Tag Archives: awareness

NOVEMBER 7, 2023 | NATIONAL CANINE LYMPHOMA AWARENESS DAY | NATIONAL RETINOL DAY | NATIONAL BITTERSWEET CHOCOLATE WITH ALMONDS DAY | INTERNATIONAL MERLOT DAY | INTERNATIONAL DAY OF MEDICAL PHYSICS – National Day Calendar

  1. NOVEMBER 7, 2023 | NATIONAL CANINE LYMPHOMA AWARENESS DAY | NATIONAL RETINOL DAY | NATIONAL BITTERSWEET CHOCOLATE WITH ALMONDS DAY | INTERNATIONAL MERLOT DAY | INTERNATIONAL DAY OF MEDICAL PHYSICS National Day Calendar
  2. Myths about cancer that should NOT be believed IndiaTimes
  3. National Cancer Awareness Day: Two contrasting tales of suffering & recovery OTV News
  4. Buy minimum Rs 20 lakh indemnity cover for protection against cancer Business Standard
  5. National Cancer Awareness Day 2023 Observed on 7th November Adda247
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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FACT SHEET: On Int’l Overdose Awareness Day, the Biden-Harris Administration Announces More Than $450 Million in New Funding to Support President Biden’s Unity Agenda Efforts to Beat the Overdose Epidemic and Save Lives – The White House

  1. FACT SHEET: On Int’l Overdose Awareness Day, the Biden-Harris Administration Announces More Than $450 Million in New Funding to Support President Biden’s Unity Agenda Efforts to Beat the Overdose Epidemic and Save Lives The White House
  2. Spotlight on Bay Area stories for National Overdose Awareness Day KPIX | CBS NEWS BAY AREA
  3. Alliance to Heal holds proclamation with City of La Crosse and La Crosse County WXOW.com
  4. Family of ‘Wire’ actor seeks to raise awareness of overdose danger Eyewitness News ABC7NY
  5. Overdose Awareness Day community event at MLK Center postponed WECT
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Novel Neurofeedback Technique Enhances Awareness of Mind-Wandering

Summary: Researchers have developed a novel neurofeedback technique based on Pavlovian conditioning that detects when a person’s mind is wandering.

Source: ATR Brain Information Communication Research Laboratory Group

Everyone knows the feeling. You are trying to concentrate on driving or studying, or paying attention in a boring meeting, but suddenly, you realize that you are thinking about something irrelevant to the task at hand.

While mind-wandering is sometimes associated with mental problems such as depression, it also contributes to our creativity. Therefore, what we need is not to avoid mind-wandering, but to learn how to manage it.

The first step to control mind-wandering is to realize that it is occurring. Once we notice it, we are free to stop or to continue it. At ATR, we developed the first method, a neurofeedback technique, to enhance awareness of mind-wandering.

We performed a double-blinded test with 36 participants and demonstrated that awareness of mind-wandering was significantly enhanced after 20 minutes of neurofeedback. Participants were assigned by computer to control and experimental groups and those assignments were withheld from experimenters.

During neurofeedback, artificial intelligence was used to identify mind-wandering of participants performing a task that requires concentration.

In the control group, soft tones were presented at irregular intervals. In the experimental group, those tones were sounded when neurofeedback detected that a participant’s mind was wandering.

However, until debriefing at the end of the experiment, participants in both groups were told that tones were meaningless and were instructed to ignore them.

Since people become aware that their minds are wandering at the time their attention is re-directed back to the external environment, we hypothesized that this novel neurofeedback creates a state in which participants become cognizant of mind-wandering whenever it occurs.

This study had two unique features. First, participants in the experimental group did not know that they had received neurofeedback and they didn’t realize that their awareness of mind-wandering had been enhanced. Second, in conventional neurofeedback, participants obtain rewards when they control their brains well.

In contrast, our neurofeedback employed no rewards or punishments. Instead, it was based on traditional (Pavlovian) conditioning.

This study did not reveal how long effects of this neurofeedback persist, but probably they will not last long. However, future studies will examine whether repeated neurofeedback endures in daily life, and we will also explore training techniques to improve mood and mental problems and to enhance creativity.

Everyone knows the feeling. You are trying to concentrate on driving or studying, or paying attention in a boring meeting, but suddenly, you realize that you are thinking about something irrelevant to the task at hand.

While mind-wandering is sometimes associated with mental problems such as depression, it also contributes to our creativity. Therefore, what we need is not to avoid mind-wandering, but to learn how to manage it.

The first step to control mind-wandering is to realize that it is occurring. Once we notice it, we are free to stop or to continue it. At ATR, we developed the first method, a neurofeedback technique, to enhance awareness of mind-wandering.

We performed a double-blinded test with 36 participants and demonstrated that awareness of mind-wandering was significantly enhanced after 20 minutes of neurofeedback. Participants were assigned by computer to control and experimental groups and those assignments were withheld from experimenters.

During neurofeedback, artificial intelligence was used to identify mind-wandering of participants performing a task that requires concentration.

In the control group, soft tones were presented at irregular intervals. In the experimental group, those tones were sounded when neurofeedback detected that a participant’s mind was wandering.

However, until debriefing at the end of the experiment, participants in both groups were told that tones were meaningless and were instructed to ignore them.

The first step to control mind-wandering is to realize that it is occurring. Image is in the public domain

Since people become aware that their minds are wandering at the time their attention is re-directed back to the external environment, we hypothesized that this novel neurofeedback creates a state in which participants become cognizant of mind-wandering whenever it occurs.

This study had two unique features. First, participants in the experimental group did not know that they had received neurofeedback and they didn’t realize that their awareness of mind-wandering had been enhanced. Second, in conventional neurofeedback, participants obtain rewards when they control their brains well.

In contrast, our neurofeedback employed no rewards or punishments. Instead, it was based on traditional (Pavlovian) conditioning.

This study did not reveal how long effects of this neurofeedback persist, but probably they will not last long. However, future studies will examine whether repeated neurofeedback endures in daily life, and we will also explore training techniques to improve mood and mental problems and to enhance creativity.

See also

About this neurotech research news

Author: Ritsuko Mashimo
Source: ATR Brain Information Communication Research Laboratory Group
Contact: Ritsuko Mashimo – ATR Brain Information Communication Research Laboratory Group
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.
“Pavlovian-based neurofeedback enhances meta-awareness of mind-wandering” by IssakuKawashima et al. Neural Networks


Abstract

Pavlovian-based neurofeedback enhances meta-awareness of mind-wandering

Absorption in mind-wandering (MW) may worsen our mood and can cause psychological disorders. Researchers indicate the possibility that meta-awareness of MW prevents these mal-effects and enhances favorable consequences of MW, such as boosting creativity; thus, meta-awareness has attracted psychological and clinical attention.

However, few studies have investigated the nature of meta-awareness of MW, because there has been no method to isolate and operate this ability. Therefore, we propose a new approach to manipulate the ability of meta-awareness.

We used Pavlovian conditioning, tying to it an occurrence of MW and a neutral tone sound inducing the meta-awareness of MW.

To perform paired presentations of the unconditioned stimulus (neutral tone) and the conditioned stimulus (perception accompanying MW), we detected participants’ natural occurrence of MW via electroencephalogram and a machine-learning estimation method.

The double-blinded randomized controlled trial with 37 participants found that a single 20-min conditioning session significantly increased the meta-awareness of MW as assessed by behavioral and neuroscientific measures.

The core protocol of the proposed method is real-time feedback on participants’ neural information, and in that sense, we can refer to it as neurofeedback.

However, there are some differences from typical neurofeedback protocols, and we discuss them in this paper. Our novel classical conditioning is expected to contribute to future research on the modulation effect of meta-awareness on MW.

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November is Pancreatic Cancer Awareness Month; know the signs and symptoms

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Pancreatic cancer is a lethal disease rarely detected at an early stage.

It is the third leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States.

It is estimated that more than 60,000 Americans will be diagnosed with pancreatic cancer by the end of this year, and more than 48,000 people will die of it.

The exact causes pancreatic cancer are still not yet well understood.

Factors that increase the risk of developing pancreatic cancer include diabetes, smoking, chronically inflamed pancreas, family history of genetic disorders that can increase cancer risk, family history of pancreatic cancer, and older age.

Additional factors that may increase risk include consuming a diet high in red or processed meats and obesity.

Dr. Mitra’s previous three columns:

Pancreatic cancer begins in the pancreas — an organ in the abdomen that lies behind the lower portion of the stomach.

The pancreas has two primary functions: It makes digestive enzymes such as amylase and lipase; And it also produces hormones, such as insulin, that control how our bodies store and utilize glucose — sugar that is the body’s primary source of energy.

There are two forms of pancreatic cancer: exocrine and endocrine.

Exocrine cancer accounts for approximately 95 percent of all cases.

Endocrine cancer is also known as pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors, or islet cell tumors.

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma represents approximately 85 percent of all pancreatic neoplasms.

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma begins in the ductal cells that deliver digestive enzymes produced by the pancreatic cells into the duodenum.

While some of these risk factors are out of your control, here are some lifestyle choices you can make to reduce your risk:

If you smoke, try to stop. Talk to your doctor about smoking cessation strategies, including medications, support groups, and nicotine replacement therapy.

Work to maintain a healthy diet. Engage in daily aerobic exercise with a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, and whole grains that may reduce your cancer risk.

Common presenting symptoms in patients with exocrine pancreatic cancer are fatigue, unintentional weight loss, lack of appetite, abdominal pain, dark urine, jaundice, nausea, vomiting, oily stools and back pain.

Signs and symptoms of pancreatic cancer typically do not occur until the disease is advanced.

The condition is rarely detected at its early stages when it is the most curable.

Early detection helps save lives. So, learn and share the facts, symptoms and risk factors of pancreatic cancer, motivate healthy choices and provide guidance on when to seek genetic counseling.

November is Pancreatic Cancer Awareness Month, which paves the opportunity to learn more about the risk factors of this highly lethal malignancy, inspire the community to take action, and drive research toward a cure.

November is a month of inspiration for communities touched by pancreatic cancer.

Why wait? Call your doctor to help you take the proper steps to prevent pancreatic cancer, seek immediate intervention and educate others.

Dr. Sue Mitra is Board Certified in Internal Medicine and has been practicing in Brevard County since 2022. Dr. Mitra can be reached at 321-622-6222. You can visit her at www.suemitra.com and schedule an appointment. Call now to learn more about pancreatic cancer and assess the risks of this disease.

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Bill Gates takes it to the extreme and releases swarm of mosquitoes to create malaria awareness

Bill Gates made a statement about malaria recently since he did whatever it took to make a point, that it shouldn’t be just the communities in economically challenged circumstances who should deal with the situation.

He’s been an advocate to combat malaria

Gates who has been a fundraiser and investor for different life-threatening situations has endeavored in preventing the malaria disease from claiming more lives and to create awareness, he took it to the limit by releasing a swarm of mosquitoes to the attendees of the conference where he was the keynote speaker.

People had mixed feelings

His antics had quite a reaction on social media, “This guy has been fighting viruses since windows 95… .” Another commented, “I would be so mad if I was in that audience!”

While the next one continued “I love how everyone is clapping and laughing while bill releases mosquitoes into the crowd” – prompting the reply: “They’re not clapping they’re trying to kill the mosquitoes.”

This is the second time he used insects to prove a point

In 2010 he released glowing fireflies to make people aware of the global energy shortage crisis, and back them he received a standing ovation for his antics.

Bill and Melinda Gates have donated to try and eradicate malaria

Bill Gates has been keen on his endeavors to prove a point regarding worldly dangers such as Ebola and SARS which are also carried by mosquitoes.

Both Bill and his ex-wife Melinda Gates have been using their foundation to attract interest so there could, fortunately, have malaria eradication.



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Colonoscopy screening by Heidi Klum raises awareness of process after she was ‘late to the party’

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“America’s Got Talent” judge Heidi Klum recently had some memorable photos taken not of herself — but of her colon.

And she’s using it to raise awareness about the importance of colon cancer screening.

The 49-year-old recently shared during an appearance on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” that she received a colonoscopy while celebrating her three-year wedding anniversary with her husband, German guitarist Tom Kaulitz.

NON-HODGKIN’S LYMPHOMA: WHAT IS THE CANCER THAT JANE FONDA SAYS SHE HAS?

He has a type of migraine known as cluster headaches — so the pair went on a health retreat in Austria. 

“Usually I have my photo taken from the outside, but they were all in there,” Klum told comedian Nicole Byer, who was the guest host for the late-night show two weeks ago. 

Heidi Klum is married to musician Tom Kaulitz. She discussed the recent test she had to screen for colon cancer. 
(Getty Images)

She learned that the intestine is 8 meters long but admitted “the pictures didn’t come out so well.” 

What is a colonoscopy?

A colonoscopy is a screening test often performed by a doctor who specializes in the gastrointestinal tract. The screening is done a person who does not have any symptoms to look for disease, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

“There are multiple ways to screen for colon cancer, including colonoscopy, stool tests and by imaging (virtual colonography),” said Dr. Avinash Ketwaroo, gastroenterologist and associate professor of medicine at Yale School of Medicine in Connecticut.

“Colonoscopy has the advantage of allowing for the detection and removal of precancerous polyps during the same procedure.”

Nearly all colorectal cancer develops from abnormal growths in the colon or rectum, which are known as precancerous polyps, per the CDC.

The health agency noted that a colonoscopy will show if there are any precancerous polyps — so that those can be removed before they have a chance to turn into cancer.

Heidi Klum discussed her recent colonoscopy. Doctors say it is generally safe and well tolerated by most patients — and is a critical screening tool.
(James Devaney/GC Images)

“Colonoscopy has the advantage of allowing for the detection and removal of precancerous polyps during the same procedure, and therefore can prevent colorectal cancer,” said Dr. David Greenwald, director of clinical gastroenterology and endoscopy at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.

Benefits outweigh the risks for most people

Greenwald told Fox News Digital that a colonoscopy is generally safe and well tolerated with minimal risks, though there are some complications to be aware of before consenting to the procedure. 

These include complications related to sedation and bleeding risks as well, “which is estimated to occur in about one in 1,000 procedures.”

“For colonoscopy, the benefits of detecting and preventing colorectal cancer are substantial and far outweigh the risks.”

Because a scope is passed into the colon, another rare complication is “perforation, or making a hole in the intestine, which occurs in about one in 3,000 to 1 [in] 5,000 procedures.”

Greenwald said that “all medical procedures have risks. For colonoscopy, the benefits of detecting and preventing colorectal cancer are substantial and far outweigh the risks.”

Don’t fret the ‘prep’

Still, many patients are cautious about having a colonoscopy because the colon needs to be cleared of stool. The preparation requires frequent trips to the restroom prior to the procedure. 

“Preparation for colonoscopy is often considered to be the worst part of the procedure — comedians have made entire routines about this very topic,” Greenwald added.

Although other screening tests are available to detect polyps, a colonoscopy needs be performed later to remove them if a polyp is detected during the test.
(iStock)

“However, newer and better tasting preparation solutions are available, and it is possible to achieve complete colonoscopy preparation with lower volumes of fluid than was previously thought.”

And when the “prep” is then complete — with that lower volume of fluid and better tasting solutions — it is generally “not as bad as people are expecting it to be,” Greenwald noted.

But some people would just rather choose a less invasive screening approach.

Stool tests and other screenings

Greenwald told Fox News Digital that although other screening tests are available to detect polyps, a colonoscopy needs be performed later to remove them if a polyp is detected.

Some less invasive screening tests are the stool-based tests that look for blood in the stool, such as FIT, or fecal immunochemical testing, he added.

“Colonoscopy remains the most effective way to reduce your overall risk of developing colon cancer.”

These tests are generally done annually; a patient receives a test kit and uses a stick or brush to obtain one or more small stool samples, according to the CDC.

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The samples are then returned to a lab, where they are checked for the presence of blood.

Another type of stool test is known as FIT-DNA testing that looks for both blood in the stool and “abnormal pieces of DNA that might come off polyps or cancer,” which is commercially known as Cologuard, Greenwald noted.

In this image released on May 17, Heidi Klum attends the 2021 MTV Movie and TV Awards: UNSCRIPTED in Los Angeles, California. 
(Amy Sussman/Getty Images)

This test, which is done once every three years, requires the patient to collect a complete bowel movement, which is then sent to a lab to look for “altered DNA” and for the presence of blood, per the CDC. 

“Colonoscopy remains the most effective way to reduce your overall risk of developing colon cancer,” said Ketwaroo. “It allows us to find precancerous polyps and remove them, and to identify colon cancer earlier when it is more easily treated.”

NEW STUDY SUGGESTS YOU SHOULD STOP EATING ULTRA-PROCESSED FOODS

It’s a more efficient “one-step approach” compared to the “two-step approach with stool-based testing, where if the stool test is abnormal, the second step, a colonoscopy, is then necessary to complete the screening continuum,” Greenwald added.

When should you get a repeat colonoscopy? 

A colonoscopy is generally recommended every 10 years in average-risk individuals by national guidelines, Greenwald noted.

But stool tests, however, need to be done more frequently to be as effective.

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Klum admitted she was “a little late to the party” to get a colonoscopy because she’s turning 50.

“Recently, the recommended age to have your first screening test was lowered to 45 from 50 years of age,” Ketwaroo said.

“This reflects a growing awareness of younger patients [having] colon cancer.”

Klum said her colonoscopy was normal.

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But if a colonoscopy shows precancerous polyps — then, depending on the type of polyp, “a shorter interval, often three or five years, is necessary when colon polyps are detected on the initial exam,” Greenwald noted. 

“Patients who have colon polyps once are at higher risk for having colon polyps subsequently and require more intensive surveillance.”

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New York Yankees, Tampa Bay Rays collaborate on social media to spread awareness about gun violence

While their players competed against each other on the field, the social media teams for the Tampa Bay Rays and New York Yankees joined in collaboration Thursday night in an effort to raise awareness about gun violence in the United States.

In wake of the recent mass shootings in Buffalo, New York, and Uvalde, Texas, both teams opted to use their platforms to provide “facts about gun violence in America” instead of providing any live commentary about Thursday’s game.

“We all deserve to be safe — in schools, grocery stores, places of worship, our neighborhoods, houses and America,” the Rays posted prior to the start of Thursday’s game. “The most recent shootings in Buffalo and Uvalde have shaken us to the core.

“This cannot become normal. We cannot become numb. We cannot look the other way. We all know, if nothing changes, nothing changes.”

Added the Yankees, who have more than 3.6 million Twitter followers: “The devastating events that have taken place in Uvalde, Buffalo and countless other communities across our nation are tragedies that are intolerable.”

Throughout the game, the teams posted the same facts — as well as attributing where they got those facts — in concert with each other on their respective Twitter feeds.

MLB teams’ social media accounts are usually used during games to show video highlights, relay baseball statistics or exchange witty jokes with other accounts about the action on the field. On Thursday, that was replaced by posts like “Firearms were the leading cause of death for American children and teens in 2020.”

Tampa Bay also pledged to make a $50,000 donation to a national gun violence prevention organization. The Rays, who have more than 650,000 followers, also changed their Twitter header to an image reading “End Gun Violence.”

The collaboration comes after an 18-year-old gunman killed 19 children and two teachers at Robb Elementary School on Tuesday in Uvalde, Texas. In Buffalo, 10 people were killed on May 14 when an 18-year-old gunman opened fire in a supermarket. Both gunmen were using AR-15-style assault rifles.

“We understand that no single organization can solve this crisis alone,” the Rays posted, “but working together, we can make an impact.”

Several notable sports figures — including Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr — have used their platform over the past few days to plead for action to combat gun violence.

The Uvalde school shooting was particularly personal for Rays reliever Brooks Raley, who is from Uvalde and still has family who live in the town. He attended the school where the shooting occurred.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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People With Dermatillomania Are Spreading Awareness On TikTok

For months, Jaylin Scott had picked at her armpits. She would dig at her skin any time of the day — even in her sleep — until it bled and burned. These episodes would make her scream and cry in pain, drained by the compulsion to level out her skin.

“In my mind I’m screaming at myself to stop picking, stop picking, but I just couldn’t,” Scott said. “I had to have someone physically pull my arm away.”

The dry heat where she worked as a lifeguard in Las Vegas was intense, but she couldn’t wear deodorant because picking made her skin raw, so she constantly worried about body odor, too.

“It felt really shameful,” Scott said. “I became disgusted with myself.”

Then she found videos on TikTok about people struggling with the same thing, which made her feel seen. That was the first time she’d heard about skin picking disorder, a mental illness related to obsessive compulsive disorder that involves repeatedly picking at skin on the body, resulting in emotional and physical damage.

About six months ago, a dermatologist finally diagnosed her with the condition and prescribed an ointment called triamcinolone acetonide. The medication healed the scabs that formed in her armpits, which helped Scott avoid the urge to pick at her skin, a feeling many with the condition experience due to emotional and physical factors.

Receiving a diagnosis helped her immensely; now Scott is in recovery and has joined the many people with the illness who have posted about their journey on TikTok.

“Beyond proud of myself,” Scott wrote in a TikTok caption in August 2021. “I’ve kept this a secret for a long time and i feel it’s time to share my journey so others don’t feel alone!”


BuzzFeed News; Getty Images

Why people pick their skin

Skin picking disorder affects as many as 1 in 20 people and is a form of self-soothing to handle emotional distress. It was informally called dermatillomania (a term still commonly used) or compulsive skin picking until 2013, when it was classified as excoriation disorder by the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5).

Research on the disorder is in its “infancy,” but awareness around the illness has grown, especially in the past five years, according to Karen Pickett, a licensed psychotherapist in California who has researched the condition for 20 years.

The disorder goes far beyond popping pimples or removing dry skin. It can cause conspicuous lesions on the body. People with the disorder often miss out on normal life or suffer emotional distress because of the compulsion.

Pickett said that someone with the disorder can simultaneously want to stop and seek the satisfaction of checking the skin for areas to work at. The behavior sets off synapses that produce dopamine and endorphin hits in the brain.

“Skin pickers can talk about the ‘reward’ as a feeling of accomplishment or relief or a way to self-soothe,” Pickett said.

According to Lauren McKeaney, CEO and founder of the Chicago-based Picking Me Foundation, triggers depend on the person but can be anything from a stressful day to a comment about your appearance.

The primary kinds of skin picking are scanning, a process of unconsciously searching the skin for something to smooth out, or focused picking, honing in on a perceived imperfection for an extended period of time before “coming to” and realizing what damage has been done, McKeaney said. She likened skin picking to an unavoidable “signal” from the body about an emotional state; to find a solution to picking, it’s important to recognize the emotion behind the behavior, she said.

Based on research about closely related disorders, Pickett said that about 80% of people with skin picking disorders have other psychological conditions, such as depression, because of its emotional regulation component.

Lauren Brown, 26, said she thinks her family’s history of addiction and depression, and her own “addictive personality,” set her up to potentially have dermatillomania.

For her, skin picking was a normal habit exacerbated to dangerous levels by a change in her environment. Brown, who wrote a memoir about anxiety and skin picking called Hands, said the behavior gave her solace after she moved to a new city and felt lonely. After a while, she couldn’t resist looking at herself in the mirror for extended periods of time, picking at her skin, and savoring the reward of clearing perceived irregularities. It’s hard to explain to someone who doesn’t have the disorder, she said, but she felt a sense of “achievement.”

“You think, It’s just a habit and I can stop whenever I want,” Brown said, adding that skin picking can be motivated by a sense of wanting to improve skin or a desire to release a feeling. For her, she wanted to get away from negative feelings about her new life. After picking, the emotions would briefly go away, but then she’d be jolted back into reality.

“You go into this mindless state of almost enjoyment. … You all of a sudden wake up to realize time has passed — that can be a shocking moment,” she said.

“Skin picking can actually help a person soothe themselves through uncomfortable thoughts and feelings,” Pickett said, adding that skin picking is a common way for someone to deal with difficult emotions if they are already in recovery from another mental illness. One emotional regulator replaces another.


Courtesy of Lauren Brown and Jaylin Scott

Left: Lauren Brown; right: Jaylin Scott

For McKeaney, it was a way to pacify herself any time she felt too anxious or excited. “It really developed into a repetitive ingrained behavior I used to regulate stimuli,” she said. The disorder affected many of her childhood experiences; she quit figure skating, a sport she loved, because the healing scabs on her legs made it difficult to pull her tights off. She couldn’t stay the night at a friend’s house out of fear she’d have a picking episode; her parents only allowed her to have black bedsheets because they masked the little blood marks she’d leave in her sleep.

A lot of what is known about skin picking disorder is based on research on the closely related trichotillomania, or hair pulling disorder, which is also a body-focused repetitive behavior, Pickett said. People may pull their hair or pick at their skin for similar emotional reasons, or even do both things, so scientists study the disorders closely.

One 2006 study concerning trichotillomania concluded that two mutations in the SLITRK1 gene were linked to hair-pulling disorder. Given the similarities of hair pulling and skin picking disorders, Pickett said it’s possible to assume that a genetic marker may cause skin picking disorder, too, although she said no research has pinpointed one yet.

Pickett said she works with parents with skin picking disorder who fear “giving” it to their children.

Simone Kolysh, 38, a sociologist based in Maryland, has noticed their 15-year-old son is scratching on his shoulders and arms, the same areas they do. They point it out to him and provide a fidget toy to replace the urge to pick, without trying to make a big deal about it.

“I’m a lot kinder to my kids than I am to myself,” said Kolysh, who has four children and said seeing their child picking at his skin has made them feel ashamed and blame themself for his behavior.


BuzzFeed News; Getty Images

How the pandemic raised awareness of skin picking disorder

The pandemic was a pressure cooker for many people with skin picking disorder, Pickett, the psychotherapist, said. Some people with dermatillomania who spoke with BuzzFeed News said the pandemic exacerbated their anxiety and depression, leading them to double down on their behaviors in search of some form of relief. Lockdown meant there was also a reduced likelihood of other people seeing their skin.

McKeaney of the Picking Me Foundation said she began picking her skin when she was 5 years old. Her body is covered in scars from sores she created as a child “anywhere [her] hands could reach,” she told BuzzFeed News.

Now 35 and in recovery, McKeaney said the pandemic was triggering; suddenly the CDC was saying “Don’t touch your face,” something her parents used to say to stop her picking. But more time in front of the mirror also meant new opportunities for self-reflection, she said, and she has also noticed a major uptick during the pandemic of people seeking support from the organization.

As people were isolated and experienced uncertainty during the pandemic, interest in understanding these symptoms increased: Google Trends shows a growth in queries in the US for “dermatillomania” and “skin picking” after spring 2020.

Now an otherwise little-known community is speaking up: Advocacy organizations, bots, apps, TikTokers, and Instagram accounts are spreading awareness about the disorder, debunking myths, sharing personal experiences, and offering support and resources.


Courtesy of Aaron Jeanfrancois

Aaron Jeanfrancois shared his skin picking recovery on TikTok to spread awareness of the disorder.

Aaron Jeanfrancois hasn’t picked the skin on his palms since June 27, 2020. The 18-year-old first-year student at Brooklyn College, who is autistic, started creating lesions on their hands around the age of 5 as a form of stimming, a term that refers to self-calming behaviors. He couldn’t stop, sometimes targeting the area for 30 minutes at a time. Embarrassed by the look of their palms, which became red and raw from the picking, Jeanfrancois avoided giving high fives or would position his hand so only the top was visible.

But in the first summer of the pandemic, Jeanfrancois decided to make a change. His mother had told him that when she was younger, she had picked her skin too, and her recovery motivated him to try to stop. By focusing on other actions such as meditating, playing video games, or exercising, Jeanfrancois has been able to fill the gap. They have since posted about his disorder on TikTok, sharing how he stopped picking and achieved significant recovery milestones.


Why it can often take years to get a diagnosis

For decades, medical professionals failed to find a solution for McKeaney or even diagnose her condition. Dermatologists and psychiatrists said she had eczema or psoriasis, not a mental illness.

McKeaney was finally able to identify her disorder in 2014 when an area she picked on her upper right thigh became infected. She was in severe pain and felt ashamed her disorder had progressed so much. Doctors had discussed with her the possibility of amputating her leg because the bacteria were resistant to several antibiotics, but then a young nurse in the room saw her skin and said, “It looks like dermatillomania.”

“Having a term for this disorder, I felt armed,” McKeaney said. “It felt so awesome to have something to share.”


Courtesy of Lauren McKeaney

Lauren McKeaney, who runs a skin picking advocacy organization in Chicago

Jennifer Hollander, a nurse practitioner at the Beverly Hills Center for Plastic & Laser Surgery, helps hundreds of patients nationally with cosmetic skin concerns and said people rarely know they have skin picking disorder when they come to her.

“I would say it’s underreported because there’s a lot of shame around it,” Hollander said, adding she’s seen an “uptick” in patients with skin picking disorder and is treating them “now more than ever.” But she focuses on having a conversation with patients about how common the condition is.

Hollander said it can be difficult to tell if a patient has skin picking disorder or another skin condition, such as acne, because picking creates “secondary” wounds on top of those caused by other conditions. Because medical research into the disorder is lacking, she said, she’s glad to be able to connect patients with support groups or share her expertise on social media.

Talking about the condition, both with their family and online, has helped a lot, said Kolysh. “Once I started posting pictures of it and just talking about it in general, I got a bit more of a handle on it,” they said. “I became more in control of the behavior because I brought it into my conscious sphere out of my subconscious.”

“Talking about it and sharing photos of my skin and not blurring it out or editing it helped normalize it,” they added.

Many of the people who are publicly sharing their experiences with skin picking disorder are white women like herself, said Pickett, the psychotherapist. One reason for this is that white women are more likely to seek out therapy in the US than other groups. Another is that while Black and other nonwhite groups may experience more emotional trauma than white people, there’s a gap in receiving a diagnosis or getting therapy, according to Mental Health America. (In 2018, over half of Black and African American adults with a serious mental illness did not receive treatment.)

Jeanfrancois, who is Black and bisexual, said he is inspired to spread awareness about skin picking disorder among people who are not white women. This is especially important, he said, because symptoms like bloody wounds show differently on nonwhite bodies.

Scott, who is Black, said the disorder resurfaced existing insecurities about her skin color. Before she started picking at her armpits, she said, she was already self-conscious about the area because of dark spots caused by shaving, something Black women experience due to higher melanin levels.

“White women are overrepresented in the research,” Pickett said. “Hopefully that will change with more awareness and acceptance.”


BuzzFeed News; Getty Images

What it’s like to have skin picking disorder

Skin picking disorder is complex because it feels good in the moment, but shame and remorse often follow.

Scarlett, 20, an online personal coach in Northamptonshire, England, is in recovery from depression and an eating disorder but has struggled with skin picking since she was 12. Skin picking served as a way for her to avoid self-harm caused by depression or deal with emotions she had after eating.

Scarlett (who did not want her last name mentioned for privacy reasons) said people should avoid saying “stop picking your skin” or “your skin is looking better” to those with the disorder.

“[If] someone [mentions] anything to do with my skin … I end up just making it worse,” she said, adding that comments like these fail to address the root of the behavior, and sometimes compel her to focus even more on her face. “It’s just understanding that it’s difficult to not do it.”

Pickett added, “Shame is a huge part of skin picking disorder largely because of lack of information. It’s not their fault.”

“That’s the inner conflict — I want to skin pick and I want to stop,” Pickett said. When she treats people, she talks about the behavior, its “addictive quality,” the emotional regulation needed to calm her brain, how to stop, and finding other techniques for dealing with thoughts and feelings.

Pickett said it’s not clear to researchers how the brain is able to basically zone out, but self-reported data shows that it can be a form of the mind soothing itself.

She said that the disorder is a pendulum of reward and shame: “You feel bad about yourself, and it precipitates all these emotions, which you then deal with via the behavior. … Breaking that cycle can be quite difficult.”

Kim Mills, a 29-year-old creator who posts on TikTok and Instagram as Kim on Skin, bit her nails as a child, and after puberty that evolved into skin picking. The disorder was a “cage,” she said, and she got frustrated that she wasn’t growing out of it. She’d give herself goals — once she got a boyfriend or her first apartment, she would stop picking — but the end never came.

It was isolating. “I felt like people around me only knew a certain side of me,” Mills said. “I felt like friends and family didn’t really know me.”

Mills now hosts Dermatillo-Diaries: The BFRB Podcast, posts content about common misconceptions and triggers, and promotes products like Nudge, a wristband device for skin pickers that vibrates and lights up whenever someone raises their hands to their face or head. (Mills said the Nudge device has been out of stock since the start of the pandemic, but the company declined BuzzFeed News’ request for comment on when it plans to restock.)


How to manage skin picking and get help

There’s no single way a doctor may approach treating someone for skin picking disorder. Awareness of the condition is still growing, and the solution is different for every person. Some medical providers may prescribe an ointment like Scott received, while others may send a patient to a therapist for a mental health evaluation. McKeaney of the Picking Me Foundation said she creates information packets to send to physicians — who are often the first point of contact with someone with dermatillomania — and a directory of informed medical providers.

Hollander, the nurse practitioner, gives patients the foundation’s “fiddle packs,” which include tools to keep the hands busy and deter someone from touching their body. She said she can’t speak for the whole medical community but noted that her nursing background gives her a “holistic” approach to skin picking disorder that focuses on the emotional factors behind a skin problem; she also refers patients with skin picking disorder to a therapist for cognitive behavioral therapy, which provides people with ways to approach specific behaviors in the moment.

Many skin pickers feel like they’re the only people doing it. But the Picking Me Foundation has run a virtual support group since March 2020 that has grown from three attendees to about 40 per meeting. The foundation now has over 800 members, and its email list has doubled in size since the start of the pandemic.

Mills said she had trouble finding useful forums or treatments on her own when she started her recovery three years ago, prompting her to make social media content as Kim on Skin to help others feel seen and learn more about skin picking disorder herself. She started her recovery by tracking her triggers, writing down when she was picking, how long the episodes were, and how these might be connected to other events that day. There’s even an app she used for this purpose called SkinPick, which provides a self-monitoring tool and a four-week course to help people understand and reduce their skin picking.

After gathering this data, Mills noticed that job stresses were often behind her picking, so she pivoted from a career in finance to one in social media. She now has a full-time job but hopes to eventually focus full time on Kim on Skin.

Mills reiterated how important it is to not downplay someone’s skin picking as only a habit. “Then they’re back to square one,” she said, “feeling embarrassed and even more alone.”

Investing time in recovery is also not something that may come naturally to people with dermatillomania, Mills said.

“A large majority are struggling with providing self-care,” she said. “Because of that, a big investment into themselves, that’s really hard for people to justify.”

Self-managed treatment depends on the person and their triggers. For McKeaney, avoiding mirrors is important. She splashes water on the sink in her bathroom so she won’t bring her face close to the mirror. She also leaves the lights off, keeps the door open, puts a tape boundary on the floor, uses acrylic nails (which are less sharp on skin), and wears pimple patches to hide areas she would be tempted to pick.

Scarlett, the personal coach in England, manages her picking by going on walks, keeping a stress ball in the bathroom, and covering up mirrors with towels. She spoke out on TikTok about skin picking and connects via DMs with others who do it, which makes her feel less alone. She said her skin picking has become less intense with each little change. In July 2020, she decided to enter a bodybuilding competition; knowing the event was coming up served as a reminder to hold back from skin picking.

Pickett’s advice for anyone who encounters a friend or relative with skin picking disorder is to cite the definition, treatment options, and other resources from the TLC Foundation for Body-Focused Repetitive Behaviors, and then ask them if they’ve heard of the disorder and if they think it might be something they have. This avoids any sense of blame or shame, as if they’ve done something they should be embarrassed about.

“For anyone who is struggling, I ask them to be as gentle with themselves,” McKeaney said. “This disorder already tears us apart and doesn’t deserve another minute of our time.” ●

This story is part of our Body Week series. To read more, click here.



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Largest Ever Psychedelics Study Maps Changes of Conscious Awareness to Neurotransmitter Systems

Summary: Study reveals how psychedelic drug-induced changes in subjective awareness are rooted in specific neurotransmitter systems.

Source: McGill University

Psychedelics are now a rapidly growing area of neuroscience and clinical research, one that may produce much-needed new therapies for disorders such as depression and schizophrenia. Yet there is still a lot to know about how these drug agents alter states of consciousness.

In the world’s largest study on psychedelics and the brain, a team of researchers from The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital) and Department of Biomedical Engineering of McGill University, the Broad Institute at Harvard/MIT, SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, and Mila—Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute have shown how drug-induced changes in subjective awareness are anatomically rooted in specific neurotransmitter receptor systems.

The researchers gathered 6,850 testimonials from people who took a range of 27 different psychedelic drugs. In a first-of-its-kind approach, they designed a machine learning strategy to extract commonly used words from the testimonials and link them with the neurotransmitter receptors that likely induced them.

The interdisciplinary team could then associate the subjective experiences with brain regions where the receptor combinations are most commonly found—these turned out to be the lowest and some of the deepest layers of the brain’s information processing layers.

Using thousands of gene transcription probes, the team created a 3D map of the brain receptors and the subjective experiences linked to them, across the whole brain. While psychedelic experience is known to vary widely from person to person, the large testimonial dataset allowed the team to characterize coherent states of conscious experiences with receptors and brain regions across individuals. This supports the theory that new hallucinogenic drug compounds can be designed to reliably create desired mental states.

Graph showing relation between type of drug, descriptive words and neurotransmitter. Credit: Danilo Bzdok

For example, a promising effect of some psychedelics for psychiatric intervention is ego-dissolution—the feeling of being detached with the self. The study found that this feeling was most associated with the receptor serotonin 5-HT2A.

However, other serotonin receptors (5-HT2C, 5-HT1A, 5-HT2B), adrenergic receptors Alpha-2A and Beta-2, as well as the D2 receptor were also linked with the feeling of ego-dissolution. A drug targeting these receptors may be able to reliably create this feeling in patients whom clinicians believe might benefit from it.

“Hallucinogenic drugs may very well turn out to be the next big thing to improve clinical care of major mental health conditions,” says Professor Danilo Bzdok, the study’s lead author

“Our study provides a first step, a proof of principle that we may be able to build machine learning systems in the future that can accurately predict which neurotransmitter receptor combinations need to be stimulated to induce a specific state of conscious experience in a given person.”

About this consciousness and neuropharmacology research news

Author: Press Office
Source: McGill University
Contact: Press Office – McGill University
Image: The image is credited to Danilo Bzdok

Original Research: Open access.
“Trips and neurotransmitters: Discovering principled patterns across 6850 hallucinogenic experiences” by Danilo Bzdok et al. Science Advances


Abstract

See also

Trips and neurotransmitters: Discovering principled patterns across 6850 hallucinogenic experiences

Psychedelics probably alter states of consciousness by disrupting how the higher association cortex governs bottom-up sensory signals. Individual hallucinogenic drugs are usually studied in participants in controlled laboratory settings.

Here, we have explored word usage in 6850 free-form testimonials about 27 drugs through the prism of 40 neurotransmitter receptor subtypes, which were then mapped to three-dimensional coordinates in the brain via their gene transcription levels from invasive tissue probes.

Despite high interindividual variability, our pattern-learning approach delineated how drug-induced changes of conscious awareness are linked to cortex-wide anatomical distributions of receptor density proxies. Each discovered receptor-experience factor spanned between a higher-level association pole and a sensory input pole, which may relate to the previously reported collapse of hierarchical order among large-scale networks.

Coanalyzing many psychoactive molecules and thousands of natural language descriptions of drug experiences, our analytical framework finds the underlying semantic structure and maps it directly to the brain.

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Albany doctors advocate for Colon Cancer Awareness Month

ALBANY, Ga. (WALB) – Doctors across Albany are advocating for Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month and say it’s important for patients to be aware of information regarding the disease.

“It’s important for people to continue to get colon cancer screenings and also for even younger patients to get screened for colon cancer starting around age 45,” said, Franklin Goldwire, M.D. Gastroenterologist at Phoebe Putney Hospital.

Franklin Goldwire M.D. Gastroenterologist at Phoebe Putney Hospital(WALB)

The importance of getting screened comes from the fact patients may not experience symptoms, according to Goldwire.

“Unfortunately, what happens is that colon cancer tends not to cause a lot of symptoms until it’s really late okay, and so what people need to be aware of is that even though they aren’t having symptoms, that doesn’t mean that there isn’t a problem there,” said Goldwire.

Dr. Price Corr, Specialist in General Surgery at Albany surgical and Southern Surgery Center, said that catching colon cancer early can save a life.

Dr. Price Corr – Specialist in General Surgery at Albany surgical and Southern Surgery Center(WALB)

“Because if we catch colon cancer early, like in the form of a little polyp, we can remove it and that’s all that we really have to have done. They don’t have to have any more surgery. They don’t have to have chemotherapy or radiation or anything like that, so early detection is the key,” he said.

Goldwire added anyone experiencing symptoms should contact their primary care physician.

“Typically weight loss, you may notice blood in the stool and you may notice a change in the way the stool looks. Those stools may become pencil-thin or more ribbon-shaped stools. Those are things to look for,” said Goldwire.

Corr is a big advocate for this month for many reasons.

“When we have any kind of awareness month, it’s to make people more alert to what’s going on around them and just kind of make you think outside of the box. Like, maybe I need to go check and I can’t tell you the number of times that I’ve done a colonoscopy on somebody and we found a colon cancer and they say ‘I’m so glad I had it checked, I didn’t have any family history,’” said Corr.

In honor of Colon Cancer Awareness Month, anyone can wear light blue all month long to show support.

Copyright 2022 WALB. All rights reserved.

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