Quantum Sufficit
Just Enough
Can people really be scared to death or die of a broken heart? Yes,
according a study published in the New England
Journal of Medicine. Researchers found that sudden stress such as shock,
anger, fear, or grief can cause severe but reversible left ventricular
dysfunction in otherwise healthy patients. Ninety-five percent of patients who
reported symptoms of what is now called stress cardiomyopathy were women, and
all recovered rapidly after admission to the hospital. However, researchers
warn that some of the cases could have been fatal if the patients had not
received medical attention.
"Have you had your flu shot? Does it seem like that's the
never-ending question every autumn? Perhaps that question isn't as important in
a certain age group as people may think. Researchers recently studied all
causes of death in the elderly for the 33 influenza seasons from 1968 to 2001
and published their findings in Archives of
Internal Medicine. While flu vaccination rates in the elderly jumped
from 20 percent before 1980 to 65 percent in 2001, researchers could not
correlate increasing vaccination rates with a decline in mortality, and
therefore concluded that previous observational studies had substantially
overestimated the benefits of vaccination in this group.
The World Wide Web is introducing adolescent substance abusers to a
whole new world of drug information. A study recently published in
Pediatrics found that Internet-based drug
information is affecting adolescent drug users' attitudes and behaviors. In the
study, 12 adolescents undergoing substance abuse treatment participated in a
cross-sectional survey, and all said that they changed their drug-using
behavior toward a range of drugs after viewing information on the Internet.
These changes included using new drugs and drug combinations, and attempting to
minimize the drugs' negative effects. Researchers found that adolescents
frequently obtained drug information from antidrug Web sites, government Web
sites, online medical encyclopedias, and electronic medical textbooks.
Losing a job can be emotionally devastating, and it can also be
hazardous to a woman's physical health, according to a report published in
Circulation. Researchers
surveyed nearly 35,000 women and found a relationship between women who had
been laid off or fired from their jobs and a higher risk for high blood
pressure and cardiovascular disease, including heart attack, chest pain, and
stroke. Unemployed women were in the poorest physical health, while employed
women were the healthiest. Homemakers were comparable in health status to
employed women, but they had a slightly higher risk for cardiovascular disease.
The researchers say that further studies are needed to determine if these
results reflect a causal relationship.
Many people may stick together "in sickness and in health,
but it isn't always pleasant. A study published in the
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
found that elder abuse is most likely to occur in spousal caregiver situations.
Researchers evaluated interview responses from over 250 pairs of caregivers and
elder-care recipients (ages 60 years and older). Approximately 26 percent of
care recipients reported abuse by their caregiver, with spousal caregivers as
much as four times more likely to be abusive than nonspousal caregivers. The
most common abusive behavior was yelling and screaming, followed by
name-calling, swearing, threatening the care recipient, and, to a lesser
degree, physical abuse.
| Copyright © 2005 by the American
Academy of Family Physicians. |









