2022 Stephen E. Straus Lecture: From the Mouths of Babes: What Can Research on Babies, Moms, Stress, and Substance Use Tell Us About Resilience?
Stress and adversity experienced during early development can exert a profound and persistent imprint on our physiology, brain, and health across the lifespan. This imprint can lead to long-term health outcomes ranging from substance use and depression to obesity and cardiovascular disease. There is also emerging evidence that stress and adversity may be transmitted from one generation to the next. However, protective experiences may prevent or mitigate these effects. This lecture will provide examples of findings from Dr. Laura Stroud ’ s laboratory focused on revealing the earliest intergenerational transmission of mat...
Source: Videocast - All Events - October 12, 2022 Category: General Medicine Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video

Can digital health increase accessibility as mental health needs soar?
Deep Dive: Many adults with a mental illness won ’t be able to access care, during greater levels of anxiety and depression during COVID-19. Digital tools can help.            (Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos)
Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos - December 23, 2021 Category: Information Technology Source Type: video

Flugon et. al Mobility and Depressive Symptoms in Persons With Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer Dementia
No description available (Source: Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy - Video)
Source: Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy - Video - December 16, 2021 Category: Physiotherapy Source Type: video

Using AI to help manage chronic conditions
Juli.co CEO Bettina Hein discusses how the juli app uses AI to help providers and patients manage complex conditions such as asthma, depression, bipolar disorder, migraine and chronic pain using formerly siloed data. (Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos)
Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos - October 7, 2021 Category: Information Technology Source Type: video

Ethics Grand Rounds: How Should We Train Fellows in Medical Aid-in-Dying?
Ethics Grand Rounds How should we teach medical aid-in-dying to trainees? Medical aid-in-dying (aka physician-assisted suicide) is controversial. It is also legal in some states and DC, but illegal in other states. This situation raises an important challenge for training programs. To what extent should training programs teach medical aid-in-dying to trainees? Should trainees be able to opt out of receiving this training? Should trainers be able to opt out of providing it?For more information go tohttps://cc.nih.gov/about/news/grcurrent.htmAir date: 10/6/2021 12:00:00 PM (Source: Videocast - All Events)
Source: Videocast - All Events - September 30, 2021 Category: General Medicine Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video

Hospitals poised to lose $54B this year; Apple eyeing mental health detection
This week ' s top stories include projections that hospitals could lose $54 billion in net income, Apple working to help detect depression and early-stage cognitive decline, and a link found between ransomware and increased mortality rate. (Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos)
Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos - September 24, 2021 Category: Information Technology Source Type: video

Reading Between the Tweets: Social Technologies for Predicting and Changing Health Behavior
This talk is part of the Integrative Medicine Research Lecture Series presented by the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. Social technologies — for example, social media, mobile apps, internet searching, and wearable sensors — and the data they produce are increasingly being used as tools in public health research and practice. More than half of the world (4.5 billion people) is using social media sites to create, share, and discuss content. Social media users are not just sharing trivial facts, but publicly telling the world personal things about their thoughts, behaviors, and clinical diagnos...
Source: Videocast - All Events - September 3, 2021 Category: General Medicine Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video

Diabetes Health Disparities: Biology, Race, or Racism
Speaker Sherita Hill Golden, M.D. is Professor of Medicine and Vice President and Chief Diversity Officer, Johns Hopkins Medicine. Her research interests are Diabetes and Depression; Diabetes Epidemiology; Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease; Inpatient Diabetes Healthcare Delivery.For more information go tohttps://oir.nih.gov/walsAir date: 9/29/2021 3:00:00 PM (Source: Videocast - All Events)
Source: Videocast - All Events - September 3, 2021 Category: General Medicine Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video

AiME using avatars to detect mental distress that can lead to addiction
By asking evocative questions and analyzing facial expressions and voice inflection, AiME (Artificial Intelligence Mental Evaluation) can assess the risk of depression, anxiety and addiction, says Textpert founder and CEO Ray Christian. (Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos)
Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos - June 16, 2021 Category: Information Technology Source Type: video

Online clinic treating physician depression and burnout
Meru Health ' s digital solution aims to interrupt the downward spiral of depression and anxiety that could lead to suicide, says Emily Hine, VP of business development. (Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos)
Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos - June 16, 2021 Category: Information Technology Source Type: video

Meru says digital health app can help prevent physician suicide
A digital behavioral health app can interrupt the downward spiral that leads 400 physicians each year to take their own lives, claims Meru Health Vice President Emily Hines. Add link here. (Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos)
Source: Healthcare ITNews Videos - June 16, 2021 Category: Information Technology Source Type: video

Demystifying Medicine - Parkinson ’ s Disease: Advances and Challenges
Demystifying Medicine Lecture Series Parkinson's is a long-term degenerative disorder of the central nervous system that causes tremors, slowness of movement, rigidity, and postural instability. The disease may also lead to depression, anxiety, and, in the advanced stages of the disease, dementia. The cause remains unknown, and there is no cure. However, treatment to ameliorate symptoms has advanced in promising ways over the past decade. Ellen Sidransky, M.D., is an NIH senior investigator and chief of the NHGRI Medical Genetics Branch and Section on Molecular Neurogenetics. Her lab aims to understand and to optimize trea...
Source: Videocast - All Events - April 26, 2021 Category: General Medicine Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video

Demystifying Medicine: Suicide and Depression in Time of COVID-19
Demystifying Medicine Lecture Series The COVID-19 pandemic has brought profound stress into our lives — from social isolation and hectic work schedules, to grief over the loss of those who have died from COVID-19 and the inability to fully gather together to mourn them. Populations with underlying depression and addiction disorders are particularly vulnerable to self-harm during these trying times. While depression, suicide and COVID clearly are associated in terms of public health, are they also linked mechanistically, particularly in regard to neurobiology? Are there genetic factors or biomarkers for susceptibility? Th...
Source: Videocast - All Events - April 9, 2021 Category: General Medicine Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video

Demystifying Medicine Lecture Series: Suicide and Depression in Time of COVID-19
Suicide and Depression in Time of COVID-19Nora Volkow, MD NIDA and Carlos Zarate, MD NIMHFor more information go tohttps://demystifyingmedicine.od.nih.gov/Air date: 4/13/2021 4:00:00 PM (Source: Videocast - All Events)
Source: Videocast - All Events - March 29, 2021 Category: General Medicine Tags: Upcoming Events Source Type: video