Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Overdose Death Rates Among Older Americans Have Soared
Overdose fatalities among older Americans climbed in recent years, with 6,702 U.S. residents 65 and older succumbing in 2021, according to research published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry. Using data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, researchers reported that the rate of fatal overdoses for the age group quadrupled 鈥 rising from 3 deaths per 100,000 people in 2002 to 12 deaths per 100,000 people in 2021. Data indicates that 83 percent were accidental, 13 percent were intentional (suicide), 4 percent were undetermined and 0.07 percent (five deaths) were homicides. (Searing, 4/17)
In other health and wellness news 鈥
Gobbling up too many refined wheat and rice products, along with eating too few whole grains, is fueling the growth of new cases of type 2 diabetes worldwide, according to a new study that models data through 2018. (LaMotte, 4/17)
Most American adults and more than a third of children use dietary supplements, according to a new study from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and those numbers have remained steady or been on the rise. (Christensen, 4/18)
In the United States, life expectancy in 2021 was 79.1 years for women and 73.2 years for men. That 5.9-year difference is the largest gap in a quarter-century. (The data aren鈥檛 parsed to include differences among nonbinary and trans people.)鈥淢en are advantaged in every aspect of our society, yet we have worse health outcomes for most of the things that will kill you,鈥 said Derek Griffith, director of Georgetown University鈥檚 Center for Men鈥檚 Health Equity in the Racial Justice Institute. 鈥淲e tend not to prioritize men鈥檚 health, but it needs unique attention, and it has implications for the rest of the family. It means other members of the family, including women and children, also suffer.鈥 (Parker-Pope and Gilbert, 4/17)
A new mobile app developed by researchers at Brown University鈥檚 brain science institute is looking to find what happens in the brain during the transition from acute to chronic pain. The SOMA app, developed by psychiatry and human behavior professor Dr. Frederike Petzschner, is designed to directly support individuals with chronic pain and it gathers data that could help researchers predict how someone鈥檚 pain becomes chronic. The app is free and available on the App Store and Google Play Store. (Gagosz, 4/17)
Also 鈥
The parents of a 13-year-old boy who died doing the TikTok "Benadryl Challenge" are warning other parents about the dangerous social media trend.聽Jacob Stevens died after nearly a week on a ventilator after consuming 12 to 14 pills of the over-the-counter antihistamine in an attempt to induce hallucinations, his family told ABC6.com. (Martinez, 4/17)