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

Text reminders help connect health care workers to care and improve their mental health

2024-05-28
(Press-News.org) Health care workers have reported spikes in feeling burnt out in the time since the COVID-19 pandemic began, with nearly half saying it took a toll in 2022 compared to 32 percent in 2018. But a new study shows that easy-to-use and accessible platforms may help reverse this trend. Regular, automated text message reminders connecting staff to a mental health platform called “Cobalt,” drove significant improvements in both depression and anxiety scores among employees, according to a new JAMA Network Open study from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

“What we found shows that touching base with people, letting them know that help is available and easy to access, goes a long way toward maximizing digital mental health interventions and platforms, which leads to important, tangible results,” said the study’s lead author, Anish Agarwal, MD, MPH, MS, an assistant professor of Emergency Medicine and deputy director of the Center for Insights to Outcomes. “Mental health platforms continue to grow and evolve, but, to this point, there hasn’t been enough research about them and how to optimize their use, particularly among health care workers. Work like ours is important as health systems across the country seek to better assist their staff with the challenges they face.”

Available as an open-source, web-based platform for any health system, COBALT is designed specifically to support health care employees seeking mental health help. It includes resources such as podcasts, articles, and worksheets, pathways to schedule one-on-one sessions with therapists, doctors, resiliency coaches, and also features group sessions focused on specific issues, such as mindfulness or antiracism. The platform also includes access to urgent intervention for those in need of emergency attention.

Since COBALT’s launch at Penn Medicine in spring 2020, two other institutions also adopted the platform. The platform launched in just two weeks amid the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. Within 30 days, more than 5,000 people had accessed the platform. Now, more than 100,000 individuals, in total, have access to the platform across the three institutions using it.

The new study showed that users’ self-reported depression symptom scores improved by roughly 11 percent six months after employees engaged with COBALT. This was measured by the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), in which answers to a survey result in a score used to help assess potential levels of depression. Participating employees included doctors, nurses, technicians, registrars, and others. There were two groups: an intervention arm, which received monthly, automated reminder text messages on mental health and the availability of COBALT, and a control group, which just had access to the free platform but no proactive outreach. At nine months, across both groups, scores improved by just over 22 percent.

While overall scores did show improvement across the board, the effect seen in the intervention group receiving text message reminders about the program was demonstrably larger. Scores improved by more than 20 percent six months after these participants initially connected with COBALT, and 30 percent at nine months. According to PHQ-9’s scale, the latter took the average score from the lower end of “mild depression symptoms” to just a hair above “no symptoms.”

The control arm, receiving no messages, improved by about 5 percent at six months and 12 percent at nine.

“This study is one of very few evidenced-based approaches which have been shown to improve mental health of health care workers after the pandemic,” said the study’s senior author, Raina Merchant, MD, the University of Pennsylvania Health System chief transformation officer and a professor of Emergency Medicine. “Our work shows that health systems have the unique opportunity to provide substantial support for this critical workforce.”

When it came to anxiety—measured similarly to depression with a tool named Generalize Anxiety Disorder assessment (GAD-7)—the control group did not experience a significant improvement in their score at six months (roughly 4 percent), but the nine-month assessment saw a significant improvement of 13 percent.

Again, the intervention arm of the study had greater improvements in the symptom score at both six and nine months: approximately 17 and 30 percents, respectively. As with the depression symptom scores, the average nine-month anxiety score was just shy of indicating no symptoms.

“Overall, these numbers clearly indicate that the reception of the digital push was very positive, welcomed, and helped people prioritize their mental health and feel cared for,” said Lisa Bellini, MD, senior vice dean for Academic Affairs and a professor of Medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine.

Moving forward, the study team hopes to further improve the pathway to connecting the workforce with COBALT to overcome the barriers for health care workers to connect to mental health care and make the approach easy to apply to other health systems.

“COBALT is a simple, user-friendly, and scalable way of reaching our workforce,” said Agarwal. “Mental health is so important, yet many of us don't take the time to check in with ourselves or remember where to go when we need help. This approach provides insights on ways to reach people and move toward making it even simpler to connect to care."

This study was funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), and the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) (1R01MH127686-01).

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Optimal cancer-killing t cells discovered

Optimal cancer-killing t cells discovered
2024-05-28
A team of cancer researchers, led by the University of Houston, has discovered a new subset of T cells that may improve the outcome for patients treated with T-cell therapies.   T cell-based immunotherapy has tremendous value to fight, and often eliminate, cancer. The strategy activates a patient’s immune system and engineers a patient’s own T cells to recognize, attack and kill cancer cells. In this way, the body’s own T cells become living drugs.   While T-cell immunotherapy has revolutionized cancer treatment, there is still much to learn. Unfortunately, not all patients ...

Wind farms are cheaper than you think – and could have prevented Fukushima, says global review

2024-05-28
Offshore wind could have prevented the Fukushima disaster, according to a review of wind energy led by the University of Surrey.   The researchers found that offshore turbines could have averted the 2011 nuclear disaster in Japan by keeping the cooling systems running and avoiding meltdown. The team also found that wind farms are not as vulnerable to earthquakes.  Suby Bhattacharya, Professor of Geomechanics at the University of Surrey’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, said:  “Wind power gives us plentiful clean energy – now we know that it could also make other facilities safer and more reliable. The global review finds ...

Improved refrigeration could save nearly half of the 1.3 billion tons of food wasted each year globally

2024-05-28
May 28, 2024 Contact: Jim Erickson, 734-647-1842, ericksn@umich.edu   Graphic Improved refrigeration could save nearly half of the 1.3 billion tons of food wasted each year globally ANN ARBOR—About a third of the food produced globally each year goes to waste, while approximately 800 million people suffer from hunger, according to the U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization. A new University of Michigan study concludes that nearly half of the food waste, about 620 million metric tons, could be eliminated by fully refrigerated food supply chains worldwide. At the same time, ...

From fibrosis and cancer to obesity, Alzheimer’s and aging: New paper reveals broad potential of TNIK as a therapeutic target

From fibrosis and cancer to obesity, Alzheimer’s and aging: New paper reveals broad potential of TNIK as a therapeutic target
2024-05-28
A new paper in Trends in Pharmacological Sciences from researchers at generative artificial intelligence (AI)- and robotics-powered clinical stage drug discovery company Insilico Medicine (“Insilico”) and ETH Zurich reveals the broad potential of TNIK as a therapeutic target for some of the most pervasive aging-related diseases, including fibrosis, cancer, obesity, and Alzheimer’s. The findings could guide the development of new therapeutics. The lead drug in Insilico’s pipeline, INS018_055, is an AI-designed TNIK inhibitor being advanced as a treatment ...

Finnish Vole fever spreading further south

Finnish Vole fever spreading further south
2024-05-28
Researchers have discovered that bank voles in southern Sweden (Skåne) carry a virus that can cause hemorrhagic fever in humans. This finding was made more than 500 km south of the previously known range. The virus strain discovered in Skåne appears to be more closely related to strains from Finland and Karelia than to the variants found in northern Sweden and Denmark. This is revealed in a new study from Uppsala University, conducted in collaboration with infectious diseases doctors in Kristianstad and published ...

Prenatal exposure to air pollution associated with increased mental health risks

2024-05-28
A baby’s exposure to air pollution while in the womb is associated with the development of certain mental health problems once the infant reaches adolescence, new research has found. The University of Bristol-led study, published in JAMA Network Open today [28 May], examined the long-term mental health impact of early-life exposure to air and noise pollution. Growing evidence suggests air pollution, which comprises toxic gases and particulate matter, might contribute to the onset of mental health problems. It is thought that pollution could negatively affect mental health via numerous ...

New research supports expansion of kidney donation to include organs from deceased patients who once had dialysis

2024-05-28
Researchers from Johns Hopkins Medicine propose a novel approach to addressing the pressing issue of a kidney donor shortage through findings that suggest a promising method to expand the pool of available kidney donors by utilizing deceased donors on dialysis for kidney transplants.   The findings, published in the May 23rd issue of JAMA, identifies that while those who received such kidneys experienced a “significant delay” in the function of the transplanted organ compared to those ...

A cleaner way to produce ammonia

A cleaner way to produce ammonia
2024-05-28
– By Rachel Berkowitz Ammonia is the starting point for the fertilizers that have secured the world’s food supply for the last century. It’s also a main component of cleaning products, and is even considered as a future carbon-free replacement for fossil fuels in vehicles. But synthesizing ammonia from molecular nitrogen is an energy-intensive industrial process, due to the high temperatures and pressures at which the standard reaction proceeds. Scientists from the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley ...

How killifish embryos use suspended animation to survive over 8 months of drought

How killifish embryos use suspended animation to survive over 8 months of drought
2024-05-28
The African turquoise killifish lives in ephemeral ponds in Zimbabwe and Mozambique. To survive the annual dry season, the fish’s embryos enter a state of extreme suspended animation or “diapause” for approximately 8 months. Now, researchers have uncovered the mechanisms that enabled the killifish to evolve this extreme survival state. They report May 30 in the journal Cell that although killifish evolved diapause less than 18 million years ago, they did so by co-opting ancient genes ...

Harnessing green energy from plants depends on their circadian rhythms

Harnessing green energy from plants depends on their circadian rhythms
2024-05-28
WASHINGTON, May 28, 2024 —When plants draw water from their roots to nourish their stems and leaves, they produce an electric potential that could be harnessed as a renewable energy source. However, like all living things, plants are subject to a circadian rhythm — the biological clock that runs through day and night cycles and influences biological processes. In plants, this daily cycle includes capturing light energy for photosynthesis and absorbing water and nutrients from the soil during the day and slowing its growth processes at night. In a study published this week in ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Insulin resistance is linked to over 30 diseases – and to early death in women, study of people in the UK finds

Innovative semaglutide hydrogel could reduce diabetes shots to once a month

Weight loss could reduce the risk of severe infections in people with diabetes, UK research suggests

Long-term exposure to air pollution and a lack of green space increases the risk of hospitalization for respiratory conditions

Better cardiovascular health in early pregnancy may offset high genetic risk

Artificial intelligence method transforms gene mutation prediction in lung cancer: DeepGEM data releases at IASLC 2024 World Conference on Lung Cancer

Antibody–drug conjugate I-DXd shows clinically meaningful response in patients with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer

IASLC Global Survey on biomarker testing reveals progress and persistent barriers in lung cancer biomarker testing

Research shows pathway to developing predictive biomarkers for immune checkpoint inhibitors

Just how dangerous is Great Salt Lake dust? New research looks for clues

Maroulas appointed Associate Vice Chancellor, Director of AI Tennessee

New chickadee research finds cognitive skills impact lifespan

Cognitive behavioral therapy enhances brain circuits to relieve depression

Terasaki Institute awarded $2.3 Million grant from NIH for organ transplantation research using organs-on-a-chip technology

Atoms on the edge

Postdoc takes multipronged approach to muon detection

Mathematical proof: Five satellites needed for precise navigation

Scalable, multi-functional device lays groundwork for advanced quantum applications

Falling for financial scams? It may signal early Alzheimer’s disease

Integrating MRI and OCT for new insights into brain microstructure

Designing a normative neuroimaging library to support diagnosis of traumatic brain injury

Department of Energy announces $68 million in funding for artificial intelligence for scientific research

DOE, ORNL announce opportunity to define future of high-performance computing

Molecular simulations, supercomputing lead to energy-saving biomaterials breakthrough

Low-impact yoga and exercise found to help older women manage urinary incontinence

Genetic studies reveal new insights into cognitive impairment in schizophrenia

Researcher develops technology to provide cleaner energy and cleaner water

Expect the unexpected: nanoscale silver unveils intrinsic self-healing abilities

nTIDE September 2024 Jobs Report: Gains in employment for people with disabilities appear to level off after reducing gaps with non-disabled workers

Wiley enhances NMR Spectral Library Collection with extensive new databases

[Press-News.org] Text reminders help connect health care workers to care and improve their mental health