Tag Archives: depression

Tropical Depression Grace: Earthquake-hit Haiti threatened with further devastation

Tropical Depression Grace was approaching the southern coast of Hispaniola, the island comprising Haiti and the Dominican Republic, early Monday bringing with it sustained winds of 35 mph (56 km/h), and higher gusts, CNN meteorologist Haley Brink said.

Tropical storm conditions are possible in the Dominican Republic and Haiti later today, Brink said, adding that several inches of rain are forecast — with up to 15 inches (38 centimeters) possible in some isolated areas — through Tuesday.

“I am worried about the upcoming storm as it can complicate the situation for us,” Jerry Chandler, head of Haiti’s civil protection agency, said on Sunday.

The agency reported at least 1,297 people dead and more than 5,700 injured on Sunday. Those numbers are expected to rise as search and rescue efforts continue.

The quake destroyed 13,694 homes and damaged another 13,785, officials from the agency said.

The destruction has also pushed hospitals to the brink and blocked roads, making it difficult for vital supplies to reach the affected areas.

“We really need help, yesterday I was helping at the hospital and things were out of control,” a volunteer named Marcelin Lorejoie told CNN on Sunday.

“Not enough doctors, not enough medicines and we have people with serious injuries. We need urgent help before things (get) more complicated.”

Authorities are going from house to house in search of survivors — efforts which demand a tremendous amount of resources.

At the site of one collapsed hotel, a CNN team saw just one excavator, which was not working at the time. There was no police or security presence nearby, as people carried air conditioning units away from the wrecked building.

The earthquake struck at 8:30 a.m. local time on Saturday, at a depth of about 10 kilometers (6.2 miles); its epicenter was about 12 kilometers (7.5 miles) northeast of Saint-Louis-du-Sud in the southwest part of the country.

That location is about 96 kilometers (60 miles) west of the epicenter of the disastrous 7.0-magnitude quake that killed an estimated 220,000 to 300,000 people in 2010.

CNN’s Etant Dupain, AnneClaire Stapleton, Mohammed Tawfeeq, Amir Vera, Susanna Capelouto, Caitlin Hu, Elizabeth Joseph, Eric Levenson, Brandon Miller, Florencia Trucco, Michelle Velez, Lionel Vital and Theresa Waldrop contributed to this report.

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Kit Harington talks surviving addictions, suicidal thoughts

Kit Harington is getting candid about his addictions following the end of “Game of Thrones.”

The “7 Days in Hell” star, who recently revealed he was “really happy” he checked himself into rehab after the beloved HBO series ended, elaborated on the “pretty traumatic” struggles he’s endured in a new interview.

“Things that have happened to me since ‘Thrones’ ended, and that were happening during ‘Thrones,’ were of a pretty traumatic nature, and they did include alcohol,” he told the Sunday Times.

“You get to a place where you feel like you are a bad person, you feel like you are a shameful person, and you feel that there’s no way out. That’s just who you are. And getting sober is the process of going, ‘No, I can change,’” Harington continued.

The “Eternals” star, 34, shared that the age-old adage that a “leopard doesn’t change its spots” is “completely false” and allowed him to work on himself while in rehab.

“That was something I kind of clung to; the idea that I could make this huge fundamental change in who I was and how I went about my life,” he continued.

The “Game of Thrones” star revealed he concealed his issues from wife Rose Leslie.
FilmMagic for HBO

Harington, who checked himself into the luxe Connecticut retreat Privé-Swiss in May 2019, also revealed he grappled with suicidal thoughts.

“I went through periods of real depression where I wanted to do all sorts of things,” he explained, adding that he hoped his candor would “maybe help someone, somewhere.”

“But I definitely don’t want to be seen as a martyr or special. I’ve been through something. It’s my stuff. If it helps someone, that’s good.”

The British actor also revealed that he concealed his addictions from those closest to him, including wife Rose Leslie.

“You can imagine the stresses that it causes to those around you,” he explained. “I will say about my addictions that I kept them very, very quiet and I was incredibly secretive and incredibly locked up with them.

“So they came as quite a surprise to the people around me, which is quite often the case, I guess.”

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Kit Harington Opens Up About Alcoholism and Depression

Game of Thrones star Kit Harington opened up about his struggle with mental health and alcoholism in an interview with The Sunday Times. “Things that have happened to me since Thrones ended, and that were happening during Thrones, were of a pretty traumatic nature and they did include alcohol,” said Harington, who has been sober for two years. The actor described seeking help at a Connecticut treatmeent facility after going through “some pretty horrible stuff” following Games of Thrones’s conclusion in 2019. “You get to a place where you feel like you are a bad person, you feel like you are a shameful person. And you feel that there’s no way out, that’s just who you are. And getting sober is the process of going, ‘No, I can change,’” Harington said.

When asked by the Times if he had felt suicidal during this time, Harington replied, “I will give you an answer to that question: the answer is yes. Yes of course. I went through periods of real depression where I wanted to do all sorts of things.” He shared that he hopes being open about his depression and alcoholism will “maybe help someone, somewhere,” while adding, “I definitely don’t want to be seen as a martyr or special. I’ve been through something, it’s my stuff. If it helps someone, that’s good.”

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NYC Hotel Industry in a ‘Depression,’ Room Revenue Down 60%, Report Says – NBC New York

The hotel industry is in a recession or worse in 21 of the top 25 U.S. markets, and New York City is one of the worst off of all, according to a new report released Thursday by a lodging trade group.

The American Hotel & Lodging Association said the city has lost about a third of its hotel rooms since the pandemic. For those that are left, revenue per available room was $95 in May — down 62 percent from May 2019.

That’s a deep enough drop to put the city’s hotel industry in the “depression” category, the association said.

In percentage terms, only San Francisco, Boston and Washington are suffering more. (In dollar terms, NYC’s revenue drop is worse, though.)

Just four top markets nationwide have stabilized or returned to growth versus two years ago, the association said — Phoenix, Virginia Beach, Tampa and Miami.

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A third of COVID survivors suffer mental, neurological problems

A third of coronavirus patients were found to suffer from psychiatric or brain problems within six months of their COVID-19 diagnosis, according to a study published Tuesday.

Researchers analyzed the health records of 236,379 COVID patients, mostly from the US, and found that 34 percent had been diagnosed with neurological or psychiatric disorders six months on.

About one in eight of the patients, or 12.8 percent, were diagnosed for the first time with such an illness, the study showed.

Anxiety, at 17 percent, and depression or mood disorders, at 14 percent, were the most common diagnoses, according to the research.

Instances of post-COVID cases of stroke, dementia and other neurological disorders were rarer, but still significant — especially in people who had been seriously ill with the virus, the scientists said.

A nurse tends to a Covid-19 patient in the Intensive Care Unit at Providence St. Mary Medical Center in Apple Valley, California on January 11, 2021.
ARIANA DREHSLER/AFP via Getty Images

Among those who had been admitted to intensive care with the coronavirus, 7 percent had a stroke within six months. Almost 2 percent were diagnosed with dementia, the study found.

The disorders were significantly more common in COVID patients than in comparison groups of people who recovered from flu or other respiratory infections over the same time period.

Doctor Neil Hecht and his wife Mindy Cross are seen being treated on January 3, 2021. They will recover at home after after battling Covid-19 for twelve days at Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medical Center in California.
APU GOMES/AFP via Getty Images

“Our results indicate that brain diseases and psychiatric disorders are more common after COVID-19 than after flu or other respiratory infections,” said Max Taquet, a psychiatrist at Britain’s Oxford University, who co-led the work.

The study, published in the Lancet Psychiatry journal, wasn’t able to determine how the virus is linked to psychiatric conditions, Taquet said — adding that urgent research is needed to identify the mechanisms involved.

Daniel Kim talks to staff before his release from St. Jude Medical Center in Fullerton, CA on Wednesday, December 16, 2020.
Paul Bersebach/MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images

The researchers also suggested that the pandemic could bring a wave of mental and neurological problems.

“Although the individual risks for most disorders are small, the effect across the whole population may be substantial,” said Paul Harrison, an Oxford psychiatry professor who co-led the work.

With Post wires

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How to Spot Depression in Young Children

Dr. Busman said that she works with children who may say, “I don’t want to kill myself but I feel so bad I don’t know what else to do and say.”

If a child talks about wanting to die, ask what that child means, and get help from a therapist if you’re concerned. A statement like this can be a real signal that a child is in distress, so don’t dismiss it or write it off as something the child is just saying for attention, she said.

“Parents should take child symptoms very seriously,” said Jonathan Comer, professor of psychology and psychiatry at Florida International University. “In serious forms it snowballs with time, and earlier onset is associated with worse outcomes across the life span.”

In a 2016 longitudinal study, Dr. Kovacs and her colleagues traced the course of depression starting in childhood, and found recurrent episodes in later life.

So if you see changes like withdrawal from activities, irritability or sadness, fatigue, or sleep disturbances that persist for two weeks, consider having the child evaluated by someone who is familiar with mental health issues in children of that age. Start with your pediatrician, who will know about resources available in your area.

Parents should insist on a comprehensive mental health evaluation, Dr. Busman said, including gathering history from the parent, spending time with the child and talking to the school. An evaluation should include questions about symptoms of depression as well as looking for other problems, like attention deficit hyperactivity disorder or anxiety, which may be at the root of the child’s distress.

Early treatment is effective, Dr. Comer said, “There’s terrific evidence for family-focused treatment for child depression — it focuses on family interactions and their impact on mood.” With children from 3 to 7, he said, versions of parent-child interaction therapy, known as PCIT, are often used — essentially coaching parents, and helping them emphasize and praise what is positive about their children’s behavior.

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Covid-19 led to a global increase in stillbirths, maternal mortality, and depression, review finds

The review, published Wednesday in the journal the Lancet, found that stillbirths and maternal deaths increased by nearly a third, according to pooled data from 40 studies that covered 17 countries.

There was a nearly sixfold increase in ectopic pregnancies – when the fertilized egg grows outside a woman’s uterus, between January of 2020 and January 2021, the review found. Untreated, ectopic pregnancies can cause life-threating bleeding.

The researchers from St. George’s University of London determined that many of these problems may stem from a lack of access to medical care during the pandemic. Hospitals were overburdened with Covid-19 patients, and some women may have been reluctant to go to the doctor, concerned they’d be exposed to Covid-19.

The study also found that the number of women who reported symptoms of depression increased, according to six of the 10 studies the researchers evaluated. Rates of maternal anxiety were also higher.

Globally, the one rate that didn’t change much is the number of pre-term births. Pooled data from higher income countries showed a 10% reduction in preterm births. It’s unclear why. Rates stayed the same in low- and middle- income countries.

Often with preterm birth, no cause is identified. Dr. Erkan Kalafat, a co-author of the study from Koc University in Turkey, said he hopes that what they learned about preterm birth from this study will lead researchers to understand it better.

“We have an unprecedented opportunity to learn from the experiences of the COVID-19 pandemic to plan for a future of inclusive and equitable maternity care worldwide,” Kalafat said.

This study found no real change in the number of people who reported other pregnancy-related complications like high blood pressure or gestational diabetes and the pandemic didn’t seem to change the number of cesarean sections performed or the rate of pregnancies that required doctors to induce labor.

The pandemic did, however, have a disproportionately negative impact on mothers and children who lived in low and middle income countries, the study showed.

“It is clear from our study and others that the disruption caused by the pandemic has led to the avoidable deaths of both mothers and babies, especially in low- and middle-income countries,” said lead author Dr. Asma Khalil, a professor of obstetrics at St. George’s University of London. “We urge policymakers and health care leaders to prioritize safe, accessible, and equitable maternity care within the strategic response to the pandemic and aftermath, to reduce adverse pregnancy outcomes worldwide.”

Dr. Denise Jamieson called the results of the study “concerning.” Jamieson did not work on the study, but is the James Robert McCord Chair in Gynecology and Obstetrics at Emory University and a member of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists’ Covid OB Expert Work Group.

“Overall, this provides compelling evidence that the effects of the pandemic go well beyond the effects of Covid infection,” Jamieson said. “It shows that there are far-reaching adverse effects on maternal and infant health that may last long beyond the pandemic.”

Jamieson said scientists saw a similar pattern of problems in countries that were impacted by the Ebola epidemic that started in 2013.

“This is a pattern we’ve seen before,” Jamieson said. “When you have an infectious disease that consumes a lot of healthcare resources and affects large segments of the population, maternal and infant health suffer.”

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‘Talladega Nights’ Star had PTSD and Depression Before Suicide, Mom Says

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Pivotal Discovery Could Treat Epilepsy, Parkinson’s, Depression and Chronic Pain

Artist’s rendering shows X-rays striking radioluminescent nanoparticles in the brain, which emit red light that triggers a sodium (Na+) and potassium (K+) ion influx and thereby activates brain neurons. Credit: Image by Zhaowei Chen/Argonne National Laboratory.

Scientists make pivotal discovery of method for wireless modulation of neurons with X-rays that could improve the lives of patients with brain disorders. The X-ray source only requires a machine like that found in a dentist’s office.

Many people worldwide suffer from movement-related brain disorders. Epilepsy accounts for more than 50 million; essential tremor, 40 million; and Parkinson’s disease, 10 million.

Relief for some brain disorder sufferers may one day be on the way in the form of a new treatment invented by researchers from the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory and four universities. The treatment is based on breakthroughs in both optics and genetics. It would be applicable to not only movement-related brain disorders, but also chronic depression and pain.

“Our high precision noninvasive approach could become routine with the use of a small X-ray machine, the kind commonly found in every dental office.” — Elena Rozhkova, a nanoscientist in Argonne’s Center for Nanoscale Materials

This new treatment involves stimulation of neurons deep within the brain by means of injected nanoparticles that light up when exposed to X-rays (nanoscintillators) and would eliminate an invasive brain surgery currently in use. 

Our high-precision noninvasive approach could become routine with the use of a small X-ray machine, the kind commonly found in every dental office,” said Elena Rozhkova, a lead author and a nanoscientist in Argonne’s Center for Nanoscale Materials (CNM), a DOE Office of Science User Facility.

Traditional deep brain stimulation requires an invasive neurosurgical procedure for disorders when conventional drug therapy is not an option. In the traditional procedure, approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, surgeons implant a calibrated pulse generator under the skin (similar to a pacemaker). They then connect it with an insulated extension cord to electrodes inserted into a specific area of ​​the brain to stimulate the surrounding neurons and regulate abnormal impulses.

The Spanish-American scientist José Manuel Rodríguez Delgado famously demonstrated deep brain stimulation in a bullring in the 1960s,” said Vassiliy Tsytsarev, a neurobiologist from the University of Maryland and a co-author of the study. ​He brought a raging bull charging at him to a standstill by sending a radio signal to an implanted electrode.”

About 15 years ago, scientists introduced a revolutionary neuromodulation technology, ​optogenetics,” which relies on genetic modification of specific neurons in the brain. These neurons create a light-sensitive ion channel in the brain and, thereby, fire in response to external laser light. This approach, however, requires very thin fiberoptic wires implanted in the brain and suffers from the limited penetration depth of the laser light through biological tissues.

The team’s alternative optogenetics approach uses nanoscintillators injected in the brain, bypassing implantable electrodes or fiberoptic wires. Instead of lasers, they substitute X-rays because of their greater ability to pass through biological tissue barriers.

The injected nanoparticles absorb the X-ray energy and convert it into red light, which has significantly greater penetration depth than blue light,” said Zhaowei Chen, former CNM postdoctoral fellow.

Thus, the nanoparticles serve as an internal light source that makes our method work without a wire or electrode,” added Rozhkova. Since the team’s approach can both stimulate and quell targeted small areas, Rozhkova noted, it has other applications than brain disorders. For example, it could be applicable to heart problems and other damaged muscles.    

One of the team’s keys to success was the collaboration between two of the world-class facilities at Argonne: CNM and Argonne’s Advanced Photon Source (APS), a DOE Office of Science User Facility. The work at these facilities began with the synthesis and multi-tool characterization of the nanoscintillators. In particular, the X-ray excited optical luminescence of the nanoparticle samples was determined at an APS beamline (20-BM). The results showed that the particles were extremely stable over months and upon repeated exposure to the high-intensity X-rays.

According to Zou Finfrock, a staff scientist at the APS 20-BM beamline and Canadian Light Source, ​They kept glowing a beautiful orange-red light.”

Next, Argonne sent CNM-prepared nanoscintillators to the University of Maryland for tests in mice. The team at University of Maryland performed these tests over two months with a small portable X-ray machine. The results proved that the procedure worked as planned. Mice whose brains had been genetically modified to react to red light responded to the X-ray pulses with brain waves recorded on an electroencephalogram.

Finally, the University of Maryland team sent the animal brains for characterization using X-ray fluorescence microscopy performed by Argonne scientists. This analysis was performed by Olga Antipova on the Microprobe beamline (2-ID-E) at APS and by Zhonghou Cai on the Hard X-ray Nanoprobe (26-ID) jointly operated by CNM and APS.

This multi-instrument arrangement made it possible to see tiny particles residing in the complex environment of the brain tissue with a super-resolution of dozens of nanometers. It also allowed visualizing neurons near and far from the injection site on a microscale. The results proved that the nanoscintillators are chemically and biologically stable. They do not wander from the injection site or degrade.

Sample preparation is extremely important in these types of biological analysis,” said Antipova, a physicist in the X-ray Science Division (XSD) at the APS. Antipova was assisted by Qiaoling Jin and Xueli Liu, who prepared brain sections only a few micrometers thick with jeweler-like accuracy.

There is an intense level of commercial interest in optogenetics for medical applications,” said Rozhkova. ​Although still at the proof-of-concept stage, we predict our patent-pending wireless approach with small X-ray machines should have a bright future.”

Reference: “Wireless Optogenetic Modulation of Cortical Neurons Enabled by Radioluminescent Nanoparticles” by Zhaowei Chen, Vassiliy Tsytsarev, Y. Zou Finfrock, Olga A. Antipova, Zhonghou Cai, Hiroyuki Arakawa, Fritz W. Lischka, Bryan M. Hooks, Rosemarie Wilton, Dongyi Wang, Yi Liu, Brandon Gaitan, Yang Tao, Yu Chen, Reha S. Erzurumlu, Huanghao Yang and Elena A. Rozhkova, 24 February 2021, ACS Nano.
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c10436

The related article ​Wireless optogenetic modulation of cortical neurons enabled by radioluminescent nanoparticles” appeared in ACS Nano. In addition to Rozhkova, Chen, Finfrock, Antipova and Cai, another Argonne author is Rosemarie Wilton. University contributors include Vassiliy Tsytsarev, Dongyi Wang, Yi Liu, Brandon Gaitan, Yang Tao and Yu Chen from the University of Maryland, Department of Bioengineering; Hiroyuki Arakawa and Reha Erzurumlu from the University of Maryland School of Medicine; Fritz Lischka from the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences; Bryan Hooks from the University of Pittsburgh, Department of Neurobiology; and Huanghao Yang from Fuzhou University.

This research received support from the DOE Office of Science, National Institutes of Health and National Science Foundation.



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Andrelton Simmons says depression, thoughts of suicide led to decision to opt out last week of Los Angeles Angels’ season

Shortstop Andrelton Simmons says that depression and thoughts of suicide led to his decision to opt out during the last week of the Los Angeles Angels’ 2020 regular season, telling the Orange County Register that “the idea of finishing the season in a bubble was too much for me to handle.”

Simmons, who recently finalized a one-year, $10.5 million contract with the Minnesota Twins, chose to share his story in writing, through a series of Twitter direct messages, instead of verbally, because “it is still difficult to articulate certain things or be open.”

The Angels announced on Sept. 22 that Simmons had opted out of the final five games of the regular season. No additional information was provided, though Simmons said in a statement that he felt it was “the best decision for me and for my family.” At the time, the Angels remained mathematically in the race for the second wild card and second place in the AL West. Although their chances of reaching the postseason were slim, league rules required that potential playoff teams begin quarantining that week in preparation for upcoming playoff games.

“It was tough for me mentally to where the thought of suicide crossed my mind,” Simmons told the Register. “It was something I vowed a long time ago I would never consider again. I was fortunate to talk to a therapist, which helped me let go of those thoughts. At the end when a lot of people were still going through what most would think of as tough times, the idea of finishing the season in a bubble was too much for me to handle.”

Simmons played in just 30 games during the abbreviated regular season, missing time due to an ankle he injured for a third straight summer. He told the Register it was difficult to focus on baseball when so many people were struggling amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

“First time was driving through Oakland and seeing some of the shops and restaurants trying to stay open with all the homeless people camping outside,” he said. “That’s when it really hit me.”

Simmons began communicating with a therapist, but his hesitations about entering a playoff bubble persisted.

“I was really saddened by how much I was hearing about the death toll, and seeing how smaller businesses were going out of business and I was a little depressed at how the effects of all the new rules and fears were gonna affect people’s livelihoods and how disconnected people were becoming,” he said.

Simmons told the Register he wasn’t forthcoming about his reasons for opting out at the time “because I don’t like the idea of having to explain every detail of my life” and “was afraid of people judging and people twisting my story.” But he said he changed his mind when he realized that being open about his situation could help others who are struggling.

Information from ESPN’s Alden Gonzalez was used in this report.

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