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Social activities may offset psychosis risk in poor communities

Article Type
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Social engagement such as participation in community or school-based activities may mitigate psychosis risk in susceptible youth living in disadvantaged communities, new research suggests.

A study of more than 170 young participants showed reduced hippocampal volume in those living in poor neighborhoods who had low social engagement versus their peers with greater community engagement.

“These findings demonstrate the importance of considering broader environmental influences and indices of social engagement when conceptualizing adversity and potential interventions for individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis,” co-investigator Benson Ku, MD, a postdoctoral fellow and psychiatry resident at Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, told this news organization.

Emory University
Dr. Benson Ku


The results were presented at the virtual American Society of Clinical Psychopharmacology annual meeting.
 

A personal connection

It’s well known that growing up in low-income housing is associated with lower hippocampal volume and an increased risk for schizophrenia, said Dr. Ku.

“The inverse relationship between poverty and hippocampal gray matter volume has [also] been shown to be mediated by social stress, which can include things like lack of parental caregiving and stressful life events,” he added.

Dr. Ku himself grew up in a socioeconomically disadvantaged family in Queens, New York, and he said he had initially performed poorly in school. His early experiences have helped inform his clinical and research interests in the social determinants of mental health.

“I found community support in the Boys’ Club of New York and a local Magic Shop near where I lived, which helped me thrive and become the successful man I am today. I have also heard from my patients how their living conditions and neighborhood have significantly impacted their mental health,” Dr. Ku said.

“A more in-depth understanding of the social determinants of mental health has helped build rapport and empathy with my patients,” he added.

To explore the association between neighborhood poverty, social engagement, and hippocampal volume in youth at high risk for psychosis, the researchers analyzed data from the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study Phase 2, a multisite consortium.

The researchers recruited and followed up with help-seeking adolescents and young adults from diverse neighborhoods. The analysis included 174 youth, ages 12-33 years, at high clinical risk for psychosis.

Hippocampal volume was assessed using structural MRI. Neighborhood poverty was defined as the percentage of residents with an annual income below the poverty level in the past year.

Social engagement was derived from the desirable events subscale items of the Life Events Scale. These activities included involvement in a church or synagogue; participation in a club, neighborhood, or other organization; taking a vacation; engaging in a hobby, sport, craft, or recreational activity; acquiring a pet; or making new friends.
 

Lower hippocampal volume

Results showed neighborhood poverty was associated with reduced hippocampal volume, even after controlling for several confounders, including race/ethnicity, family history of mental illnesses, household poverty, educational level, and stressful life events.

Among the 77 participants with lower social engagement, which was defined as three or fewer social activities, neighborhood poverty was associated with reduced hippocampal volume.

However, in the 97 participants who reported greater social engagement, which was defined as four or more social activities, neighborhood poverty was not significantly associated with hippocampal volume.

“It is possible that social engagement may mitigate the deleterious effects of neighborhood poverty on brain morphology, which may inform interventions offered to individuals from disadvantaged neighborhoods,” Dr. Ku said.

“If replication of the relationships between neighborhood poverty, hippocampal volume, and social engagement is established in other populations in longitudinal studies, then targeted interventions at the community level and increased social engagement may potentially play a major role in disease prevention among at-risk youth,” he said.

Dr. Ku noted social engagement might look different in urban versus rural settings.

“In urban areas, it might mean friends, clubs, neighborhood organizations, etc. In rural areas, it might mean family, pets, crafts, etc. The level of social engagement may also depend on neighborhood characteristics, and more research would be needed to better understand how geographic area characteristics – remote, rural, urban – affects social engagement,” he said.
 

 

 

Interesting, innovative

Nagy Youssef, MD, PhD, director of clinical research and professor of psychiatry, Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, said the study suggests “social engagement may reduce the negative effect of poverty in this population, and if replicated in a larger study, could assist and be a part of the early intervention and prevention in psychosis.”

Ohio State University
Dr. Nagy Youssef

Overall, “this is an interesting and innovative study that has important medical and social implications and is a good step toward helping us understand these relationships and mitigate and prevent negative consequences, as best as possible, in this population,” said Dr. Youssef, who was not part of the research.

The analysis was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study. Dr. Ku and Dr. Youssef report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Social engagement such as participation in community or school-based activities may mitigate psychosis risk in susceptible youth living in disadvantaged communities, new research suggests.

A study of more than 170 young participants showed reduced hippocampal volume in those living in poor neighborhoods who had low social engagement versus their peers with greater community engagement.

“These findings demonstrate the importance of considering broader environmental influences and indices of social engagement when conceptualizing adversity and potential interventions for individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis,” co-investigator Benson Ku, MD, a postdoctoral fellow and psychiatry resident at Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, told this news organization.

Emory University
Dr. Benson Ku


The results were presented at the virtual American Society of Clinical Psychopharmacology annual meeting.
 

A personal connection

It’s well known that growing up in low-income housing is associated with lower hippocampal volume and an increased risk for schizophrenia, said Dr. Ku.

“The inverse relationship between poverty and hippocampal gray matter volume has [also] been shown to be mediated by social stress, which can include things like lack of parental caregiving and stressful life events,” he added.

Dr. Ku himself grew up in a socioeconomically disadvantaged family in Queens, New York, and he said he had initially performed poorly in school. His early experiences have helped inform his clinical and research interests in the social determinants of mental health.

“I found community support in the Boys’ Club of New York and a local Magic Shop near where I lived, which helped me thrive and become the successful man I am today. I have also heard from my patients how their living conditions and neighborhood have significantly impacted their mental health,” Dr. Ku said.

“A more in-depth understanding of the social determinants of mental health has helped build rapport and empathy with my patients,” he added.

To explore the association between neighborhood poverty, social engagement, and hippocampal volume in youth at high risk for psychosis, the researchers analyzed data from the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study Phase 2, a multisite consortium.

The researchers recruited and followed up with help-seeking adolescents and young adults from diverse neighborhoods. The analysis included 174 youth, ages 12-33 years, at high clinical risk for psychosis.

Hippocampal volume was assessed using structural MRI. Neighborhood poverty was defined as the percentage of residents with an annual income below the poverty level in the past year.

Social engagement was derived from the desirable events subscale items of the Life Events Scale. These activities included involvement in a church or synagogue; participation in a club, neighborhood, or other organization; taking a vacation; engaging in a hobby, sport, craft, or recreational activity; acquiring a pet; or making new friends.
 

Lower hippocampal volume

Results showed neighborhood poverty was associated with reduced hippocampal volume, even after controlling for several confounders, including race/ethnicity, family history of mental illnesses, household poverty, educational level, and stressful life events.

Among the 77 participants with lower social engagement, which was defined as three or fewer social activities, neighborhood poverty was associated with reduced hippocampal volume.

However, in the 97 participants who reported greater social engagement, which was defined as four or more social activities, neighborhood poverty was not significantly associated with hippocampal volume.

“It is possible that social engagement may mitigate the deleterious effects of neighborhood poverty on brain morphology, which may inform interventions offered to individuals from disadvantaged neighborhoods,” Dr. Ku said.

“If replication of the relationships between neighborhood poverty, hippocampal volume, and social engagement is established in other populations in longitudinal studies, then targeted interventions at the community level and increased social engagement may potentially play a major role in disease prevention among at-risk youth,” he said.

Dr. Ku noted social engagement might look different in urban versus rural settings.

“In urban areas, it might mean friends, clubs, neighborhood organizations, etc. In rural areas, it might mean family, pets, crafts, etc. The level of social engagement may also depend on neighborhood characteristics, and more research would be needed to better understand how geographic area characteristics – remote, rural, urban – affects social engagement,” he said.
 

 

 

Interesting, innovative

Nagy Youssef, MD, PhD, director of clinical research and professor of psychiatry, Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, said the study suggests “social engagement may reduce the negative effect of poverty in this population, and if replicated in a larger study, could assist and be a part of the early intervention and prevention in psychosis.”

Ohio State University
Dr. Nagy Youssef

Overall, “this is an interesting and innovative study that has important medical and social implications and is a good step toward helping us understand these relationships and mitigate and prevent negative consequences, as best as possible, in this population,” said Dr. Youssef, who was not part of the research.

The analysis was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study. Dr. Ku and Dr. Youssef report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Social engagement such as participation in community or school-based activities may mitigate psychosis risk in susceptible youth living in disadvantaged communities, new research suggests.

A study of more than 170 young participants showed reduced hippocampal volume in those living in poor neighborhoods who had low social engagement versus their peers with greater community engagement.

“These findings demonstrate the importance of considering broader environmental influences and indices of social engagement when conceptualizing adversity and potential interventions for individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis,” co-investigator Benson Ku, MD, a postdoctoral fellow and psychiatry resident at Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, told this news organization.

Emory University
Dr. Benson Ku


The results were presented at the virtual American Society of Clinical Psychopharmacology annual meeting.
 

A personal connection

It’s well known that growing up in low-income housing is associated with lower hippocampal volume and an increased risk for schizophrenia, said Dr. Ku.

“The inverse relationship between poverty and hippocampal gray matter volume has [also] been shown to be mediated by social stress, which can include things like lack of parental caregiving and stressful life events,” he added.

Dr. Ku himself grew up in a socioeconomically disadvantaged family in Queens, New York, and he said he had initially performed poorly in school. His early experiences have helped inform his clinical and research interests in the social determinants of mental health.

“I found community support in the Boys’ Club of New York and a local Magic Shop near where I lived, which helped me thrive and become the successful man I am today. I have also heard from my patients how their living conditions and neighborhood have significantly impacted their mental health,” Dr. Ku said.

“A more in-depth understanding of the social determinants of mental health has helped build rapport and empathy with my patients,” he added.

To explore the association between neighborhood poverty, social engagement, and hippocampal volume in youth at high risk for psychosis, the researchers analyzed data from the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study Phase 2, a multisite consortium.

The researchers recruited and followed up with help-seeking adolescents and young adults from diverse neighborhoods. The analysis included 174 youth, ages 12-33 years, at high clinical risk for psychosis.

Hippocampal volume was assessed using structural MRI. Neighborhood poverty was defined as the percentage of residents with an annual income below the poverty level in the past year.

Social engagement was derived from the desirable events subscale items of the Life Events Scale. These activities included involvement in a church or synagogue; participation in a club, neighborhood, or other organization; taking a vacation; engaging in a hobby, sport, craft, or recreational activity; acquiring a pet; or making new friends.
 

Lower hippocampal volume

Results showed neighborhood poverty was associated with reduced hippocampal volume, even after controlling for several confounders, including race/ethnicity, family history of mental illnesses, household poverty, educational level, and stressful life events.

Among the 77 participants with lower social engagement, which was defined as three or fewer social activities, neighborhood poverty was associated with reduced hippocampal volume.

However, in the 97 participants who reported greater social engagement, which was defined as four or more social activities, neighborhood poverty was not significantly associated with hippocampal volume.

“It is possible that social engagement may mitigate the deleterious effects of neighborhood poverty on brain morphology, which may inform interventions offered to individuals from disadvantaged neighborhoods,” Dr. Ku said.

“If replication of the relationships between neighborhood poverty, hippocampal volume, and social engagement is established in other populations in longitudinal studies, then targeted interventions at the community level and increased social engagement may potentially play a major role in disease prevention among at-risk youth,” he said.

Dr. Ku noted social engagement might look different in urban versus rural settings.

“In urban areas, it might mean friends, clubs, neighborhood organizations, etc. In rural areas, it might mean family, pets, crafts, etc. The level of social engagement may also depend on neighborhood characteristics, and more research would be needed to better understand how geographic area characteristics – remote, rural, urban – affects social engagement,” he said.
 

 

 

Interesting, innovative

Nagy Youssef, MD, PhD, director of clinical research and professor of psychiatry, Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, said the study suggests “social engagement may reduce the negative effect of poverty in this population, and if replicated in a larger study, could assist and be a part of the early intervention and prevention in psychosis.”

Ohio State University
Dr. Nagy Youssef

Overall, “this is an interesting and innovative study that has important medical and social implications and is a good step toward helping us understand these relationships and mitigate and prevent negative consequences, as best as possible, in this population,” said Dr. Youssef, who was not part of the research.

The analysis was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study. Dr. Ku and Dr. Youssef report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Is benzophenone safe in skin care? Part 2: Environmental effects

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 06/07/2022 - 14:46

Although it has been used as an ingredient in sunscreens and other personal care products since the 1980s, benzophenone-3 (BP-3) or oxybenzone has emerged in recent years as a significant environmental and health contaminant. DiNardo and Downs point out that BP-3 has been linked to contact and photocontact allergies in humans and implicated as a potential endocrine disruptor. They add that it can yield deleterious by-products when reacting with chlorine in swimming pools and wastewater treatment plants and can cause additional side effects in humans who ingest fish.1 This column will focus on recent studies, mainly on the role of benzophenones in sunscreen agents that pose considerable risks to waterways and marine life, with concomitant effects on the food chain.

Environmental effects of BPs and legislative responses

Various UV filters, including BP-3, octinoxate, octocrylene, and ethylhexyl salicylate, are thought to pose considerable peril to the marine environment.2,3 In particular, BP-3 has been demonstrated to provoke coral reef bleaching in vitro, leading to ossification and deforming DNA in the larval stage.3,4

According to a 2018 report, BP-3 is believed to be present in approximately two thirds of organic sunscreens used in the United States.3 In addition, several studies have revealed that detectable levels of organic sunscreen ingredients, including BP-3, have been identified in coastal waters around the globe, including Hawaii and the U.S. Virgin Islands.4-8

M Swiet Productions/Moment/Getty Images

A surfeit of tourists has been blamed in part, given that an estimated 25% of applied sunscreen is eliminated within 20 minutes of entering the water and thought to release about 4,000-6,000 tons/year into the surrounding coral reefs.9,10 In Hawaii in particular, sewage contamination of the waterways has resulted from wastewater treatment facilities ill-equipped to filter out organic substances such as BP-3 and octinoxate.10,11 In light of such circumstances, the use of sunscreens containing BP-3 and octinoxate have been restricted in Hawaii, particularly in proximity to beaches, since Jan. 1, 2021, because of their apparent environmental impact.10

The exposure of coral to these compounds is believed to result in bleaching because of impaired membrane integrity and photosynthetic pigment loss in the zooxanthellae that coral releases.9,10 Coral and the algae zooxanthellae have a symbiotic relationship, Siller et al. explain, with the coral delivering protection and components essential for photosynthesis and the algae ultimately serving as nutrients for the coral.10 Stress endured by coral is believed to cause algae to detach, rendering coral more vulnerable to disease and less viable overall.10

In 2016, Downs et al. showed that four out of five sampled locations had detectable levels of BP-3 (100 pp trillion) with a fifth tested site measured at 19.2 pp billion.4

In 2019, Sirois acknowledges the problem of coral bleaching around the world but speculates that banning sunscreen ingredients for this purpose will delude people that such a measure will reverse the decline of coral and may lead to the unintended consequence of lower use of sunscreens. Sirois adds that a more comprehensive investigation of the multiple causes of coral reef bleaching is warranted, as are deeper examinations of studies using higher concentrations of sunscreen ingredients in artificial conditions.12

Dr. Leslie S. Baumann

In the same year, Raffa et al. discussed the impending ban in Hawaii of the two sunscreen ingredients (BP-3 and octinoxate) to help preserve coral reefs. In so doing, they detailed the natural and human-induced harm to coral reefs, including pollution, fishing practices, overall impact of global climate change, and alterations in ocean temperature and chemistry. The implication is that sunscreen ingredients, which help prevent sun damage in users, are not the only causes of harm to coral reefs. Nevertheless, they point out that concentration estimates and mechanism studies buttress the argument that sunscreen ingredients contribute to coral bleaching. Still, the ban in Hawaii is thought to be a trend. Opponents of the ban are concerned that human skin cancers will rise in such circumstances. Alternative chemical sunscreens are being investigated, and physical sunscreens have emerged as the go-to recommendation.13

Notably, oxybenzone has been virtually replaced in the European Union with other UV filters with broad-spectrum action, but the majority of such filters have not yet been approved for use in the United States by the Food and Drug Administration.3

 

 

Food chain implications

BP-3 and other UV filters have been investigated for their effects on fish and mammals. Schneider and Lim illustrate that BP-3 is among the frequently used organic UV filters (along with 4-methylbenzylidene camphor, octocrylene, and octinoxate [ethylhexyl methoxycinnamate]) found in most water sources in the world, as well as multiple fish species.2 Cod liver in Norway, for instance, was found to contain octocrylene in 80% of cod, with BP-3 identified in 50% of the sample. BP-3 and octinoxate were also found in white fish.2,14 In laboratory studies, BP-3 in particular has been found in high concentrations in rainbow trout and Japanese rice fish (medaka), causing reduced egg production and hatchlings in females and increased vitellogenin protein production in males, suggesting potential feminization.2,15

Schneider and Lim note that standard wastewater treatment approaches cannot address this issue and the presence of such contaminants in fish can pose dangerous ramifications in the food chain. They assert that, despite relatively low concentrations in the fish, bioaccumulation and biomagnification present the potential for chemicals accumulating over time and becoming more deleterious as such ingredients travel up the food chain. As higher-chain organisms absorb higher concentrations of the chemicals not broken down in the lower-chain organisms, though, there have not yet been reports of adverse effects of biomagnification in humans.2

BP-3 has been found by Brausch and Rand to have bioaccumulated in fish at higher levels than the ambient water, however.1,2,16 Schneider and Lim present these issues as relevant to the sun protection discussion, while advocating for dermatologists to continue to counsel wise sun-protective behaviors.2

Conclusion

While calls for additional research are necessary and encouraging, I think human, and likely environmental, health would be better protected by the use of inorganic sunscreens in general and near or in coastal waterways. In light of legislative actions, in particular, it is important for dermatologists to intervene to ensure that patients do not engage in riskier behaviors in the sun in areas facing imminent organic sunscreen bans.

Dr. Baumann is a private practice dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur who practices in Miami. She founded the Cosmetic Dermatology Center at the University of Miami in 1997. Dr. Baumann has written two textbooks and a New York Times Best Sellers book for consumers. Dr. Baumann has received funding for advisory boards and/or clinical research trials from Allergan, Galderma, Revance, Evolus, and Burt’s Bees. She is the CEO of Skin Type Solutions Inc., a company that independently tests skin care products and makes recommendations to physicians on which skin care technologies are best. Write to her at [email protected].

References

1. DiNardo JC and Downs CA. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2018 Feb;17(1):15-9.

2. Schneider SL and Lim HW. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019 Jan;80(1):266-71.

3. Yeager DG and Lim HW. Dermatol Clin. 2019 Apr;37(2):149-57.

4. Downs CA et al. Arch Environ Contam Toxicol 2016 Feb;70(2):265-88.

5. Sánchez Rodríguez A et al. Chemosphere. 2015 Jul;131:85-90.

6. Tovar-Sánchez A et al. PLoS One. 2013 Jun 5;8(6):e65451.

7. Danovaro R and Corinaldesi C. Microb Ecol. 2003 Feb;45(2):109-18.

8. Daughton CG and Ternes TA. Environ Health Perspect. 1999 Dec;107 Suppl 6:907-38.

9. Danovaro R et al. Environ Health Perspect. 2008 Apr;116(4):441-7.

10. Siller A et al. Plast Surg Nur. 2019 Oct/Dec;39(4):157-60.

11. Ramos S et al. Sci Total Environ. 2015 Sep 1;526:278-311.

12. Sirois J. Sci Total Environ. 2019 Jul 15;674:211-2.

13. Raffa RB et al. J Clin Pharm Ther. 2019 Feb;44(1):134-9.

14. Langford KH et al. Environ Int. 2015 Jul;80:1-7.

15. Coronado M et al. Aquat Toxicol. 2008 Nov 21;90(3):182-7.

16. Brausch JM and Rand GM. Chemosphere. 2011 Mar;82(11):1518-32.

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Although it has been used as an ingredient in sunscreens and other personal care products since the 1980s, benzophenone-3 (BP-3) or oxybenzone has emerged in recent years as a significant environmental and health contaminant. DiNardo and Downs point out that BP-3 has been linked to contact and photocontact allergies in humans and implicated as a potential endocrine disruptor. They add that it can yield deleterious by-products when reacting with chlorine in swimming pools and wastewater treatment plants and can cause additional side effects in humans who ingest fish.1 This column will focus on recent studies, mainly on the role of benzophenones in sunscreen agents that pose considerable risks to waterways and marine life, with concomitant effects on the food chain.

Environmental effects of BPs and legislative responses

Various UV filters, including BP-3, octinoxate, octocrylene, and ethylhexyl salicylate, are thought to pose considerable peril to the marine environment.2,3 In particular, BP-3 has been demonstrated to provoke coral reef bleaching in vitro, leading to ossification and deforming DNA in the larval stage.3,4

According to a 2018 report, BP-3 is believed to be present in approximately two thirds of organic sunscreens used in the United States.3 In addition, several studies have revealed that detectable levels of organic sunscreen ingredients, including BP-3, have been identified in coastal waters around the globe, including Hawaii and the U.S. Virgin Islands.4-8

M Swiet Productions/Moment/Getty Images

A surfeit of tourists has been blamed in part, given that an estimated 25% of applied sunscreen is eliminated within 20 minutes of entering the water and thought to release about 4,000-6,000 tons/year into the surrounding coral reefs.9,10 In Hawaii in particular, sewage contamination of the waterways has resulted from wastewater treatment facilities ill-equipped to filter out organic substances such as BP-3 and octinoxate.10,11 In light of such circumstances, the use of sunscreens containing BP-3 and octinoxate have been restricted in Hawaii, particularly in proximity to beaches, since Jan. 1, 2021, because of their apparent environmental impact.10

The exposure of coral to these compounds is believed to result in bleaching because of impaired membrane integrity and photosynthetic pigment loss in the zooxanthellae that coral releases.9,10 Coral and the algae zooxanthellae have a symbiotic relationship, Siller et al. explain, with the coral delivering protection and components essential for photosynthesis and the algae ultimately serving as nutrients for the coral.10 Stress endured by coral is believed to cause algae to detach, rendering coral more vulnerable to disease and less viable overall.10

In 2016, Downs et al. showed that four out of five sampled locations had detectable levels of BP-3 (100 pp trillion) with a fifth tested site measured at 19.2 pp billion.4

In 2019, Sirois acknowledges the problem of coral bleaching around the world but speculates that banning sunscreen ingredients for this purpose will delude people that such a measure will reverse the decline of coral and may lead to the unintended consequence of lower use of sunscreens. Sirois adds that a more comprehensive investigation of the multiple causes of coral reef bleaching is warranted, as are deeper examinations of studies using higher concentrations of sunscreen ingredients in artificial conditions.12

Dr. Leslie S. Baumann

In the same year, Raffa et al. discussed the impending ban in Hawaii of the two sunscreen ingredients (BP-3 and octinoxate) to help preserve coral reefs. In so doing, they detailed the natural and human-induced harm to coral reefs, including pollution, fishing practices, overall impact of global climate change, and alterations in ocean temperature and chemistry. The implication is that sunscreen ingredients, which help prevent sun damage in users, are not the only causes of harm to coral reefs. Nevertheless, they point out that concentration estimates and mechanism studies buttress the argument that sunscreen ingredients contribute to coral bleaching. Still, the ban in Hawaii is thought to be a trend. Opponents of the ban are concerned that human skin cancers will rise in such circumstances. Alternative chemical sunscreens are being investigated, and physical sunscreens have emerged as the go-to recommendation.13

Notably, oxybenzone has been virtually replaced in the European Union with other UV filters with broad-spectrum action, but the majority of such filters have not yet been approved for use in the United States by the Food and Drug Administration.3

 

 

Food chain implications

BP-3 and other UV filters have been investigated for their effects on fish and mammals. Schneider and Lim illustrate that BP-3 is among the frequently used organic UV filters (along with 4-methylbenzylidene camphor, octocrylene, and octinoxate [ethylhexyl methoxycinnamate]) found in most water sources in the world, as well as multiple fish species.2 Cod liver in Norway, for instance, was found to contain octocrylene in 80% of cod, with BP-3 identified in 50% of the sample. BP-3 and octinoxate were also found in white fish.2,14 In laboratory studies, BP-3 in particular has been found in high concentrations in rainbow trout and Japanese rice fish (medaka), causing reduced egg production and hatchlings in females and increased vitellogenin protein production in males, suggesting potential feminization.2,15

Schneider and Lim note that standard wastewater treatment approaches cannot address this issue and the presence of such contaminants in fish can pose dangerous ramifications in the food chain. They assert that, despite relatively low concentrations in the fish, bioaccumulation and biomagnification present the potential for chemicals accumulating over time and becoming more deleterious as such ingredients travel up the food chain. As higher-chain organisms absorb higher concentrations of the chemicals not broken down in the lower-chain organisms, though, there have not yet been reports of adverse effects of biomagnification in humans.2

BP-3 has been found by Brausch and Rand to have bioaccumulated in fish at higher levels than the ambient water, however.1,2,16 Schneider and Lim present these issues as relevant to the sun protection discussion, while advocating for dermatologists to continue to counsel wise sun-protective behaviors.2

Conclusion

While calls for additional research are necessary and encouraging, I think human, and likely environmental, health would be better protected by the use of inorganic sunscreens in general and near or in coastal waterways. In light of legislative actions, in particular, it is important for dermatologists to intervene to ensure that patients do not engage in riskier behaviors in the sun in areas facing imminent organic sunscreen bans.

Dr. Baumann is a private practice dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur who practices in Miami. She founded the Cosmetic Dermatology Center at the University of Miami in 1997. Dr. Baumann has written two textbooks and a New York Times Best Sellers book for consumers. Dr. Baumann has received funding for advisory boards and/or clinical research trials from Allergan, Galderma, Revance, Evolus, and Burt’s Bees. She is the CEO of Skin Type Solutions Inc., a company that independently tests skin care products and makes recommendations to physicians on which skin care technologies are best. Write to her at [email protected].

References

1. DiNardo JC and Downs CA. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2018 Feb;17(1):15-9.

2. Schneider SL and Lim HW. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019 Jan;80(1):266-71.

3. Yeager DG and Lim HW. Dermatol Clin. 2019 Apr;37(2):149-57.

4. Downs CA et al. Arch Environ Contam Toxicol 2016 Feb;70(2):265-88.

5. Sánchez Rodríguez A et al. Chemosphere. 2015 Jul;131:85-90.

6. Tovar-Sánchez A et al. PLoS One. 2013 Jun 5;8(6):e65451.

7. Danovaro R and Corinaldesi C. Microb Ecol. 2003 Feb;45(2):109-18.

8. Daughton CG and Ternes TA. Environ Health Perspect. 1999 Dec;107 Suppl 6:907-38.

9. Danovaro R et al. Environ Health Perspect. 2008 Apr;116(4):441-7.

10. Siller A et al. Plast Surg Nur. 2019 Oct/Dec;39(4):157-60.

11. Ramos S et al. Sci Total Environ. 2015 Sep 1;526:278-311.

12. Sirois J. Sci Total Environ. 2019 Jul 15;674:211-2.

13. Raffa RB et al. J Clin Pharm Ther. 2019 Feb;44(1):134-9.

14. Langford KH et al. Environ Int. 2015 Jul;80:1-7.

15. Coronado M et al. Aquat Toxicol. 2008 Nov 21;90(3):182-7.

16. Brausch JM and Rand GM. Chemosphere. 2011 Mar;82(11):1518-32.

Although it has been used as an ingredient in sunscreens and other personal care products since the 1980s, benzophenone-3 (BP-3) or oxybenzone has emerged in recent years as a significant environmental and health contaminant. DiNardo and Downs point out that BP-3 has been linked to contact and photocontact allergies in humans and implicated as a potential endocrine disruptor. They add that it can yield deleterious by-products when reacting with chlorine in swimming pools and wastewater treatment plants and can cause additional side effects in humans who ingest fish.1 This column will focus on recent studies, mainly on the role of benzophenones in sunscreen agents that pose considerable risks to waterways and marine life, with concomitant effects on the food chain.

Environmental effects of BPs and legislative responses

Various UV filters, including BP-3, octinoxate, octocrylene, and ethylhexyl salicylate, are thought to pose considerable peril to the marine environment.2,3 In particular, BP-3 has been demonstrated to provoke coral reef bleaching in vitro, leading to ossification and deforming DNA in the larval stage.3,4

According to a 2018 report, BP-3 is believed to be present in approximately two thirds of organic sunscreens used in the United States.3 In addition, several studies have revealed that detectable levels of organic sunscreen ingredients, including BP-3, have been identified in coastal waters around the globe, including Hawaii and the U.S. Virgin Islands.4-8

M Swiet Productions/Moment/Getty Images

A surfeit of tourists has been blamed in part, given that an estimated 25% of applied sunscreen is eliminated within 20 minutes of entering the water and thought to release about 4,000-6,000 tons/year into the surrounding coral reefs.9,10 In Hawaii in particular, sewage contamination of the waterways has resulted from wastewater treatment facilities ill-equipped to filter out organic substances such as BP-3 and octinoxate.10,11 In light of such circumstances, the use of sunscreens containing BP-3 and octinoxate have been restricted in Hawaii, particularly in proximity to beaches, since Jan. 1, 2021, because of their apparent environmental impact.10

The exposure of coral to these compounds is believed to result in bleaching because of impaired membrane integrity and photosynthetic pigment loss in the zooxanthellae that coral releases.9,10 Coral and the algae zooxanthellae have a symbiotic relationship, Siller et al. explain, with the coral delivering protection and components essential for photosynthesis and the algae ultimately serving as nutrients for the coral.10 Stress endured by coral is believed to cause algae to detach, rendering coral more vulnerable to disease and less viable overall.10

In 2016, Downs et al. showed that four out of five sampled locations had detectable levels of BP-3 (100 pp trillion) with a fifth tested site measured at 19.2 pp billion.4

In 2019, Sirois acknowledges the problem of coral bleaching around the world but speculates that banning sunscreen ingredients for this purpose will delude people that such a measure will reverse the decline of coral and may lead to the unintended consequence of lower use of sunscreens. Sirois adds that a more comprehensive investigation of the multiple causes of coral reef bleaching is warranted, as are deeper examinations of studies using higher concentrations of sunscreen ingredients in artificial conditions.12

Dr. Leslie S. Baumann

In the same year, Raffa et al. discussed the impending ban in Hawaii of the two sunscreen ingredients (BP-3 and octinoxate) to help preserve coral reefs. In so doing, they detailed the natural and human-induced harm to coral reefs, including pollution, fishing practices, overall impact of global climate change, and alterations in ocean temperature and chemistry. The implication is that sunscreen ingredients, which help prevent sun damage in users, are not the only causes of harm to coral reefs. Nevertheless, they point out that concentration estimates and mechanism studies buttress the argument that sunscreen ingredients contribute to coral bleaching. Still, the ban in Hawaii is thought to be a trend. Opponents of the ban are concerned that human skin cancers will rise in such circumstances. Alternative chemical sunscreens are being investigated, and physical sunscreens have emerged as the go-to recommendation.13

Notably, oxybenzone has been virtually replaced in the European Union with other UV filters with broad-spectrum action, but the majority of such filters have not yet been approved for use in the United States by the Food and Drug Administration.3

 

 

Food chain implications

BP-3 and other UV filters have been investigated for their effects on fish and mammals. Schneider and Lim illustrate that BP-3 is among the frequently used organic UV filters (along with 4-methylbenzylidene camphor, octocrylene, and octinoxate [ethylhexyl methoxycinnamate]) found in most water sources in the world, as well as multiple fish species.2 Cod liver in Norway, for instance, was found to contain octocrylene in 80% of cod, with BP-3 identified in 50% of the sample. BP-3 and octinoxate were also found in white fish.2,14 In laboratory studies, BP-3 in particular has been found in high concentrations in rainbow trout and Japanese rice fish (medaka), causing reduced egg production and hatchlings in females and increased vitellogenin protein production in males, suggesting potential feminization.2,15

Schneider and Lim note that standard wastewater treatment approaches cannot address this issue and the presence of such contaminants in fish can pose dangerous ramifications in the food chain. They assert that, despite relatively low concentrations in the fish, bioaccumulation and biomagnification present the potential for chemicals accumulating over time and becoming more deleterious as such ingredients travel up the food chain. As higher-chain organisms absorb higher concentrations of the chemicals not broken down in the lower-chain organisms, though, there have not yet been reports of adverse effects of biomagnification in humans.2

BP-3 has been found by Brausch and Rand to have bioaccumulated in fish at higher levels than the ambient water, however.1,2,16 Schneider and Lim present these issues as relevant to the sun protection discussion, while advocating for dermatologists to continue to counsel wise sun-protective behaviors.2

Conclusion

While calls for additional research are necessary and encouraging, I think human, and likely environmental, health would be better protected by the use of inorganic sunscreens in general and near or in coastal waterways. In light of legislative actions, in particular, it is important for dermatologists to intervene to ensure that patients do not engage in riskier behaviors in the sun in areas facing imminent organic sunscreen bans.

Dr. Baumann is a private practice dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur who practices in Miami. She founded the Cosmetic Dermatology Center at the University of Miami in 1997. Dr. Baumann has written two textbooks and a New York Times Best Sellers book for consumers. Dr. Baumann has received funding for advisory boards and/or clinical research trials from Allergan, Galderma, Revance, Evolus, and Burt’s Bees. She is the CEO of Skin Type Solutions Inc., a company that independently tests skin care products and makes recommendations to physicians on which skin care technologies are best. Write to her at [email protected].

References

1. DiNardo JC and Downs CA. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2018 Feb;17(1):15-9.

2. Schneider SL and Lim HW. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019 Jan;80(1):266-71.

3. Yeager DG and Lim HW. Dermatol Clin. 2019 Apr;37(2):149-57.

4. Downs CA et al. Arch Environ Contam Toxicol 2016 Feb;70(2):265-88.

5. Sánchez Rodríguez A et al. Chemosphere. 2015 Jul;131:85-90.

6. Tovar-Sánchez A et al. PLoS One. 2013 Jun 5;8(6):e65451.

7. Danovaro R and Corinaldesi C. Microb Ecol. 2003 Feb;45(2):109-18.

8. Daughton CG and Ternes TA. Environ Health Perspect. 1999 Dec;107 Suppl 6:907-38.

9. Danovaro R et al. Environ Health Perspect. 2008 Apr;116(4):441-7.

10. Siller A et al. Plast Surg Nur. 2019 Oct/Dec;39(4):157-60.

11. Ramos S et al. Sci Total Environ. 2015 Sep 1;526:278-311.

12. Sirois J. Sci Total Environ. 2019 Jul 15;674:211-2.

13. Raffa RB et al. J Clin Pharm Ther. 2019 Feb;44(1):134-9.

14. Langford KH et al. Environ Int. 2015 Jul;80:1-7.

15. Coronado M et al. Aquat Toxicol. 2008 Nov 21;90(3):182-7.

16. Brausch JM and Rand GM. Chemosphere. 2011 Mar;82(11):1518-32.

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Abbott baby formula plant in Michigan reopens

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The Abbott baby formula factory in Sturgis, Mich., has reopened, a move that could ease the nationwide baby formula shortage.

“Abbott is restarting infant formula production at its Sturgis, Mich., facility today after meeting initial requirements agreed to with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as part of the consent decree entered into on May 16,” according to a company statement issued June 4.

“Abbott is starting production of EleCare and other specialty and metabolic formulas, with initial EleCare product release to consumers beginning on or about June 20. We’re also working hard to fulfill the steps necessary to restart production of Similac and other formulas and will do so as soon as we can.”

The FDA began investigating when at least four infants became ill with Cronobacter sakazakii bacteria after consuming infant formula produced in the Sturgis plant. Two infants died. Several Abbott baby formula products were recalled and the Sturgis plant was shut down for months.

Abbott said an investigation found no evidence to link the formulas to the infant illnesses, though bacteria was found in parts of the factory that didn’t have contact with formula.

The FDA entered into a consent decree with Abbott in mid-May that allowed the plant to reopen if the company took corrective actions, including the implementation of a sanitation plan and an environmental monitoring plan and employee training programs. Abbott must also retain an independent expert to monitor operations.

The Abbott shutdown, along with supply chain problems, contributed to a nationwide shortage of formula. Reuters, citing the data firm Datasembly, reported that about 73% of baby products were out of stock nationwide as of May 22.

The shortage is so severe that the federal government authorized the importing of formula from overseas.

“We understand the urgent need for formula and our top priority is getting high-quality, safe formula into the hands of families across America. We will ramp production as quickly as we can while meeting all requirements,” the Abbott statement said.

A version of this article first appeared on Webmd.com.

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The Abbott baby formula factory in Sturgis, Mich., has reopened, a move that could ease the nationwide baby formula shortage.

“Abbott is restarting infant formula production at its Sturgis, Mich., facility today after meeting initial requirements agreed to with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as part of the consent decree entered into on May 16,” according to a company statement issued June 4.

“Abbott is starting production of EleCare and other specialty and metabolic formulas, with initial EleCare product release to consumers beginning on or about June 20. We’re also working hard to fulfill the steps necessary to restart production of Similac and other formulas and will do so as soon as we can.”

The FDA began investigating when at least four infants became ill with Cronobacter sakazakii bacteria after consuming infant formula produced in the Sturgis plant. Two infants died. Several Abbott baby formula products were recalled and the Sturgis plant was shut down for months.

Abbott said an investigation found no evidence to link the formulas to the infant illnesses, though bacteria was found in parts of the factory that didn’t have contact with formula.

The FDA entered into a consent decree with Abbott in mid-May that allowed the plant to reopen if the company took corrective actions, including the implementation of a sanitation plan and an environmental monitoring plan and employee training programs. Abbott must also retain an independent expert to monitor operations.

The Abbott shutdown, along with supply chain problems, contributed to a nationwide shortage of formula. Reuters, citing the data firm Datasembly, reported that about 73% of baby products were out of stock nationwide as of May 22.

The shortage is so severe that the federal government authorized the importing of formula from overseas.

“We understand the urgent need for formula and our top priority is getting high-quality, safe formula into the hands of families across America. We will ramp production as quickly as we can while meeting all requirements,” the Abbott statement said.

A version of this article first appeared on Webmd.com.

The Abbott baby formula factory in Sturgis, Mich., has reopened, a move that could ease the nationwide baby formula shortage.

“Abbott is restarting infant formula production at its Sturgis, Mich., facility today after meeting initial requirements agreed to with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as part of the consent decree entered into on May 16,” according to a company statement issued June 4.

“Abbott is starting production of EleCare and other specialty and metabolic formulas, with initial EleCare product release to consumers beginning on or about June 20. We’re also working hard to fulfill the steps necessary to restart production of Similac and other formulas and will do so as soon as we can.”

The FDA began investigating when at least four infants became ill with Cronobacter sakazakii bacteria after consuming infant formula produced in the Sturgis plant. Two infants died. Several Abbott baby formula products were recalled and the Sturgis plant was shut down for months.

Abbott said an investigation found no evidence to link the formulas to the infant illnesses, though bacteria was found in parts of the factory that didn’t have contact with formula.

The FDA entered into a consent decree with Abbott in mid-May that allowed the plant to reopen if the company took corrective actions, including the implementation of a sanitation plan and an environmental monitoring plan and employee training programs. Abbott must also retain an independent expert to monitor operations.

The Abbott shutdown, along with supply chain problems, contributed to a nationwide shortage of formula. Reuters, citing the data firm Datasembly, reported that about 73% of baby products were out of stock nationwide as of May 22.

The shortage is so severe that the federal government authorized the importing of formula from overseas.

“We understand the urgent need for formula and our top priority is getting high-quality, safe formula into the hands of families across America. We will ramp production as quickly as we can while meeting all requirements,” the Abbott statement said.

A version of this article first appeared on Webmd.com.

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Autism ‘elopement’ raises summer drowning risk

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Changed
Mon, 06/06/2022 - 15:48

It happens quickly: A child on the autism spectrum bolts from supervision and disappears – an emergency called “autism elopement.” While any child can wander off, children on the autism spectrum face particular risks. These include the lure of water and the risk of drowning.

Some youngsters on the spectrum will follow this strong attraction to water and head for a nearby pond, river, or swimming pool. Such circumstances have made drowning a leading cause of death for these missing youths.

Autism elopement can happen any time. Summer can be especially dangerous. When the weather warms, the risk of drowning death rises, says Lori McIlwain, cofounder of the National Autism Association.

“The fatality risk is higher in May, June, July for that child to exit the setting unnoticed, especially if there’s an outdoor gathering and then they go directly to water,” Ms. McIlwain says. For instance, she says children can dart away during outdoor play, barbecues, gatherings, and other activities. Or they might wander off while vacationing near a beach or hotel pool.
 

Autism elopement

Many people don’t know about this risk, including some families with youngsters on the autism spectrum. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children is working to change that – and find solutions.

About 12 years ago, “we started noticing a very disturbing trend that children with autism were going missing and they were having grave results,” says John Bischoff, vice president of the Center’s Missing Children Division.

The Center analyzed a decade of data on accidental deaths of children on the autism spectrum. Drowning was the #1 cause, accounting for 84% of those deaths.

In 2012, researchers reported on autism and wandering in the journal Pediatrics. They analyzed answers from about 1,000 families to an online survey on the topic. Parents who had children on the spectrum and children not on the spectrum responded. Nearly half of the parents said their child with autism had tried to wander off after age 4, and 26% had gone missing long enough to cause concern.

“Of those who went missing, 24% were in danger of drowning and 65% were in danger of traffic injury,” the researchers wrote. Children on the spectrum might also be drawn to traffic signs, highways, fire trucks, and trains.

In comparison, brothers and sisters of all ages who were not on the spectrum were much less likely to have wandered off.
 

Seeking a quiet place

It’s not entirely clear why children with autism are so drawn to water, Ms. McIlwain says. But there are some clues.

“What we see is that these children exit settings that are usually bothersome,” Ms. McIlwain says. “[Those settings are] loud, with a high amount of stimuli or stress or commotion, and they go to a quiet place, usually water in a quiet area. It’s calm. It’s peaceful.”

Water isn’t the only dangerous draw. When autism elopement happens, “they also go to the woods, they go to abandoned vehicles,” she says. “So any quiet thing is usually where they will head.”
 

 

 

A family’s loss

Beth Dilg, a mother in Maryland, lost her 7-year-old daughter, Savannah Martin, who was on the autism spectrum, to drowning in 2011. Ms. Dilg had been living in Oklahoma and raising her three children alone after separating from her husband. On a chilly February day, Savannah and her 2-year-old brother left their house after Ms. Dilg had asked her 11-year-old son to keep watch while she went into the bathroom for a few minutes.

When Ms. Dilg realized the two younger kids had left, she searched the property frantically. She shouted Savannah’s name repeatedly, but the child, who had limited language, didn’t come when called. “I feel like she knew what her name was,” Ms. Dilg says, “but it wasn’t like you’d call her name and she’d come to you.”

Ms. Dilg ran to a pond near her property after her 11-year-old son said that the two siblings were in the water. Ms. Dilg entered the water and grabbed her toddler, who had survived after having been kept afloat by his bicycle helmet. But when Ms. Dilg reached Savannah, she was already unresponsive. A neighbor helped pull the children out.

It can happen in any family. Even when a parent takes precautions, a child can slip out in a moment, perhaps while the parent is asleep or taking care of personal needs or if the child is at school or elsewhere.

“It’s unrealistic to say that you’d never take your eyes off your kid,” Ms. Dilg says.

She had tried to protect Savannah by starting her on swimming lessons, installing high locks on the doors, and trying to teach her about how to stay safe.

Still, children can be skillful in finding ways to escape, Ms. Dilg says. “These kids with autism are so smart. They may not be verbal, but they have this level of intelligence,” she says. “You always have to stay a step ahead of them.”

Ms. Dilg has been a longtime volunteer with Team HOPE, a peer support group with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. She offers emotional support to parents whose children are missing or who have died, including the parents of youngsters with autism who have drowned.
 

Teaching first responders

If a child on the autism spectrum goes missing, searching for them can be complicated by their condition. For instance, some children cannot speak or aren’t able to respond to searchers calling their name. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children offers training to law enforcement and provides search protocols for first responders.

The center has drawn on expertise from Laurie Reyes, an officer with Maryland’s Montgomery County Police Department. In 2005, Ms. Reyes created a special unit within the department to focus on safety for people at risk for wandering. They have conditions that include autism/intellectual and developmental disabilities, as well as Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia.

“We have a culture of awareness here,” Ms. Reyes says. All Montgomery County recruits and officers receive training in how to interact with those on the autism spectrum, who may not respond to police commands. Police also learn how to search, including immediately checking bodies of water. “We’ve had many times where we’ve located individuals in bodies of water,” Ms. Reyes says.

Don’t wait to call 911. When a child goes missing, time matters. Ms. Reyes advises families not to search on their own. “Call 911 right away,” she says.
 

 

 

Top safety tips to help prevent autism elopement

Use these tips to help keep kids on the autism spectrum safe and prevent drownings.

Secure your home. Use window and door alarms to alert you if a door or window becomes ajar. “Those door alarms are essential,” Ms. McIlwain says.

You can buy alarms online or get them free from the National Autism Association through its Big Red Safety Box program.

You can also buy portable door alarms for travel and arrange to have door alarms at your child’s school.

Ms. McIlwain advises securing the home with adequate locks and using baby monitors. Installing visual prompts, such as a stop sign on the door, might also cue a child not to leave.

Use personal identification. Ms. McIlwain says that children with autism must wear identification, such as a wristband, that includes their name, autism diagnosis, and the name and phone number of a contact person.

If children won’t wear a wristband, IDs on shoelaces are an option, she says. But parents should be aware that kids might leave without shoes or take them off before entering water.

Parents can also weigh the pros and cons of using tracking and locater devices, Ms. McIlwain says.

Identify triggers. “What’s going to make the child want to leave the setting? Is it noise? Is it a certain thing that they fear?” Ms. McIlwain says. “There’s always a reason.”

If parents can identify particular triggers, they can use calming techniques, for example, or provide headphones to counteract bothersome noises.

Teach safety skills, such as swimming lessons. Swimming lessons are important, Ms. McIlwain says. However, children with autism are often bothered by noise and commotion. So a regular swim class might not work for them.

Instead, Ms. McIlwain encourages parents to ask their local YMCA about special-needs swimming lessons or to search for such lessons online. What usually turns out to be best is to give the child a few private swimming lessons “with somebody who understands autism.”

For the child’s final lesson, they should swim fully clothed and with shoes on, Ms. McIlwain says. “A lot of our kids go straight into water fully clothed, and they just need to be able to be familiar with how that feels and the weight of that and be able to swim like that as well.”

If a child is drawn to water, discuss a scheduled time to go so that the youngster can wait, Ms. McIlwain says. “They can see that they’re going to get that water time. They’re going to be able to go to that place. They’re going to wait instead of trying to go on their own.”

Keep a close watch and team up. “When there is a family gathering or an outdoor barbecue, a lot of times, we all think, there are more adults here, so there are going to be more eyes on all the kids. And that always ends up being opposite, right?” Ms. McIlwain says.

Be specific about who is monitoring the child’s safety.

“We encourage parents to do the ‘Tag, you’re it’ game with one another. So you basically tag an adult who is responsible for keeping an eye on that child for a period of time so that there’s always supervision.”
 

Be prepared

There are a few things you can do now to be ready in case your child slips away. These measures may help find the child quickly.

Take photos today. Keep a full-length shot and a head shot of your child and store them electronically. If your child wanders away, you can immediately send the images to law enforcement to help them search.

Write a 911 script. Have this document ready in case your child wanders. It describes, among other things, points of interest that might draw your child, as well as locations of nearby bodies of water. By having it all written down, you’ll be able to share the information quickly with first responders. The Montgomery County Police Department has a “Wandering 911 Script” that you can download and use.

A version of this article first appeared on Webmd.com.

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It happens quickly: A child on the autism spectrum bolts from supervision and disappears – an emergency called “autism elopement.” While any child can wander off, children on the autism spectrum face particular risks. These include the lure of water and the risk of drowning.

Some youngsters on the spectrum will follow this strong attraction to water and head for a nearby pond, river, or swimming pool. Such circumstances have made drowning a leading cause of death for these missing youths.

Autism elopement can happen any time. Summer can be especially dangerous. When the weather warms, the risk of drowning death rises, says Lori McIlwain, cofounder of the National Autism Association.

“The fatality risk is higher in May, June, July for that child to exit the setting unnoticed, especially if there’s an outdoor gathering and then they go directly to water,” Ms. McIlwain says. For instance, she says children can dart away during outdoor play, barbecues, gatherings, and other activities. Or they might wander off while vacationing near a beach or hotel pool.
 

Autism elopement

Many people don’t know about this risk, including some families with youngsters on the autism spectrum. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children is working to change that – and find solutions.

About 12 years ago, “we started noticing a very disturbing trend that children with autism were going missing and they were having grave results,” says John Bischoff, vice president of the Center’s Missing Children Division.

The Center analyzed a decade of data on accidental deaths of children on the autism spectrum. Drowning was the #1 cause, accounting for 84% of those deaths.

In 2012, researchers reported on autism and wandering in the journal Pediatrics. They analyzed answers from about 1,000 families to an online survey on the topic. Parents who had children on the spectrum and children not on the spectrum responded. Nearly half of the parents said their child with autism had tried to wander off after age 4, and 26% had gone missing long enough to cause concern.

“Of those who went missing, 24% were in danger of drowning and 65% were in danger of traffic injury,” the researchers wrote. Children on the spectrum might also be drawn to traffic signs, highways, fire trucks, and trains.

In comparison, brothers and sisters of all ages who were not on the spectrum were much less likely to have wandered off.
 

Seeking a quiet place

It’s not entirely clear why children with autism are so drawn to water, Ms. McIlwain says. But there are some clues.

“What we see is that these children exit settings that are usually bothersome,” Ms. McIlwain says. “[Those settings are] loud, with a high amount of stimuli or stress or commotion, and they go to a quiet place, usually water in a quiet area. It’s calm. It’s peaceful.”

Water isn’t the only dangerous draw. When autism elopement happens, “they also go to the woods, they go to abandoned vehicles,” she says. “So any quiet thing is usually where they will head.”
 

 

 

A family’s loss

Beth Dilg, a mother in Maryland, lost her 7-year-old daughter, Savannah Martin, who was on the autism spectrum, to drowning in 2011. Ms. Dilg had been living in Oklahoma and raising her three children alone after separating from her husband. On a chilly February day, Savannah and her 2-year-old brother left their house after Ms. Dilg had asked her 11-year-old son to keep watch while she went into the bathroom for a few minutes.

When Ms. Dilg realized the two younger kids had left, she searched the property frantically. She shouted Savannah’s name repeatedly, but the child, who had limited language, didn’t come when called. “I feel like she knew what her name was,” Ms. Dilg says, “but it wasn’t like you’d call her name and she’d come to you.”

Ms. Dilg ran to a pond near her property after her 11-year-old son said that the two siblings were in the water. Ms. Dilg entered the water and grabbed her toddler, who had survived after having been kept afloat by his bicycle helmet. But when Ms. Dilg reached Savannah, she was already unresponsive. A neighbor helped pull the children out.

It can happen in any family. Even when a parent takes precautions, a child can slip out in a moment, perhaps while the parent is asleep or taking care of personal needs or if the child is at school or elsewhere.

“It’s unrealistic to say that you’d never take your eyes off your kid,” Ms. Dilg says.

She had tried to protect Savannah by starting her on swimming lessons, installing high locks on the doors, and trying to teach her about how to stay safe.

Still, children can be skillful in finding ways to escape, Ms. Dilg says. “These kids with autism are so smart. They may not be verbal, but they have this level of intelligence,” she says. “You always have to stay a step ahead of them.”

Ms. Dilg has been a longtime volunteer with Team HOPE, a peer support group with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. She offers emotional support to parents whose children are missing or who have died, including the parents of youngsters with autism who have drowned.
 

Teaching first responders

If a child on the autism spectrum goes missing, searching for them can be complicated by their condition. For instance, some children cannot speak or aren’t able to respond to searchers calling their name. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children offers training to law enforcement and provides search protocols for first responders.

The center has drawn on expertise from Laurie Reyes, an officer with Maryland’s Montgomery County Police Department. In 2005, Ms. Reyes created a special unit within the department to focus on safety for people at risk for wandering. They have conditions that include autism/intellectual and developmental disabilities, as well as Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia.

“We have a culture of awareness here,” Ms. Reyes says. All Montgomery County recruits and officers receive training in how to interact with those on the autism spectrum, who may not respond to police commands. Police also learn how to search, including immediately checking bodies of water. “We’ve had many times where we’ve located individuals in bodies of water,” Ms. Reyes says.

Don’t wait to call 911. When a child goes missing, time matters. Ms. Reyes advises families not to search on their own. “Call 911 right away,” she says.
 

 

 

Top safety tips to help prevent autism elopement

Use these tips to help keep kids on the autism spectrum safe and prevent drownings.

Secure your home. Use window and door alarms to alert you if a door or window becomes ajar. “Those door alarms are essential,” Ms. McIlwain says.

You can buy alarms online or get them free from the National Autism Association through its Big Red Safety Box program.

You can also buy portable door alarms for travel and arrange to have door alarms at your child’s school.

Ms. McIlwain advises securing the home with adequate locks and using baby monitors. Installing visual prompts, such as a stop sign on the door, might also cue a child not to leave.

Use personal identification. Ms. McIlwain says that children with autism must wear identification, such as a wristband, that includes their name, autism diagnosis, and the name and phone number of a contact person.

If children won’t wear a wristband, IDs on shoelaces are an option, she says. But parents should be aware that kids might leave without shoes or take them off before entering water.

Parents can also weigh the pros and cons of using tracking and locater devices, Ms. McIlwain says.

Identify triggers. “What’s going to make the child want to leave the setting? Is it noise? Is it a certain thing that they fear?” Ms. McIlwain says. “There’s always a reason.”

If parents can identify particular triggers, they can use calming techniques, for example, or provide headphones to counteract bothersome noises.

Teach safety skills, such as swimming lessons. Swimming lessons are important, Ms. McIlwain says. However, children with autism are often bothered by noise and commotion. So a regular swim class might not work for them.

Instead, Ms. McIlwain encourages parents to ask their local YMCA about special-needs swimming lessons or to search for such lessons online. What usually turns out to be best is to give the child a few private swimming lessons “with somebody who understands autism.”

For the child’s final lesson, they should swim fully clothed and with shoes on, Ms. McIlwain says. “A lot of our kids go straight into water fully clothed, and they just need to be able to be familiar with how that feels and the weight of that and be able to swim like that as well.”

If a child is drawn to water, discuss a scheduled time to go so that the youngster can wait, Ms. McIlwain says. “They can see that they’re going to get that water time. They’re going to be able to go to that place. They’re going to wait instead of trying to go on their own.”

Keep a close watch and team up. “When there is a family gathering or an outdoor barbecue, a lot of times, we all think, there are more adults here, so there are going to be more eyes on all the kids. And that always ends up being opposite, right?” Ms. McIlwain says.

Be specific about who is monitoring the child’s safety.

“We encourage parents to do the ‘Tag, you’re it’ game with one another. So you basically tag an adult who is responsible for keeping an eye on that child for a period of time so that there’s always supervision.”
 

Be prepared

There are a few things you can do now to be ready in case your child slips away. These measures may help find the child quickly.

Take photos today. Keep a full-length shot and a head shot of your child and store them electronically. If your child wanders away, you can immediately send the images to law enforcement to help them search.

Write a 911 script. Have this document ready in case your child wanders. It describes, among other things, points of interest that might draw your child, as well as locations of nearby bodies of water. By having it all written down, you’ll be able to share the information quickly with first responders. The Montgomery County Police Department has a “Wandering 911 Script” that you can download and use.

A version of this article first appeared on Webmd.com.

It happens quickly: A child on the autism spectrum bolts from supervision and disappears – an emergency called “autism elopement.” While any child can wander off, children on the autism spectrum face particular risks. These include the lure of water and the risk of drowning.

Some youngsters on the spectrum will follow this strong attraction to water and head for a nearby pond, river, or swimming pool. Such circumstances have made drowning a leading cause of death for these missing youths.

Autism elopement can happen any time. Summer can be especially dangerous. When the weather warms, the risk of drowning death rises, says Lori McIlwain, cofounder of the National Autism Association.

“The fatality risk is higher in May, June, July for that child to exit the setting unnoticed, especially if there’s an outdoor gathering and then they go directly to water,” Ms. McIlwain says. For instance, she says children can dart away during outdoor play, barbecues, gatherings, and other activities. Or they might wander off while vacationing near a beach or hotel pool.
 

Autism elopement

Many people don’t know about this risk, including some families with youngsters on the autism spectrum. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children is working to change that – and find solutions.

About 12 years ago, “we started noticing a very disturbing trend that children with autism were going missing and they were having grave results,” says John Bischoff, vice president of the Center’s Missing Children Division.

The Center analyzed a decade of data on accidental deaths of children on the autism spectrum. Drowning was the #1 cause, accounting for 84% of those deaths.

In 2012, researchers reported on autism and wandering in the journal Pediatrics. They analyzed answers from about 1,000 families to an online survey on the topic. Parents who had children on the spectrum and children not on the spectrum responded. Nearly half of the parents said their child with autism had tried to wander off after age 4, and 26% had gone missing long enough to cause concern.

“Of those who went missing, 24% were in danger of drowning and 65% were in danger of traffic injury,” the researchers wrote. Children on the spectrum might also be drawn to traffic signs, highways, fire trucks, and trains.

In comparison, brothers and sisters of all ages who were not on the spectrum were much less likely to have wandered off.
 

Seeking a quiet place

It’s not entirely clear why children with autism are so drawn to water, Ms. McIlwain says. But there are some clues.

“What we see is that these children exit settings that are usually bothersome,” Ms. McIlwain says. “[Those settings are] loud, with a high amount of stimuli or stress or commotion, and they go to a quiet place, usually water in a quiet area. It’s calm. It’s peaceful.”

Water isn’t the only dangerous draw. When autism elopement happens, “they also go to the woods, they go to abandoned vehicles,” she says. “So any quiet thing is usually where they will head.”
 

 

 

A family’s loss

Beth Dilg, a mother in Maryland, lost her 7-year-old daughter, Savannah Martin, who was on the autism spectrum, to drowning in 2011. Ms. Dilg had been living in Oklahoma and raising her three children alone after separating from her husband. On a chilly February day, Savannah and her 2-year-old brother left their house after Ms. Dilg had asked her 11-year-old son to keep watch while she went into the bathroom for a few minutes.

When Ms. Dilg realized the two younger kids had left, she searched the property frantically. She shouted Savannah’s name repeatedly, but the child, who had limited language, didn’t come when called. “I feel like she knew what her name was,” Ms. Dilg says, “but it wasn’t like you’d call her name and she’d come to you.”

Ms. Dilg ran to a pond near her property after her 11-year-old son said that the two siblings were in the water. Ms. Dilg entered the water and grabbed her toddler, who had survived after having been kept afloat by his bicycle helmet. But when Ms. Dilg reached Savannah, she was already unresponsive. A neighbor helped pull the children out.

It can happen in any family. Even when a parent takes precautions, a child can slip out in a moment, perhaps while the parent is asleep or taking care of personal needs or if the child is at school or elsewhere.

“It’s unrealistic to say that you’d never take your eyes off your kid,” Ms. Dilg says.

She had tried to protect Savannah by starting her on swimming lessons, installing high locks on the doors, and trying to teach her about how to stay safe.

Still, children can be skillful in finding ways to escape, Ms. Dilg says. “These kids with autism are so smart. They may not be verbal, but they have this level of intelligence,” she says. “You always have to stay a step ahead of them.”

Ms. Dilg has been a longtime volunteer with Team HOPE, a peer support group with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. She offers emotional support to parents whose children are missing or who have died, including the parents of youngsters with autism who have drowned.
 

Teaching first responders

If a child on the autism spectrum goes missing, searching for them can be complicated by their condition. For instance, some children cannot speak or aren’t able to respond to searchers calling their name. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children offers training to law enforcement and provides search protocols for first responders.

The center has drawn on expertise from Laurie Reyes, an officer with Maryland’s Montgomery County Police Department. In 2005, Ms. Reyes created a special unit within the department to focus on safety for people at risk for wandering. They have conditions that include autism/intellectual and developmental disabilities, as well as Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia.

“We have a culture of awareness here,” Ms. Reyes says. All Montgomery County recruits and officers receive training in how to interact with those on the autism spectrum, who may not respond to police commands. Police also learn how to search, including immediately checking bodies of water. “We’ve had many times where we’ve located individuals in bodies of water,” Ms. Reyes says.

Don’t wait to call 911. When a child goes missing, time matters. Ms. Reyes advises families not to search on their own. “Call 911 right away,” she says.
 

 

 

Top safety tips to help prevent autism elopement

Use these tips to help keep kids on the autism spectrum safe and prevent drownings.

Secure your home. Use window and door alarms to alert you if a door or window becomes ajar. “Those door alarms are essential,” Ms. McIlwain says.

You can buy alarms online or get them free from the National Autism Association through its Big Red Safety Box program.

You can also buy portable door alarms for travel and arrange to have door alarms at your child’s school.

Ms. McIlwain advises securing the home with adequate locks and using baby monitors. Installing visual prompts, such as a stop sign on the door, might also cue a child not to leave.

Use personal identification. Ms. McIlwain says that children with autism must wear identification, such as a wristband, that includes their name, autism diagnosis, and the name and phone number of a contact person.

If children won’t wear a wristband, IDs on shoelaces are an option, she says. But parents should be aware that kids might leave without shoes or take them off before entering water.

Parents can also weigh the pros and cons of using tracking and locater devices, Ms. McIlwain says.

Identify triggers. “What’s going to make the child want to leave the setting? Is it noise? Is it a certain thing that they fear?” Ms. McIlwain says. “There’s always a reason.”

If parents can identify particular triggers, they can use calming techniques, for example, or provide headphones to counteract bothersome noises.

Teach safety skills, such as swimming lessons. Swimming lessons are important, Ms. McIlwain says. However, children with autism are often bothered by noise and commotion. So a regular swim class might not work for them.

Instead, Ms. McIlwain encourages parents to ask their local YMCA about special-needs swimming lessons or to search for such lessons online. What usually turns out to be best is to give the child a few private swimming lessons “with somebody who understands autism.”

For the child’s final lesson, they should swim fully clothed and with shoes on, Ms. McIlwain says. “A lot of our kids go straight into water fully clothed, and they just need to be able to be familiar with how that feels and the weight of that and be able to swim like that as well.”

If a child is drawn to water, discuss a scheduled time to go so that the youngster can wait, Ms. McIlwain says. “They can see that they’re going to get that water time. They’re going to be able to go to that place. They’re going to wait instead of trying to go on their own.”

Keep a close watch and team up. “When there is a family gathering or an outdoor barbecue, a lot of times, we all think, there are more adults here, so there are going to be more eyes on all the kids. And that always ends up being opposite, right?” Ms. McIlwain says.

Be specific about who is monitoring the child’s safety.

“We encourage parents to do the ‘Tag, you’re it’ game with one another. So you basically tag an adult who is responsible for keeping an eye on that child for a period of time so that there’s always supervision.”
 

Be prepared

There are a few things you can do now to be ready in case your child slips away. These measures may help find the child quickly.

Take photos today. Keep a full-length shot and a head shot of your child and store them electronically. If your child wanders away, you can immediately send the images to law enforcement to help them search.

Write a 911 script. Have this document ready in case your child wanders. It describes, among other things, points of interest that might draw your child, as well as locations of nearby bodies of water. By having it all written down, you’ll be able to share the information quickly with first responders. The Montgomery County Police Department has a “Wandering 911 Script” that you can download and use.

A version of this article first appeared on Webmd.com.

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Monkeypox largely a mystery for pregnant people

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Mon, 06/13/2022 - 14:08

With monkeypox now circulating in the United States, expecting mothers may worry about what might happen if they contract the infection while pregnant.

As of today, 25 cases of monkeypox have been confirmed in the United States since the outbreak began in early May, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Although none of those cases has involved a pregnant person, the World Health Organization says monkeypox can pass from mother to fetus before delivery or to newborns by close contact during and after birth.

The case count could grow as the agency continues to investigate potential infections of the virus. In a conference call Friday, health officials stressed the importance of contact tracing, testing, and vaccine treatment.

As physicians in the United States are scrambling for information on ways to treat patients, a new study, published in Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology, could help clinicians better care for pregnant people infected with monkeypox. The authors advise consistently monitoring the fetus for infection and conducting regular ultrasounds, among other precautions. 

Asma Khalil, MBBCh, MD, a professor of obstetrics and fetal medicine at St. George’s University, London, and lead author of the new study, said the monkeypox outbreak outside Africa caught many clinicians by surprise.

“We quickly realized very few physicians caring for pregnant women knew anything at all about monkeypox and how it affects pregnancy,” Dr. Khalil told this news organization. “Clinicians caring for pregnant women are likely to be faced soon with pregnant women concerned they may have the infection – because they have a rash, for example – or indeed pregnant women who do have the infection.”

According to the CDC, monkeypox can be transmitted through direct contact with the rash, sores, or scabs caused by the virus, as well as contact with clothing, bedding, towels, or other surfaces used by an infected person. Respiratory droplets and oral fluids from a person with monkeypox have also been linked to spread of the virus, as has sexual activity.

Although the condition is rarely fatal, infants and young children are at the greatest risk of developing severe symptoms, health officials said. 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved a monkeypox vaccine, Jynneos (Bavarian Nordic A/S), for general use, but it has not been specifically approved for pregnant people. However, a study of 300 pregnant women who received the vaccine reported no adverse reactions or failed pregnancies linked to the shots.

The new review suggests that women who have a confirmed infection during pregnancy should have a doctor closely monitor the fetus until birth.

If the fetus is over 26 weeks or if the mother is unwell, the fetus should be cared for with heart monitoring, either by a doctor or remotely every 2-3 days. Ultrasounds should be performed regularly to confirm that the fetus is still growing well and that the placenta is functioning properly.

Further into the pregnancy, monitoring should include measurements of the fetus and detailed assessment of the fetal organs and the amniotic fluid. Once the infection is resolved, the risk to the fetus is small, according to Dr. Khalil. However, since data are limited, she recommended an ultrasound scan every 2-4 weeks. At birth, for the protection of the infant and the mother, the baby should be isolated until infection is no longer a risk.

The Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists is preparing guidance on the management of monkeypox in pregnant people, Dr. Khalil said. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said it is “relying on the CDC for the time being,” according to a spokesperson for ACOG. 

“There is a clear need for further research in this area,” Dr. Khalil said. “The current outbreak is an ideal opportunity to make this happen.”

Dr. Khalil has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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With monkeypox now circulating in the United States, expecting mothers may worry about what might happen if they contract the infection while pregnant.

As of today, 25 cases of monkeypox have been confirmed in the United States since the outbreak began in early May, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Although none of those cases has involved a pregnant person, the World Health Organization says monkeypox can pass from mother to fetus before delivery or to newborns by close contact during and after birth.

The case count could grow as the agency continues to investigate potential infections of the virus. In a conference call Friday, health officials stressed the importance of contact tracing, testing, and vaccine treatment.

As physicians in the United States are scrambling for information on ways to treat patients, a new study, published in Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology, could help clinicians better care for pregnant people infected with monkeypox. The authors advise consistently monitoring the fetus for infection and conducting regular ultrasounds, among other precautions. 

Asma Khalil, MBBCh, MD, a professor of obstetrics and fetal medicine at St. George’s University, London, and lead author of the new study, said the monkeypox outbreak outside Africa caught many clinicians by surprise.

“We quickly realized very few physicians caring for pregnant women knew anything at all about monkeypox and how it affects pregnancy,” Dr. Khalil told this news organization. “Clinicians caring for pregnant women are likely to be faced soon with pregnant women concerned they may have the infection – because they have a rash, for example – or indeed pregnant women who do have the infection.”

According to the CDC, monkeypox can be transmitted through direct contact with the rash, sores, or scabs caused by the virus, as well as contact with clothing, bedding, towels, or other surfaces used by an infected person. Respiratory droplets and oral fluids from a person with monkeypox have also been linked to spread of the virus, as has sexual activity.

Although the condition is rarely fatal, infants and young children are at the greatest risk of developing severe symptoms, health officials said. 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved a monkeypox vaccine, Jynneos (Bavarian Nordic A/S), for general use, but it has not been specifically approved for pregnant people. However, a study of 300 pregnant women who received the vaccine reported no adverse reactions or failed pregnancies linked to the shots.

The new review suggests that women who have a confirmed infection during pregnancy should have a doctor closely monitor the fetus until birth.

If the fetus is over 26 weeks or if the mother is unwell, the fetus should be cared for with heart monitoring, either by a doctor or remotely every 2-3 days. Ultrasounds should be performed regularly to confirm that the fetus is still growing well and that the placenta is functioning properly.

Further into the pregnancy, monitoring should include measurements of the fetus and detailed assessment of the fetal organs and the amniotic fluid. Once the infection is resolved, the risk to the fetus is small, according to Dr. Khalil. However, since data are limited, she recommended an ultrasound scan every 2-4 weeks. At birth, for the protection of the infant and the mother, the baby should be isolated until infection is no longer a risk.

The Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists is preparing guidance on the management of monkeypox in pregnant people, Dr. Khalil said. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said it is “relying on the CDC for the time being,” according to a spokesperson for ACOG. 

“There is a clear need for further research in this area,” Dr. Khalil said. “The current outbreak is an ideal opportunity to make this happen.”

Dr. Khalil has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

With monkeypox now circulating in the United States, expecting mothers may worry about what might happen if they contract the infection while pregnant.

As of today, 25 cases of monkeypox have been confirmed in the United States since the outbreak began in early May, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Although none of those cases has involved a pregnant person, the World Health Organization says monkeypox can pass from mother to fetus before delivery or to newborns by close contact during and after birth.

The case count could grow as the agency continues to investigate potential infections of the virus. In a conference call Friday, health officials stressed the importance of contact tracing, testing, and vaccine treatment.

As physicians in the United States are scrambling for information on ways to treat patients, a new study, published in Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology, could help clinicians better care for pregnant people infected with monkeypox. The authors advise consistently monitoring the fetus for infection and conducting regular ultrasounds, among other precautions. 

Asma Khalil, MBBCh, MD, a professor of obstetrics and fetal medicine at St. George’s University, London, and lead author of the new study, said the monkeypox outbreak outside Africa caught many clinicians by surprise.

“We quickly realized very few physicians caring for pregnant women knew anything at all about monkeypox and how it affects pregnancy,” Dr. Khalil told this news organization. “Clinicians caring for pregnant women are likely to be faced soon with pregnant women concerned they may have the infection – because they have a rash, for example – or indeed pregnant women who do have the infection.”

According to the CDC, monkeypox can be transmitted through direct contact with the rash, sores, or scabs caused by the virus, as well as contact with clothing, bedding, towels, or other surfaces used by an infected person. Respiratory droplets and oral fluids from a person with monkeypox have also been linked to spread of the virus, as has sexual activity.

Although the condition is rarely fatal, infants and young children are at the greatest risk of developing severe symptoms, health officials said. 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved a monkeypox vaccine, Jynneos (Bavarian Nordic A/S), for general use, but it has not been specifically approved for pregnant people. However, a study of 300 pregnant women who received the vaccine reported no adverse reactions or failed pregnancies linked to the shots.

The new review suggests that women who have a confirmed infection during pregnancy should have a doctor closely monitor the fetus until birth.

If the fetus is over 26 weeks or if the mother is unwell, the fetus should be cared for with heart monitoring, either by a doctor or remotely every 2-3 days. Ultrasounds should be performed regularly to confirm that the fetus is still growing well and that the placenta is functioning properly.

Further into the pregnancy, monitoring should include measurements of the fetus and detailed assessment of the fetal organs and the amniotic fluid. Once the infection is resolved, the risk to the fetus is small, according to Dr. Khalil. However, since data are limited, she recommended an ultrasound scan every 2-4 weeks. At birth, for the protection of the infant and the mother, the baby should be isolated until infection is no longer a risk.

The Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists is preparing guidance on the management of monkeypox in pregnant people, Dr. Khalil said. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said it is “relying on the CDC for the time being,” according to a spokesperson for ACOG. 

“There is a clear need for further research in this area,” Dr. Khalil said. “The current outbreak is an ideal opportunity to make this happen.”

Dr. Khalil has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The power of napping

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Changed
Mon, 06/06/2022 - 15:35

As a physician who has had a career-long obsession with the underappreciated value of sleep, a recent study published in the journal Child Development caught my eye. The findings presented by a group of Australian-based psychologists and educators suggest a positive association between napping and learning by preschool children. While the study itself relied on a very small sample and may not prove to be repeatable, the authors included in their introduction an excellent discussion of a large collection of recent studies supporting the educational benefit of sleep in general and napping in particular.

Although sleep seems to finally be receiving some of the attention it deserves, I am still concerned that as a profession we are failing to give it the appropriate weight at our health maintenance visits. This is particularly true of napping. Understandably, napping doesn’t feel urgent to parents in those turbulent first 4 or 5 months of night wakings and erratic settling. However, as a child approaches the 6-month milestone, napping is a topic ripe for well-considered anticipatory guidance.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

When the recurrent cycles of awake-eat-sleep begin to develop into a somewhat predictable pattern and solid food is introduced, it’s time to suggest to parents a strategy that will encourage a napping pattern that will hopefully habituate into toddlerhood and beyond.

It can begin simply as a matter of defining the feeding in the middle of the day as lunch and then programming the period immediately following that meal as a siesta – a segment of the day completely reserved for rest. Many warm-weather countries have been using this strategy for centuries. Try to go to the pharmacy to pick up a prescription at 2 o’clock in the afternoon in rural Spain. It just ain’t gonna happen.

Most adults and children I know seem to be sleepy during this midday postprandial period. It makes more than a little sense to harness this natural drowsiness into creating a napping habit. However, the challenge for many young families is controlling their schedule to create a period of time when nothing else is going on in the child’s environment, leaving sleep as the only option. For some parents this requires the discipline to pause their own lives long enough so that the children realize that they aren’t missing out on something fun. This means no TV, no phone conversations, no visitors. Obviously, it also means not scheduling any appointments during this siesta period. Skilled day care providers have been doing this for years. But the message hasn’t seeped into the general population and sadly I occasionally see mothers with toddlers in the grocery store at 1 in the afternoon.

Once the nap/siesta is firmly welded to lunch, this gives the parent the ability to make minor adjustments that reflect the child’s stamina. If the child seems to be tiring/getting grumpy, serve up lunch a bit early and the restorative nap follows. As the child gets older and his or her stamina improves he or she may not be sleepy but the siesta remains as a quiet time. Some days it may be a nap, some days just a rest for an hour. By counseling parents to define the period after lunch as a siesta you will be helping them avoid that dreaded transition period called “giving up the nap.”

You may already be including this strategy in your anticipatory guidance. It may help to add to your advice the accumulating evidence that napping may play an important role in the child’s development and education.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at [email protected].

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As a physician who has had a career-long obsession with the underappreciated value of sleep, a recent study published in the journal Child Development caught my eye. The findings presented by a group of Australian-based psychologists and educators suggest a positive association between napping and learning by preschool children. While the study itself relied on a very small sample and may not prove to be repeatable, the authors included in their introduction an excellent discussion of a large collection of recent studies supporting the educational benefit of sleep in general and napping in particular.

Although sleep seems to finally be receiving some of the attention it deserves, I am still concerned that as a profession we are failing to give it the appropriate weight at our health maintenance visits. This is particularly true of napping. Understandably, napping doesn’t feel urgent to parents in those turbulent first 4 or 5 months of night wakings and erratic settling. However, as a child approaches the 6-month milestone, napping is a topic ripe for well-considered anticipatory guidance.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

When the recurrent cycles of awake-eat-sleep begin to develop into a somewhat predictable pattern and solid food is introduced, it’s time to suggest to parents a strategy that will encourage a napping pattern that will hopefully habituate into toddlerhood and beyond.

It can begin simply as a matter of defining the feeding in the middle of the day as lunch and then programming the period immediately following that meal as a siesta – a segment of the day completely reserved for rest. Many warm-weather countries have been using this strategy for centuries. Try to go to the pharmacy to pick up a prescription at 2 o’clock in the afternoon in rural Spain. It just ain’t gonna happen.

Most adults and children I know seem to be sleepy during this midday postprandial period. It makes more than a little sense to harness this natural drowsiness into creating a napping habit. However, the challenge for many young families is controlling their schedule to create a period of time when nothing else is going on in the child’s environment, leaving sleep as the only option. For some parents this requires the discipline to pause their own lives long enough so that the children realize that they aren’t missing out on something fun. This means no TV, no phone conversations, no visitors. Obviously, it also means not scheduling any appointments during this siesta period. Skilled day care providers have been doing this for years. But the message hasn’t seeped into the general population and sadly I occasionally see mothers with toddlers in the grocery store at 1 in the afternoon.

Once the nap/siesta is firmly welded to lunch, this gives the parent the ability to make minor adjustments that reflect the child’s stamina. If the child seems to be tiring/getting grumpy, serve up lunch a bit early and the restorative nap follows. As the child gets older and his or her stamina improves he or she may not be sleepy but the siesta remains as a quiet time. Some days it may be a nap, some days just a rest for an hour. By counseling parents to define the period after lunch as a siesta you will be helping them avoid that dreaded transition period called “giving up the nap.”

You may already be including this strategy in your anticipatory guidance. It may help to add to your advice the accumulating evidence that napping may play an important role in the child’s development and education.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at [email protected].

As a physician who has had a career-long obsession with the underappreciated value of sleep, a recent study published in the journal Child Development caught my eye. The findings presented by a group of Australian-based psychologists and educators suggest a positive association between napping and learning by preschool children. While the study itself relied on a very small sample and may not prove to be repeatable, the authors included in their introduction an excellent discussion of a large collection of recent studies supporting the educational benefit of sleep in general and napping in particular.

Although sleep seems to finally be receiving some of the attention it deserves, I am still concerned that as a profession we are failing to give it the appropriate weight at our health maintenance visits. This is particularly true of napping. Understandably, napping doesn’t feel urgent to parents in those turbulent first 4 or 5 months of night wakings and erratic settling. However, as a child approaches the 6-month milestone, napping is a topic ripe for well-considered anticipatory guidance.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

When the recurrent cycles of awake-eat-sleep begin to develop into a somewhat predictable pattern and solid food is introduced, it’s time to suggest to parents a strategy that will encourage a napping pattern that will hopefully habituate into toddlerhood and beyond.

It can begin simply as a matter of defining the feeding in the middle of the day as lunch and then programming the period immediately following that meal as a siesta – a segment of the day completely reserved for rest. Many warm-weather countries have been using this strategy for centuries. Try to go to the pharmacy to pick up a prescription at 2 o’clock in the afternoon in rural Spain. It just ain’t gonna happen.

Most adults and children I know seem to be sleepy during this midday postprandial period. It makes more than a little sense to harness this natural drowsiness into creating a napping habit. However, the challenge for many young families is controlling their schedule to create a period of time when nothing else is going on in the child’s environment, leaving sleep as the only option. For some parents this requires the discipline to pause their own lives long enough so that the children realize that they aren’t missing out on something fun. This means no TV, no phone conversations, no visitors. Obviously, it also means not scheduling any appointments during this siesta period. Skilled day care providers have been doing this for years. But the message hasn’t seeped into the general population and sadly I occasionally see mothers with toddlers in the grocery store at 1 in the afternoon.

Once the nap/siesta is firmly welded to lunch, this gives the parent the ability to make minor adjustments that reflect the child’s stamina. If the child seems to be tiring/getting grumpy, serve up lunch a bit early and the restorative nap follows. As the child gets older and his or her stamina improves he or she may not be sleepy but the siesta remains as a quiet time. Some days it may be a nap, some days just a rest for an hour. By counseling parents to define the period after lunch as a siesta you will be helping them avoid that dreaded transition period called “giving up the nap.”

You may already be including this strategy in your anticipatory guidance. It may help to add to your advice the accumulating evidence that napping may play an important role in the child’s development and education.

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at [email protected].

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Childhood cardiovascular risks and longevity

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Mon, 06/06/2022 - 14:40

Now hot off the press from the “always-guessed-it-was-true-but-now-you-know-it” department comes a multinational study that looked at childhood cardiovascular risk factors and longevity.

Using data collected from individuals in Finland, Australia, and the United States the International Childhood Cardiovascular Cohorts Consortium Outcomes Study investigators sought links between subjects’ body mass index, systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, blood triglyceride level, and smoking in childhood with cardiovascular disease and outcomes as they aged into adulthood.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

The children were initially enrolled in the 1970s and 1980s. The adult evaluations were done in 2015-2019 when the subjects’ average age was 46. Of the 40,000 individuals who originally entered the study, 800 were found to have cardiovascular events of which over 300 had resulted in death. I found these numbers a bit surprising given the relatively young age at which the follow-up data were collected.

What was less surprising is that people with higher than normal values for all five risk factors as children had nearly three times the risk of cardiovascular disease as adults. Researchers found that smoking at a young age was biggest risk factor with body mass index, systolic blood pressure, blood triglycerides, and cholesterol following in descending order. They also found that adults who were obese as children had triple the risk of cardiovascular disease as adults. High blood pressure in childhood doubled the risk.

It will be interesting to see if and how these trends change as the study population ages. It could be that the effect of these childhood risk factors is blunted as the those segments at the highest risk die off and/or risk- associated behaviors adopted in adulthood become more prominent. But, it feels more likely that the childhood risk factors will remain as major contributors.

Is this just another ho-hum-told-you-so study or does it have some special relevance for us as pediatricians? At a minimum these findings should inspire us to stick with our calling to commit ourselves to the health of children. A healthy adult population is clearly our legacy.

Of course the two individual risk factors in childhood that appear to be the most potent in adulthood, obesity and smoking, are also the most frustrating for pediatricians to address. However, the study suggests that we should rejoice in those few successes when we achieve them. Childhood obesity has been a tough nut to crack. On the other hand, the societal change that has made great strides in adult smoking over the last half century should encourage us that our work with the pediatric population will eventually bring rewards.

Smoking and obesity can include components of both patient and parental behavior. Monitoring cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood pressure hinges on our behavior as providers. Although there have been recent recommendations that we be more attentive, we don’t have a strong history when it comes to detecting and addressing high blood pressure in children. This study should serve as an another reminder to take blood pressure more seriously.

I was surprised and somewhat disappointed that I first learned about the results of this study in an email newsletter from the medical school I attended. I would have hoped that a paper like this from a well known peer-reviewed journal with a clear message about the relationship of childhood health and longevity should have been picked up quickly by the lay press. Again, this leaves it to us to promote the message that the health of children is important in and of itself but plays a critical role in the health of adults.
 

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at [email protected].

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Now hot off the press from the “always-guessed-it-was-true-but-now-you-know-it” department comes a multinational study that looked at childhood cardiovascular risk factors and longevity.

Using data collected from individuals in Finland, Australia, and the United States the International Childhood Cardiovascular Cohorts Consortium Outcomes Study investigators sought links between subjects’ body mass index, systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, blood triglyceride level, and smoking in childhood with cardiovascular disease and outcomes as they aged into adulthood.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

The children were initially enrolled in the 1970s and 1980s. The adult evaluations were done in 2015-2019 when the subjects’ average age was 46. Of the 40,000 individuals who originally entered the study, 800 were found to have cardiovascular events of which over 300 had resulted in death. I found these numbers a bit surprising given the relatively young age at which the follow-up data were collected.

What was less surprising is that people with higher than normal values for all five risk factors as children had nearly three times the risk of cardiovascular disease as adults. Researchers found that smoking at a young age was biggest risk factor with body mass index, systolic blood pressure, blood triglycerides, and cholesterol following in descending order. They also found that adults who were obese as children had triple the risk of cardiovascular disease as adults. High blood pressure in childhood doubled the risk.

It will be interesting to see if and how these trends change as the study population ages. It could be that the effect of these childhood risk factors is blunted as the those segments at the highest risk die off and/or risk- associated behaviors adopted in adulthood become more prominent. But, it feels more likely that the childhood risk factors will remain as major contributors.

Is this just another ho-hum-told-you-so study or does it have some special relevance for us as pediatricians? At a minimum these findings should inspire us to stick with our calling to commit ourselves to the health of children. A healthy adult population is clearly our legacy.

Of course the two individual risk factors in childhood that appear to be the most potent in adulthood, obesity and smoking, are also the most frustrating for pediatricians to address. However, the study suggests that we should rejoice in those few successes when we achieve them. Childhood obesity has been a tough nut to crack. On the other hand, the societal change that has made great strides in adult smoking over the last half century should encourage us that our work with the pediatric population will eventually bring rewards.

Smoking and obesity can include components of both patient and parental behavior. Monitoring cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood pressure hinges on our behavior as providers. Although there have been recent recommendations that we be more attentive, we don’t have a strong history when it comes to detecting and addressing high blood pressure in children. This study should serve as an another reminder to take blood pressure more seriously.

I was surprised and somewhat disappointed that I first learned about the results of this study in an email newsletter from the medical school I attended. I would have hoped that a paper like this from a well known peer-reviewed journal with a clear message about the relationship of childhood health and longevity should have been picked up quickly by the lay press. Again, this leaves it to us to promote the message that the health of children is important in and of itself but plays a critical role in the health of adults.
 

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at [email protected].

Now hot off the press from the “always-guessed-it-was-true-but-now-you-know-it” department comes a multinational study that looked at childhood cardiovascular risk factors and longevity.

Using data collected from individuals in Finland, Australia, and the United States the International Childhood Cardiovascular Cohorts Consortium Outcomes Study investigators sought links between subjects’ body mass index, systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, blood triglyceride level, and smoking in childhood with cardiovascular disease and outcomes as they aged into adulthood.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

The children were initially enrolled in the 1970s and 1980s. The adult evaluations were done in 2015-2019 when the subjects’ average age was 46. Of the 40,000 individuals who originally entered the study, 800 were found to have cardiovascular events of which over 300 had resulted in death. I found these numbers a bit surprising given the relatively young age at which the follow-up data were collected.

What was less surprising is that people with higher than normal values for all five risk factors as children had nearly three times the risk of cardiovascular disease as adults. Researchers found that smoking at a young age was biggest risk factor with body mass index, systolic blood pressure, blood triglycerides, and cholesterol following in descending order. They also found that adults who were obese as children had triple the risk of cardiovascular disease as adults. High blood pressure in childhood doubled the risk.

It will be interesting to see if and how these trends change as the study population ages. It could be that the effect of these childhood risk factors is blunted as the those segments at the highest risk die off and/or risk- associated behaviors adopted in adulthood become more prominent. But, it feels more likely that the childhood risk factors will remain as major contributors.

Is this just another ho-hum-told-you-so study or does it have some special relevance for us as pediatricians? At a minimum these findings should inspire us to stick with our calling to commit ourselves to the health of children. A healthy adult population is clearly our legacy.

Of course the two individual risk factors in childhood that appear to be the most potent in adulthood, obesity and smoking, are also the most frustrating for pediatricians to address. However, the study suggests that we should rejoice in those few successes when we achieve them. Childhood obesity has been a tough nut to crack. On the other hand, the societal change that has made great strides in adult smoking over the last half century should encourage us that our work with the pediatric population will eventually bring rewards.

Smoking and obesity can include components of both patient and parental behavior. Monitoring cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood pressure hinges on our behavior as providers. Although there have been recent recommendations that we be more attentive, we don’t have a strong history when it comes to detecting and addressing high blood pressure in children. This study should serve as an another reminder to take blood pressure more seriously.

I was surprised and somewhat disappointed that I first learned about the results of this study in an email newsletter from the medical school I attended. I would have hoped that a paper like this from a well known peer-reviewed journal with a clear message about the relationship of childhood health and longevity should have been picked up quickly by the lay press. Again, this leaves it to us to promote the message that the health of children is important in and of itself but plays a critical role in the health of adults.
 

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at [email protected].

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Trans teens less likely to commit acts of sexual violence, says new study

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Mon, 06/06/2022 - 10:38

Transgender and nonbinary adolescents are twice as likely to experience sexual violence as their cisgendered peers but are less likely to attempt rape or commit sexual assault, researchers have found.

The study, which was published online  in JAMA Network Open, is among the first on the sexual violence that trans, nonbinary, and other gender nonconforming adolescents experience. Previous studies have focused on adults.

“In the busy world of clinical care, it is essential that clinicians be aware of potential disparities their patients are navigating,” said Michele Ybarra, PhD, MPH, president and research director of the Center for Innovative Public Health Research, San Clemente, California, who led the study. “This includes sexual violence victimization for gender minority youth and the need to talk about consent and boundaries for youth of all genders.”

Dr. Ybarra said that while clinicians may be aware that transgender young people face stigma, discrimination, and bullying, they may not be aware that trans youth are also the targets of sexual violence.

Studies indicate that health care providers and communities have significant misconceptions about sexually explicit behavior among trans and nonbinary teens. Misconceptions can lead to discrimination, resulting in higher rates of drug abuse, dropping out of school, suicide, and homelessness.

Dr. Ybarra and her colleagues surveyed 911 trans, nonbinary, or questioning youth on Instagram and Facebook through a collaboration with Growing Up With Media, a national longitudinal survey designed to investigate sexual violence during adolescence.

They also surveyed 3,282 cisgender persons aged 14-16 years who were recruited to the study between June 2018 and March 2020. The term “cisgender” refers to youth who identify with their gender at birth.

The questionnaires asked teens about gender identity, race, economic status, and support systems at home. Factors associated with not experiencing sexual violence included having a strong network of friends, family, and educators; involvement in the community; and having people close who affirm their gender identity.

More than three-fourths (78%) of youth surveyed identified as cisgender, 13.9% identified as questioning, and 7.9% identified as transgender.

Roughly two-thirds (67%) of transgender adolescents said they had experienced serious sexual violence, 73% reported experiencing violence in their communities, and 63% said they had been exposed to aggressive behavior. In contrast, 6.7% of trans youth said they had ever committed sexual violence, while 7.4% of cisgender teens surveyed, or 243 students, said they had done so.

“The relative lack of visibility of gender minority youth in sexual violence research is unacceptable,” Dr. Ybarra told this news organization. “To be counted, one needs to be seen. We aimed to start addressing this exclusion with the current study.”

The findings provide a lens into the levels of sexual violence that LGBTQIA+ youth experience and an opportunity to provide more inclusive care, according to Elizabeth Miller, MD, PhD, FSAHM, Distinguished Professor of Pediatrics, director of the Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, and medical director of community and population health at UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, who was not involved in the study.

“There are unfortunately pervasive and harmful stereotypes in our society about the ‘sexual deviancy’ attributed to LGBTQIA+ individuals,” Dr. Miller told this news organization. “This study adds to the research literature that counters and challenges these harmful – and inaccurate – perceptions.”

Dr. Miller said clinicians can help this population by offering youth accurate information about relevant support and services, including how to help a friend.

Programs that providers could incorporate include gender transformative approaches, which guide youth to examine gender norms and inequities and that develop leadership skills.

Such programs are more common outside the United States and have been shown to decrease LGBTQIA+ youth exposure to sexual violence, she said.

Dr. Miller said more research is needed to understand the contexts in which gender minority youth experience sexual violence to guide prevention efforts: “We need to move beyond individual-focused interventions to considering community-level interventions to create safer and more inclusive spaces for all youth.”

Dr. Miller has received royalties for writing content for UptoDate Wolters Kluwer outside of the current study. Dr. Ybarra has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Transgender and nonbinary adolescents are twice as likely to experience sexual violence as their cisgendered peers but are less likely to attempt rape or commit sexual assault, researchers have found.

The study, which was published online  in JAMA Network Open, is among the first on the sexual violence that trans, nonbinary, and other gender nonconforming adolescents experience. Previous studies have focused on adults.

“In the busy world of clinical care, it is essential that clinicians be aware of potential disparities their patients are navigating,” said Michele Ybarra, PhD, MPH, president and research director of the Center for Innovative Public Health Research, San Clemente, California, who led the study. “This includes sexual violence victimization for gender minority youth and the need to talk about consent and boundaries for youth of all genders.”

Dr. Ybarra said that while clinicians may be aware that transgender young people face stigma, discrimination, and bullying, they may not be aware that trans youth are also the targets of sexual violence.

Studies indicate that health care providers and communities have significant misconceptions about sexually explicit behavior among trans and nonbinary teens. Misconceptions can lead to discrimination, resulting in higher rates of drug abuse, dropping out of school, suicide, and homelessness.

Dr. Ybarra and her colleagues surveyed 911 trans, nonbinary, or questioning youth on Instagram and Facebook through a collaboration with Growing Up With Media, a national longitudinal survey designed to investigate sexual violence during adolescence.

They also surveyed 3,282 cisgender persons aged 14-16 years who were recruited to the study between June 2018 and March 2020. The term “cisgender” refers to youth who identify with their gender at birth.

The questionnaires asked teens about gender identity, race, economic status, and support systems at home. Factors associated with not experiencing sexual violence included having a strong network of friends, family, and educators; involvement in the community; and having people close who affirm their gender identity.

More than three-fourths (78%) of youth surveyed identified as cisgender, 13.9% identified as questioning, and 7.9% identified as transgender.

Roughly two-thirds (67%) of transgender adolescents said they had experienced serious sexual violence, 73% reported experiencing violence in their communities, and 63% said they had been exposed to aggressive behavior. In contrast, 6.7% of trans youth said they had ever committed sexual violence, while 7.4% of cisgender teens surveyed, or 243 students, said they had done so.

“The relative lack of visibility of gender minority youth in sexual violence research is unacceptable,” Dr. Ybarra told this news organization. “To be counted, one needs to be seen. We aimed to start addressing this exclusion with the current study.”

The findings provide a lens into the levels of sexual violence that LGBTQIA+ youth experience and an opportunity to provide more inclusive care, according to Elizabeth Miller, MD, PhD, FSAHM, Distinguished Professor of Pediatrics, director of the Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, and medical director of community and population health at UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, who was not involved in the study.

“There are unfortunately pervasive and harmful stereotypes in our society about the ‘sexual deviancy’ attributed to LGBTQIA+ individuals,” Dr. Miller told this news organization. “This study adds to the research literature that counters and challenges these harmful – and inaccurate – perceptions.”

Dr. Miller said clinicians can help this population by offering youth accurate information about relevant support and services, including how to help a friend.

Programs that providers could incorporate include gender transformative approaches, which guide youth to examine gender norms and inequities and that develop leadership skills.

Such programs are more common outside the United States and have been shown to decrease LGBTQIA+ youth exposure to sexual violence, she said.

Dr. Miller said more research is needed to understand the contexts in which gender minority youth experience sexual violence to guide prevention efforts: “We need to move beyond individual-focused interventions to considering community-level interventions to create safer and more inclusive spaces for all youth.”

Dr. Miller has received royalties for writing content for UptoDate Wolters Kluwer outside of the current study. Dr. Ybarra has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Transgender and nonbinary adolescents are twice as likely to experience sexual violence as their cisgendered peers but are less likely to attempt rape or commit sexual assault, researchers have found.

The study, which was published online  in JAMA Network Open, is among the first on the sexual violence that trans, nonbinary, and other gender nonconforming adolescents experience. Previous studies have focused on adults.

“In the busy world of clinical care, it is essential that clinicians be aware of potential disparities their patients are navigating,” said Michele Ybarra, PhD, MPH, president and research director of the Center for Innovative Public Health Research, San Clemente, California, who led the study. “This includes sexual violence victimization for gender minority youth and the need to talk about consent and boundaries for youth of all genders.”

Dr. Ybarra said that while clinicians may be aware that transgender young people face stigma, discrimination, and bullying, they may not be aware that trans youth are also the targets of sexual violence.

Studies indicate that health care providers and communities have significant misconceptions about sexually explicit behavior among trans and nonbinary teens. Misconceptions can lead to discrimination, resulting in higher rates of drug abuse, dropping out of school, suicide, and homelessness.

Dr. Ybarra and her colleagues surveyed 911 trans, nonbinary, or questioning youth on Instagram and Facebook through a collaboration with Growing Up With Media, a national longitudinal survey designed to investigate sexual violence during adolescence.

They also surveyed 3,282 cisgender persons aged 14-16 years who were recruited to the study between June 2018 and March 2020. The term “cisgender” refers to youth who identify with their gender at birth.

The questionnaires asked teens about gender identity, race, economic status, and support systems at home. Factors associated with not experiencing sexual violence included having a strong network of friends, family, and educators; involvement in the community; and having people close who affirm their gender identity.

More than three-fourths (78%) of youth surveyed identified as cisgender, 13.9% identified as questioning, and 7.9% identified as transgender.

Roughly two-thirds (67%) of transgender adolescents said they had experienced serious sexual violence, 73% reported experiencing violence in their communities, and 63% said they had been exposed to aggressive behavior. In contrast, 6.7% of trans youth said they had ever committed sexual violence, while 7.4% of cisgender teens surveyed, or 243 students, said they had done so.

“The relative lack of visibility of gender minority youth in sexual violence research is unacceptable,” Dr. Ybarra told this news organization. “To be counted, one needs to be seen. We aimed to start addressing this exclusion with the current study.”

The findings provide a lens into the levels of sexual violence that LGBTQIA+ youth experience and an opportunity to provide more inclusive care, according to Elizabeth Miller, MD, PhD, FSAHM, Distinguished Professor of Pediatrics, director of the Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, and medical director of community and population health at UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, who was not involved in the study.

“There are unfortunately pervasive and harmful stereotypes in our society about the ‘sexual deviancy’ attributed to LGBTQIA+ individuals,” Dr. Miller told this news organization. “This study adds to the research literature that counters and challenges these harmful – and inaccurate – perceptions.”

Dr. Miller said clinicians can help this population by offering youth accurate information about relevant support and services, including how to help a friend.

Programs that providers could incorporate include gender transformative approaches, which guide youth to examine gender norms and inequities and that develop leadership skills.

Such programs are more common outside the United States and have been shown to decrease LGBTQIA+ youth exposure to sexual violence, she said.

Dr. Miller said more research is needed to understand the contexts in which gender minority youth experience sexual violence to guide prevention efforts: “We need to move beyond individual-focused interventions to considering community-level interventions to create safer and more inclusive spaces for all youth.”

Dr. Miller has received royalties for writing content for UptoDate Wolters Kluwer outside of the current study. Dr. Ybarra has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Surgeons, who see it up close, offer ways to stop gun violence

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Mon, 06/06/2022 - 10:20

Trauma surgeons are in the tough position of seeing victims just after gun violence across the United States, and they have some advice.

Their strategies can work regardless of where you stand on the Second Amendment of the Constitution, said Patricia Turner, MD. “Our proposals are embraced by both gun owners and non–gun owners alike, and we are unique in that regard.”

These “implementable solutions” could prevent the next massacre, Dr. Turner, executive director of the American College of Surgeons, said during a news briefing the group sponsored on June 2.

“Our future – indeed all of our futures – depend on our ability to find durable, actionable steps that we can implement tomorrow to save lives,” she said.
 

Firsthand perspective

“Sadly I’m here today as a trauma surgeon who has cared for two of the largest mass shootings in modern U.S. history,” said Ronald Stewart, MD, chair of the department of surgery at University Hospital in San Antonio, Texas.

Dr. Stewart treated victims of the 2017 Sutherland Springs First Baptist Church shooting – where 27 people died, including the shooter – and the recent Uvalde school shooting, both in Texas.

“The injuries inflicted by high-velocity weapons used at both of these attacks are horrific. A high-capacity, magazine-fed automatic rifle such as the AR-15 causes extremely destructive tissue wounds,” he said.

One of the group’s proposals is to increase the regulation of high-velocity weapons, including AR-15s.

“These wounds are horribly lethal at close range, and sadly, most victims do not survive long enough to make it to a trauma center,” Dr. Stewart said.

On a positive note, “all of our current [Uvalde] patients are improving, which really brings us joy in this dark time,” he said. “But all of them have a long road to deal with recovery with both the physical and emotional impact of their injuries.”

Jeffrey Kerby, MD, agreed.

“Trauma surgeons see the short-term physical effects of these injuries and watch patients struggle with the long-term impact of these wounds,” said Dr. Kerby, director of trauma and acute care surgery at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
 

Surgeons feel ‘profound impact’ of shootings

“Firearm violence has a profound impact on surgeons, and we are the undisputed subject matter experts in treating the tragic results,” said Patrick Bailey, MD, medical director for advocacy at the American College of Surgeons.

“This impacts surgeons as well,” said Dr. Kerby, chair of the Committee on Trauma for the surgeons’ group. “We are human, and we can’t help but share in the grief, the pain, and the suffering that our patients endure.

“As a pediatric surgeon ... I have too often witnessed the impact of firearm violence, and obviously, the devastation extends beyond the victims to their families,” he said. “To put it succinctly, in our culture, parents are not supposed to be put in a position of burying their children.”
 

A public health crisis

“It’s important to recognize that we’ve been talking about a public health approach,” said Eileen Bulger, MD, acting chief of the trauma division at the University of Washington in Seattle. That strategy is important for engaging both firearm owners and communities that have a higher risk for firearm violence, she said.

A committee of the American College of Surgeons developed specific recommendations in 2018, which are still valid today. The group brought together surgeons from across the U.S. including “passionate firearm owners and experts in firearm safety,” Dr. Bulger said.

The committee, for example, agreed on 10 specific recommendations “that we believe are bipartisan and could have an immediate impact in saving lives.”

“I’m a lifelong gun owner,” Dr. Bailey said, emphasizing that the team’s process included participation and perspective from other surgeons “who, like me, are also gun owners, but gun owners who also seek to reduce the impact of firearm violence in our country.”

The recommendations address these areas:

  • Gun ownership
  • Firearm registration
  • Licensure
  • Education and training
  • Ownership responsibilities
  • Mandatory reporting and risk reduction
  • Safety innovation and technology
  • Research
  • The culture of violence
  • Social isolation and mental health

For example, “we currently have certain classes of weapons with significant offensive capability,” Dr. Bulger said, “that are appropriately restricted and regulated under the National Firearms Act as Class 3 weapons.”

This group includes fully automatic machine guns, explosive devices, and short-barrel shotguns.

“We recommend a formal reassessment of the firearms designated within each of these national firearms classifications,” Dr. Bulger said.

For example, high-capacity, magazine-fed semiautomatic rifles, such as the AR-15, should be considered for reclassification as NFA Class 3 firearms, or they should get a new designation with tighter regulation.

The ACS endorses formal firearm safety training for all new gun owners. Also, owners who do not provide reasonably safe firearm storage should be held responsible for events related to the discharge of their firearms, Dr. Bulger said. And people who are deemed an imminent threat to themselves or others through firearm ownership should be temporarily or permanently restricted, with due process.
 

Research and reporting reforms

The ACS is also calling for research on firearm injuries and firearm injury prevention to be federally funded, Dr. Bulger said. The research should be done in a nonpartisan manner, she said.

“We have concerns that the manner and tone in which information is released to the public may lead to copycat mass killers,” she said. “The ACS recommends that law enforcement officials and the press take steps to eliminate the notoriety of the shooter, for example.”

Dr. Bulger also addressed the mental health angle. “We encourage recognition of mental health warning signs and social isolation by teachers, counselors, peers, and parents.” When identified, immediate referral to professionals is needed.

In addition to these recommendations, another team from the American College of Surgeons has published an overview of ways to address the inequities that contribute to violence. “We advocate for federal funding to support the development of hospital-based and community programs for violence intervention and prevention,” Dr. Bulger said.

Dr. Bailey said that as a gun owner himself, he thinks other gun owners would support these recommendations.

“I do not believe that the steps recommended ... pose undue burden on the rights of individual gun owners,” he said.
 

The time is now

Most firearm injuries are not from mass shooting events, Dr. Kerby said.

“My own trauma center has seen a 40% increase in the number of firearm injuries just in the last 2 years,” he added, “and these numbers continue to grow.”

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

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Trauma surgeons are in the tough position of seeing victims just after gun violence across the United States, and they have some advice.

Their strategies can work regardless of where you stand on the Second Amendment of the Constitution, said Patricia Turner, MD. “Our proposals are embraced by both gun owners and non–gun owners alike, and we are unique in that regard.”

These “implementable solutions” could prevent the next massacre, Dr. Turner, executive director of the American College of Surgeons, said during a news briefing the group sponsored on June 2.

“Our future – indeed all of our futures – depend on our ability to find durable, actionable steps that we can implement tomorrow to save lives,” she said.
 

Firsthand perspective

“Sadly I’m here today as a trauma surgeon who has cared for two of the largest mass shootings in modern U.S. history,” said Ronald Stewart, MD, chair of the department of surgery at University Hospital in San Antonio, Texas.

Dr. Stewart treated victims of the 2017 Sutherland Springs First Baptist Church shooting – where 27 people died, including the shooter – and the recent Uvalde school shooting, both in Texas.

“The injuries inflicted by high-velocity weapons used at both of these attacks are horrific. A high-capacity, magazine-fed automatic rifle such as the AR-15 causes extremely destructive tissue wounds,” he said.

One of the group’s proposals is to increase the regulation of high-velocity weapons, including AR-15s.

“These wounds are horribly lethal at close range, and sadly, most victims do not survive long enough to make it to a trauma center,” Dr. Stewart said.

On a positive note, “all of our current [Uvalde] patients are improving, which really brings us joy in this dark time,” he said. “But all of them have a long road to deal with recovery with both the physical and emotional impact of their injuries.”

Jeffrey Kerby, MD, agreed.

“Trauma surgeons see the short-term physical effects of these injuries and watch patients struggle with the long-term impact of these wounds,” said Dr. Kerby, director of trauma and acute care surgery at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
 

Surgeons feel ‘profound impact’ of shootings

“Firearm violence has a profound impact on surgeons, and we are the undisputed subject matter experts in treating the tragic results,” said Patrick Bailey, MD, medical director for advocacy at the American College of Surgeons.

“This impacts surgeons as well,” said Dr. Kerby, chair of the Committee on Trauma for the surgeons’ group. “We are human, and we can’t help but share in the grief, the pain, and the suffering that our patients endure.

“As a pediatric surgeon ... I have too often witnessed the impact of firearm violence, and obviously, the devastation extends beyond the victims to their families,” he said. “To put it succinctly, in our culture, parents are not supposed to be put in a position of burying their children.”
 

A public health crisis

“It’s important to recognize that we’ve been talking about a public health approach,” said Eileen Bulger, MD, acting chief of the trauma division at the University of Washington in Seattle. That strategy is important for engaging both firearm owners and communities that have a higher risk for firearm violence, she said.

A committee of the American College of Surgeons developed specific recommendations in 2018, which are still valid today. The group brought together surgeons from across the U.S. including “passionate firearm owners and experts in firearm safety,” Dr. Bulger said.

The committee, for example, agreed on 10 specific recommendations “that we believe are bipartisan and could have an immediate impact in saving lives.”

“I’m a lifelong gun owner,” Dr. Bailey said, emphasizing that the team’s process included participation and perspective from other surgeons “who, like me, are also gun owners, but gun owners who also seek to reduce the impact of firearm violence in our country.”

The recommendations address these areas:

  • Gun ownership
  • Firearm registration
  • Licensure
  • Education and training
  • Ownership responsibilities
  • Mandatory reporting and risk reduction
  • Safety innovation and technology
  • Research
  • The culture of violence
  • Social isolation and mental health

For example, “we currently have certain classes of weapons with significant offensive capability,” Dr. Bulger said, “that are appropriately restricted and regulated under the National Firearms Act as Class 3 weapons.”

This group includes fully automatic machine guns, explosive devices, and short-barrel shotguns.

“We recommend a formal reassessment of the firearms designated within each of these national firearms classifications,” Dr. Bulger said.

For example, high-capacity, magazine-fed semiautomatic rifles, such as the AR-15, should be considered for reclassification as NFA Class 3 firearms, or they should get a new designation with tighter regulation.

The ACS endorses formal firearm safety training for all new gun owners. Also, owners who do not provide reasonably safe firearm storage should be held responsible for events related to the discharge of their firearms, Dr. Bulger said. And people who are deemed an imminent threat to themselves or others through firearm ownership should be temporarily or permanently restricted, with due process.
 

Research and reporting reforms

The ACS is also calling for research on firearm injuries and firearm injury prevention to be federally funded, Dr. Bulger said. The research should be done in a nonpartisan manner, she said.

“We have concerns that the manner and tone in which information is released to the public may lead to copycat mass killers,” she said. “The ACS recommends that law enforcement officials and the press take steps to eliminate the notoriety of the shooter, for example.”

Dr. Bulger also addressed the mental health angle. “We encourage recognition of mental health warning signs and social isolation by teachers, counselors, peers, and parents.” When identified, immediate referral to professionals is needed.

In addition to these recommendations, another team from the American College of Surgeons has published an overview of ways to address the inequities that contribute to violence. “We advocate for federal funding to support the development of hospital-based and community programs for violence intervention and prevention,” Dr. Bulger said.

Dr. Bailey said that as a gun owner himself, he thinks other gun owners would support these recommendations.

“I do not believe that the steps recommended ... pose undue burden on the rights of individual gun owners,” he said.
 

The time is now

Most firearm injuries are not from mass shooting events, Dr. Kerby said.

“My own trauma center has seen a 40% increase in the number of firearm injuries just in the last 2 years,” he added, “and these numbers continue to grow.”

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

Trauma surgeons are in the tough position of seeing victims just after gun violence across the United States, and they have some advice.

Their strategies can work regardless of where you stand on the Second Amendment of the Constitution, said Patricia Turner, MD. “Our proposals are embraced by both gun owners and non–gun owners alike, and we are unique in that regard.”

These “implementable solutions” could prevent the next massacre, Dr. Turner, executive director of the American College of Surgeons, said during a news briefing the group sponsored on June 2.

“Our future – indeed all of our futures – depend on our ability to find durable, actionable steps that we can implement tomorrow to save lives,” she said.
 

Firsthand perspective

“Sadly I’m here today as a trauma surgeon who has cared for two of the largest mass shootings in modern U.S. history,” said Ronald Stewart, MD, chair of the department of surgery at University Hospital in San Antonio, Texas.

Dr. Stewart treated victims of the 2017 Sutherland Springs First Baptist Church shooting – where 27 people died, including the shooter – and the recent Uvalde school shooting, both in Texas.

“The injuries inflicted by high-velocity weapons used at both of these attacks are horrific. A high-capacity, magazine-fed automatic rifle such as the AR-15 causes extremely destructive tissue wounds,” he said.

One of the group’s proposals is to increase the regulation of high-velocity weapons, including AR-15s.

“These wounds are horribly lethal at close range, and sadly, most victims do not survive long enough to make it to a trauma center,” Dr. Stewart said.

On a positive note, “all of our current [Uvalde] patients are improving, which really brings us joy in this dark time,” he said. “But all of them have a long road to deal with recovery with both the physical and emotional impact of their injuries.”

Jeffrey Kerby, MD, agreed.

“Trauma surgeons see the short-term physical effects of these injuries and watch patients struggle with the long-term impact of these wounds,” said Dr. Kerby, director of trauma and acute care surgery at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
 

Surgeons feel ‘profound impact’ of shootings

“Firearm violence has a profound impact on surgeons, and we are the undisputed subject matter experts in treating the tragic results,” said Patrick Bailey, MD, medical director for advocacy at the American College of Surgeons.

“This impacts surgeons as well,” said Dr. Kerby, chair of the Committee on Trauma for the surgeons’ group. “We are human, and we can’t help but share in the grief, the pain, and the suffering that our patients endure.

“As a pediatric surgeon ... I have too often witnessed the impact of firearm violence, and obviously, the devastation extends beyond the victims to their families,” he said. “To put it succinctly, in our culture, parents are not supposed to be put in a position of burying their children.”
 

A public health crisis

“It’s important to recognize that we’ve been talking about a public health approach,” said Eileen Bulger, MD, acting chief of the trauma division at the University of Washington in Seattle. That strategy is important for engaging both firearm owners and communities that have a higher risk for firearm violence, she said.

A committee of the American College of Surgeons developed specific recommendations in 2018, which are still valid today. The group brought together surgeons from across the U.S. including “passionate firearm owners and experts in firearm safety,” Dr. Bulger said.

The committee, for example, agreed on 10 specific recommendations “that we believe are bipartisan and could have an immediate impact in saving lives.”

“I’m a lifelong gun owner,” Dr. Bailey said, emphasizing that the team’s process included participation and perspective from other surgeons “who, like me, are also gun owners, but gun owners who also seek to reduce the impact of firearm violence in our country.”

The recommendations address these areas:

  • Gun ownership
  • Firearm registration
  • Licensure
  • Education and training
  • Ownership responsibilities
  • Mandatory reporting and risk reduction
  • Safety innovation and technology
  • Research
  • The culture of violence
  • Social isolation and mental health

For example, “we currently have certain classes of weapons with significant offensive capability,” Dr. Bulger said, “that are appropriately restricted and regulated under the National Firearms Act as Class 3 weapons.”

This group includes fully automatic machine guns, explosive devices, and short-barrel shotguns.

“We recommend a formal reassessment of the firearms designated within each of these national firearms classifications,” Dr. Bulger said.

For example, high-capacity, magazine-fed semiautomatic rifles, such as the AR-15, should be considered for reclassification as NFA Class 3 firearms, or they should get a new designation with tighter regulation.

The ACS endorses formal firearm safety training for all new gun owners. Also, owners who do not provide reasonably safe firearm storage should be held responsible for events related to the discharge of their firearms, Dr. Bulger said. And people who are deemed an imminent threat to themselves or others through firearm ownership should be temporarily or permanently restricted, with due process.
 

Research and reporting reforms

The ACS is also calling for research on firearm injuries and firearm injury prevention to be federally funded, Dr. Bulger said. The research should be done in a nonpartisan manner, she said.

“We have concerns that the manner and tone in which information is released to the public may lead to copycat mass killers,” she said. “The ACS recommends that law enforcement officials and the press take steps to eliminate the notoriety of the shooter, for example.”

Dr. Bulger also addressed the mental health angle. “We encourage recognition of mental health warning signs and social isolation by teachers, counselors, peers, and parents.” When identified, immediate referral to professionals is needed.

In addition to these recommendations, another team from the American College of Surgeons has published an overview of ways to address the inequities that contribute to violence. “We advocate for federal funding to support the development of hospital-based and community programs for violence intervention and prevention,” Dr. Bulger said.

Dr. Bailey said that as a gun owner himself, he thinks other gun owners would support these recommendations.

“I do not believe that the steps recommended ... pose undue burden on the rights of individual gun owners,” he said.
 

The time is now

Most firearm injuries are not from mass shooting events, Dr. Kerby said.

“My own trauma center has seen a 40% increase in the number of firearm injuries just in the last 2 years,” he added, “and these numbers continue to grow.”

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

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NIAID trial to test asthma drug in disadvantaged urban children

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Fri, 06/03/2022 - 14:10

 

The Prevention of Asthma Exacerbations Using Dupilumab in Urban Children and Adolescents (PANDA) trial was launched in order to examine the effects of treatment on children with poorly controlled allergic asthma who live in low-income urban environments in the United States, according to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Black and Hispanic children who live in these environments are at particularly high risk for asthma and are prone to attacks. These children and adolescents often have many allergies and are exposed to both high levels of indoor allergens and traffic-related pollution, which can make their asthma even more difficult to control, according to a June 2 NIAID press release.

PANDA is a multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial of dupilumab adjunctive therapy for the reduction of asthma exacerbations in urban children and adolescents 6-17 years with T2-high exacerbation-prone asthma. Approximately 240 participants will be randomized 2:1 to one of two study arms: 1) guidelines-based asthma treatment plus dupilumab, or 2) guidelines-based asthma treatment plus placebo. The planned study treatment will continue for 1 year with an additional 3 months of follow-up following completion of study treatment, according to the study details.

In an earlier study, NIAID-supported investigators identified numerous networks of genes that are activated together and are associated with asthma attacks in minority children and adolescents living in low-income urban settings

“We need to find out how well approved asthma drugs work for disadvantaged children of color living in urban areas, and whether biological markers can help predict how the drugs affect their asthma,” NIAID director Anthony S. Fauci, MD, said in the release. “The PANDA trial is an important step toward these goals.”

Participant criteria for the study include children of either sex, ages 6-17 years, who live in prespecified urban areas. Participants must have a diagnosis of asthma and must have had at least two asthma exacerbations in the prior year (defined as a requirement for systemic corticosteroids and/or hospitalization). At the screening visit, participants must have the following requirements for asthma controller medication: For children ages 6-11 years: treatments with at least fluticasone 250 mcg dry powder inhaler (DPI) one puff twice daily or its equivalent; for children ages 12 years and older, treatment with at least fluticasone 250 mcg plus long-acting beta agonist (LABA) DPI one puff twice daily or its equivalent.
 

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05347771Location: The NIAID-funded Childhood Asthma in Urban Settings (CAUSE) Network is conducting the study at seven medical centers located in Aurora, Colo.; Boston; Chicago; Cincinnati; New York, and Washington, D.C.

Sponsor: NIAID, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi are cofunding the phase 2 trial.

Study start date: April 2022

Expected completion Date: March 31, 2025

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The Prevention of Asthma Exacerbations Using Dupilumab in Urban Children and Adolescents (PANDA) trial was launched in order to examine the effects of treatment on children with poorly controlled allergic asthma who live in low-income urban environments in the United States, according to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Black and Hispanic children who live in these environments are at particularly high risk for asthma and are prone to attacks. These children and adolescents often have many allergies and are exposed to both high levels of indoor allergens and traffic-related pollution, which can make their asthma even more difficult to control, according to a June 2 NIAID press release.

PANDA is a multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial of dupilumab adjunctive therapy for the reduction of asthma exacerbations in urban children and adolescents 6-17 years with T2-high exacerbation-prone asthma. Approximately 240 participants will be randomized 2:1 to one of two study arms: 1) guidelines-based asthma treatment plus dupilumab, or 2) guidelines-based asthma treatment plus placebo. The planned study treatment will continue for 1 year with an additional 3 months of follow-up following completion of study treatment, according to the study details.

In an earlier study, NIAID-supported investigators identified numerous networks of genes that are activated together and are associated with asthma attacks in minority children and adolescents living in low-income urban settings

“We need to find out how well approved asthma drugs work for disadvantaged children of color living in urban areas, and whether biological markers can help predict how the drugs affect their asthma,” NIAID director Anthony S. Fauci, MD, said in the release. “The PANDA trial is an important step toward these goals.”

Participant criteria for the study include children of either sex, ages 6-17 years, who live in prespecified urban areas. Participants must have a diagnosis of asthma and must have had at least two asthma exacerbations in the prior year (defined as a requirement for systemic corticosteroids and/or hospitalization). At the screening visit, participants must have the following requirements for asthma controller medication: For children ages 6-11 years: treatments with at least fluticasone 250 mcg dry powder inhaler (DPI) one puff twice daily or its equivalent; for children ages 12 years and older, treatment with at least fluticasone 250 mcg plus long-acting beta agonist (LABA) DPI one puff twice daily or its equivalent.
 

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05347771Location: The NIAID-funded Childhood Asthma in Urban Settings (CAUSE) Network is conducting the study at seven medical centers located in Aurora, Colo.; Boston; Chicago; Cincinnati; New York, and Washington, D.C.

Sponsor: NIAID, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi are cofunding the phase 2 trial.

Study start date: April 2022

Expected completion Date: March 31, 2025

 

The Prevention of Asthma Exacerbations Using Dupilumab in Urban Children and Adolescents (PANDA) trial was launched in order to examine the effects of treatment on children with poorly controlled allergic asthma who live in low-income urban environments in the United States, according to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Black and Hispanic children who live in these environments are at particularly high risk for asthma and are prone to attacks. These children and adolescents often have many allergies and are exposed to both high levels of indoor allergens and traffic-related pollution, which can make their asthma even more difficult to control, according to a June 2 NIAID press release.

PANDA is a multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial of dupilumab adjunctive therapy for the reduction of asthma exacerbations in urban children and adolescents 6-17 years with T2-high exacerbation-prone asthma. Approximately 240 participants will be randomized 2:1 to one of two study arms: 1) guidelines-based asthma treatment plus dupilumab, or 2) guidelines-based asthma treatment plus placebo. The planned study treatment will continue for 1 year with an additional 3 months of follow-up following completion of study treatment, according to the study details.

In an earlier study, NIAID-supported investigators identified numerous networks of genes that are activated together and are associated with asthma attacks in minority children and adolescents living in low-income urban settings

“We need to find out how well approved asthma drugs work for disadvantaged children of color living in urban areas, and whether biological markers can help predict how the drugs affect their asthma,” NIAID director Anthony S. Fauci, MD, said in the release. “The PANDA trial is an important step toward these goals.”

Participant criteria for the study include children of either sex, ages 6-17 years, who live in prespecified urban areas. Participants must have a diagnosis of asthma and must have had at least two asthma exacerbations in the prior year (defined as a requirement for systemic corticosteroids and/or hospitalization). At the screening visit, participants must have the following requirements for asthma controller medication: For children ages 6-11 years: treatments with at least fluticasone 250 mcg dry powder inhaler (DPI) one puff twice daily or its equivalent; for children ages 12 years and older, treatment with at least fluticasone 250 mcg plus long-acting beta agonist (LABA) DPI one puff twice daily or its equivalent.
 

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05347771Location: The NIAID-funded Childhood Asthma in Urban Settings (CAUSE) Network is conducting the study at seven medical centers located in Aurora, Colo.; Boston; Chicago; Cincinnati; New York, and Washington, D.C.

Sponsor: NIAID, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi are cofunding the phase 2 trial.

Study start date: April 2022

Expected completion Date: March 31, 2025

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