Archive for the ‘Depression Treatment’ Category

Obesity in America Projected to Affect 164 Million by 2030

Friday, August 26th, 2011

Obesity is associated with deadly illnesses including diabetes, heart disease and stroke. Unfortunately, Western diets and lifestyles that include little exercise are causing alarming increases in obesity. Help is available. One can work with a nutritionist to learn healthier eating habits and can work with psychologists and health psychologists to change behaviors and habits that contribute to an unhealthy lifestyle. If you need help living a healthier life, don’t wait another day, get help and start feeling better.

Excerpt from article:

If rates of obesity continue to follow the current trends, half of the United States population will suffer from obesity within the next two decades. With projections that the number of obese people in America will climb from 99 million in 2008 to 164 million by 2030, obesity-related diseases and health care costs are expected to soar. The disturbing information come from a new report recently published in the journal The Lancet.

According to Claire Wang, assistant professor of health policy and management at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health and lead author of the study “At the rate we’re looking at right now, it’s a dire prediction. Something has to be done.”

The report, second in a series of articles on obesity published in the journal, projects that the number of obese people in the United Kingdom will rise to almost double from 15 million to 26 million in the next 19 years. Rates of obesity in both the U.S. and U.K. have already become the highest among all 34 member nations of the Organization for Economic Development and Cooperation OECD.

Read More: Obesity in America Projected to Affect 164 Million by 2030.

CBT Cuts Relapse Rates in Persistent Depression. Boston CBT and Counseling Available.

Friday, August 5th, 2011

A form of cognitive behavioral therapy that specifically addresses ruminations has been shown to be more effective than medication-only treatment for treating persistent depression. The new approach to CBT helped reduce relapse rates for depression.

Excerpt:

Adding rumination-focused cognitive behavior therapy CBT to standard treatment can decrease persistent depression, new research suggests.

Depressive rumination was defined as “repetitive thinking about the causes, meanings, and implications of depressed feelings, symptoms, problems, and upsetting events.” Rumination-focused CBT is designed to shift these negative thoughts to constructive rumination. It differs from standard CBT because it focuses on directly modifying the process of thinking.

In a phase 2 randomized controlled trial RCT of 42 patients with residual depression, those receiving up to 12 sessions of the combined therapy showed significantly improved symptoms, increased remission rates, and decreased relapse rates compared with those receiving treatment as usual (TAU) only.

“The key messages are that rumination might be a maintaining factor in residual depression and that adding a psychological treatment for rumination to antidepressant medication produces significant improvements in this hard-to-treat group,” lead study author Edward R. Watkins, PhD, professor of Experimental and Applied Clinical Psychology and cofounder of the Mood Disorders Center at the University of Exeter, United Kingdom, told Medscape Medical News.

To read a more detailed account see:  CBT Cuts Relapse Rates in Persistent Depression.

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The Truth About Cats and Dogs: Pets Are Good for Mental Health of ‘Everyday People’

Monday, July 11th, 2011

A new study shows the positive impact that having a pet can have on the emotional functioning of people. Prior research has shown that elderly people with pets fare better in many ways than those who do not have a pet. The current studies showed similar benefits. So, before you tell the kids, “no, you can’t have a cat,” just remember that it might help them emotionally…and you too.

Excerpt:

Pets can serve as important sources of social and emotional support for “everyday people,” not just individuals facing significant health challenges, according to research published by the American Psychological Association.

And, the study found, pet owners were just as close to key people in their lives as to their animals, indicating no evidence that relationships with pets came at the expense of relationships with other people, or that people relied more on pets when their human social support was poorer.

Psychologists at Miami University and Saint Louis University conducted three experiments to examine the potential benefits of pet ownership among what they called everyday people. The results of the current study were reported in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology®, published online by APA.

“We observed evidence that pet owners fared better, both in terms of well-being outcomes and individual differences, than non-owners on several dimensions,” said lead researcher Allen R. McConnell, PhD, of Miami University in Ohio. “Specifically, pet owners had greater self-esteem, were more physically fit, tended to be less lonely, were more conscientious, were more extraverted, tended to be less fearful and tended to be less preoccupied than non-owners.”

Read more at: The Truth About Cats and Dogs: Pets Are Good for Mental Health of ‘Everyday People’.

 

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Scientists find genetic link to depression. May aid future depression treatment.

Monday, May 16th, 2011

Scientists say they have discovered the first solid evidence that variations in some peoples genes may cause depression — one of the worlds most common and costly mental illnesses.

And in a rare occurrence in genetic research, a British-led international teams finding of a DNA region linked to depression has been replicated by another team from the United States who were studying an entirely separate group of people.”

Whats remarkable is that both groups found exactly the same region in two separate studies,” Pamela Madden, who led the U.S. team at Washington University, said in a statement.

The researchers said they hoped the findings would bring scientists closer to developing more effective treatments for patients with depression, since currently available medicines for depression only work in around half of patients.”

These findings … will help us track down specific genes that are altered in people with this disease,” said Gerome Breen of Kings College Londons Institute of Psychiatry, who led the other research group.

The researchers said they believed many genes were involved in depression.These findings are unlikely to benefit patients immediately, with any new drugs developed from them likely to take another 10 to 15 years. However, they will help scientists understand what may be happening at the genetic and molecular levels in people with depression.

If you are suffering from symptoms of depression, help is available. Depression treatment can include counseling and psychotherapy and/or medication treatment. Don’t delay, depression treatment can help.

Read more at: Scientists find genetic link to depression | Reuters.

Sleep, Depression, and Stress Influence Weight Loss: Newton Health & Wellness Support Group Can Help.

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011

April 5, 2011 — A new study suggests that sleep, depression, and stress are key components of an interventional weight loss program. The study was published online March 29 in the International Journal of Obesity.

The current US obesity epidemic is believed to have a number of contributing elements, including genetic, environmental, and lifestyle factors, such as disordered sleep patterns. Multiple studies have demonstrated an inverse association between sleep duration and weight gain.

To better understand the effects of sleep, screen time, depression, and stress on weight loss success, the researchers, led by Dr. Charles Elder of the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, Portland, Oregon, conducted a 2-phase randomized clinical trial. Phase 1 included a nonrandomized, 6-month behavioral weight loss intervention that included 472 adults with obesity body mass index, 30 – 50 kg/m2. Phase 2 incorporated weight loss maintenance. The current study focuses on phase 1 results.

The phase 1 intervention included 22 group sessions, led by a behavioral counselor, during the course of 26 weeks. Participants were given recommendations to reduce food consumption by 500 calories per day, adopt the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension pattern, and participate in at least 180 minutes of exercise per week.

Mean weight loss during phase 1 was 6.3 ± 7.1 kg, and 285 participants 60% who lost a minimum of 4.5 kg were randomly selected into phase 2. Participants attended an average of 73.1% ± 26.7% of sessions. They filled out 5.1 ± 1.9 daily food records per week and reported 195.1 ± 123.1 minutes of exercise per week.

Stress and sleep time were revealed to be important factors in qualifying for phase 2. A 1-point change in the Perceived Stress Scale had an associated odds ratio of 0.966 increased success associated with less weight loss, 95% confidence interval, 0.937 – 0.995; P = .024. Participants with a quadratic trend in sleep time had an odds ratio of 0.797 95% confidence interval, 0.649 – 0.978; P = .030. Participants who slept 6 to 7 hours or 7 to 8 hours were more likely to qualify for phase 2 than those with other sleep times.

At entry into the program, lower stress was associated with greater ensuing weight loss slope, 0.132; SE, 0.054; t = 2.42; P = .021.

Changes in baseline predictors during the program had significant impacts on success. Reduction in stress between entry and a post weight-loss follow-up visit as measured by the Perceived Stress Scale were associated with improved weight loss r = 0.159; P = .048. A similar trend was seen in depression as measured by the Personal Health Questionnaire—Depression Subscale r = 0.223; P = .035.

The researchers found no correlation between screen time and weight loss success. Session attendance correlated positively with weight loss success r = −0.621, as were exercise r = −0.361 and food records r = −0.501; all P < .001.

“[These] results suggest that clinicians and investigators might consider targeting sleep, depression and stress as part of a behavioral weight loss intervention,” the study authors conclude.

Commonwealth Psychology Associates is now offering a 13-week health & wellness support group in Newton, MA.

This work was funded by the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, National Institutes of Health. The study authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.Int J Obesity. Published online March 29, 2011. Abstract

via Sleep, Depression, and Stress Influence Weight Loss.

Suicide Risk Assessment Often Inaccurate. Better Training Needed.

Monday, March 28th, 2011

Suicide Risk Assessment Often Inaccurate in

Ambiguous Cases

Findings Suggest a Need for Better Risk Assessment Training

Jill Stein

March 16, 2011 (Vienna, Austria) — Faced with ambiguous cases, mental health professionals (MHPs) often inaccurately classify patients’ suicide risk, new research shows.

Presented here at EPA 2011: 19th European Congress of Psychiatry, UK investigators found obviously high- or low-risk scenarios produced a predictable consensus of opinion among MHPs with respect to suicide risk. However, an ambiguous or incomplete scenario produced more variation in risk classification.

“The results mean that a group of MHPs may be misclassifying some of their patients, who are at high risk of suicide, as being at low or medium risk,” Julian Beezhold, FRCPsych, consultant in emergency psychiatry at Hellesdon Hospital in Norwich, United Kingdom, told Medscape Medical News.

The data also identify the need for better risk assessment training, with a special focus on MHPs who assume the risk is low when presented with incomplete or ambiguous information, Dr. Beezhold added.

Lack of Guidance

According to investigators, suicide risk assessment accounts for a significant part of the MHPs’ workload, and a large body of research has examined the efficacy of various methods of suicide risk assessment. Further, a significant amount of effort has been devoted to developing suicide risk assessment training to improve clinical outcomes.

To date, the various assessment methods available include the actuarial approach, which is based on algorithms and objective procedures; the clinical approach, which is more subjective, intuitive, and based on clinical experience; and a structured approach, which combines the actuarial and clinical approach, which is widely viewed as the preferred approach.

None of these methods, however, provide clinicians with guidance on how to respond to an ambiguous scenario.

Dr. Kate Manley (left) and Dr. Julian Beezhold (right)

The study examined suicide risk for various clinical scenarios with a particular focus on ambiguous cases.

A total of 720 MHPs from a broad range of disciplines were asked to assess suicide risk for 10 clinical scenarios developed to provide a mixture of high-, medium-, and low-risk cases. In some of the scenarios, the available information was incomplete or ambiguous.

The following is an example of an incomplete and ambiguous scenario that was included in the study:

“A 55-year-old man has been sent in by a community practitioner without a letter. He does not respond to your questions and avoids eye contact. You notice that he is short of breath.”

About 20% of MHPs suggested that they didn’t know how to classify a patient with ambiguous or incomplete information. About 40% of MHPs were more cautious and opted for a high-risk classification. The remaining 40% were less cautious and assumed that the patient was at low risk for suicide.

Best Response

“The best response in an uncertain scenario is to acknowledge that the lack of information and ambiguity may mask a higher-risk patient, and therefore clinicians should proceed more cautiously,” Dr. Beezhold said.

“For example, they should take more time in order to complete a more thorough risk assessment. A lack of information in a given clinical scenario may prevent individuals from using a combined actuarial/clinical judgment-based method, such as a suicide rating scale, in their assessment of suicide risk. Without objective information, clinicians may have to rely on judgment alone,” he said.

The MHPs in the study included junior and senior psychiatrists, mental health nursing staff, clinical psychologists, nursing assistances, and therapists working at the Norfolk & Waveney Mental Health Care NHS Foundation Trust, which provides a complete range of mental health care to roughly 1 million people.

Dr. Beezhold pointed out the study clearly identifies a need to target training more precisely according to individual response to ambiguity.

Finally, he noted that more studies are needed to better explain the discrepancy in responses to suicide risk scenarios among MHPs.

“The more information we have, the better we can predict suicidality,” he said.

If you or a loved one are suffering from depression or have suicidal thoughts, please seek professional help.

DE

Dr. Beezhold has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

EPA 2011: 19th European Congress of Psychiatry: Abstract P03-458. Presented March 15, 2011.

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Patients Benefit from Telling & Hearing Stories of Others. Wellness Group Therapy Available in Boston & Newton.

Monday, March 21st, 2011

Talk therapy [and Wellness & Support Group Therapy]

By Karen Weintraub Globe Correspondent / March 21, 2011

Teresa Purifoy doesn’t care who knows her troubles. She wears many of them on her 425-pound body anyway, so why would she mind?

Plus, she loves that someone is listening, and that her struggles might help someone else.

“Even though I have flaws on my body I still can tell my story,’’ the 48-year-old Birmingham, Ala., resident said with evident pride.

Purifoy was a volunteer in a recent study led by University of Massachusetts Medical School researcher Dr. Thomas Houston. It found that patients could better control their blood pressure if they heard stories from people like Purifoy who were successfully controlling theirs. Purifoy is also hoping that what she heard from other volunteer storytellers will help her finally beat her weight problem.

People going through a medical crisis have always shared stories or sought the advice of others in similar situations. But now storytelling may be becoming a formal part of the health care system.

It’s easier to understand medical advice delivered by a fellow patient, Houston and others have found. It’s often more believable, too. Talking about their own medical problems can also help patients cope. And all medical care could be made better, another line of reasoning goes, if doctors would listen better to the stories their patients want to tell.

Purifoy, for instance, has a lot to say.

If it were just a matter of willpower, she’d already be wearing those size 20 clothes she dreams about. After all, she was able to quit her smoking habit cold turkey one day in 1997, raise three children, and care for her disabled husband.

With diabetes and fibromyalgia in addition to her high blood pressure, Purifoy needs help to lose the extra weight. But she’s not convinced her caregivers are on her side. One doctor told her she was fat and ugly. Another refused to cut an in-grown toenail, saying the real problem was too-tight shoes. (It wasn’t.)

Purifoy would rather take advice from someone who looks like her. If they’re too skinny, she said, the advice doesn’t seem relevant.

“All I see is the little person. I can’t get the message,’’ she said.

She recently received a copy of the DVD from Houston’s study that features her story, and she’s been inspired by some of the other tales on it. Watching an overweight man named Eddie talk about his workout plan made her think that she might be able to do some exercises, too, she said, and inspired her to try a few.

And that’s the point, said Houston, also a doctor at the Bedford Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

“Storytelling is a natural human thing. We live by stories and through stories we make meaning of our lives,’’ he said.

Houston’s study, published earlier this year in the Annals of Internal Medicine, looked at 299 African-Americans with uncontrolled blood pressure. Those who listened to stories from others in similar straits lowered their pressure more over the next six months than those given factual data only, the study found.

Storytelling is particularly effective, he and others said, for patients who have trouble trusting or understanding information told to them by medical professionals. Stories from “real’’ people just have more credibility than statistics, he said.

“When provided with facts, people often counter-argue or identify ways that the information is not directly related to them,’’ he said. “With storytelling, you get engaged in the story, you hear the information and the counter-arguing mechanisms of your brain are turned off.’’

Matthew W. Kreuter, director of the health communication research laboratory at Washington University in St. Louis, says that the two methods can complement each other.

He would like to see a “story rack’’ alongside the pamphlet rack found in nearly every doctor’s waiting room, allowing people to choose stories from patients with similar problems and demographics.

The Internet has opened up a world of stories for people — though some of them should be taken with a grain of salt, Kreuter said. The storyteller might have a very unusual tale that’s not relevant to you or that offers bad advice. Or a narrative might have been posted by a drug company posing as a patient to promote a drug.

On the plus side, the Internet also offers people an outlet for communicating their own story to others.

Simply telling or writing a personal story can be cathartic, whether there’s an audience for it or not, according to James W. Pennebaker, chairman of the Psychology Department at the University of Texas at Austin.

There have been more than 200 studies over the past 20 years confirming the benefits of putting one’s medical story into words.

“Almost anyone, if they find themselves thinking or worrying too much, and especially if they don’t have someone to talk to — writing is beneficial for them,’’ Pennebaker said.

Internist Rita Charon thinks that good patient care simply can’t happen without letting patients tell their stories.

“The only way to know what’s the matter if you’re sick is to tell someone else about it. It’s in giving the account of self that the sick person comes to know what’s the matter,’’ said Charon, director of the Program in Narrative Medicine at Columbia University. “When we deny them that, not only do I the doctor not find out what’s the matter but she the patient doesn’t [either].’’

When Charon meets her patients for the first time, she quizzes them not about their symptoms but about their story. “Please tell me what you think I should know about your situation,’’ she’ll ask.

Within five minutes of posing the question — fast enough to fit into even a harried doctor’s schedule — one recent patient told Charon everything she needed to know to understand the woman’s health.

“I got a sense of what’s wrong with her, what’s right with her, what her pleasures are,’’ Charon said. “There’s nothing more urgent for a doctor to know than what matters to you.’’

What matters to Purifoy is ending the pain from her fibromyalgia, a bad back, and diabetic neuropathy. To do that, she has to lose weight. Alabama’s Medicaid program will pay for weight loss surgery, but none of the local surgeons is accepting Medicaid patients, she said. So she’s got to do it the long, slow way — by eating less and exercising more.

“For a person like me who’s struggling, you need somebody to go through it with you who understands,’’ Purifoy said. “If they don’t understand, all they say is why can’t she do this?

“These DVDs really are helpful. You’ve got somebody who’s living your story, they’re trying.’’ Karen Weintraub can be reached at karen@karenweintraub.com.

If you are interested in participating in group therapy for Health & Wellness, Grief & Loss or Anxiety & Stress Management, contact us today. We have new groups forming.

More than a third sleep less than 7 hours. Negative impact on health & cognitive functioning.

Friday, March 4th, 2011

Poor concentration and memory problems might not be due to ADHD or other common causes. The culprit may be poor or insufficient sleep, which can have a significant negative impact on concentration and memory.

Boston Globe:  More than a third of Americans regularly sleep less than seven hours a night, affecting their ability to concentrate, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Short sleep duration was found among 35 percent of adults surveyed, and 48 percent reported snoring, an unhealthy behavior, according to a study in the Journal Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report yesterday. About 39 percent of respondents ages 25 to 54 reported sleeping less than seven hours in a day.

The most common side effect of sleep-related difficulties was loss of concentration, followed by trouble remembering, another report found. Most adults need seven to nine hours to avoid higher likelihood of illness and death, the Washington-based National Sleep Foundation said.

“Poor sleep habits, which include not scheduling enough time for sleep, can be assessed during general medical care visits and improved with effective behavioral changes,’’ the authors wrote in an editorial.

Health psychologists often employ behavioral interventions and offer sleep hygiene techniques that can improve sleep. To learn more about these services or to obtain services, give us a call.

View full report at: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/wk/mm6008.pdf

View Boston Globe Article at: More than a third sleep less than 7 hours – The Boston Globe.

Better think positive: Pessimism can block therapy. Cognitive therapy might help.

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

Spine surgeon Anders Cohen puts a lot of stock in patients’ expectations of pain relief. He prefers to operate only on those who “grab you by the collar and say, `I can’t take it anymore.’”

New brain research proves doctors like Cohen are onto something: Pessimism can override the effectiveness of even powerful treatments.

You’ve heard of the placebo effect, the healing power of positive belief. This is the “nocebo” effect, the flip side, almost its evil twin.

And while the self-fulfilling prophecy of negative thinking isn’t nearly as well studied, some scientists say it’s time for doctors to start paying a lot more attention to their patients’ outlook.

“We all know that many treatments work for some people but not for others,” says neuroscientist Dr. Randy Gollub of Massachusetts General Hospital. Instead of stressing only the percentages, “say, `I have every reason to believe that you could be one of the people who will respond.’”

Scientists already know the placebo effect is real. They can measure it in studies that compare real drugs to dummy pills, where those given the fakes have noticeable improvements to pain and other symptoms.

But could a gloomy outlook really harm? British and German researchers performed the most sophisticated study yet to tell. They strapped a heat-beaming device onto the legs of 22 healthy volunteers, zapping it until people rated their pain at nearly 70 on a scale of 1 to 100.

Then the researchers hooked up an IV to give them the powerful morphine-like painkiller remifentanil. Typically used for surgery patients, it works rapidly but also is metabolized rapidly, able to be switched on and off as researchers alternated between giving the drug or plain fluid.

The volunteers’ brains were scanned as they described how much pain, and pain relief, they experienced at different times. When the researchers induced the burn and surreptitiously turned on the drug, the volunteers said their pain improved a fair amount. The painkiller was working, expectations aside.

Here’s the mind over matter: The researchers next told the volunteers they were about to inject the painkiller even though they’d never turned it off. Those pain ratings dropped even more — meaning expectations of relief doubled the drug’s painkilling benefit.

Finally, the researchers lied again, saying they were stopping the drug and that pain would probably increase. Sure enough, the volunteers’ pain levels soared back up to almost their pre-treated level as grim expectations canceled out the effect of a proven and potent painkiller. Anxiety levels fluctuated similarly.

Why? The brain scans tell the tantalizing tale — showing changes in neural pain networks that prove the people really did experience the changes in pain that they reported.

Moreover, expecting more pain fired up sections of the brain that control mood and anxiety, the researchers recently reported in the journal Science Translational Medicine. In contrast, anticipating pain relief fired up different regions previously found active in people given placebos.

It’s a small study, dealing just with pain. But the results may apply to a range of drug therapies, especially in chronic diseases because so many of those patients are conditioned by months or years or frustrating treatment failures, concluded lead researcher Dr. Ulrike Bingel of Hamburg’s University Medical Center, who teamed with Oxford University researchers for the study.

Learning how anxiety influences pain is crucial to understanding this nocebo effect — how you get the pain you expect, said co-author and Oxford neuroscientist Irene Tracey, in a recent review of the science of expectations in the journal Nature Medicine.

It’s by no means a novel concept. Previous research has found people given a dummy pill can experience the side effects of the medication they thought they were getting.

While there’s a lot yet to learn, for now doctors should at least try building closer relationships with their patients to encourage trust in recommended treatments, said Mass General’s Gollub.

“Building these strong, positive expectations for doing well are part of what comes from believing in your treater as someone who cares about you,” she said.

Directly managing patients’ expectations — spelling out exactly what will happen at different points to take away some of the fear — also can help, said Cohen, chief of spine surgery at Brooklyn Hospital Center in New York. He teaches new doctors not to promise surgery patients they’ll wake up free from pain because — while the old back pain may be fading — they’re going to hurt from the operation.

When someone says, “`Wow, it’s just like he told it was going to be, this guy told me the truth,’ now you’ve got this bond of confidence,” Cohen said. “You’re partnering with your patient.”

via Better think positive: Pessimism can block therapy – Boston.com.

Alcohol kills more than AIDS, TB or violence: World Health Organization.

Saturday, February 12th, 2011

Alcohol causes nearly 4 percent of deaths worldwide, more than AIDS, tuberculosis or violence, the World Health Organization warned on Friday.

Rising incomes have triggered more drinking in heavily populated countries in Africa and Asia, including India and South Africa, and binge drinking is a problem in many developed countries, the United Nations agency said.

Yet alcohol control policies are weak and remain a low priority for most governments despite drinking’s heavy toll on society from road accidents, violence, disease, child neglect and job absenteeism, it said.

Approximately 2.5 million people die each year from alcohol related causes, the WHO said in its “Global Status Report on Alcohol and Health.”

“The harmful use of alcohol is especially fatal for younger age groups and alcohol is the world’s leading risk factor for death among males aged 15-59,” the report found.

In Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), every fifth death is due to harmful drinking, the highest rate.

Binge drinking, which often leads to risky behavior, is now prevalent in Brazil, Kazakhstan, Mexico, Russia, South Africa and Ukraine, and rising elsewhere, according to the WHO.

“Worldwide, about 11 percent of drinkers have weekly heavy episodic drinking occasions, with men outnumbering women by four to one. Men consistently engage in hazardous drinking at much higher levels than women in all regions,” the report said.

Health ministers from the WHO’s 193 member states agreed last May to try to curb binge drinking and other growing forms of excessive alcohol use through higher taxes on alcoholic drinks and tighter marketing restrictions.

DISEASE AND INJURY

Alcohol is a causal factor in 60 types of diseases and injuries, according to WHO’s first report on alcohol since 2004.

Its consumption has been linked to cirrhosis of the liver, epilepsy, poisonings, road traffic accidents, violence, and several types of cancer, including cancers of the colorectum, breast, larynx and liver.

“Six or seven years ago we didn’t have strong evidence of a causal relationship between drinking and breast cancer. Now we do,” Vladimir Poznyak, head of WHO’s substance abuse unit who coordinated the report, told Reuters.

Read the rest at: Alcohol kills more than AIDS, TB or violence: WHO | Reuters.