PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Columbia University study finds that improved access to mental health care is associated with reductions in suicide risk

Columbia University study finds that improved access to mental health care is associated with reductions in suicide risk
2023-05-01
(Press-News.org) Amid historically high suicide rates and mental health care provider shortages, new research from Incite @ Columbia University suggests that interventions to alleviate mental health care access disparities can prevent unnecessary death and suffering. In an article pending publication in PNAS next week, “Differential Spatial-Social Accessiblity to Mental Health Care and Suicide," Daniel Tadmon and Peter S. Bearman find that in the United States improved access to mental health care is associated with reductions in suicide risk.

To enable this research, Tadmon and Bearman developed new methods of measuring access with greater granularity than previously possible. To start, they precisely located all psychiatrists and therapists in the United States, creating a comprehensive, accurate provider mapping for the first time. For each census tract, roughly equivalent to a neighborhood in size, they calculated residents’ access to care by incorporating service demand, competition, and transportation options. Next, they compared this score to the average suicide rate at the county level. Higher scores, which indicated shorter travel times to more providers who are less saturated by demand, were strongly associated with reduced suicide risk. This effect persisted when controlling for other key factors associated with suicide, including race, divorce, and gun shop prevalence.

This work illuminates misalignments between health care distribution and need in the United States. Tadmon notes that this data also exposes the high level of inequality in access to care. He adds, “It's alarming that the same people whose social circumstances put them at greater risk for suicide also have a much harder time finding available psychiatrists and therapists who could help them.”

For more information on the dataset underpinning this work, visit Incite’s website.

About Incite @ Columbia University

Incite is a leading interdisciplinary social science research institute at Columbia University. Incite’s mission is to create knowledge for public action—to catalyze conversations that lead to more just, equitable, and democratic societies.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Columbia University study finds that improved access to mental health care is associated with reductions in suicide risk Columbia University study finds that improved access to mental health care is associated with reductions in suicide risk 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Chances of eliminating HIV infection increased by novel dual gene-editing approach

2023-05-01
EMBARGO UNTIL: May 1, 2023 at 3 PM ET Gene-editing therapy aimed at two targets – HIV-1, the virus that causes AIDS, and CCR5, the co-receptor that helps the virus get into cells – can effectively eliminate HIV infection, new research from the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University and the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) shows. The study, published online in the journal The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), is the first to combine a dual gene-editing strategy with antiretroviral ...

Scientists discover anatomical changes in the brains of the newly sighted

2023-05-01
CAMBRIDGE, MA — For many decades, neuroscientists believed there was a “critical period” in which the brain could learn to make sense of visual input, and that this window closed around the age of 6 or 7. Recent work from MIT Professor Pawan Sinha has shown that the picture is more nuanced than that. In many studies of children in India who had surgery to remove congenital cataracts beyond the age of 7, he has found that older children can learn visual tasks such as recognizing ...

NYU Abu Dhabi study identifies brain structures that underlie sight recovery in blind teenagers

NYU Abu Dhabi study identifies brain structures that underlie sight recovery in blind teenagers
2023-05-01
Fast facts: Congenital cataracts are the leading cause of treatable blindness in children worldwide. In nations where the surgery is widely available, surgery occurs during infancy and there is a good prognosis for the recovery of visual function. It is widely accepted that the window for surgical intervention for congenital cataracts closes by the time a child reaches the ages of six to eight years old, as that is a critical period for visual brain development. Restoration of the visual input later in life is generally ...

Evidence of conscious-like activity in the dying brain

2023-05-01
[EMBARGOED UNTIL May 1, 2023 at 3:00 PM U.S. Eastern time] Reports of near-death experiences--with tales of white light, visits from departed loved ones, hearing voices, among other attributes—capture our imagination and are deeply engrained in our cultural landscape. The fact that these reports share so many common elements begs the question of whether there is something fundamentally real underpinning them—and that those who have managed to survive death are providing glimpses of a consciousness that does not completely disappear, even after the heart stops ...

50-year study offers insight into effects of climate on bird reproduction

50-year study offers insight into effects of climate on bird reproduction
2023-05-01
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A new study reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences assessed changes in the reproductive output of 104 bird species around the world between 1970 and 2019. The study reveals that a warming climate appears to have more worrisome effects on larger birds and migratory birds than on smaller, sedentary species. Study co-author Jeffrey Hoover, an avian ecologist at the Illinois Natural History Survey describes the findings in an interview with University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign life sciences editor Diana Yates. Some highlights: Increasing local temperatures during the chick-rearing part of the ...

Coal trains increase air pollution in San Francisco bay area

Coal trains increase air pollution in San Francisco bay area
2023-05-01
Coal trains and terminal operations add a significant amount of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) pollution to urban areas, more so than other freight or passenger trains, according to a study conducted in Richmond, California, by the University of California, Davis. The paper, published in the journal Air Quality, Atmosphere & Health, is the first study of coal train particulate pollution in a U.S. urban area. It’s also the first to use artificial intelligence technologies to verify that the source of air pollution detected comes from coal. It found that passing trains carrying ...

Silver nanoparticles spark key advance in thermoelectricity for power generation

Silver nanoparticles spark key advance in thermoelectricity for power generation
2023-05-01
HOUSTON – Several high-performance thermoelectric materials have been discovered over the past two decades, but without efficient devices to convert the energy they produce into emission-free power, their promise has been unfulfilled. Now an international team of scientists led by a University of Houston physicist and several of his former students has reported a new approach to constructing the thermoelectric modules, using silver nanoparticles to connect the modules’ electrode and metallization layers. The ...

A new method to test cancer drug toxicity

2023-05-01
For people with cancer, chemotherapy saves lives, but for some patients, the treatment comes with a side effect—heart damage. Screening cancer drugs for cardiotoxicity has been an ongoing challenge as heart cells don’t naturally grow in a dish, requiring researchers to do this critical testing using cardiac tissue from rodent models. A new study from researchers at Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University and Tufts Medical Center reports that heart tissue obtained through organ donations from dogs dying of other causes are a promising platform for testing cancer drug toxicity, offering scientists a new alternative. The ...

Webb finds water vapor, but from a rocky planet or its star?

Webb finds water vapor, but from a rocky planet or its star?
2023-05-01
The most common stars in the universe are red dwarf stars, which means that rocky exoplanets are most likely to be found orbiting such a star. Red dwarf stars are cool, so a planet has to hug it in a tight orbit to stay warm enough to potentially host liquid water (meaning it lies in the habitable zone). Such stars are also active, particularly when they are young, releasing ultraviolet and X-ray radiation that could destroy planetary atmospheres. As a result, one important open question in astronomy is whether a rocky planet could maintain, or reestablish, an atmosphere in such a harsh environment.   To help answer that question, astronomers ...

Cannabis knocks down pain, improves sleep and lifts brain fog in cancer patients

2023-05-01
Cancer patients who use cannabis to address their symptoms have less pain and sleep better, according to new University of Colorado Boulder research. But they also experience another, unexpected, benefit: After a few weeks of sustained use, they seem to think more clearly. “When you’re in a lot of pain, it’s hard to think,” said senior author Angela Bryan, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at CU Boulder and a cancer survivor. “We found that when patients’ pain levels came down after using cannabis for a while, their cognition got better.” The small but groundbreaking study, published ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Insilico Medicine and Taigen achieves license agreement to develop and commercialize AI-driven PHD inhibitor for anemia of Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)

Exploring dominant endophytic Pleosporales in grasses: New taxonomic insights in the suborder Massarineae

Comparative transcriptomic analysis of human maxillary and mandibular tooth germs reveals discrepancies in gene expression patterns

Scientists detect atmosphere on molten rocky exoplanet - study

Chip-scale magnetometer uses light for high-precision magnetic sensing

Illinois Tech biomedical engineering professor Philip R. Troyk elected as Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors

The National Academy of Inventors welcomes 2025 Class of Fellows

Multi-scale modelling framework predicts mechanical responses of Fe–Cr–Al alloys across composition and processing conditions

Preoperative radiation may improve antitumor immune response in most common form of breast cancer

Breast MRI may be safely omitted from diagnostic workup in certain patients with early-stage, HR-negative breast cancer

Sentinel lymph node biopsy may be safely omitted in some patients with early-stage breast cancer

Rats may seek cannabis to cope with stress

New FAU research strengthens evidence linking alcohol use to cancer

Gut health à la CAR T

Dr. Pengfei Liu receives 2026 O'Donnell Award in Medicine for pioneering advances in genetic diagnostics and rare disease treatment

Dr. Yunsun Nam receives 2026 O'Donnell Award in Biological Sciences for pioneering RNA research transforming gene regulation and cancer therapy

Dr. Bilal Akin wins 2026 O'Donnell Award in Engineering for transformative work in EV energy systems and industrial automation

Dr. Fan Zhang receives 2026 O'Donnell Award in Physical Sciences for groundbreaking discoveries in quantum matter and topological physics

Dr. Yue Hu receives 2026 O'Donnell Award for revolutionizing energy operations with real-time AI and reinforcement learning

Greater risk that the political right falls for conspiracy theories

JMC Publication: Insilico’s AI platforms enable discovery of potent, selective, oral DGKα inhibitor to overcome checkpoint resistance

Targeting collagen signaling boosts drug delivery in pancreatic cancer

Valvular heart disease is common in cancer patients but interventions improve survival

When socially responsible investing backfires

Cuffless blood pressure technologies in wearable devices show promise to transform care

AI-based tool predicts future cardiovascular events in patients with angina

Researchers map how the cerebellum builds its connections with the rest of the brain during early development

Routine scans could detect early prostate radiotherapy changes

Fairness in AI: Study shows central role of human decision-making

Pandemic ‘beneath the surface’ has been quietly wiping out sea urchins around the world

[Press-News.org] Columbia University study finds that improved access to mental health care is associated with reductions in suicide risk