Tuesday, September 4, 2007
Bipolar Disorder Diagnosis Up In Children
CHICAGO (eCanadaNow) - The estimated number of youth with office visits with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder substantially increased between 1994 and 2003, while adult visits with a bipolar disorder diagnoses appeared to almost double, according to a report in the September issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Bipolar disorder is a psychiatric illness that typically involves periods of mania (an abnormally elevated mood) and depression. �Although bipolar disorder may have its onset during childhood, little is known about national trends in the diagnosis and management of bipolar disorder in young people,� the authors write as background information in the article.
Carmen Moreno, M.D., of the Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Maranon, Servicio de Psiquiatria, Madrid, Spain, and colleagues analyzed data from a national survey of office-based physicians designed to represent all such clinicians in the United States. The physicians provided information about demographic, clinical and treatment aspects of each patient visit for a one-week time period. The researchers compared the rate of growth in bipolar disorder diagnoses among individuals age 19 and under to that of individuals age 20 and older from 1994 to 1995 through 2002 to 2003. They also compared demographic information and prescribed treatments between the two groups during the years 1999 to 2003.
The annual number of office-based visits with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder in youth was estimated to increase from 25 per 100,000 youth in 1994 to 1995 to 1,003 per 100,000 youth in 2002 to 2003. In the same time, outpatient visits with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder in adults increased from 905 to 1,679 per 100,000 population. As a percentage of total office-based visits, visits with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder increased among youth from 0.01 percent (1994 to 1995) to 0.44 percent (2002 to 2003), and among adults, from 0.31 percent to 0.5 percent in the same time periods.
Between 1999 and 2003, most young people diagnosed with bipolar disorder were male (66.5 percent), while 67.6 percent of diagnosed adults were females. Young people were more likely than adults to receive diagnoses of both bipolar disorder and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (32.2 percent vs. 3 percent).
�The impressive increase in the diagnosis of childhood and adolescent bipolar disorder in U.S. office-based practice indicates a shift in clinical diagnostic practices,� the authors write. �In broad terms, either bipolar disorder was historically underdiagnosed in children and adolescents and that problem has now been rectified, or bipolar disorder is currently being overdiagnosed in this age group. Without independent systematic diagnostic assessments, we cannot confidently select between these two competing hypotheses.�
Most youth (90.6 percent) and adults (86.4 percent) were prescribed medications to treat bipolar disorder, including mood stabilizers, antipsychotics and antidepressants. These similarities occurred despite the fact that the condition and treatments may affect adults and children differently, the authors note. �There is an urgent need to study the reliability and validity using multiple informant strategies of the diagnosis of child and adolescent bipolar disorder in community practice and to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of pharmacological treatment regimens commonly used to treat youth diagnosed with bipolar disorder,� they conclude.
Source : ecanadanow
Read Business Articles for Free
Malay's Blog
Interest In Investment ?
Read Before Seriously Involved In HomeBusiness
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Wired Top Stories
world news
Top News
Africa News
Health News
Technology News
Business News
Movie News
Entertainment News
Sport News
Fashion and Style News
Sports Leisure News
Technology News
International News
Reuters News
TV News
Entertainment News
Entertainment News
TV: Business
Movie Reviews
Travelling News
Money Matters News
Middle East News
Asia Pacific News
Europe News
Labels
Pakistan
Pregnancy
US
Iran
Bhutto
British
China
Dies
NASA
google
Abstinence students no more likely to abstain from sex
Anna Nicole Smith
Benzir Bhutto
Bush
Fish
For
Healthy
Iraq
Mosques
Motorola
Russia
deaths
gay
hate
indian couple
iphone
men
oil laws
sunni
women
5 ways to get your sex life going
70 Gigapixel Photo
A suicide bomber
AIDS
Afghan
Africa
Ahmadinejad
Airman spots jetliner fuel leak
Amy Winehouse
Anna Nicole Smith boyfriend and doctors charged
Antioxidants Don’t Lower Heart RiskHealthy
Arab-Israeli
Assassinated
Asteroid Belt
Astronauts
Back
Batteries
Beckham
Beirut
Bil
Bipolar Disorder Diagnosis Up In Children
Bird Flu
Botox
Breast-feeding
Brings
Britain
Business
CTIA
Caffeine
California
Canada
Cell phones
Certain Veto
Child Porn
China Seeks to Calm Fears Amid Scandal
China justifies sanctions veto
Chinese
Chlamydia
Citigroup
Clash in
Combat Mission in Iraq Will End Aug 31 2010
Consumer
Couple Sues
Created
Crossover Ball
Dell
Dems
Disaster
Disney backs star after nude scandal
E.Coli in Beef Linked to 19 Illnesses in Ohio
Early-stage Sperm Cells
Earthquake
Earthquake China
Edmund Hillary
Elections
Electric Fish
Everest
Experts
F1
FDA
Families of Columbia
Federal Reserve
Florida
Food Crisis
Former
From Human Bone
G.M
G8
Gates
Gene Therapy Cures Color-Blind Monkeys
Georgia
Georgia governor leads prayer for rain
Golfer Killing Hawk
Grand Canyon
Grand Entrance
Guinea prime minister
HIV
Heart Attack In Youth
IMF
Indonesian
Infants
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Iowa River Falls
Iran Cyber Battle
Iran Leader
Iranian
Iraqis
Israel
Jamie Lynn Spears
Jennifer Hudson
Jennifer Lopez
Karadzic
Kashmir route
Keeping In Touch In A Wired World
LONDON
Lebanese
Lily Allen
Lindsay Lohan
Malaysian Grand Prix
Man's
Marriage
Marrow
Massive
Mogadishu
Mouseless
Mr. Bush
Mugabe
Musharraf
Myanmar
N Korea
NASA plants the seeds of space exploration
NEW YORK
NIU
North Carolina
Over
PCs
Pakistan Army Moves Against Pro-Taliban Militants
Palestinian
Paris Hilton
Pentagon
Police
Portable Office
Possible
President Mugabe
Pressures mount on new Thai PM
Protesters
RIYADH
Racy MySpace Pics
Rally
Removing a Champagne Cork
Robots Sex Life
Rodney
Romney
Russia defies ceasefire
Russian President
Security Council
Sepang
Sex Diseases
Shanghai faces direct hit from Typhoon Wipha
Skittish
Skype
Solomon Islands Sparks
Spacecraft
Sri Lanka
TB
Taiwan Strait
Taliban
Technology
Teen
Teenager unlocks iPhone's secret
Terminator Salvation
Thai-Cambodia
The Next Hacking Frontier
Torture
Troop-Withdrawal
Tropical Storm Gustav Intensifies
Tropical Storm Hanna/Hannah is Born
Tsunami Alert
U.S.
UK captives
UM
Universal Studios in LA
Very low risk
Veto
Virus
Vonage
War-scarred
Web Attacks
West Nile
Wired Bird of Paradise
Wireless 2007
Wolfowitz
World leaders
XP
Yahoo
Yeltsin
Zimbabwe
abyss
air crash
anti-anxiety
anti-depressant
attack
ban
bed
beef recall
bookshop
brain cancer
britney spears
burma
bus blast
calls
climate change
countries
cut
damage
diabetes
divorce
eBay
epidemic
fall
fire
fire burning
food
fresign
gadget lab
hulk hogan
human organ
humans
in Massachusetts
investigated
japanese
jobs
k-fed
leaders
lebanon
linda hogan
melamine
middle east
miscarriage
missile
mp3
mumbai
muslim american
myspace
mystery
napster
nigeria
obesity
oil price
on
online auction
opec
patient's
pet food
pressure
psychological
quake relief
reactor
recession
reconciliation
relative
religious
saudi arabia
seven
shia
shooting
slavery
sleep
society
soldier
spiderman
stricke
study says
tanks enter Georgian city
teenager arrested
to shut
to speed up
toothpaste
trafficking
unesco
vehicles
viacom
virus kill honeybees in usa
war
warming
warn
web ad spending
will
wired video
wonder
world bank
wresler
youtube
No comments:
Post a Comment