and that got cut because of COVID. For us, it was thinking about allocations of resources.”
Interview slot theft and zoom fatigue
Remote interviewing also meant that applicants could accept more interviews, something that raised a big concern. Without expenses or travel time, would top-tier candidates take more interviews than normal and thus take limited interview spots from other qualified candidates? Maybe so, says the AAMC’s Dr. Whelan.
“We didn’t have systematic data, but we heard from enough schools and programs ... that students who were maybe not the top-top ranked students in the class but in every way solid were receiving fewer interviews than previous years,” Dr. Whelan said. This is despite guidance that recommended programs add interview slots to serve as a counterbalance.
Some students say they accepted more interview slots in the beginning of the interview season, partly because they could, and partly because some thought of early interviews as “practice” for later interviews. However, as video interviews piled up, some of them described feeling “Zoom fatigue” and said they later canceled interviews with programs they didn’t anticipate joining.
More SOAP, less clarity
As for what comes next, the NRMP is preparing for a longer-than-normal Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program (SOAP) than in years past. SOAP usually offers three rounds of matches after the initial Match Day; Ms. Lamb said things are different this year.
“SOAP will be the same number of days, but we’ve added an additional round on Thursday afternoon,” she said. Will it be unnecessary or not enough? Nobody knows. “How big SOAP actually is going to be is one of the things that we really don’t have a sense of right now and probably aren’t going to have a sense of until the Match.”
Uncertainty is the name of the game. More than any other Match before, programs and applicants won’t know how results from this pandemic year stack up for a few months at the very least. “I really want to see what this looks like on the other side,” Dr. Smith said. “Are applicants happy with the way it looks when they come here? Do they feel like they matched with the right place?”
Whether this unprecedented year will be remembered more for positive changes moving forward, including more flexibility on remote interviews, or for less-informed decisions that result in dissatisfied participants is also unclear.
“I think after the Match is over, we’ll be talking to everyone to get more perspective on what people who are applying now would tell the next class, and how programs can adjust,” said Kathy Diemer, MD, assistant dean for career counseling at Washington University. At the very least, those who are involved in this year after year can start thinking about what the future should look like.
“We’re going to need to do some kind of debriefing after this is over, both program directors and our students as well, so we can determine how to move forward next year and beyond.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The final numbers won’t look much different, but the 2021 Match results will be unlike any before. As of mid-January, only 16 more institutions were confirmed to be participating in Match Day this year, resulting in about 800 more positions, said Donna Lamb, president and CEO of the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP). The Electronic Residency Application Service reported about 50,000 individual applicant submissions, a slight increase from prior years.
The stats may be similar, but the current residency application cycle may lead to wildly different results after the pandemic forced interviews to be conducted virtually and caused the cancellation of most away clinical rotations. Troy Amen, a fifth-year MD-MBA student at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and copresident of his student class, says the lack of on-campus, in-person experiences means students feel more in the dark than ever. The same is true for institutions. “The programs are also suffering because now they don’t know which students are a good ‘cultural fit’ for them,” he said.
Standing out has always been a concern for prospective residents, but Mr. Amen says fears are even higher this year. “[Institutions are] struggling to vet out 850 applicants, and they have no connection to us.”
Organizations have scrambled to keep the process as fair and informative as possible. “Everyone is trying to do the right thing here,” said Alison J. Whelan, MD, chief academic officer of the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC). She says that although the process has significantly changed, the heart of it remains the same. “The bottom line is directors really want to fill their intern class, and schools and students really want to match.”
Since the NRMP was established in 1952, it has never had to contend with a pandemic of this scale. The unprecedented circumstances have led to some much-feared and some unexpected changes, like top candidates “stealing” interview slots, “swag bags” sent to entice residents, beefed-up online profiles, as well as “Zoom fatigue,” a spike in home-field advantage for institutions, and massive anxiety for those students staking their future to a city they may have never seen in person.
What was lost and what was gained
“It’s really hard to get a real feel for the program when you’ve not been there in person,” said Christopher Smith, MD, director of the internal medicine residency program at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Dr. Smith recalled interviewing for residencies 25 years ago. His wife, a teacher, took time off to travel with him.
“She would ‘interview the town’ while I interviewed the program, and we compared notes at night,” he said. Because of COVID-19-related travel restrictions, just physically seeing the city in which they may live for years wasn’t an option for many. “I have a lot of sympathy for students applying right now,” Dr. Smith said.
For the residency class of 2021, the first shoe really dropped last March, when the AAMC issued guidance strongly recommending that programs pause clinical rotations away from their home schools. As established doctors know well, and as graduating medical students confirmed, these rotations are crucial to understanding a program’s culture and gaining experience that can boost candidacy. “I’m applying to orthopedic surgery, where away rotations are the gold standard for impressing attendees and residents at institutions away from home,” said Mr. Amen.
The pandemic completely cut off that key source of information to determine the right fit. It also meant applicants couldn’t have as diverse a portfolio of recommendation letters, something many worry may be detrimental to their soon-to-be-released Match rankings.
Unlike the loss of away rotations, the forced shift from in-person to virtual interviews had some meaningful benefits. Students no longer incurred expenses for airline flights, hotel rooms, and rental cars. Many organizations and programs have been trying for years to figure out how to lower the financial burden of interviews to make the process more equitable for those at economic or other disadvantage.
“The equity piece of this is huge – decreasing barriers and leveling the field a little bit is a really huge advantage,” said Kate Shaw, MD, residency program director and associate chair of education for the obstetrics and gynecology program at Stanford (Calif.) University. In some ways, this latest change is an extension of a strategy Dr. Shaw and others had already begun implementing.
“Over the last 5 to 10 years, we’ve been working to address the implicit bias in the application process, so we’ve gone to a holistic review of applicants, where we don’t have score cutoffs. We look at the whole person,” she said. “And we did that in an effort to increase diversity and equity.” Dr. Shaw and others hope that the accidental positive changes from COVID restrictions may be intentionally preserved long after the pandemic ends.
Home-field advantage vs. swag bags
Many medical students applying to residencies this year say they have given greater weight to their home programs than they might have without the pandemic. “I didn’t get a sense of anyone’s culture other than my home institution,” said Alex Skidmore, a fourth-year medical student at Washington University in St. Louis. “I definitely am ranking Wash-U higher.”
The desire to emphasize the known quality of a student’s home institution isn’t surprising to program directors. Dr. Shaw said she thinks this year’s Match could well end with a higher percentage of students matching either in their home programs or in programs close to loved ones. “The value of being close to family has come up in our conversations, where students are considering the right program for them but also the other life factors,” she said.
To overcome this home-field advantage, many programs have beefed up their websites, including providing video tours of their facilities. They also “upped their social media game” and encouraged residents to create online groups for prospective residents to share information about programs and life outside of work. Some residents even offered video tours of their personal apartments to applicants.
Without in-person access to facilities and staff, a program’s online presence became a deciding factor, applicants said. “If you have a bad website, it’s like having a dirty building to interview applicants in,” Mr. Skidmore said. For many prospective residents, an institution’s Internet presence was a “make or break” factor. “It’s the only thing I saw for many programs, and when we are doing the amount of research we are doing remotely, when I saw a program with a bad website, it made me not like the program as much,” he said.
Some programs, hoping to woo candidates as well as to provide them with more insight into what they and their cities have to offer, sent “swag bags” to candidates. These included things like gift cards for food delivery and offerings from local businesses. Washington University’s pediatrics residency program sent gooey butter cakes – a St. Louis staple – along with other treats from small businesses and copies of magazines that showcased the city’s dining and entertainment scene.
Other programs, even those at the same medical institution, felt quite strongly that those types of packages shouldn’t be sent. “We interviewed almost 500 applicants, so there was no way we could have afforded that,” said Dominique Cosco, MD, director of Washington University’s internal medicine residency program. “Our normal recruitment budget is almost $100,000 in a normal year, and that got cut because of COVID. For us, it was thinking about allocations of resources.”
Interview slot theft and zoom fatigue
Remote interviewing also meant that applicants could accept more interviews, something that raised a big concern. Without expenses or travel time, would top-tier candidates take more interviews than normal and thus take limited interview spots from other qualified candidates? Maybe so, says the AAMC’s Dr. Whelan.
“We didn’t have systematic data, but we heard from enough schools and programs ... that students who were maybe not the top-top ranked students in the class but in every way solid were receiving fewer interviews than previous years,” Dr. Whelan said. This is despite guidance that recommended programs add interview slots to serve as a counterbalance.
Some students say they accepted more interview slots in the beginning of the interview season, partly because they could, and partly because some thought of early interviews as “practice” for later interviews. However, as video interviews piled up, some of them described feeling “Zoom fatigue” and said they later canceled interviews with programs they didn’t anticipate joining.
More SOAP, less clarity
As for what comes next, the NRMP is preparing for a longer-than-normal Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program (SOAP) than in years past. SOAP usually offers three rounds of matches after the initial Match Day; Ms. Lamb said things are different this year.
“SOAP will be the same number of days, but we’ve added an additional round on Thursday afternoon,” she said. Will it be unnecessary or not enough? Nobody knows. “How big SOAP actually is going to be is one of the things that we really don’t have a sense of right now and probably aren’t going to have a sense of until the Match.”
Uncertainty is the name of the game. More than any other Match before, programs and applicants won’t know how results from this pandemic year stack up for a few months at the very least. “I really want to see what this looks like on the other side,” Dr. Smith said. “Are applicants happy with the way it looks when they come here? Do they feel like they matched with the right place?”
Whether this unprecedented year will be remembered more for positive changes moving forward, including more flexibility on remote interviews, or for less-informed decisions that result in dissatisfied participants is also unclear.
“I think after the Match is over, we’ll be talking to everyone to get more perspective on what people who are applying now would tell the next class, and how programs can adjust,” said Kathy Diemer, MD, assistant dean for career counseling at Washington University. At the very least, those who are involved in this year after year can start thinking about what the future should look like.
“We’re going to need to do some kind of debriefing after this is over, both program directors and our students as well, so we can determine how to move forward next year and beyond.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The final numbers won’t look much different, but the 2021 Match results will be unlike any before. As of mid-January, only 16 more institutions were confirmed to be participating in Match Day this year, resulting in about 800 more positions, said Donna Lamb, president and CEO of the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP). The Electronic Residency Application Service reported about 50,000 individual applicant submissions, a slight increase from prior years.
The stats may be similar, but the current residency application cycle may lead to wildly different results after the pandemic forced interviews to be conducted virtually and caused the cancellation of most away clinical rotations. Troy Amen, a fifth-year MD-MBA student at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and copresident of his student class, says the lack of on-campus, in-person experiences means students feel more in the dark than ever. The same is true for institutions. “The programs are also suffering because now they don’t know which students are a good ‘cultural fit’ for them,” he said.
Standing out has always been a concern for prospective residents, but Mr. Amen says fears are even higher this year. “[Institutions are] struggling to vet out 850 applicants, and they have no connection to us.”
Organizations have scrambled to keep the process as fair and informative as possible. “Everyone is trying to do the right thing here,” said Alison J. Whelan, MD, chief academic officer of the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC). She says that although the process has significantly changed, the heart of it remains the same. “The bottom line is directors really want to fill their intern class, and schools and students really want to match.”
Since the NRMP was established in 1952, it has never had to contend with a pandemic of this scale. The unprecedented circumstances have led to some much-feared and some unexpected changes, like top candidates “stealing” interview slots, “swag bags” sent to entice residents, beefed-up online profiles, as well as “Zoom fatigue,” a spike in home-field advantage for institutions, and massive anxiety for those students staking their future to a city they may have never seen in person.
What was lost and what was gained
“It’s really hard to get a real feel for the program when you’ve not been there in person,” said Christopher Smith, MD, director of the internal medicine residency program at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Dr. Smith recalled interviewing for residencies 25 years ago. His wife, a teacher, took time off to travel with him.
“She would ‘interview the town’ while I interviewed the program, and we compared notes at night,” he said. Because of COVID-19-related travel restrictions, just physically seeing the city in which they may live for years wasn’t an option for many. “I have a lot of sympathy for students applying right now,” Dr. Smith said.
For the residency class of 2021, the first shoe really dropped last March, when the AAMC issued guidance strongly recommending that programs pause clinical rotations away from their home schools. As established doctors know well, and as graduating medical students confirmed, these rotations are crucial to understanding a program’s culture and gaining experience that can boost candidacy. “I’m applying to orthopedic surgery, where away rotations are the gold standard for impressing attendees and residents at institutions away from home,” said Mr. Amen.
The pandemic completely cut off that key source of information to determine the right fit. It also meant applicants couldn’t have as diverse a portfolio of recommendation letters, something many worry may be detrimental to their soon-to-be-released Match rankings.
Unlike the loss of away rotations, the forced shift from in-person to virtual interviews had some meaningful benefits. Students no longer incurred expenses for airline flights, hotel rooms, and rental cars. Many organizations and programs have been trying for years to figure out how to lower the financial burden of interviews to make the process more equitable for those at economic or other disadvantage.
“The equity piece of this is huge – decreasing barriers and leveling the field a little bit is a really huge advantage,” said Kate Shaw, MD, residency program director and associate chair of education for the obstetrics and gynecology program at Stanford (Calif.) University. In some ways, this latest change is an extension of a strategy Dr. Shaw and others had already begun implementing.
“Over the last 5 to 10 years, we’ve been working to address the implicit bias in the application process, so we’ve gone to a holistic review of applicants, where we don’t have score cutoffs. We look at the whole person,” she said. “And we did that in an effort to increase diversity and equity.” Dr. Shaw and others hope that the accidental positive changes from COVID restrictions may be intentionally preserved long after the pandemic ends.
Home-field advantage vs. swag bags
Many medical students applying to residencies this year say they have given greater weight to their home programs than they might have without the pandemic. “I didn’t get a sense of anyone’s culture other than my home institution,” said Alex Skidmore, a fourth-year medical student at Washington University in St. Louis. “I definitely am ranking Wash-U higher.”
The desire to emphasize the known quality of a student’s home institution isn’t surprising to program directors. Dr. Shaw said she thinks this year’s Match could well end with a higher percentage of students matching either in their home programs or in programs close to loved ones. “The value of being close to family has come up in our conversations, where students are considering the right program for them but also the other life factors,” she said.
To overcome this home-field advantage, many programs have beefed up their websites, including providing video tours of their facilities. They also “upped their social media game” and encouraged residents to create online groups for prospective residents to share information about programs and life outside of work. Some residents even offered video tours of their personal apartments to applicants.
Without in-person access to facilities and staff, a program’s online presence became a deciding factor, applicants said. “If you have a bad website, it’s like having a dirty building to interview applicants in,” Mr. Skidmore said. For many prospective residents, an institution’s Internet presence was a “make or break” factor. “It’s the only thing I saw for many programs, and when we are doing the amount of research we are doing remotely, when I saw a program with a bad website, it made me not like the program as much,” he said.
Some programs, hoping to woo candidates as well as to provide them with more insight into what they and their cities have to offer, sent “swag bags” to candidates. These included things like gift cards for food delivery and offerings from local businesses. Washington University’s pediatrics residency program sent gooey butter cakes – a St. Louis staple – along with other treats from small businesses and copies of magazines that showcased the city’s dining and entertainment scene.
Other programs, even those at the same medical institution, felt quite strongly that those types of packages shouldn’t be sent. “We interviewed almost 500 applicants, so there was no way we could have afforded that,” said Dominique Cosco, MD, director of Washington University’s internal medicine residency program. “Our normal recruitment budget is almost $100,000 in a normal year, and that got cut because of COVID. For us, it was thinking about allocations of resources.”
Interview slot theft and zoom fatigue
Remote interviewing also meant that applicants could accept more interviews, something that raised a big concern. Without expenses or travel time, would top-tier candidates take more interviews than normal and thus take limited interview spots from other qualified candidates? Maybe so, says the AAMC’s Dr. Whelan.
“We didn’t have systematic data, but we heard from enough schools and programs ... that students who were maybe not the top-top ranked students in the class but in every way solid were receiving fewer interviews than previous years,” Dr. Whelan said. This is despite guidance that recommended programs add interview slots to serve as a counterbalance.
Some students say they accepted more interview slots in the beginning of the interview season, partly because they could, and partly because some thought of early interviews as “practice” for later interviews. However, as video interviews piled up, some of them described feeling “Zoom fatigue” and said they later canceled interviews with programs they didn’t anticipate joining.
More SOAP, less clarity
As for what comes next, the NRMP is preparing for a longer-than-normal Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program (SOAP) than in years past. SOAP usually offers three rounds of matches after the initial Match Day; Ms. Lamb said things are different this year.
“SOAP will be the same number of days, but we’ve added an additional round on Thursday afternoon,” she said. Will it be unnecessary or not enough? Nobody knows. “How big SOAP actually is going to be is one of the things that we really don’t have a sense of right now and probably aren’t going to have a sense of until the Match.”
Uncertainty is the name of the game. More than any other Match before, programs and applicants won’t know how results from this pandemic year stack up for a few months at the very least. “I really want to see what this looks like on the other side,” Dr. Smith said. “Are applicants happy with the way it looks when they come here? Do they feel like they matched with the right place?”
Whether this unprecedented year will be remembered more for positive changes moving forward, including more flexibility on remote interviews, or for less-informed decisions that result in dissatisfied participants is also unclear.
“I think after the Match is over, we’ll be talking to everyone to get more perspective on what people who are applying now would tell the next class, and how programs can adjust,” said Kathy Diemer, MD, assistant dean for career counseling at Washington University. At the very least, those who are involved in this year after year can start thinking about what the future should look like.
“We’re going to need to do some kind of debriefing after this is over, both program directors and our students as well, so we can determine how to move forward next year and beyond.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Afternoon napping was associated with better cognition in an older Chinese population, according to a new study in General Psychiatry.
The findings add to those seen in other observational studies showing afternoon napping promotes cognitive function, said the authors of the paper, published in General Psychiatry.
“The prevalence of afternoon napping has been increasing in older adults much more than in younger individuals,” wrote Han Cai, MS, of the department of geriatrics at The Fourth People’s Hospital of Wuhu, Anhui, China, and coauthors. “The elderly individuals who took afternoon naps showed significantly higher cognitive performance compared with those who did not nap.”
The researchers enrolled 2,214 people in the study – all Han Chinese and aged 60 or older. Afternoon napping was considered any period of inactivity of at least 5 minutes but less than 2 hours after lunch and outside of the person’s main sleep schedule. Those who reported ever napping – 1,534 subjects – were included in the napping group, and the others – 680 – in the nonnapping group. Patients with major physical conditions were excluded.
The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), and the Neuropsychological Test Battery (NTB) were used to measure cognitive function, and 739 patients agreed to blood tests for lipid values.
The average total MMSE score was higher for the napping group at 25.3 points out of 30, than for the nonnapping group, at 24.56 (P = .003). Those in the napping group also had significantly higher scores in the orientation portion of the MoCA test, at 5.55 out of 6 points, compared with 5.41 for the nonnapping group (P = .006).
Those in the napping group scored significantly higher on the digit span and language fluency parts of the Neuropsychological Test Battery (P = .009 and .020, respectively).
Dementia was assessed with face-to-face visits with clinicians, but diagnoses of dementia were not different between the groups.
Triglycerides were found to be higher – though still in the normal range – in the napping group compared with the nonnapping group, 1.80 mmol/L to 1.75 mmol/L, the researchers found (P = .001). No differences were seen for HDL or LDL cholesterol levels, or in hypertension or diabetes, the researchers reported.
The authors noted that inflammation is likely an important feature in the relationship between napping and cognitive function. Inflammatory cytokines have been found to play a role in sleep disorders, and strong inflammatory responses can lead to adverse events, including cognitive impairment.
“Sleep is known to be a regulator of the immune response that counters these inflammatory mediators, whereas napping, in particular, is thought to be an evolved response to inflammation,” they said.
The average age of patients in the napping group was 72.8 years, slightly older than those in the nonnapping group at 71.3 years, and this was a significant difference (P = .016).
The researchers acknowledged that the study “could not show direct causality of napping, whether beneficial or harmful,” and that “a lack of detailed information regarding napping duration ... also limited the description of napping status.”
Junxin Li, PhD, RN, assistant professor at Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Baltimore, who has studied napping and cognition, said that previous research generally supports a U-shaped relationship between napping and mental acuity, with shorter or medium-length naps benefiting cognition and no naps or naps that are too long being detrimental.
Dr. Junxin Li
“This study looked at no nap versus naps of less than 2 hours and may not be able to capture this potential U-shaped association,” she said.
For clinicians, the duration, timing, frequency, and purpose of naps are important factors in making recommendations to patients, she said.
“For example, timing – napping in the early evening close to older adult’s bedtime may delay their bedtime and interfere with their nighttime sleep quality. Taking naps after lunchtime is hypothesized to provide the most therapeutic values to the health and usually recommended,” she said. Regular napping is better than “randomly dozing off,” Dr. Li added.
There are also cultural considerations – in east Asia, napping tends to be considered part of a healthy lifestyle, while in western countries it is not – and this could impact napping behaviors and how these behaviors affect cognition, she said.
Phyllis C. Zee, MD, PhD, director of the Center for Circadian and Sleep Medicine at the Northwestern University, Chicago, said the results are consistent with early cross-sectional studies that showed that regular, scheduled naps in the afternoon were associated with positive cognitive performance and lower cardiometabolic disease risk.
Dr. Phyllis C. Zee
Dr. Zee noted that it’s important to recognize that the positive data are associated with naps that are planned, while older adults napping because of excess sleepiness are at a higher risk for cognitive impairment and other health issues.
The study authors, Dr. Li, and Dr. Zee reported no relevant financial disclosures.
Afternoon napping was associated with better cognition in an older Chinese population, according to a new study in General Psychiatry.
The findings add to those seen in other observational studies showing afternoon napping promotes cognitive function, said the authors of the paper, published in General Psychiatry.
“The prevalence of afternoon napping has been increasing in older adults much more than in younger individuals,” wrote Han Cai, MS, of the department of geriatrics at The Fourth People’s Hospital of Wuhu, Anhui, China, and coauthors. “The elderly individuals who took afternoon naps showed significantly higher cognitive performance compared with those who did not nap.”
The researchers enrolled 2,214 people in the study – all Han Chinese and aged 60 or older. Afternoon napping was considered any period of inactivity of at least 5 minutes but less than 2 hours after lunch and outside of the person’s main sleep schedule. Those who reported ever napping – 1,534 subjects – were included in the napping group, and the others – 680 – in the nonnapping group. Patients with major physical conditions were excluded.
The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), and the Neuropsychological Test Battery (NTB) were used to measure cognitive function, and 739 patients agreed to blood tests for lipid values.
The average total MMSE score was higher for the napping group at 25.3 points out of 30, than for the nonnapping group, at 24.56 (P = .003). Those in the napping group also had significantly higher scores in the orientation portion of the MoCA test, at 5.55 out of 6 points, compared with 5.41 for the nonnapping group (P = .006).
Those in the napping group scored significantly higher on the digit span and language fluency parts of the Neuropsychological Test Battery (P = .009 and .020, respectively).
Dementia was assessed with face-to-face visits with clinicians, but diagnoses of dementia were not different between the groups.
Triglycerides were found to be higher – though still in the normal range – in the napping group compared with the nonnapping group, 1.80 mmol/L to 1.75 mmol/L, the researchers found (P = .001). No differences were seen for HDL or LDL cholesterol levels, or in hypertension or diabetes, the researchers reported.
The authors noted that inflammation is likely an important feature in the relationship between napping and cognitive function. Inflammatory cytokines have been found to play a role in sleep disorders, and strong inflammatory responses can lead to adverse events, including cognitive impairment.
“Sleep is known to be a regulator of the immune response that counters these inflammatory mediators, whereas napping, in particular, is thought to be an evolved response to inflammation,” they said.
The average age of patients in the napping group was 72.8 years, slightly older than those in the nonnapping group at 71.3 years, and this was a significant difference (P = .016).
The researchers acknowledged that the study “could not show direct causality of napping, whether beneficial or harmful,” and that “a lack of detailed information regarding napping duration ... also limited the description of napping status.”
Junxin Li, PhD, RN, assistant professor at Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Baltimore, who has studied napping and cognition, said that previous research generally supports a U-shaped relationship between napping and mental acuity, with shorter or medium-length naps benefiting cognition and no naps or naps that are too long being detrimental.
Dr. Junxin Li
“This study looked at no nap versus naps of less than 2 hours and may not be able to capture this potential U-shaped association,” she said.
For clinicians, the duration, timing, frequency, and purpose of naps are important factors in making recommendations to patients, she said.
“For example, timing – napping in the early evening close to older adult’s bedtime may delay their bedtime and interfere with their nighttime sleep quality. Taking naps after lunchtime is hypothesized to provide the most therapeutic values to the health and usually recommended,” she said. Regular napping is better than “randomly dozing off,” Dr. Li added.
There are also cultural considerations – in east Asia, napping tends to be considered part of a healthy lifestyle, while in western countries it is not – and this could impact napping behaviors and how these behaviors affect cognition, she said.
Phyllis C. Zee, MD, PhD, director of the Center for Circadian and Sleep Medicine at the Northwestern University, Chicago, said the results are consistent with early cross-sectional studies that showed that regular, scheduled naps in the afternoon were associated with positive cognitive performance and lower cardiometabolic disease risk.
Dr. Phyllis C. Zee
Dr. Zee noted that it’s important to recognize that the positive data are associated with naps that are planned, while older adults napping because of excess sleepiness are at a higher risk for cognitive impairment and other health issues.
The study authors, Dr. Li, and Dr. Zee reported no relevant financial disclosures.
Afternoon napping was associated with better cognition in an older Chinese population, according to a new study in General Psychiatry.
The findings add to those seen in other observational studies showing afternoon napping promotes cognitive function, said the authors of the paper, published in General Psychiatry.
“The prevalence of afternoon napping has been increasing in older adults much more than in younger individuals,” wrote Han Cai, MS, of the department of geriatrics at The Fourth People’s Hospital of Wuhu, Anhui, China, and coauthors. “The elderly individuals who took afternoon naps showed significantly higher cognitive performance compared with those who did not nap.”
The researchers enrolled 2,214 people in the study – all Han Chinese and aged 60 or older. Afternoon napping was considered any period of inactivity of at least 5 minutes but less than 2 hours after lunch and outside of the person’s main sleep schedule. Those who reported ever napping – 1,534 subjects – were included in the napping group, and the others – 680 – in the nonnapping group. Patients with major physical conditions were excluded.
The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), and the Neuropsychological Test Battery (NTB) were used to measure cognitive function, and 739 patients agreed to blood tests for lipid values.
The average total MMSE score was higher for the napping group at 25.3 points out of 30, than for the nonnapping group, at 24.56 (P = .003). Those in the napping group also had significantly higher scores in the orientation portion of the MoCA test, at 5.55 out of 6 points, compared with 5.41 for the nonnapping group (P = .006).
Those in the napping group scored significantly higher on the digit span and language fluency parts of the Neuropsychological Test Battery (P = .009 and .020, respectively).
Dementia was assessed with face-to-face visits with clinicians, but diagnoses of dementia were not different between the groups.
Triglycerides were found to be higher – though still in the normal range – in the napping group compared with the nonnapping group, 1.80 mmol/L to 1.75 mmol/L, the researchers found (P = .001). No differences were seen for HDL or LDL cholesterol levels, or in hypertension or diabetes, the researchers reported.
The authors noted that inflammation is likely an important feature in the relationship between napping and cognitive function. Inflammatory cytokines have been found to play a role in sleep disorders, and strong inflammatory responses can lead to adverse events, including cognitive impairment.
“Sleep is known to be a regulator of the immune response that counters these inflammatory mediators, whereas napping, in particular, is thought to be an evolved response to inflammation,” they said.
The average age of patients in the napping group was 72.8 years, slightly older than those in the nonnapping group at 71.3 years, and this was a significant difference (P = .016).
The researchers acknowledged that the study “could not show direct causality of napping, whether beneficial or harmful,” and that “a lack of detailed information regarding napping duration ... also limited the description of napping status.”
Junxin Li, PhD, RN, assistant professor at Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Baltimore, who has studied napping and cognition, said that previous research generally supports a U-shaped relationship between napping and mental acuity, with shorter or medium-length naps benefiting cognition and no naps or naps that are too long being detrimental.
Dr. Junxin Li
“This study looked at no nap versus naps of less than 2 hours and may not be able to capture this potential U-shaped association,” she said.
For clinicians, the duration, timing, frequency, and purpose of naps are important factors in making recommendations to patients, she said.
“For example, timing – napping in the early evening close to older adult’s bedtime may delay their bedtime and interfere with their nighttime sleep quality. Taking naps after lunchtime is hypothesized to provide the most therapeutic values to the health and usually recommended,” she said. Regular napping is better than “randomly dozing off,” Dr. Li added.
There are also cultural considerations – in east Asia, napping tends to be considered part of a healthy lifestyle, while in western countries it is not – and this could impact napping behaviors and how these behaviors affect cognition, she said.
Phyllis C. Zee, MD, PhD, director of the Center for Circadian and Sleep Medicine at the Northwestern University, Chicago, said the results are consistent with early cross-sectional studies that showed that regular, scheduled naps in the afternoon were associated with positive cognitive performance and lower cardiometabolic disease risk.
Dr. Phyllis C. Zee
Dr. Zee noted that it’s important to recognize that the positive data are associated with naps that are planned, while older adults napping because of excess sleepiness are at a higher risk for cognitive impairment and other health issues.
The study authors, Dr. Li, and Dr. Zee reported no relevant financial disclosures.
Areas with active cannabis dispensaries have seen a decrease in opioid-related mortalities, recent research has shown.
Dr. Greta Hsu
“Our findings suggest that higher storefront cannabis dispensary counts are associated with reduced opioid related mortality rates at the county level,” wrote Greta Hsu, PhD, professor of management, University of California, Davis, and Balázs Kovács, PhD, associate professor of organizational behavior, Yale University, New Haven, Conn. “This association holds for both medical and recreational dispensaries, and appears particularly strong for deaths associated with synthetic (nonmethadone) opioids, which include the highly potent synthetic opioid fentanyl and its analogs.”
Dr. Balázs Kovács
In the study, published in BMJ, the researchers evaluated the prevalence of medical and recreational cannabis dispensaries in 812 U.S. counties within 23 states with some degree of cannabis legalization between 2014 and 2018. Overall, dispensaries located in counties in eight U.S. states and the District of Columbia that sold cannabis recreationally and an additional 15 states that contained medical cannabis dispensaries were included.
Dr. Hsu and Dr. Kovács performed their analysis by examining dispensaries that were operating storefronts by the end of 2017 at the county level using panel-regression methods, combining data obtained from the consumer-facing website Weedmaps.com, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention U.S. mortality data, and data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
To measure opioid-related mortality, the researchers measured ICD-10 codes specific to natural opioid analgesics and semisynthetic opioids, methadone, heroin, nonmethadone synthetic opioid analgesics, and fentanyl-related deaths.
The analysis showed a negative association between the number of cannabis dispensaries at the county level and overall opioid-related mortality rates (95% confidence interval, −0.23 to −0.11), with an increase from one to two dispensaries in a county resulting in a 17% decrease in opioid-related mortality rates and an increase from two to three dispensaries resulting in another decrease in opioid-related mortality of 8.5%.
When evaluating mortality by specific opioid type, the researchers found a negative association between the number of dispensaries and synthetic nonmethadone opioids, with an increase from one to two dispensaries resulting in a 21% decrease in mortality attributable to synthetic nonmethadone opioids (95% CI, −0.27 to −0.14; P = .002). There were also negative associations between the number of dispensaries and prescription opioid-related mortality rates (95% CI, −0.13 to −0.03) and heroin-related mortality rates (95% CI, −0.13 to −0.02). The negative association was similar in comparisons between synthetic nonmethadone opioid-related mortality and the number of dispensaries for medical cannabis (95% CI, −0.21 to −0.09; P = .002) and recreational cannabis (95% CI, −0.17 to −0.04; P = .01).
Evidence of a negative association between legalization of medical or recreational cannabis and opioid-related mortality has been mixed in the literature, with some studies also showing a “spurious or nonsignificant” association, according to Dr. Hsu and Dr. Kovács.
While previous studies have looked at the legalization of cannabis for medical or recreational use, legalization on its own is an “incomplete picture,” they said, which might offer one explanation for these mixed findings. Some states that legalize medical cannabis, for example, might not allow dispensaries to legally sell cannabis, and there may be a delay of 1-2 years between the time a state legalizes cannabis for recreational use and when dispensaries are open and available to the public.
“These results were obtained after controlling for county level population characteristics, yearly effects, whether recreational dispensaries were legal or not in the focal county’s state, and opioid-related state policies,” the authors wrote.
Results ‘may be even stronger’ than reported
Christopher G. Fichtner, MD, clinical professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at the University of California, Riverside, said in an interview that the evidence for using cannabis as an opioid substitution for pain management has not been balanced, but noted “the bulk of it suggests that there is some harm reduction benefit by having liberalized access to cannabis.”
Courtesy Dr. Christopher Fichtner
Dr. Christopher Fichtner
One strength of the study by Dr. Hsu and Dr. Kovács was how they were able to examine implementation of legalization of medical or recreational cannabis, rather than simply a change in the law, he said.
“By looking at dispensary count, it’s actually looking at a better measure of on-the-ground implementation than just change in policy,” Dr. Fichtner explained. “You’re looking at what was actually accomplished in terms of making cannabis legally available.”
The choice to evaluate storefront dispensaries only and not include delivery services in their data, “probably makes it a relatively conservative estimate. I think that would be a strength, that their findings may be even stronger than what it is they’re reporting,” Dr. Fichtner said.
“I do think, if anything, the paper is relatively tentative about advancing its conclusions, which I think is a weakness in a lot of these studies,” he added. In 2017, the National Academy of Sciences released a report that found evidence cannabis or cannabinoids can significantly reduce pain symptoms. In that report, “one of their strongest conclusions is that there’s conclusive or substantial evidence that cannabis or cannabinoids are effective management of chronic pain,” Dr. Fichtner said.
He said that digging deeper into what kinds of pain cannabis can treat is one area for future research. “Certainly, it seems that it’s unlikely that cannabis is going to be good for every kind of pain,” he said. “What kinds of pain is it better for than others? Is it some benefit for many kinds of pain, or only a few types of pain?”
The authors reported no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Fichtner is the author of a book on cannabis policy in the United States, but reported no other financial disclosures.
Areas with active cannabis dispensaries have seen a decrease in opioid-related mortalities, recent research has shown.
Dr. Greta Hsu
“Our findings suggest that higher storefront cannabis dispensary counts are associated with reduced opioid related mortality rates at the county level,” wrote Greta Hsu, PhD, professor of management, University of California, Davis, and Balázs Kovács, PhD, associate professor of organizational behavior, Yale University, New Haven, Conn. “This association holds for both medical and recreational dispensaries, and appears particularly strong for deaths associated with synthetic (nonmethadone) opioids, which include the highly potent synthetic opioid fentanyl and its analogs.”
Dr. Balázs Kovács
In the study, published in BMJ, the researchers evaluated the prevalence of medical and recreational cannabis dispensaries in 812 U.S. counties within 23 states with some degree of cannabis legalization between 2014 and 2018. Overall, dispensaries located in counties in eight U.S. states and the District of Columbia that sold cannabis recreationally and an additional 15 states that contained medical cannabis dispensaries were included.
Dr. Hsu and Dr. Kovács performed their analysis by examining dispensaries that were operating storefronts by the end of 2017 at the county level using panel-regression methods, combining data obtained from the consumer-facing website Weedmaps.com, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention U.S. mortality data, and data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
To measure opioid-related mortality, the researchers measured ICD-10 codes specific to natural opioid analgesics and semisynthetic opioids, methadone, heroin, nonmethadone synthetic opioid analgesics, and fentanyl-related deaths.
The analysis showed a negative association between the number of cannabis dispensaries at the county level and overall opioid-related mortality rates (95% confidence interval, −0.23 to −0.11), with an increase from one to two dispensaries in a county resulting in a 17% decrease in opioid-related mortality rates and an increase from two to three dispensaries resulting in another decrease in opioid-related mortality of 8.5%.
When evaluating mortality by specific opioid type, the researchers found a negative association between the number of dispensaries and synthetic nonmethadone opioids, with an increase from one to two dispensaries resulting in a 21% decrease in mortality attributable to synthetic nonmethadone opioids (95% CI, −0.27 to −0.14; P = .002). There were also negative associations between the number of dispensaries and prescription opioid-related mortality rates (95% CI, −0.13 to −0.03) and heroin-related mortality rates (95% CI, −0.13 to −0.02). The negative association was similar in comparisons between synthetic nonmethadone opioid-related mortality and the number of dispensaries for medical cannabis (95% CI, −0.21 to −0.09; P = .002) and recreational cannabis (95% CI, −0.17 to −0.04; P = .01).
Evidence of a negative association between legalization of medical or recreational cannabis and opioid-related mortality has been mixed in the literature, with some studies also showing a “spurious or nonsignificant” association, according to Dr. Hsu and Dr. Kovács.
While previous studies have looked at the legalization of cannabis for medical or recreational use, legalization on its own is an “incomplete picture,” they said, which might offer one explanation for these mixed findings. Some states that legalize medical cannabis, for example, might not allow dispensaries to legally sell cannabis, and there may be a delay of 1-2 years between the time a state legalizes cannabis for recreational use and when dispensaries are open and available to the public.
“These results were obtained after controlling for county level population characteristics, yearly effects, whether recreational dispensaries were legal or not in the focal county’s state, and opioid-related state policies,” the authors wrote.
Results ‘may be even stronger’ than reported
Christopher G. Fichtner, MD, clinical professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at the University of California, Riverside, said in an interview that the evidence for using cannabis as an opioid substitution for pain management has not been balanced, but noted “the bulk of it suggests that there is some harm reduction benefit by having liberalized access to cannabis.”
Courtesy Dr. Christopher Fichtner
Dr. Christopher Fichtner
One strength of the study by Dr. Hsu and Dr. Kovács was how they were able to examine implementation of legalization of medical or recreational cannabis, rather than simply a change in the law, he said.
“By looking at dispensary count, it’s actually looking at a better measure of on-the-ground implementation than just change in policy,” Dr. Fichtner explained. “You’re looking at what was actually accomplished in terms of making cannabis legally available.”
The choice to evaluate storefront dispensaries only and not include delivery services in their data, “probably makes it a relatively conservative estimate. I think that would be a strength, that their findings may be even stronger than what it is they’re reporting,” Dr. Fichtner said.
“I do think, if anything, the paper is relatively tentative about advancing its conclusions, which I think is a weakness in a lot of these studies,” he added. In 2017, the National Academy of Sciences released a report that found evidence cannabis or cannabinoids can significantly reduce pain symptoms. In that report, “one of their strongest conclusions is that there’s conclusive or substantial evidence that cannabis or cannabinoids are effective management of chronic pain,” Dr. Fichtner said.
He said that digging deeper into what kinds of pain cannabis can treat is one area for future research. “Certainly, it seems that it’s unlikely that cannabis is going to be good for every kind of pain,” he said. “What kinds of pain is it better for than others? Is it some benefit for many kinds of pain, or only a few types of pain?”
The authors reported no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Fichtner is the author of a book on cannabis policy in the United States, but reported no other financial disclosures.
Areas with active cannabis dispensaries have seen a decrease in opioid-related mortalities, recent research has shown.
Dr. Greta Hsu
“Our findings suggest that higher storefront cannabis dispensary counts are associated with reduced opioid related mortality rates at the county level,” wrote Greta Hsu, PhD, professor of management, University of California, Davis, and Balázs Kovács, PhD, associate professor of organizational behavior, Yale University, New Haven, Conn. “This association holds for both medical and recreational dispensaries, and appears particularly strong for deaths associated with synthetic (nonmethadone) opioids, which include the highly potent synthetic opioid fentanyl and its analogs.”
Dr. Balázs Kovács
In the study, published in BMJ, the researchers evaluated the prevalence of medical and recreational cannabis dispensaries in 812 U.S. counties within 23 states with some degree of cannabis legalization between 2014 and 2018. Overall, dispensaries located in counties in eight U.S. states and the District of Columbia that sold cannabis recreationally and an additional 15 states that contained medical cannabis dispensaries were included.
Dr. Hsu and Dr. Kovács performed their analysis by examining dispensaries that were operating storefronts by the end of 2017 at the county level using panel-regression methods, combining data obtained from the consumer-facing website Weedmaps.com, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention U.S. mortality data, and data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
To measure opioid-related mortality, the researchers measured ICD-10 codes specific to natural opioid analgesics and semisynthetic opioids, methadone, heroin, nonmethadone synthetic opioid analgesics, and fentanyl-related deaths.
The analysis showed a negative association between the number of cannabis dispensaries at the county level and overall opioid-related mortality rates (95% confidence interval, −0.23 to −0.11), with an increase from one to two dispensaries in a county resulting in a 17% decrease in opioid-related mortality rates and an increase from two to three dispensaries resulting in another decrease in opioid-related mortality of 8.5%.
When evaluating mortality by specific opioid type, the researchers found a negative association between the number of dispensaries and synthetic nonmethadone opioids, with an increase from one to two dispensaries resulting in a 21% decrease in mortality attributable to synthetic nonmethadone opioids (95% CI, −0.27 to −0.14; P = .002). There were also negative associations between the number of dispensaries and prescription opioid-related mortality rates (95% CI, −0.13 to −0.03) and heroin-related mortality rates (95% CI, −0.13 to −0.02). The negative association was similar in comparisons between synthetic nonmethadone opioid-related mortality and the number of dispensaries for medical cannabis (95% CI, −0.21 to −0.09; P = .002) and recreational cannabis (95% CI, −0.17 to −0.04; P = .01).
Evidence of a negative association between legalization of medical or recreational cannabis and opioid-related mortality has been mixed in the literature, with some studies also showing a “spurious or nonsignificant” association, according to Dr. Hsu and Dr. Kovács.
While previous studies have looked at the legalization of cannabis for medical or recreational use, legalization on its own is an “incomplete picture,” they said, which might offer one explanation for these mixed findings. Some states that legalize medical cannabis, for example, might not allow dispensaries to legally sell cannabis, and there may be a delay of 1-2 years between the time a state legalizes cannabis for recreational use and when dispensaries are open and available to the public.
“These results were obtained after controlling for county level population characteristics, yearly effects, whether recreational dispensaries were legal or not in the focal county’s state, and opioid-related state policies,” the authors wrote.
Results ‘may be even stronger’ than reported
Christopher G. Fichtner, MD, clinical professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at the University of California, Riverside, said in an interview that the evidence for using cannabis as an opioid substitution for pain management has not been balanced, but noted “the bulk of it suggests that there is some harm reduction benefit by having liberalized access to cannabis.”
Courtesy Dr. Christopher Fichtner
Dr. Christopher Fichtner
One strength of the study by Dr. Hsu and Dr. Kovács was how they were able to examine implementation of legalization of medical or recreational cannabis, rather than simply a change in the law, he said.
“By looking at dispensary count, it’s actually looking at a better measure of on-the-ground implementation than just change in policy,” Dr. Fichtner explained. “You’re looking at what was actually accomplished in terms of making cannabis legally available.”
The choice to evaluate storefront dispensaries only and not include delivery services in their data, “probably makes it a relatively conservative estimate. I think that would be a strength, that their findings may be even stronger than what it is they’re reporting,” Dr. Fichtner said.
“I do think, if anything, the paper is relatively tentative about advancing its conclusions, which I think is a weakness in a lot of these studies,” he added. In 2017, the National Academy of Sciences released a report that found evidence cannabis or cannabinoids can significantly reduce pain symptoms. In that report, “one of their strongest conclusions is that there’s conclusive or substantial evidence that cannabis or cannabinoids are effective management of chronic pain,” Dr. Fichtner said.
He said that digging deeper into what kinds of pain cannabis can treat is one area for future research. “Certainly, it seems that it’s unlikely that cannabis is going to be good for every kind of pain,” he said. “What kinds of pain is it better for than others? Is it some benefit for many kinds of pain, or only a few types of pain?”
The authors reported no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Fichtner is the author of a book on cannabis policy in the United States, but reported no other financial disclosures.
The Biden administration has halted a Trump administration initiative that would have allowed more physicians to prescribe buprenorphine for opioid use disorder (OUD).
Under the Trump administration’s plan, many doctors would be exempt from taking a day’s training before they could prescribe buprenorphine for OUD.
On Jan. 25, 2021, citing anonymous sources, the Washington Post reported that this action by the Biden administration was likely. At the time, there were concerns about whether the Department of Health & Human Services had the legal authority to make this policy change, the Post reported. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration subsequently announced the derailment of the buprenorphine proposal on its website.
The plan was unveiled Jan. 14 in the final days of the Trump administration. In SAMHSA’s view, the proposal was made “prematurely.” The SAMHSA statement did not detail the reasons for abandoning the Jan. 14 proposal. It had been scheduled to take effect upon publication in the Federal Register.
Instead of finalizing it in this way, the HHS said it would work with other federal agencies to “increase access to buprenorphine, reduce overdose rates and save lives.”
The HHS decision to scupper the proposal disappointed many physician groups. In a letter dated Jan. 27, several physician groups called on the Biden administration to proceed with the Trump proposal.
Under current federal law, physicians who wish to prescribe buprenorphine outside of opioid treatment programs must take an 8-hour course and receive a waiver from the Drug Enforcement Administration, the letter noted. It was signed by the American College of Emergency Physicians, the American Medical Association, and other organizations.
Treatment barrier
After taking the training course, it can take 60-90 days for physicians to receive the waiver. The license application can then be submitted. Physician groups argue that this so-called X-waiver requirement creates a barrier to providing medication-assisted treatment.
“Due to the stigma, some clinicians are not willing to pursue this DEA license or even engage in treatment of patients with [OUD],” the letter said.
The Trump administration’s proposal would have limited most physicians to treating no more than 30 patients with buprenorphine for OUD at any one time. This cap would not have applied to hospital-based physicians, such as those practicing emergency medicine, the HHS noted in a statement. The policy would have applied to only physicians who already have registered with the DEA.
Patrice A. Harris, MD, the immediate past president of the AMA and chair of the organization’s Opioid Task Force, was among the many physicians who supported the Trump administration proposal.
“It is estimated that more than 2 million Americans need treatment for opioid use disorder, but only a small percentage actually receive treatment,” Dr. Harris said in statement. Dr. Harris also noted that overdose deaths have reportedly accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data show there were more than 83,000 drug overdose deaths in the United States in the 12 months ending in June 2020. That is the highest number of overdose deaths ever recorded in a 12-month period and is an increase of more than 21%, compared with the previous year.
A ‘disappointment’
On Jan. 28, Dr. Harris said the decision to drop the plan was a disappointment.
“We encourage the current administration to quickly develop a path forward that removes the burdensome waiver requirement, thus allowing more physicians to prescribe this lifesaving medication,” she said in a statement sent to this news organization.
In a Jan. 26 statement, the American Society of Addiction Medicine urged Congress to eliminate the X-waiver and called for more education and training in the treatment of patients who struggle with opioids.
In the 116th session of Congress, which ended on Jan. 3, there was bipartisan support for proposed legislation to ease requirements for buprenorphine prescribing. A House bill had more than 90 Democratic and 21 Republican sponsors. A companion Senate bill had three Democratic and three Republican Sponsors, including Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.). On Jan. 25, Dr. Hassan tweeted that she would be seeking an explanation from the Biden administration if it halted the plan to ease the waiver restriction.
“Medication-assisted treatment can save lives, and the buprenorphine waiver requirement should be eliminated so that physicians can more easily prescribe it to those who need it,” she said.
Many clinicians and policy experts turned to Twitter to urge an easing of buprenorphine prescribing, using the hashtag “Xthexwaiver.”
Among them was the official who put forward the Jan. 14 proposal, Brett Giroir, MD. He served as assistant secretary for health during the Trump administration.
Objections
In its Jan. 25 article, the Washington Post referred to an article in Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Weekly in which a top federal official in the Trump administration objected to Dr. Giroir’s plan.
Elinore F. McCance-Katz, MD, PhD, who served as the assistant secretary of HHS for SAMHSA, had earlier proposed raising the cap for addiction experts. Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Weekly quotes Dr. McCance-Katz as saying the Trump buprenorphine proposal was “unfair to the incoming administration.”
“The Biden administration has so much work to do to get their programs and policies into place, and to do something like this at the 11th hour that could get doctors into trouble – it’s heinous,” she said in the article.
Dr. McCance-Katz had resigned before the Trump administration proposal was unveiled. On Jan. 7, she issued a public notice announcing she would resign, citing concerns about the previous day’s attack on the U.S. Capitol.
“It had been my plan to stay until the change in administration occurred, but my plans abruptly changed last evening when, on my way back from visiting an excellent residential treatment program in New York, I saw the violent takeover of the Capitol building,” she said.
On Twitter, Roland Flores, MD, an anesthesiologist and pain specialist, urged his colleagues to consider the need for more education among clinicians who treat OUD. He jousted a bit with those favoring a swift drive to “XtheXwaiver” and questioned their arguments about the burden of the current rules.
“I think ‘all this red tape’ is a little bit of an exaggeration – it’s an 8-hour online course, and an application,” Dr. Flores tweeted in one exchange. “But #XtheXwaiver is fine – it’s probably rooted in stigma. It’s unlikely to make much difference tho. The waiver wasn’t the thing keeping docs from prescribing.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Biden administration has halted a Trump administration initiative that would have allowed more physicians to prescribe buprenorphine for opioid use disorder (OUD).
Under the Trump administration’s plan, many doctors would be exempt from taking a day’s training before they could prescribe buprenorphine for OUD.
On Jan. 25, 2021, citing anonymous sources, the Washington Post reported that this action by the Biden administration was likely. At the time, there were concerns about whether the Department of Health & Human Services had the legal authority to make this policy change, the Post reported. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration subsequently announced the derailment of the buprenorphine proposal on its website.
The plan was unveiled Jan. 14 in the final days of the Trump administration. In SAMHSA’s view, the proposal was made “prematurely.” The SAMHSA statement did not detail the reasons for abandoning the Jan. 14 proposal. It had been scheduled to take effect upon publication in the Federal Register.
Instead of finalizing it in this way, the HHS said it would work with other federal agencies to “increase access to buprenorphine, reduce overdose rates and save lives.”
The HHS decision to scupper the proposal disappointed many physician groups. In a letter dated Jan. 27, several physician groups called on the Biden administration to proceed with the Trump proposal.
Under current federal law, physicians who wish to prescribe buprenorphine outside of opioid treatment programs must take an 8-hour course and receive a waiver from the Drug Enforcement Administration, the letter noted. It was signed by the American College of Emergency Physicians, the American Medical Association, and other organizations.
Treatment barrier
After taking the training course, it can take 60-90 days for physicians to receive the waiver. The license application can then be submitted. Physician groups argue that this so-called X-waiver requirement creates a barrier to providing medication-assisted treatment.
“Due to the stigma, some clinicians are not willing to pursue this DEA license or even engage in treatment of patients with [OUD],” the letter said.
The Trump administration’s proposal would have limited most physicians to treating no more than 30 patients with buprenorphine for OUD at any one time. This cap would not have applied to hospital-based physicians, such as those practicing emergency medicine, the HHS noted in a statement. The policy would have applied to only physicians who already have registered with the DEA.
Patrice A. Harris, MD, the immediate past president of the AMA and chair of the organization’s Opioid Task Force, was among the many physicians who supported the Trump administration proposal.
“It is estimated that more than 2 million Americans need treatment for opioid use disorder, but only a small percentage actually receive treatment,” Dr. Harris said in statement. Dr. Harris also noted that overdose deaths have reportedly accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data show there were more than 83,000 drug overdose deaths in the United States in the 12 months ending in June 2020. That is the highest number of overdose deaths ever recorded in a 12-month period and is an increase of more than 21%, compared with the previous year.
A ‘disappointment’
On Jan. 28, Dr. Harris said the decision to drop the plan was a disappointment.
“We encourage the current administration to quickly develop a path forward that removes the burdensome waiver requirement, thus allowing more physicians to prescribe this lifesaving medication,” she said in a statement sent to this news organization.
In a Jan. 26 statement, the American Society of Addiction Medicine urged Congress to eliminate the X-waiver and called for more education and training in the treatment of patients who struggle with opioids.
In the 116th session of Congress, which ended on Jan. 3, there was bipartisan support for proposed legislation to ease requirements for buprenorphine prescribing. A House bill had more than 90 Democratic and 21 Republican sponsors. A companion Senate bill had three Democratic and three Republican Sponsors, including Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.). On Jan. 25, Dr. Hassan tweeted that she would be seeking an explanation from the Biden administration if it halted the plan to ease the waiver restriction.
“Medication-assisted treatment can save lives, and the buprenorphine waiver requirement should be eliminated so that physicians can more easily prescribe it to those who need it,” she said.
Many clinicians and policy experts turned to Twitter to urge an easing of buprenorphine prescribing, using the hashtag “Xthexwaiver.”
Among them was the official who put forward the Jan. 14 proposal, Brett Giroir, MD. He served as assistant secretary for health during the Trump administration.
Objections
In its Jan. 25 article, the Washington Post referred to an article in Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Weekly in which a top federal official in the Trump administration objected to Dr. Giroir’s plan.
Elinore F. McCance-Katz, MD, PhD, who served as the assistant secretary of HHS for SAMHSA, had earlier proposed raising the cap for addiction experts. Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Weekly quotes Dr. McCance-Katz as saying the Trump buprenorphine proposal was “unfair to the incoming administration.”
“The Biden administration has so much work to do to get their programs and policies into place, and to do something like this at the 11th hour that could get doctors into trouble – it’s heinous,” she said in the article.
Dr. McCance-Katz had resigned before the Trump administration proposal was unveiled. On Jan. 7, she issued a public notice announcing she would resign, citing concerns about the previous day’s attack on the U.S. Capitol.
“It had been my plan to stay until the change in administration occurred, but my plans abruptly changed last evening when, on my way back from visiting an excellent residential treatment program in New York, I saw the violent takeover of the Capitol building,” she said.
On Twitter, Roland Flores, MD, an anesthesiologist and pain specialist, urged his colleagues to consider the need for more education among clinicians who treat OUD. He jousted a bit with those favoring a swift drive to “XtheXwaiver” and questioned their arguments about the burden of the current rules.
“I think ‘all this red tape’ is a little bit of an exaggeration – it’s an 8-hour online course, and an application,” Dr. Flores tweeted in one exchange. “But #XtheXwaiver is fine – it’s probably rooted in stigma. It’s unlikely to make much difference tho. The waiver wasn’t the thing keeping docs from prescribing.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Biden administration has halted a Trump administration initiative that would have allowed more physicians to prescribe buprenorphine for opioid use disorder (OUD).
Under the Trump administration’s plan, many doctors would be exempt from taking a day’s training before they could prescribe buprenorphine for OUD.
On Jan. 25, 2021, citing anonymous sources, the Washington Post reported that this action by the Biden administration was likely. At the time, there were concerns about whether the Department of Health & Human Services had the legal authority to make this policy change, the Post reported. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration subsequently announced the derailment of the buprenorphine proposal on its website.
The plan was unveiled Jan. 14 in the final days of the Trump administration. In SAMHSA’s view, the proposal was made “prematurely.” The SAMHSA statement did not detail the reasons for abandoning the Jan. 14 proposal. It had been scheduled to take effect upon publication in the Federal Register.
Instead of finalizing it in this way, the HHS said it would work with other federal agencies to “increase access to buprenorphine, reduce overdose rates and save lives.”
The HHS decision to scupper the proposal disappointed many physician groups. In a letter dated Jan. 27, several physician groups called on the Biden administration to proceed with the Trump proposal.
Under current federal law, physicians who wish to prescribe buprenorphine outside of opioid treatment programs must take an 8-hour course and receive a waiver from the Drug Enforcement Administration, the letter noted. It was signed by the American College of Emergency Physicians, the American Medical Association, and other organizations.
Treatment barrier
After taking the training course, it can take 60-90 days for physicians to receive the waiver. The license application can then be submitted. Physician groups argue that this so-called X-waiver requirement creates a barrier to providing medication-assisted treatment.
“Due to the stigma, some clinicians are not willing to pursue this DEA license or even engage in treatment of patients with [OUD],” the letter said.
The Trump administration’s proposal would have limited most physicians to treating no more than 30 patients with buprenorphine for OUD at any one time. This cap would not have applied to hospital-based physicians, such as those practicing emergency medicine, the HHS noted in a statement. The policy would have applied to only physicians who already have registered with the DEA.
Patrice A. Harris, MD, the immediate past president of the AMA and chair of the organization’s Opioid Task Force, was among the many physicians who supported the Trump administration proposal.
“It is estimated that more than 2 million Americans need treatment for opioid use disorder, but only a small percentage actually receive treatment,” Dr. Harris said in statement. Dr. Harris also noted that overdose deaths have reportedly accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data show there were more than 83,000 drug overdose deaths in the United States in the 12 months ending in June 2020. That is the highest number of overdose deaths ever recorded in a 12-month period and is an increase of more than 21%, compared with the previous year.
A ‘disappointment’
On Jan. 28, Dr. Harris said the decision to drop the plan was a disappointment.
“We encourage the current administration to quickly develop a path forward that removes the burdensome waiver requirement, thus allowing more physicians to prescribe this lifesaving medication,” she said in a statement sent to this news organization.
In a Jan. 26 statement, the American Society of Addiction Medicine urged Congress to eliminate the X-waiver and called for more education and training in the treatment of patients who struggle with opioids.
In the 116th session of Congress, which ended on Jan. 3, there was bipartisan support for proposed legislation to ease requirements for buprenorphine prescribing. A House bill had more than 90 Democratic and 21 Republican sponsors. A companion Senate bill had three Democratic and three Republican Sponsors, including Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.). On Jan. 25, Dr. Hassan tweeted that she would be seeking an explanation from the Biden administration if it halted the plan to ease the waiver restriction.
“Medication-assisted treatment can save lives, and the buprenorphine waiver requirement should be eliminated so that physicians can more easily prescribe it to those who need it,” she said.
Many clinicians and policy experts turned to Twitter to urge an easing of buprenorphine prescribing, using the hashtag “Xthexwaiver.”
Among them was the official who put forward the Jan. 14 proposal, Brett Giroir, MD. He served as assistant secretary for health during the Trump administration.
Objections
In its Jan. 25 article, the Washington Post referred to an article in Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Weekly in which a top federal official in the Trump administration objected to Dr. Giroir’s plan.
Elinore F. McCance-Katz, MD, PhD, who served as the assistant secretary of HHS for SAMHSA, had earlier proposed raising the cap for addiction experts. Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Weekly quotes Dr. McCance-Katz as saying the Trump buprenorphine proposal was “unfair to the incoming administration.”
“The Biden administration has so much work to do to get their programs and policies into place, and to do something like this at the 11th hour that could get doctors into trouble – it’s heinous,” she said in the article.
Dr. McCance-Katz had resigned before the Trump administration proposal was unveiled. On Jan. 7, she issued a public notice announcing she would resign, citing concerns about the previous day’s attack on the U.S. Capitol.
“It had been my plan to stay until the change in administration occurred, but my plans abruptly changed last evening when, on my way back from visiting an excellent residential treatment program in New York, I saw the violent takeover of the Capitol building,” she said.
On Twitter, Roland Flores, MD, an anesthesiologist and pain specialist, urged his colleagues to consider the need for more education among clinicians who treat OUD. He jousted a bit with those favoring a swift drive to “XtheXwaiver” and questioned their arguments about the burden of the current rules.
“I think ‘all this red tape’ is a little bit of an exaggeration – it’s an 8-hour online course, and an application,” Dr. Flores tweeted in one exchange. “But #XtheXwaiver is fine – it’s probably rooted in stigma. It’s unlikely to make much difference tho. The waiver wasn’t the thing keeping docs from prescribing.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The National Institutes of Health has launched a database to track COVID-19–related neurologic symptoms, complications, and outcomes as well as the effects of the virus on preexisting neurologic conditions.
“We know COVID-19 can disrupt multiple body systems, but the effects of the virus and the body’s response to COVID-19 infection on the brain, spinal cord, nerves, and muscle can be particularly devastating and contribute to persistence of disability even after the virus is cleared,” said Barbara Karp, MD, program director at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.
“There is an urgent need to understand COVID-19–related neurological problems, which not uncommonly include headaches, fatigue, cognitive difficulties, stroke, pain, and sleep disorders as well as some very rare complications of serious infections,” said Dr. Karp.
The COVID-19 NeuroDatabank/BioBank (NeuroCOVID) is funded by the NINDS. It was created and will be maintained by researchers at NYU Langone Health in New York.
The project is led by Andrea Troxel, ScD, professor of population health, and Eva Petkova, PhD, professor of population health and child and adolescent psychiatry, both at New York University.
“We’ve built a pretty comprehensive database that will accept deidentified patient information about new neurological issues that coincide with their COVID disease or worsening of preexisting neurological problems,” said Dr. Troxel. “In addition, we have a bio repository that will accept almost any kind of biological sample, such as blood, plasma, cerebrospinal fluid, and tissue,” she said.
“Neuroimages are very difficult to store because the files are so enormous, but we’ve had some questions about that, and we’re looking into whether we can accommodate neuroimages,” Dr. Troxel noted.
Dr. Troxel said a “blast of information and invitations” has gone out in an effort to acquire data and biospecimens. “We’ve been really pleased with the amount of interest already, interest not only from large academic medical centers, as you might expect, but also from some smaller stand-alone clinics and even some individuals who have either experienced some of these neurological problems of COVID or know those who have and are really eager to try to provide information,” she added.
Researchers interested in using data and biosamples from the database may submit requests to the NeuroCOVID Steering Committee. More information is available online on the NeuroCOVID website.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The National Institutes of Health has launched a database to track COVID-19–related neurologic symptoms, complications, and outcomes as well as the effects of the virus on preexisting neurologic conditions.
“We know COVID-19 can disrupt multiple body systems, but the effects of the virus and the body’s response to COVID-19 infection on the brain, spinal cord, nerves, and muscle can be particularly devastating and contribute to persistence of disability even after the virus is cleared,” said Barbara Karp, MD, program director at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.
“There is an urgent need to understand COVID-19–related neurological problems, which not uncommonly include headaches, fatigue, cognitive difficulties, stroke, pain, and sleep disorders as well as some very rare complications of serious infections,” said Dr. Karp.
The COVID-19 NeuroDatabank/BioBank (NeuroCOVID) is funded by the NINDS. It was created and will be maintained by researchers at NYU Langone Health in New York.
The project is led by Andrea Troxel, ScD, professor of population health, and Eva Petkova, PhD, professor of population health and child and adolescent psychiatry, both at New York University.
“We’ve built a pretty comprehensive database that will accept deidentified patient information about new neurological issues that coincide with their COVID disease or worsening of preexisting neurological problems,” said Dr. Troxel. “In addition, we have a bio repository that will accept almost any kind of biological sample, such as blood, plasma, cerebrospinal fluid, and tissue,” she said.
“Neuroimages are very difficult to store because the files are so enormous, but we’ve had some questions about that, and we’re looking into whether we can accommodate neuroimages,” Dr. Troxel noted.
Dr. Troxel said a “blast of information and invitations” has gone out in an effort to acquire data and biospecimens. “We’ve been really pleased with the amount of interest already, interest not only from large academic medical centers, as you might expect, but also from some smaller stand-alone clinics and even some individuals who have either experienced some of these neurological problems of COVID or know those who have and are really eager to try to provide information,” she added.
Researchers interested in using data and biosamples from the database may submit requests to the NeuroCOVID Steering Committee. More information is available online on the NeuroCOVID website.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The National Institutes of Health has launched a database to track COVID-19–related neurologic symptoms, complications, and outcomes as well as the effects of the virus on preexisting neurologic conditions.
“We know COVID-19 can disrupt multiple body systems, but the effects of the virus and the body’s response to COVID-19 infection on the brain, spinal cord, nerves, and muscle can be particularly devastating and contribute to persistence of disability even after the virus is cleared,” said Barbara Karp, MD, program director at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.
“There is an urgent need to understand COVID-19–related neurological problems, which not uncommonly include headaches, fatigue, cognitive difficulties, stroke, pain, and sleep disorders as well as some very rare complications of serious infections,” said Dr. Karp.
The COVID-19 NeuroDatabank/BioBank (NeuroCOVID) is funded by the NINDS. It was created and will be maintained by researchers at NYU Langone Health in New York.
The project is led by Andrea Troxel, ScD, professor of population health, and Eva Petkova, PhD, professor of population health and child and adolescent psychiatry, both at New York University.
“We’ve built a pretty comprehensive database that will accept deidentified patient information about new neurological issues that coincide with their COVID disease or worsening of preexisting neurological problems,” said Dr. Troxel. “In addition, we have a bio repository that will accept almost any kind of biological sample, such as blood, plasma, cerebrospinal fluid, and tissue,” she said.
“Neuroimages are very difficult to store because the files are so enormous, but we’ve had some questions about that, and we’re looking into whether we can accommodate neuroimages,” Dr. Troxel noted.
Dr. Troxel said a “blast of information and invitations” has gone out in an effort to acquire data and biospecimens. “We’ve been really pleased with the amount of interest already, interest not only from large academic medical centers, as you might expect, but also from some smaller stand-alone clinics and even some individuals who have either experienced some of these neurological problems of COVID or know those who have and are really eager to try to provide information,” she added.
Researchers interested in using data and biosamples from the database may submit requests to the NeuroCOVID Steering Committee. More information is available online on the NeuroCOVID website.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Her mom calls her Princess, but her real name is Lindsey. She’s 17 and lives with her mom, Sandra, a nurse, outside Atlanta. On May 17, 2020, a Sunday, Lindsey decided she didn’t want breakfast; she wanted Doritos. So she left home and walked to Family Dollar, taking her pants off on the way, while her mom followed on foot, talking to the police on her phone as they went.
Lindsey has autism. It can be hard for her to communicate and navigate social situations. She thrives on routine and gets special help at school. Or got help, before the coronavirus pandemic closed schools and forced tens of millions of children to stay home. Sandra said that’s when their living hell started.
“It’s like her brain was wired,” she said. “She’d just put on her jacket, and she’s out the door. And I’m chasing her.”
On May 17, Sandra chased her all the way to Family Dollar. Hours later, Lindsey was in jail, charged with assaulting her mom. (KHN and NPR are not using the family’s last name.)
Lindsey is 1 of almost 3 million children in the United States who have a serious emotional or behavioral health condition. When the pandemic forced schools and doctors’ offices to close last spring, it also cut children off from the trained teachers and therapists who understand their needs.
As a result, many, like Lindsey, spiraled into EDs and even police custody. Federal data shows a nationwide surge of children in mental health crisis during the pandemic – a surge that’s further taxing an already overstretched safety net.
‘Take her’
Even after schools closed, Lindsey continued to wake up early, get dressed and wait for the bus. When she realized it had stopped coming, Sandra said, her daughter just started walking out of the house, wandering, a few times a week.
In those situations, Sandra did what many families in crisis report they’ve had to do since the pandemic began: Race through the short list of places she could call for help.
First, her state’s mental health crisis hotline. But they often put Sandra on hold.
“This is ridiculous,” she said of the wait. “It’s supposed to be a crisis team. But I’m on hold for 40, 50 minutes. And by the time you get on the phone, [the crisis] is done!”
Then there’s the local hospital’s ED, but Sandra said she had taken Lindsey there for previous crises and been told there isn’t much they can do.
That’s why, on May 17, when Lindsey walked to Family Dollar in just a red T-shirt and underwear to get that bag of Doritos, Sandra called the last option on her list: the police.
Sandra arrived at the store before the police and paid for the chips. According to Sandra and police records, when an officer approached, Lindsey grew agitated and hit her mom on the back, hard.
Sandra said she explained to the officer: “‘She’s autistic. You know, I’m okay. I’m a nurse. I just need to take her home and give her her medication.’ ”
Lindsey takes a mood stabilizer, but because she left home before breakfast, she hadn’t taken it that morning. The officer asked if Sandra wanted to take her to the nearest hospital.
The hospital wouldn’t be able to help Lindsey, Sandra said. It hadn’t before. “They already told me: ‘Ma’am, there’s nothing we can do.’ They just check her labs, it’s fine, and they ship her back home. There’s nothing [the hospital] can do,” she recalled telling the officer.
Sandra asked if the police could drive her daughter home so the teen could take her medication, but the officer said no, they couldn’t. The only other thing they could do, the officer said, was take Lindsey to jail for hitting her mom.
“I’ve tried everything,” Sandra said, exasperated. She paced the parking lot, feeling hopeless, sad and out of options. Finally, in tears, she told the officers: “Take her.”
Lindsey does not like to be touched and fought back when authorities tried to handcuff her. Several officers wrestled her to the ground. At that point, Sandra protested and said an officer threatened to arrest her, too, if she didn’t back away. Lindsey was taken to jail, where she spent much of the night until Sandra was able to post bail.
Clayton County Solicitor-General Charles Brooks denied that Sandra was threatened with arrest and said that, while Lindsey’s case is still pending, his office “is working to ensure that the resolution in this matter involves a plan for medication compliance and not punitive action.”
Sandra isn’t alone in her experience. Multiple families interviewed for this story reported similar experiences of calling in the police when a child was in crisis because caretakers didn’t feel they had any other option.
‘The whole system is really grinding to a halt’
Roughly 6% of U.S. children ages 6-17 years are living with serious emotional or behavioral difficulties, including children with autism, severe anxiety, depression and trauma-related mental health conditions.
Many of these children depend on schools for access to vital therapies. When schools and doctors’ offices stopped providing in-person services last spring, kids were untethered from the people and supports they rely on.
Dr. Susan Duffy
“The lack of in-person services is really detrimental,” said Susan Duffy, MD,a pediatrician and professor of emergency medicine at Brown University, Providence, R.I.
Marjorie, a mother in Florida, said her 15-year-old son has suffered during these disruptions. He has ADHD and oppositional defiant disorder, a condition marked by frequent and persistent hostility. Little things – like being asked to do schoolwork – can send him into a rage, leading to holes punched in walls, broken doors and violent threats. (The family’s last name or her son’s first name are not used to protect her son’s privacy and future prospects.)
The pandemic has shifted both school and her son’s therapy sessions online. But Marjorie said virtual therapy isn’t working because her son doesn’t focus well during sessions and tries to watch television instead. Lately, she has simply been canceling them.
“I was paying for appointments and there was no therapeutic value,” Marjorie said.
The issues cut across socioeconomic lines – affecting families with private insurance, like Marjorie, as well as those who receive coverage through Medicaid, a federal-state program that provides health insurance to low-income people and those with disabilities.
In the first few months of the pandemic, between March and May, children on Medicaid received 44% fewer outpatient mental health services – including therapy and in-home support – compared with the same time period in 2019, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. That’s even after accounting for increased telehealth appointments.
And while the nation’s EDs have seen a decline in overall visits, there was a relative increase in mental health visits for kids in 2020, compared with 2019.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that, from April to October 2020, hospitals across the United States saw a 24% increase in the proportion of mental health emergency visits for children aged 5-11 years, and a 31% increase for children aged 12-17.
“Proportionally, the number of mental health visits is far more significant than it has been in the past,” said Dr. Duffy. “Not only are we seeing more children, more children are being admitted” to inpatient care.
That’s because there are fewer outpatient services now available to children, she said, and because the conditions of the children showing up at EDs “are more serious.”
This crisis is not only making life harder for these kids and their families, but it’s also stressing the entire health care system.
Child and adolescent psychiatrists working in hospitals around the country said children are increasingly “boarding” in EDs for days, waiting for inpatient admission to a regular hospital or psychiatric hospital.
Dr. Christopher Bellonci
Before the pandemic, there was already a shortage of inpatient psychiatric beds for children, said Christopher Bellonci, MD, a child psychiatrist at Judge Baker Children’s Center in Boston. That shortage has only gotten worse as hospitals cut capacity to allow for more physical distancing within psychiatric units.
“The whole system is really grinding to a halt at a time when we have unprecedented need,” Dr. Bellonci said.
‘A signal that the rest of your system doesn’t work’
Psychiatrists on the front lines share the frustrations of parents struggling to find help for their children.
Part of the problem is there have never been enough psychiatrists and therapists trained to work with children, intervening in the early stages of their illness, said Jennifer Havens, MD, a child psychiatrist at New York University.
“Tons of people showing up in emergency rooms in bad shape is a signal that the rest of your system doesn’t work,” she said.
Too often, Dr. Havens said, services aren’t available until children are older – and in crisis. “Often for people who don’t have access to services, we wait until they’re too big to be managed.”
While the pandemic has made life harder for Marjorie and her son in Florida, she said it has always been difficult to find the support and care he needs. Last fall, he needed a psychiatric evaluation, but the nearest specialist who would accept her commercial insurance was 100 miles away, in Alabama.
“Even when you have the money or you have the insurance, it is still a travesty,” Marjorie said. “You cannot get help for these kids.”
Parents are frustrated, and so are psychiatrists on the front lines. C.J. Glawe, MD, who leads the psychiatric crisis department at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, said that once a child is stabilized after a crisis it can be hard to explain to parents that they may not be able to find follow-up care anywhere near their home.
“Especially when I can clearly tell you I know exactly what you need, I just can’t give it to you,” Dr. Glawe said. “It’s demoralizing.”
When states and communities fail to provide children the services they need to live at home, kids can deteriorate and even wind up in jail, like Lindsey. At that point, Dr. Glawe said, the cost and level of care required will be even higher, whether that’s hospitalization or long stays in residential treatment facilities.
That’s exactly the scenario Sandra, Lindsey’s mom, is hoping to avoid for her Princess.
“For me, as a nurse and as a provider, that will be the last thing for my daughter,” she said. “It’s like [state and local leaders] leave it to the school and the parent to deal with, and they don’t care. And that’s the problem. It’s sad because, if I’m not here...”
Her voice trailed off as tears welled.
“She didn’t ask to have autism.”
To help families like Sandra’s and Marjorie’s, advocates said, all levels of government need to invest in creating a mental health system that’s accessible to anyone who needs it.
But given that many states have seen their revenues drop because of the pandemic, there’s a concern services will instead be cut – at a time when the need has never been greater.
This story is part of a reporting partnership that includes NPR, Illinois Public Media and Kaiser Health News. Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is an editorially independent program of KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation), which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
Her mom calls her Princess, but her real name is Lindsey. She’s 17 and lives with her mom, Sandra, a nurse, outside Atlanta. On May 17, 2020, a Sunday, Lindsey decided she didn’t want breakfast; she wanted Doritos. So she left home and walked to Family Dollar, taking her pants off on the way, while her mom followed on foot, talking to the police on her phone as they went.
Lindsey has autism. It can be hard for her to communicate and navigate social situations. She thrives on routine and gets special help at school. Or got help, before the coronavirus pandemic closed schools and forced tens of millions of children to stay home. Sandra said that’s when their living hell started.
“It’s like her brain was wired,” she said. “She’d just put on her jacket, and she’s out the door. And I’m chasing her.”
On May 17, Sandra chased her all the way to Family Dollar. Hours later, Lindsey was in jail, charged with assaulting her mom. (KHN and NPR are not using the family’s last name.)
Lindsey is 1 of almost 3 million children in the United States who have a serious emotional or behavioral health condition. When the pandemic forced schools and doctors’ offices to close last spring, it also cut children off from the trained teachers and therapists who understand their needs.
As a result, many, like Lindsey, spiraled into EDs and even police custody. Federal data shows a nationwide surge of children in mental health crisis during the pandemic – a surge that’s further taxing an already overstretched safety net.
‘Take her’
Even after schools closed, Lindsey continued to wake up early, get dressed and wait for the bus. When she realized it had stopped coming, Sandra said, her daughter just started walking out of the house, wandering, a few times a week.
In those situations, Sandra did what many families in crisis report they’ve had to do since the pandemic began: Race through the short list of places she could call for help.
First, her state’s mental health crisis hotline. But they often put Sandra on hold.
“This is ridiculous,” she said of the wait. “It’s supposed to be a crisis team. But I’m on hold for 40, 50 minutes. And by the time you get on the phone, [the crisis] is done!”
Then there’s the local hospital’s ED, but Sandra said she had taken Lindsey there for previous crises and been told there isn’t much they can do.
That’s why, on May 17, when Lindsey walked to Family Dollar in just a red T-shirt and underwear to get that bag of Doritos, Sandra called the last option on her list: the police.
Sandra arrived at the store before the police and paid for the chips. According to Sandra and police records, when an officer approached, Lindsey grew agitated and hit her mom on the back, hard.
Sandra said she explained to the officer: “‘She’s autistic. You know, I’m okay. I’m a nurse. I just need to take her home and give her her medication.’ ”
Lindsey takes a mood stabilizer, but because she left home before breakfast, she hadn’t taken it that morning. The officer asked if Sandra wanted to take her to the nearest hospital.
The hospital wouldn’t be able to help Lindsey, Sandra said. It hadn’t before. “They already told me: ‘Ma’am, there’s nothing we can do.’ They just check her labs, it’s fine, and they ship her back home. There’s nothing [the hospital] can do,” she recalled telling the officer.
Sandra asked if the police could drive her daughter home so the teen could take her medication, but the officer said no, they couldn’t. The only other thing they could do, the officer said, was take Lindsey to jail for hitting her mom.
“I’ve tried everything,” Sandra said, exasperated. She paced the parking lot, feeling hopeless, sad and out of options. Finally, in tears, she told the officers: “Take her.”
Lindsey does not like to be touched and fought back when authorities tried to handcuff her. Several officers wrestled her to the ground. At that point, Sandra protested and said an officer threatened to arrest her, too, if she didn’t back away. Lindsey was taken to jail, where she spent much of the night until Sandra was able to post bail.
Clayton County Solicitor-General Charles Brooks denied that Sandra was threatened with arrest and said that, while Lindsey’s case is still pending, his office “is working to ensure that the resolution in this matter involves a plan for medication compliance and not punitive action.”
Sandra isn’t alone in her experience. Multiple families interviewed for this story reported similar experiences of calling in the police when a child was in crisis because caretakers didn’t feel they had any other option.
‘The whole system is really grinding to a halt’
Roughly 6% of U.S. children ages 6-17 years are living with serious emotional or behavioral difficulties, including children with autism, severe anxiety, depression and trauma-related mental health conditions.
Many of these children depend on schools for access to vital therapies. When schools and doctors’ offices stopped providing in-person services last spring, kids were untethered from the people and supports they rely on.
Dr. Susan Duffy
“The lack of in-person services is really detrimental,” said Susan Duffy, MD,a pediatrician and professor of emergency medicine at Brown University, Providence, R.I.
Marjorie, a mother in Florida, said her 15-year-old son has suffered during these disruptions. He has ADHD and oppositional defiant disorder, a condition marked by frequent and persistent hostility. Little things – like being asked to do schoolwork – can send him into a rage, leading to holes punched in walls, broken doors and violent threats. (The family’s last name or her son’s first name are not used to protect her son’s privacy and future prospects.)
The pandemic has shifted both school and her son’s therapy sessions online. But Marjorie said virtual therapy isn’t working because her son doesn’t focus well during sessions and tries to watch television instead. Lately, she has simply been canceling them.
“I was paying for appointments and there was no therapeutic value,” Marjorie said.
The issues cut across socioeconomic lines – affecting families with private insurance, like Marjorie, as well as those who receive coverage through Medicaid, a federal-state program that provides health insurance to low-income people and those with disabilities.
In the first few months of the pandemic, between March and May, children on Medicaid received 44% fewer outpatient mental health services – including therapy and in-home support – compared with the same time period in 2019, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. That’s even after accounting for increased telehealth appointments.
And while the nation’s EDs have seen a decline in overall visits, there was a relative increase in mental health visits for kids in 2020, compared with 2019.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that, from April to October 2020, hospitals across the United States saw a 24% increase in the proportion of mental health emergency visits for children aged 5-11 years, and a 31% increase for children aged 12-17.
“Proportionally, the number of mental health visits is far more significant than it has been in the past,” said Dr. Duffy. “Not only are we seeing more children, more children are being admitted” to inpatient care.
That’s because there are fewer outpatient services now available to children, she said, and because the conditions of the children showing up at EDs “are more serious.”
This crisis is not only making life harder for these kids and their families, but it’s also stressing the entire health care system.
Child and adolescent psychiatrists working in hospitals around the country said children are increasingly “boarding” in EDs for days, waiting for inpatient admission to a regular hospital or psychiatric hospital.
Dr. Christopher Bellonci
Before the pandemic, there was already a shortage of inpatient psychiatric beds for children, said Christopher Bellonci, MD, a child psychiatrist at Judge Baker Children’s Center in Boston. That shortage has only gotten worse as hospitals cut capacity to allow for more physical distancing within psychiatric units.
“The whole system is really grinding to a halt at a time when we have unprecedented need,” Dr. Bellonci said.
‘A signal that the rest of your system doesn’t work’
Psychiatrists on the front lines share the frustrations of parents struggling to find help for their children.
Part of the problem is there have never been enough psychiatrists and therapists trained to work with children, intervening in the early stages of their illness, said Jennifer Havens, MD, a child psychiatrist at New York University.
“Tons of people showing up in emergency rooms in bad shape is a signal that the rest of your system doesn’t work,” she said.
Too often, Dr. Havens said, services aren’t available until children are older – and in crisis. “Often for people who don’t have access to services, we wait until they’re too big to be managed.”
While the pandemic has made life harder for Marjorie and her son in Florida, she said it has always been difficult to find the support and care he needs. Last fall, he needed a psychiatric evaluation, but the nearest specialist who would accept her commercial insurance was 100 miles away, in Alabama.
“Even when you have the money or you have the insurance, it is still a travesty,” Marjorie said. “You cannot get help for these kids.”
Parents are frustrated, and so are psychiatrists on the front lines. C.J. Glawe, MD, who leads the psychiatric crisis department at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, said that once a child is stabilized after a crisis it can be hard to explain to parents that they may not be able to find follow-up care anywhere near their home.
“Especially when I can clearly tell you I know exactly what you need, I just can’t give it to you,” Dr. Glawe said. “It’s demoralizing.”
When states and communities fail to provide children the services they need to live at home, kids can deteriorate and even wind up in jail, like Lindsey. At that point, Dr. Glawe said, the cost and level of care required will be even higher, whether that’s hospitalization or long stays in residential treatment facilities.
That’s exactly the scenario Sandra, Lindsey’s mom, is hoping to avoid for her Princess.
“For me, as a nurse and as a provider, that will be the last thing for my daughter,” she said. “It’s like [state and local leaders] leave it to the school and the parent to deal with, and they don’t care. And that’s the problem. It’s sad because, if I’m not here...”
Her voice trailed off as tears welled.
“She didn’t ask to have autism.”
To help families like Sandra’s and Marjorie’s, advocates said, all levels of government need to invest in creating a mental health system that’s accessible to anyone who needs it.
But given that many states have seen their revenues drop because of the pandemic, there’s a concern services will instead be cut – at a time when the need has never been greater.
This story is part of a reporting partnership that includes NPR, Illinois Public Media and Kaiser Health News. Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is an editorially independent program of KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation), which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
A bag of Doritos, that’s all Princess wanted.
StHelena/Getty Images
Her mom calls her Princess, but her real name is Lindsey. She’s 17 and lives with her mom, Sandra, a nurse, outside Atlanta. On May 17, 2020, a Sunday, Lindsey decided she didn’t want breakfast; she wanted Doritos. So she left home and walked to Family Dollar, taking her pants off on the way, while her mom followed on foot, talking to the police on her phone as they went.
Lindsey has autism. It can be hard for her to communicate and navigate social situations. She thrives on routine and gets special help at school. Or got help, before the coronavirus pandemic closed schools and forced tens of millions of children to stay home. Sandra said that’s when their living hell started.
“It’s like her brain was wired,” she said. “She’d just put on her jacket, and she’s out the door. And I’m chasing her.”
On May 17, Sandra chased her all the way to Family Dollar. Hours later, Lindsey was in jail, charged with assaulting her mom. (KHN and NPR are not using the family’s last name.)
Lindsey is 1 of almost 3 million children in the United States who have a serious emotional or behavioral health condition. When the pandemic forced schools and doctors’ offices to close last spring, it also cut children off from the trained teachers and therapists who understand their needs.
As a result, many, like Lindsey, spiraled into EDs and even police custody. Federal data shows a nationwide surge of children in mental health crisis during the pandemic – a surge that’s further taxing an already overstretched safety net.
‘Take her’
Even after schools closed, Lindsey continued to wake up early, get dressed and wait for the bus. When she realized it had stopped coming, Sandra said, her daughter just started walking out of the house, wandering, a few times a week.
In those situations, Sandra did what many families in crisis report they’ve had to do since the pandemic began: Race through the short list of places she could call for help.
First, her state’s mental health crisis hotline. But they often put Sandra on hold.
“This is ridiculous,” she said of the wait. “It’s supposed to be a crisis team. But I’m on hold for 40, 50 minutes. And by the time you get on the phone, [the crisis] is done!”
Then there’s the local hospital’s ED, but Sandra said she had taken Lindsey there for previous crises and been told there isn’t much they can do.
That’s why, on May 17, when Lindsey walked to Family Dollar in just a red T-shirt and underwear to get that bag of Doritos, Sandra called the last option on her list: the police.
Sandra arrived at the store before the police and paid for the chips. According to Sandra and police records, when an officer approached, Lindsey grew agitated and hit her mom on the back, hard.
Sandra said she explained to the officer: “‘She’s autistic. You know, I’m okay. I’m a nurse. I just need to take her home and give her her medication.’ ”
Lindsey takes a mood stabilizer, but because she left home before breakfast, she hadn’t taken it that morning. The officer asked if Sandra wanted to take her to the nearest hospital.
The hospital wouldn’t be able to help Lindsey, Sandra said. It hadn’t before. “They already told me: ‘Ma’am, there’s nothing we can do.’ They just check her labs, it’s fine, and they ship her back home. There’s nothing [the hospital] can do,” she recalled telling the officer.
Sandra asked if the police could drive her daughter home so the teen could take her medication, but the officer said no, they couldn’t. The only other thing they could do, the officer said, was take Lindsey to jail for hitting her mom.
“I’ve tried everything,” Sandra said, exasperated. She paced the parking lot, feeling hopeless, sad and out of options. Finally, in tears, she told the officers: “Take her.”
Lindsey does not like to be touched and fought back when authorities tried to handcuff her. Several officers wrestled her to the ground. At that point, Sandra protested and said an officer threatened to arrest her, too, if she didn’t back away. Lindsey was taken to jail, where she spent much of the night until Sandra was able to post bail.
Clayton County Solicitor-General Charles Brooks denied that Sandra was threatened with arrest and said that, while Lindsey’s case is still pending, his office “is working to ensure that the resolution in this matter involves a plan for medication compliance and not punitive action.”
Sandra isn’t alone in her experience. Multiple families interviewed for this story reported similar experiences of calling in the police when a child was in crisis because caretakers didn’t feel they had any other option.
‘The whole system is really grinding to a halt’
Roughly 6% of U.S. children ages 6-17 years are living with serious emotional or behavioral difficulties, including children with autism, severe anxiety, depression and trauma-related mental health conditions.
Many of these children depend on schools for access to vital therapies. When schools and doctors’ offices stopped providing in-person services last spring, kids were untethered from the people and supports they rely on.
Dr. Susan Duffy
“The lack of in-person services is really detrimental,” said Susan Duffy, MD,a pediatrician and professor of emergency medicine at Brown University, Providence, R.I.
Marjorie, a mother in Florida, said her 15-year-old son has suffered during these disruptions. He has ADHD and oppositional defiant disorder, a condition marked by frequent and persistent hostility. Little things – like being asked to do schoolwork – can send him into a rage, leading to holes punched in walls, broken doors and violent threats. (The family’s last name or her son’s first name are not used to protect her son’s privacy and future prospects.)
The pandemic has shifted both school and her son’s therapy sessions online. But Marjorie said virtual therapy isn’t working because her son doesn’t focus well during sessions and tries to watch television instead. Lately, she has simply been canceling them.
“I was paying for appointments and there was no therapeutic value,” Marjorie said.
The issues cut across socioeconomic lines – affecting families with private insurance, like Marjorie, as well as those who receive coverage through Medicaid, a federal-state program that provides health insurance to low-income people and those with disabilities.
In the first few months of the pandemic, between March and May, children on Medicaid received 44% fewer outpatient mental health services – including therapy and in-home support – compared with the same time period in 2019, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. That’s even after accounting for increased telehealth appointments.
And while the nation’s EDs have seen a decline in overall visits, there was a relative increase in mental health visits for kids in 2020, compared with 2019.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that, from April to October 2020, hospitals across the United States saw a 24% increase in the proportion of mental health emergency visits for children aged 5-11 years, and a 31% increase for children aged 12-17.
“Proportionally, the number of mental health visits is far more significant than it has been in the past,” said Dr. Duffy. “Not only are we seeing more children, more children are being admitted” to inpatient care.
That’s because there are fewer outpatient services now available to children, she said, and because the conditions of the children showing up at EDs “are more serious.”
This crisis is not only making life harder for these kids and their families, but it’s also stressing the entire health care system.
Child and adolescent psychiatrists working in hospitals around the country said children are increasingly “boarding” in EDs for days, waiting for inpatient admission to a regular hospital or psychiatric hospital.
Dr. Christopher Bellonci
Before the pandemic, there was already a shortage of inpatient psychiatric beds for children, said Christopher Bellonci, MD, a child psychiatrist at Judge Baker Children’s Center in Boston. That shortage has only gotten worse as hospitals cut capacity to allow for more physical distancing within psychiatric units.
“The whole system is really grinding to a halt at a time when we have unprecedented need,” Dr. Bellonci said.
‘A signal that the rest of your system doesn’t work’
Psychiatrists on the front lines share the frustrations of parents struggling to find help for their children.
Part of the problem is there have never been enough psychiatrists and therapists trained to work with children, intervening in the early stages of their illness, said Jennifer Havens, MD, a child psychiatrist at New York University.
“Tons of people showing up in emergency rooms in bad shape is a signal that the rest of your system doesn’t work,” she said.
Too often, Dr. Havens said, services aren’t available until children are older – and in crisis. “Often for people who don’t have access to services, we wait until they’re too big to be managed.”
While the pandemic has made life harder for Marjorie and her son in Florida, she said it has always been difficult to find the support and care he needs. Last fall, he needed a psychiatric evaluation, but the nearest specialist who would accept her commercial insurance was 100 miles away, in Alabama.
“Even when you have the money or you have the insurance, it is still a travesty,” Marjorie said. “You cannot get help for these kids.”
Parents are frustrated, and so are psychiatrists on the front lines. C.J. Glawe, MD, who leads the psychiatric crisis department at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, said that once a child is stabilized after a crisis it can be hard to explain to parents that they may not be able to find follow-up care anywhere near their home.
“Especially when I can clearly tell you I know exactly what you need, I just can’t give it to you,” Dr. Glawe said. “It’s demoralizing.”
When states and communities fail to provide children the services they need to live at home, kids can deteriorate and even wind up in jail, like Lindsey. At that point, Dr. Glawe said, the cost and level of care required will be even higher, whether that’s hospitalization or long stays in residential treatment facilities.
That’s exactly the scenario Sandra, Lindsey’s mom, is hoping to avoid for her Princess.
“For me, as a nurse and as a provider, that will be the last thing for my daughter,” she said. “It’s like [state and local leaders] leave it to the school and the parent to deal with, and they don’t care. And that’s the problem. It’s sad because, if I’m not here...”
Her voice trailed off as tears welled.
“She didn’t ask to have autism.”
To help families like Sandra’s and Marjorie’s, advocates said, all levels of government need to invest in creating a mental health system that’s accessible to anyone who needs it.
But given that many states have seen their revenues drop because of the pandemic, there’s a concern services will instead be cut – at a time when the need has never been greater.
This story is part of a reporting partnership that includes NPR, Illinois Public Media and Kaiser Health News. Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is an editorially independent program of KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation), which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
Schizophrenia spectrum disorder is associated with a significantly increased risk of dying from COVID-19, new research shows.
Dr. Donald Goff
After adjusting for demographic and medical risk factors, the investigators found that patients who had been diagnosed with schizophrenia were two to three times more likely to die of COVID-19 if they contracted the disease.
“This means that people with schizophrenia should be prioritized for vaccination, and efforts should be taken to reduce risk of infection [social distancing, masks, etc.], particularly in people with schizophrenia who live in congregate living situations [hospitals and group residences],” Donald Goff, MD, department of psychiatry, New York University Langone Medical Center, said in an interview.
The study included 7,348 adults with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection from the NYU Langone Health System; 75 (1.0%) had a history of schizophrenia spectrum disorder, 564 (7.7%) had a history of a mood disorder, and 360 (4.9%) had a history of an anxiety disorder.
Overall, 864 patients (11.8%) died or were discharged to hospice within 45 days of a positive SARS-CoV-2 test.
In the fully adjusted model, a premorbid diagnosis of schizophrenia spectrum disorder, but not mood or anxiety disorder, was significantly associated with an increased risk of dying from COVID-19 within 45 days.
”A higher risk with schizophrenia spectrum diagnoses was expected based on previous studies of all-cause mortality, but the magnitude of the increase after adjusting for comorbid medical risk factors was unexpected,” the researchers wrote in the study, first authored by Katlyn Nemani, MD, research assistant professor of psychiatry at NYU Langone.
‘Alarming finding’
In an interview, Luming Li, MD, Yale New Haven (Conn.) Psychiatric Hospital, noted that, although the number patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders in the sample is “fairly low,” she was not surprised by the increased risk for death from COVID-19.
Dr. Luming Li
“Schizophrenia falls into the serious mental illness category, and these patients are more often predisposed to homelessness, comorbid medical and substance use, living in congregate settings, lower socioeconomic status, etc,” Dr. Li noted.
Dr. Li’s advice for clinicians who treat patients who have schizophrenia during the COVID-19 pandemic is to minimize their risk in various care settings through the use of personal protective equipment and other infection prevention techniques.
“If a patient does contract COVID-19, make sure patient’s care is escalated appropriately, given the higher risk for mortality in patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders,” she said.
Tom Pollak, PhD, MRCPsych, King’s College London, said that it has been known for some time that patients with serious mental illness have poorer physical health outcomes. More recently, it has been shown that those who have been diagnosed with psychiatric disorders appear to be at greater risk for poor COVID-19 outcomes.
“This study is the first to specifically highlight schizophrenia spectrum disorders as being particularly at risk. This is an alarming finding. These patients are already amongst the most vulnerable members of society and are probably underserved by most health care systems worldwide,” Dr. Pollak said in a statement.
“Although these findings need urgent replication in larger samples, there are clear reasons for policymakers to take notice now, including giving immediate consideration for prioritization of patients with serious mental illness in nationwide COVID-19 vaccination programs,” he added.
Matthew Hotopf, PhD, FRCPsych, FMedSci, also with King’s College London, said that the New York group has identified people with severe mental disorders as “a high-risk group, and this has immediate public health implications regarding vaccination – that’s the important message of the paper.
“Schizophrenia and other severe psychiatric disorders are risk factors for mortality in the general population before COVID. This is a group with a 10- to 20-year reduction in life expectancy – more than for many diseases we associated with early death,” said Dr. Hotopf.
“The reasons for this are multifactorial, including social deprivation, lifestyle factors (people with schizophrenia smoke more and have high rates of obesity), harms associated with some medications used to treat psychosis, and differential access to health care,” he noted.
“In COVID, we know that deprivation is associated with a much higher mortality, so we would therefore expect that people with severe mental illness will be particularly disadvantaged,” he said.
The study had no specific funding. Dr. Goff has received research support and travel reimbursement from Avanir Pharmaceuticals and Takeda. Dr. Nemani, Dr. Li, Dr. Pollak, and Dr. Hotopf disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Schizophrenia spectrum disorder is associated with a significantly increased risk of dying from COVID-19, new research shows.
Dr. Donald Goff
After adjusting for demographic and medical risk factors, the investigators found that patients who had been diagnosed with schizophrenia were two to three times more likely to die of COVID-19 if they contracted the disease.
“This means that people with schizophrenia should be prioritized for vaccination, and efforts should be taken to reduce risk of infection [social distancing, masks, etc.], particularly in people with schizophrenia who live in congregate living situations [hospitals and group residences],” Donald Goff, MD, department of psychiatry, New York University Langone Medical Center, said in an interview.
The study included 7,348 adults with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection from the NYU Langone Health System; 75 (1.0%) had a history of schizophrenia spectrum disorder, 564 (7.7%) had a history of a mood disorder, and 360 (4.9%) had a history of an anxiety disorder.
Overall, 864 patients (11.8%) died or were discharged to hospice within 45 days of a positive SARS-CoV-2 test.
In the fully adjusted model, a premorbid diagnosis of schizophrenia spectrum disorder, but not mood or anxiety disorder, was significantly associated with an increased risk of dying from COVID-19 within 45 days.
”A higher risk with schizophrenia spectrum diagnoses was expected based on previous studies of all-cause mortality, but the magnitude of the increase after adjusting for comorbid medical risk factors was unexpected,” the researchers wrote in the study, first authored by Katlyn Nemani, MD, research assistant professor of psychiatry at NYU Langone.
‘Alarming finding’
In an interview, Luming Li, MD, Yale New Haven (Conn.) Psychiatric Hospital, noted that, although the number patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders in the sample is “fairly low,” she was not surprised by the increased risk for death from COVID-19.
Dr. Luming Li
“Schizophrenia falls into the serious mental illness category, and these patients are more often predisposed to homelessness, comorbid medical and substance use, living in congregate settings, lower socioeconomic status, etc,” Dr. Li noted.
Dr. Li’s advice for clinicians who treat patients who have schizophrenia during the COVID-19 pandemic is to minimize their risk in various care settings through the use of personal protective equipment and other infection prevention techniques.
“If a patient does contract COVID-19, make sure patient’s care is escalated appropriately, given the higher risk for mortality in patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders,” she said.
Tom Pollak, PhD, MRCPsych, King’s College London, said that it has been known for some time that patients with serious mental illness have poorer physical health outcomes. More recently, it has been shown that those who have been diagnosed with psychiatric disorders appear to be at greater risk for poor COVID-19 outcomes.
“This study is the first to specifically highlight schizophrenia spectrum disorders as being particularly at risk. This is an alarming finding. These patients are already amongst the most vulnerable members of society and are probably underserved by most health care systems worldwide,” Dr. Pollak said in a statement.
“Although these findings need urgent replication in larger samples, there are clear reasons for policymakers to take notice now, including giving immediate consideration for prioritization of patients with serious mental illness in nationwide COVID-19 vaccination programs,” he added.
Matthew Hotopf, PhD, FRCPsych, FMedSci, also with King’s College London, said that the New York group has identified people with severe mental disorders as “a high-risk group, and this has immediate public health implications regarding vaccination – that’s the important message of the paper.
“Schizophrenia and other severe psychiatric disorders are risk factors for mortality in the general population before COVID. This is a group with a 10- to 20-year reduction in life expectancy – more than for many diseases we associated with early death,” said Dr. Hotopf.
“The reasons for this are multifactorial, including social deprivation, lifestyle factors (people with schizophrenia smoke more and have high rates of obesity), harms associated with some medications used to treat psychosis, and differential access to health care,” he noted.
“In COVID, we know that deprivation is associated with a much higher mortality, so we would therefore expect that people with severe mental illness will be particularly disadvantaged,” he said.
The study had no specific funding. Dr. Goff has received research support and travel reimbursement from Avanir Pharmaceuticals and Takeda. Dr. Nemani, Dr. Li, Dr. Pollak, and Dr. Hotopf disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Schizophrenia spectrum disorder is associated with a significantly increased risk of dying from COVID-19, new research shows.
Dr. Donald Goff
After adjusting for demographic and medical risk factors, the investigators found that patients who had been diagnosed with schizophrenia were two to three times more likely to die of COVID-19 if they contracted the disease.
“This means that people with schizophrenia should be prioritized for vaccination, and efforts should be taken to reduce risk of infection [social distancing, masks, etc.], particularly in people with schizophrenia who live in congregate living situations [hospitals and group residences],” Donald Goff, MD, department of psychiatry, New York University Langone Medical Center, said in an interview.
The study included 7,348 adults with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection from the NYU Langone Health System; 75 (1.0%) had a history of schizophrenia spectrum disorder, 564 (7.7%) had a history of a mood disorder, and 360 (4.9%) had a history of an anxiety disorder.
Overall, 864 patients (11.8%) died or were discharged to hospice within 45 days of a positive SARS-CoV-2 test.
In the fully adjusted model, a premorbid diagnosis of schizophrenia spectrum disorder, but not mood or anxiety disorder, was significantly associated with an increased risk of dying from COVID-19 within 45 days.
”A higher risk with schizophrenia spectrum diagnoses was expected based on previous studies of all-cause mortality, but the magnitude of the increase after adjusting for comorbid medical risk factors was unexpected,” the researchers wrote in the study, first authored by Katlyn Nemani, MD, research assistant professor of psychiatry at NYU Langone.
‘Alarming finding’
In an interview, Luming Li, MD, Yale New Haven (Conn.) Psychiatric Hospital, noted that, although the number patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders in the sample is “fairly low,” she was not surprised by the increased risk for death from COVID-19.
Dr. Luming Li
“Schizophrenia falls into the serious mental illness category, and these patients are more often predisposed to homelessness, comorbid medical and substance use, living in congregate settings, lower socioeconomic status, etc,” Dr. Li noted.
Dr. Li’s advice for clinicians who treat patients who have schizophrenia during the COVID-19 pandemic is to minimize their risk in various care settings through the use of personal protective equipment and other infection prevention techniques.
“If a patient does contract COVID-19, make sure patient’s care is escalated appropriately, given the higher risk for mortality in patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders,” she said.
Tom Pollak, PhD, MRCPsych, King’s College London, said that it has been known for some time that patients with serious mental illness have poorer physical health outcomes. More recently, it has been shown that those who have been diagnosed with psychiatric disorders appear to be at greater risk for poor COVID-19 outcomes.
“This study is the first to specifically highlight schizophrenia spectrum disorders as being particularly at risk. This is an alarming finding. These patients are already amongst the most vulnerable members of society and are probably underserved by most health care systems worldwide,” Dr. Pollak said in a statement.
“Although these findings need urgent replication in larger samples, there are clear reasons for policymakers to take notice now, including giving immediate consideration for prioritization of patients with serious mental illness in nationwide COVID-19 vaccination programs,” he added.
Matthew Hotopf, PhD, FRCPsych, FMedSci, also with King’s College London, said that the New York group has identified people with severe mental disorders as “a high-risk group, and this has immediate public health implications regarding vaccination – that’s the important message of the paper.
“Schizophrenia and other severe psychiatric disorders are risk factors for mortality in the general population before COVID. This is a group with a 10- to 20-year reduction in life expectancy – more than for many diseases we associated with early death,” said Dr. Hotopf.
“The reasons for this are multifactorial, including social deprivation, lifestyle factors (people with schizophrenia smoke more and have high rates of obesity), harms associated with some medications used to treat psychosis, and differential access to health care,” he noted.
“In COVID, we know that deprivation is associated with a much higher mortality, so we would therefore expect that people with severe mental illness will be particularly disadvantaged,” he said.
The study had no specific funding. Dr. Goff has received research support and travel reimbursement from Avanir Pharmaceuticals and Takeda. Dr. Nemani, Dr. Li, Dr. Pollak, and Dr. Hotopf disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.