Post by scpg02 on Jan 13, 2010 23:04:56 GMT
Study: Fast morphine treatment may prevent PTSD
By LINDA A. JOHNSON, AP
"These are provocative and thought-provoking findings that should lead scientists to investigate the underlying mechanisms" in future studies, said JoAnn Difede, a PTSD researcher at New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center.
Difede and Barbara Rothbaum, who heads the Trauma and Anxiety Recovery Program at Emory University School of Medicine, said that until more research backs up the findings, the study probably won't lead to many more patients in civilian emergency rooms getting morphine.
"At this point, I don't see it having a huge impact" for civilians, Rothbaum said.
A second study in the journal found that Army wives were more likely to develop depression or sleep problems the longer, or the more times, their spouses were sent to Iraq or Afghanistan.
That study, by researchers at the University of North Carolina and elsewhere, examined medical records for outpatient care of about 250,000 wives of active-duty soldiers from 2003 through 2006.
Compared with wives whose husbands stayed home, those whose husbands were deployed for up to 11 months were 18 percent more likely to be diagnosed with depression and at least 20 percent more likely to be diagnosed with sleep disorders, anxiety and acute stress.
For wives whose husbands were deployed for more than 11 months, problems were even more common: They were at least 24 percent more likely to be diagnosed with depression or anxiety, and about 40 percent more likely to be diagnosed with acute stress or sleep problems.
The researchers didn't have data showing whether husbands were deployed or at home when the wives were being treated for mental health problems.
That meant the scientists couldn't conclude whether those problems were caused by worries about the spouse's safety and the difficulties of being a single parent, or by stress caused by the returning spouse's psychological problems or other behavior changes.
"I suspect that if you look at the Reserve and National Guard wives, the toll might be even worse," because they have less social support than families living in a military community, Rothbaum said.
She said the effects of deployment on children also need to be studied so the military can figure out how to provide more help to families. [/ul]
www.comcast.net/articles/news-health/20100113/US.MED.Preventing.PTSD/
By LINDA A. JOHNSON, AP
"These are provocative and thought-provoking findings that should lead scientists to investigate the underlying mechanisms" in future studies, said JoAnn Difede, a PTSD researcher at New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center.
Difede and Barbara Rothbaum, who heads the Trauma and Anxiety Recovery Program at Emory University School of Medicine, said that until more research backs up the findings, the study probably won't lead to many more patients in civilian emergency rooms getting morphine.
"At this point, I don't see it having a huge impact" for civilians, Rothbaum said.
A second study in the journal found that Army wives were more likely to develop depression or sleep problems the longer, or the more times, their spouses were sent to Iraq or Afghanistan.
That study, by researchers at the University of North Carolina and elsewhere, examined medical records for outpatient care of about 250,000 wives of active-duty soldiers from 2003 through 2006.
Compared with wives whose husbands stayed home, those whose husbands were deployed for up to 11 months were 18 percent more likely to be diagnosed with depression and at least 20 percent more likely to be diagnosed with sleep disorders, anxiety and acute stress.
For wives whose husbands were deployed for more than 11 months, problems were even more common: They were at least 24 percent more likely to be diagnosed with depression or anxiety, and about 40 percent more likely to be diagnosed with acute stress or sleep problems.
The researchers didn't have data showing whether husbands were deployed or at home when the wives were being treated for mental health problems.
That meant the scientists couldn't conclude whether those problems were caused by worries about the spouse's safety and the difficulties of being a single parent, or by stress caused by the returning spouse's psychological problems or other behavior changes.
"I suspect that if you look at the Reserve and National Guard wives, the toll might be even worse," because they have less social support than families living in a military community, Rothbaum said.
She said the effects of deployment on children also need to be studied so the military can figure out how to provide more help to families. [/ul]
www.comcast.net/articles/news-health/20100113/US.MED.Preventing.PTSD/