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Journals Psychiatric Clinics of North A...

Psychiatric Clinics of North America

https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879839/national-institute-on-drug-abuse-dissemination-of-scientific-knowledge-to-improve-adolescent-health
#21
REVIEW
Geetha A Subramaniam, Laura Nolan, Kristen Huntley, Michelle Corbin, Kenyatta Crenshaw, Todd Mandell, Janet Linton, Quandra Blackeney
The wide and effective dissemination of research findings is crucial to the mission of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). This article describes NIDA dissemination efforts and resources that are available to inform clinicians, teens, families, and educators about youth and substance use. Resources that are available include content addressing facts about youth drug use, trends in use, and stigma, in addition to substance use disorder (SUD) prevention and treatment. Information is provided about resources such as infographics, research-based practice guides, training, educational events, and online videos...
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879838/treatment-of-adolescent-cannabis-use-disorders
#22
REVIEW
Zachary W Adams, Brigid R Marriott, Leslie A Hulvershorn, Jesse D Hinckley
This review summarizes treatments for cannabis use disorder (CUD) in adolescents. The best supported CUD treatments are cognitive behavioral psychotherapies, including family-based models that facilitate environmental changes and youth-focused models that incorporate skills training, motivational interviewing, and contingency management to promote reductions in cannabis use. Some medications show promise in reducing cannabis craving and withdrawal symptoms. Further research is needed on the efficacy and implementation of existing treatments given the changes in cannabis use trends over time and on emerging technologies that may expand access to evidence-based CUD treatments...
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879837/brief-interventions-for-cannabis-using-adolescents
#23
REVIEW
Ken C Winters, Holly Waldron, Hyman Hops, Tim Ozechowski, Aleah Montano
This article discusses the application of brief interventions to address adolescents with a cannabis use problem. Topics include a general model of brief interventions, the outcome literature, existing brief interventions that focus on youth cannabis use, adjustments to a brief intervention when addressing cannabis, referral to treatment issues, personalizing a brief intervention, the need to address coexisting problems, and future directions.
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879836/substance-use-screening-brief-intervention-and-referral-to-treatment-in-pediatric-primary-care-school-based-health-clinics-and-mental-health-clinics
#24
REVIEW
Jessica B Calihan, Sharon Levy
Adolescent cannabis use is a modifiable health behavior with potential adverse developmental, cognitive, psychological, and health effects. Over the last 2 decades, work to promote implementation of screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment has improved screening, use of validated screening tools, and preventive messaging. Current intervention strategies for cannabis use are associated with modest, short-term effects, and referral to treatment is limited by availability of resources for adolescent substance use...
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879835/a-pragmatic-clinical-approach-to-substance-abuse-prevention
#25
REVIEW
Paula Riggs
Research has led to the development of hundreds of evidence-based prevention interventions, most of which are school-based prevention programs. Most primary care clinicians and child/adolescent behavioral health clinicians are unfamiliar with and/or lack training in evidence-based prevention interventions. However, most clinicians in these settings routinely screen children for developmental delays and skills deficits that increase the risk of developing substance abuse and a broad range of mental health and behavior problems by adolescence...
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879834/a-review-of-the-effects-of-adolescent-cannabis-use-on-physical-health
#26
REVIEW
Abigail L Tuvel, Evan A Winiger, J Megan Ross
The current review highlights the available research related to cannabis and indicators of physical health in a variety of domains. Various studies have found associations between cannabis use with pulmonary, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, and endocrine function as well as body mass index and sleep. At this time, more research is needed to understand the influence of cannabis use on physical health, particularly among adolescent samples.
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879833/cannabis-and-psychosis
#27
REVIEW
Michelle L West, Shadi Sharif
Psychosis and cannabis use may overlap in multiple ways in young people. Research suggests that cannabis use increases risk for having psychotic symptoms, both attenuated (subthreshold) and acute. Cannabis use may also exacerbate psychosis symptoms among young people with underlying psychosis risk and psychotic disorders. Although there are suggestions for treating co-occurring psychosis and cannabis use in young people (e.g., incorporating cannabis use assessment and treatment strategies into specialized early psychosis care), there are many gaps in clinical trial research to support evidence-based treatment of these overlapping concerns...
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879832/adolescent-cannabis-use-comorbid-attention-deficit-hyperactivity-disorder-and-other-internalizing-and-externalizing-disorders
#28
REVIEW
Karla Molinero, Jesse D Hinckley
Cannabis use often co-occurs with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and other internalizing and externalizing disorders. Treatment planning, including pharmacologic and psychosocial interventions, for these comorbid disorders require thorough diagnostic evaluation to determine the extent of social, emotional, and behavioral impairments, severity of substance use, and motivation for change. Improved understanding of these comorbid disorders will inform treatment planning that address current symptoms and behaviors and may also prevent the development of mental health and substance use disorders in early adulthood...
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879831/the-effects-of-adolescent-cannabis-use-on-psychosocial-functioning-a-critical-review-of-the-evidence
#29
REVIEW
Jonathan D Schaefer, Kayla M Nelson, Sylia Wilson
Although observational studies have shown that adolescent cannabis use is associated with impairments in important psychosocial domains, including peer, romantic, and parent-child relationships, educational outcomes, adult socioeconomic status, and legal consequences, mechanisms underlying these associations remain largely unclear. Cannabis use may have a deleterious causal effect on functioning, but it is also possible the association may be due to reverse causation or confounding by shared vulnerability factors that account for both cannabis use in adolescence and concurrent and subsequent psychosocial impairment...
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879830/impact-of-adolescent-cannabis-use-on-neurocognitive-and-brain-development
#30
REVIEW
J Cobb Scott
Research examining associations between frequent cannabis use in adolescence and brain-behavior outcomes has increased substantially over the past 2 decades. This review attempts to synthesize the state of evidence in this area of research while acknowledging challenges in interpretation. Although there is converging evidence that ongoing, frequent cannabis use in adolescence is associated with small reductions in cognitive functioning, there is still significant debate regarding the persistence of reductions after a period of abstinence...
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879829/cannabis-use-disorder-in-adolescents
#31
REVIEW
Daniel Hashemi, Kevin Gray
With increasing cannabis potency, increasing variety of methods of cannabis use, and lower perceived risk of cannabis use, it is increasingly important clinicians who work with adolescents remain up-to-date on the latest literature regarding cannabis use and its associated outcomes. Adolescent cannabis use is associated with chronic cognitive, psychosocial, psychiatric, and physical outcomes. Clinicians working in this field should be able to recognize cannabis use disorder, understand how adolescent cannabis use can impact the developing mind, and have informed discussions with patients and families regarding risks of use...
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879828/impact-of-cannabis-legalization-on-adolescent-cannabis-use
#32
REVIEW
Kristie Ladegard, Devika Bhatia
Because of substantial limitations in available national data, such as inconsistencies among surveys and small sample sizes, the increased prevalence of cannabis use among adolescents since recreational legalization has not been directly observed. Nevertheless, both usage frequency and product potency have significantly increased, alongside alternative routes of delivery to smoking, such as vaping cannabis. Moreover, certain populations may be especially vulnerable to the effects of legalization. Regardless of differing state-level cannabis legalization status, the adverse consequences of cannabis on youth have clear negative impacts on mental health, medical symptoms, educational outcomes, and increased risk of addiction to other substances...
December 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37500256/women-s-mental-health
#33
EDITORIAL
Susan G Kornstein, Anita H Clayton
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
September 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37500255/psychiatric-issues-in-women-veterans
#34
REVIEW
Elizabeth Alpert, Allison L Baier, Tara E Galovski
Women veterans have unique life experiences and mental health needs, perhaps in part related to their high rates of exposure to traumatic events including military sexual trauma, combat trauma, and intimate partner violence. We review mental health difficulties among women veterans and describe related functional impairment. Evidence-based treatments are available, but barriers to care remain, including providers' lack of awareness of the unique needs of women veterans. Efforts are needed to increase access to evidence-based interventions, remove barriers to care, and improve provider competency working with this population to maximize clinical outcomes...
September 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37500254/reproductive-rights-and-women-s-mental-health
#35
REVIEW
Nada Logan Stotland
Reproductive rights, including access to comprehensive reproductive health care, are essential to the well-being of women and society. The Dobbs decision of the US Supreme Court has greatly exacerbated the confusion, the stress, and the loss of services. Psychiatrists need to know and communicate the strong scientific evidence of the advantages of sex education, contraception, abortion, and bodily autonomy and to help patients process their feelings and make informed decisions about their own care.
September 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37500253/working-with-survivors-of-sex-trafficking-mental-health-implications
#36
REVIEW
Abigail H Conley, Kellie E Carlyle, Gary Cuddeback, Susan G Kornstein
Human trafficking is one of the largest criminal enterprises in the world, generating an estimated $150 billion in illegal profits annually. Sex trafficking is the most common form of human trafficking, and survivors experience significant physical, emotional, and sexual trauma that places them at increased risk of poor health outcomes. As sex trafficking continues to disproportionately impact the physical and mental health of individuals belonging to marginalized groups, a multidisciplinary approach to combat trafficking will require collaboration between health services, law enforcement, and social services...
September 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37500252/mental-health-disparities-in-sexual-minority-and-transgender-women-implications-and-considerations-for-treatment
#37
REVIEW
Kareen M Matouk, Julie K Schulman, Julia A C Case
Minority stress theory offers an explanation of how discrimination, marginalization, harassment, and violence against sexual minority and transgender women are connected to mental health disparities. Particularly, these groups are vulnerable to body image issues, disordered eating, higher rates of mood and anxiety disorders, suicide and nonsuicidal self-injury, and substance use. Discrimination is also experienced within clinical settings, which may lead this population to postpone or avoid treatment. Clinicians play a crucial role in reducing barriers to health care by developing cultural competency and ensuring safe and affirming spaces within their practice...
September 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37500251/racial-ethnic-disparities-and-women-s-mental-health-considerations-for-providing-culturally-sensitive-care
#38
REVIEW
Nina Ballone, Erica Richards
Racial and ethnic disparities are apparent in many areas of health care. Within mental health, women experience increased rates of some mental health disorders particularly noted within the reproductive life cycle starting at puberty and ending with the menopause transition. Hormone and endocrine processes along with individual vulnerability and various stressors all likely play a major role. Among these women, a disproportionate number are racial and ethnic minorities in the United States. Cultural influences and systemic barriers are explored to provide competent and necessary mental health care for women...
September 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37500250/psychological-aspects-of-breast-cancer
#39
REVIEW
Jennifer Kim Penberthy, Anne Louise Stewart, Caroline F Centeno, David R Penberthy
Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in women. Associated psychological symptoms include stress, adjustment difficulties, anxiety, depression, impaired cognitive function, sleep disturbances, altered body image, sexual dysfunction, and diminished overall well-being. Distress screening and assessment identifies women who will benefit from therapeutic interventions. Addressing these symptoms improves compliance with treatment and outcomes including disease-related outcomes, psychological symptoms, and quality of life...
September 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37500249/examining-associations-between-women-s-mental-health-and-obesity
#40
REVIEW
Jennifer V A Kemp, Vivek Kumar, April Saleem, Gabrielle Hashman, Mashael Hussain, Valerie H Taylor
Obesity is a common comorbidity associated with mental illness. It is important to understand the many ways weight gain and obesity can impact the cause and course of mental illness in women, with a special focus on vulnerable life stages. Women seem disproportionally impacted by the weight gain side effects of medications, and issues such as weight gain are more likely to impact symptoms of mental illness, impacting self-esteem. This article summarizes the existing literature on the associations between women's mental health and obesity...
September 2023: Psychiatric Clinics of North America
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