This message was sent to ##Email##
|
|
|
|
Promoted by
|
|
|
 |
ADAA
New ADAA Public Blog Posts

Depression Treatment — It Works
by Beth Salcedo, MD — ADAA Board President

Depression Among College Students
by Diana Cusumano, LHMC, NCC and Erica Riba, LCSW
Calling All ADAA Bloggers!
ADAA is seeking blog posts for our public community on the following topics for our public and professional communities. Interested in contributing a post to ADAA? Have an idea for a post? Please contact Lise Bram.
New ADAA Public Webinars

Depression Among College Students
by Diana Cusumano, LHMC, NCC and Erica Riba, LCSW

El Rostro del Trauma en la Comunidad Latina
By Garlene Guadron, LPC
ADAA
06/01/2018 How Do You Treat Anxiety? Only 20% of Young People Stay Well After Being Treated Once, According to a New Study, Bustle, Golda S. Ginsburg, PhD
05/31/2018 I Tried Positive Thinking for 5 Days — Here's What Happened, Refinery 29, Joel Minden, PhD
05/31/2018 Why Are Black Children Killing Themselves?, U.S. News & World Report, Angela Neal-Barnett, PhD
05/29/2018 What to Do (and Carry with you) To Cope With A Panic Attack, NBC News, Misti Nicholson, PsyD and Carolyn Rodriguez, MD, PhD
05/25/2018 Why So Many Young Women Are Terrified To Fly, Bustle, David A. Carbonell, PhD, Misti Nicholson, PsyD, and Martin Seif, PhD, ABPP
05/23/2018 For Troubled Kids, Some Schools Take Time Out For Group Therapy, National Public Radio, Mary Alvord, PhD
05/22/2018 A Healthy Renewal for Puerto Rico, U.S. News & World Report, Karen Martinez, MD, MSc
05/21/2018 Blue Cross Blue Shield Depression Study Interview, CBS Radio Network, Beth Salcedo, MD
05/21/2018 10 Surprising Signs of Depression, Prevention.com, Simon Rego, PsyD
ADAA members are often reported on or quoted in the general media about a wide range of topics.
Have you published a new book or research article? Have you been quoted in a recent news article/story? Please let us know so we can share your news with your ADAA colleagues and with our public community. Simply email Lise Bram and we'll make sure to feature your news/new publication here every other week, on our social media platforms and on the ADAA Members in the News website page.
|
|
|
|
|
ADAA
Members Can Print Their Own Invoices
ADAA members can now print their own invoices when you renew your membership, purchase a store item, etc. Click here to learn more.
ADAA Find-a-Therapist Statistics
For ADAA members who are clinicians and are listed on ADAA's Find-a-Therapist (FAT) platform, please note that we are now tracking page views/users. For the month of May, 2018, the main FAT page received 7,485 Page Views and had 2,512 Users and 2,399 new users.
 You Can Support ADAA Through Amazon
Father's Day is June 17 and it's a great opportunity to shop for Dad at smile.amazon.com and support ADAA at the same time. If you select ADAA as your charity of choice, Amazon will donate a portion of all sales to ADAA.
Have a Birthday Coming up? You can Celebrate AND Support ADAA on Facebook
You and your friends/family can support causes that are important to you (like ADAA!) by raising funds and awareness without leaving Facebook Start your own Facebook fundraiser here today. Visit ADAA's Facebook page.
ADAA offers a variety of webinars for mental health professionals. Most ADAA professional webinars offer CE credits.
Save the Date! Fall 2018 Webinars — Registration Coming Soon
- September 13, 2018 — Addressing Cognitive Dimensions of Academic & School Anxiety
- September 20, 2018 — Selective Mutism Tools & WeSpeak Program
Recent additions:
View all ADAA On-Demand Webinars
ADAA is pleased to offer three recorded webinar bundle packages at a special discounted price. Each bundle contains 3 recorded webinars on a specific topic. Some packages offer CE credits. The webinar format is a one-hour audiovisual presentation, including a brief Q&A session.
Optimize your 2018 ADAA Conference Experience with On-Demand Audio-Recordings
- Couldn't make it to #ADAA2018 this year?
- Left the conference early? Missed some sessions?
- Interested in listening to your favorite sessions again?
ADAA is excited to offer audio recordings of selected conference sessions (over 30 hours of programming, including up to 9 hours of CE).
Click here for details/to order.
ADAA
Save the Date for #ADAA2019
Submission Portal opens Tuesday, June 12, 2018. Please visit the ADAA 2019 Submissions website page for a "How to Submit" guide and other important information.
ADAA
Murray B. Stein, MD, MPHA — Editor-in-Chief. Meet the New Journal Editorial Board
Depression and Anxiety, the official journal of the Anxiety and Depression Association of America, is available online at no charge to ADAA members. The journal welcomes original research and synthetic review articles covering neurobiology (genetics and neuroimaging), epidemiology, experimental psychopathology, and treatment (psychotherapeutic and pharmacologic) aspects of mood and anxiety disorders, and related phenomena in humans. A priority is placed on papers focusing on treatment, as well as those providing cutting-edge reviews of key areas and issues, in order to enhance the clinical evaluation and care of individuals struggling with the effects of these disorders. All submissions are peer-reviewed; there is no handling or publishing fee.
Learn more about the Journal
JUNE 2018 ISSUE – VOLUME 35 - ISSUE 6
THESE EARLY VIEW ARTICLES ARE NOW AVAILABLE ON WILEY ONLINE LIBRARY
RESEARCH ARTICLES
Personal sleep debt and daytime sleepiness mediate the relationship between sleep and mental health outcomes in young adults
David L. Dickinson, Alexander P. Wolkow, Shantha M. W. Rajaratnam and Sean P. A. Drummond
Version of Record online: 22 MAY 2018 | DOI: 10.1002/da.22769
Finding factors that predict treatment-resistant depression: Results of a cohort study
M. Soledad Cepeda, Jenna Reps and Patrick Ryan
Version of Record online: 22 MAY 2018 | DOI: 10.1002/da.22774
Severe role impairment associated with mental disorders: Results of the WHO World Mental Health Surveys International College Student Project
Jordi Alonso, Philippe Mortier, Randy P. Auerbach, Ronny Bruffaerts, Gemma Vilagut, Pim Cuijpers, Koen Demyttenaere, David D. Ebert, Edel Ennis, Raul A. Gutiérrez-García, Jennifer Greif Green, Penelope Hasking, Christine Lochner, Matthew K. Nock, Stephanie Pinder-Amaker, Nancy A. Sampson, Alan M. Zaslavsky, Ronald C. Kessler and WHO WMH-ICS Collaborators
Version of Record online: 30 MAY 2018 | DOI: 10.1002/da.22778
ADAA
The Human Animal Bond Research Institute (HABRI) is sharing a research opportunity from the WALTHAM Human-Animal Interaction Research Program.
Research eligible for funding under this call must focus on human-animal interaction (HAI) as it relates to one or more of the following preferred topic areas:
- The impact of pets on human physical and socio-emotional health (includes the concepts of physical activity, wellness, engagement, social support, usefulness, purpose and connectedness)
- Maintenance of healthy body weight in people and pets (includes how the behaviors of both species impact the other)
There are up to three awards available, each for a maximum of $338,594.40. The deadline for applications is July 23, 2018.
Full details on the call for proposals is available here.
ADAA is proud to collaborate with the Massachusetts General Hospital Psychiatry Academy to co-present two on-demand sessions on:
Both sessions are fully on-demand and open for participation to anyone at any time. These sessions are approved for CME credit through Jan. 19, 2021.
ADAA members receive a $5 discount on each session by entering the code "ADAA" during registration.
| RESEARCH AND PRACTICE NEWS |
Psychiatry Advisor
Research published in The Journal of Pediatrics indicated no significant relationship between depression or anxiety symptomatology and cardiovascular disease risk after adjusting for body fat percentage. The cross-sectional study cohort consisted of 202 participants aged 8 to 18 years with a wide range of body mass index values from normal weight to severe obesity.
READ MORE
Psych Central
A new study finds that African-Americans and Latinos are significantly more likely to experience serious depression than whites. The study, published in Preventive Medicine, also found that African-Americans and Latinos were more likely to have higher levels of chronic stress and more unhealthy behaviors.
READ MORE
Medical News Today
A recently published review finds a significant link between hay fever and a raised risk of anxiety and depression in adolescents. They also appear to be more impulsive and have less resistance to stress. The review, published in the journal Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology, examined 25 previously published studies.
READ MORE
HealthDay News
If you're taking an antidepressant, you're likely to gain weight, a new study out of Britain reports. That's a finding that generated little surprise among mental health experts. In the study, published May 23 in the BMJ, patients who used any of a dozen common antidepressants were 21 percent more likely than others to put on an extra five to eight pounds, the study authors said.
READ MORE
Psychiatry Advisor
Young adults with recurrent depression experience processing speed deficits that are not affected by symptom severity, and the interaction between recurring episodes of depression and aging appears to exacerbate cognitive performance deficits with each recurrence, according to a study published in Depression and Anxiety.
READ MORE
|
MISSED AN ISSUE OF ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION INSIGHTS? VISIT AND SEARCH THE ARCHIVE TODAY. |
CNN
Before there were smartphones, singles would often go to bars or clubs and try to meet "the one," or at least the one for that night. Alcohol-induced courage and a steep bar tab later, singles were on top of their game or it was "game over" — until the next weekend. Technology has saved singles from all that. With smartphones, we can now carry millions of potential love interests in our pockets.
READ MORE
Psych Central
Suicide rates among whites have traditionally been higher than for blacks in the United States. However, a new study shows that the racial differences in suicide rates may be age-specific. The findings, published in JAMA Pediatrics, reveal that suicide rates for black children aged 5-12 are approximately double than that for white children of similar ages.
READ MORE
Psych Central
A new study finds that a mobile phone intervention, commonly referred to as mHealth, may be as effective as a clinic-based group intervention for people with serious mental illness. For the study, researchers compared the mHealth approach (FOCUS) to a more traditional clinic-based group intervention, the Wellness Recovery Action Plan (WRAP).
READ MORE
Medical Xpress
No matter which treatment they get, only 20 percent of young people diagnosed with anxiety will stay well over the long term, UConn Health researchers report in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. "When you see so few kids stay non-symptomatic after receiving the best treatments we have, that's discouraging," says UConn Health psychologist Golda Ginsburg.
READ MORE
MindShift
Sometimes 11-year-old B. comes home from school in tears. Maybe she was taunted about her weight that day, called "ugly." Or her so-called friends blocked her on their phones. Some nights she is too anxious to sleep alone and climbs into her mother's bed. It's just the two of them at home, ever since her father was deported back to West Africa when she was a toddler.
READ MORE
Vogue
At a cute Italian restaurant, over candlelight and red wine, a man once told me he could never trust or love someone with a mental illness. He knew I lived with bipolar disorder. "That's a deal-breaker for me," I said, trying to take the power back and reject him, rather than the other way around. We argued and I sobbed, wondering whether I'd ever be loved, chemical imbalance and all.
READ MORE
|
|
|
|
|
 7701 Las Colinas Ridge, Ste. 800, Irving, TX 75063
|