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After Missing the Olympic Track and Field Team, Keni Harrison Broke a 28-Year-Old Record

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

U.S. hurdler Keni Harrison may not be headed to Rio this summer, but that didn’t stop her from breaking a world record over the weekend.

Harrison, 23, finished first in the women’s 100-meter hurdles at the Diamond League meet in London on Friday evening with a time of 12.20 seconds, beating the previous record—held by Bulgarian Yordanka Donkova since 1988—by one one-hundredth of a second.

Aside from setting a new mark, Harrison finished ahead of three fellow American athletes who will compete in the Olympics in August: Brianna Rollins (who finished with a time of 12.57 seconds), Kristi Castlin (12.59 seconds), and Nia Ali (12.63 seconds).

Earlier this month, Harrison missed her chance at a spot on the 2016 Track and Field roster after finishing in sixth place at the trials in Eugene, Oregon, with a time of 12.62 seconds. Harrison saw the race in London as an opportunity to deliver a powerful message: “I wanted to come out here and show the world that I still have it even though I won’t be going to the Olympics,” Harrison said. “I had to give it all I had.”

RELATED: 5 Reasons We’re Inspired by 16-Year-Old Olympian Sydney McLaughlin

The hurdler from Tennessee won Friday’s race by a huge margin (more than a quarter-second). But her victory became even sweeter a few seconds after she crossed the finish line, when the official clock was corrected from 12.58 to 12.20.

This clip captures the incredible joy on Harrison’s face as she learned she had broken the 28-year-old world record.

“Initially I saw 12.5, and I was just happy to come out here and win. I was so happy when [the real time] came up and I was feeling really blessed. It shows that even if you don’t go out there and make the team, you have to keep going and be strong. I just ran my best and look what happened,” she said.




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Ariana Grande Updated Her Signature Pony with Bangs

Instagram Photo

Ariana Grande is super loyal to her signature ponytail and we’re totally cool with that because a) it’s Ari and b) ponytails might be the best thing to ever happen to hair. But when our girl makes any change to her mane whatsoever, no matter how temporary, we become slightly obsessed.

RELATED: Cara Delevingne’s Elephant Tattoo Is a Masterpiece

Case in point: The singer just debuted bangs. Yes, people, bangs!

The fringe looks amazing on Grande, who tried the look out in clip-in form in June. Between this and her Pokemon Go ‘grams, we’re not entirely sure what we’re more excited about.

RELATED: Jhene Aiko Is Having a Major Pastel Hair Moment

Instagram Photo

Only time will tell how long Grande decides to keep her new look, but for now we’ll revel in the change.

This article originally appeared on InStyle.com/MIMI.




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Med Students View Ex-Patients’ E-Records to Track Progress

MONDAY, July 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Many U.S. medical students use electronic health records to track the progress of their former patients and confirm the accuracy of their diagnoses, a new study shows.

While the practice raises issues over privacy, checking up on former patients may not be a bad thing overall, the researchers said.

The students “are accessing health information for educational purposes — it is important for them to learn medicine by observing the course of illness,” said study co-author Dr. Gregory Brisson, of Northwestern University’s School of Medicine in Chicago.

In fact, “we have talked with a group of patients about this issue and, after hearing about this issue, they concluded that students should not only be permitted to follow up on former patients, but that they should be required to do it,” he said.

In their study, Brisson and Dr. Patrick Tyler, also from Northwestern, surveyed 103 fourth-year medical students who were training at an academic health center in 2013.

Most — 96 percent — admitted they used patients’ e-records to follow up on cases. Most times, the students used the e-records to confirm diagnoses and follow up on their patients’ treatment success.

When the students were asked if they had any ethical reservations about accessing the records of patients who were no longer under their care, only about 17 percent of the participants voiced such concerns.

Privacy issues do come into play, however, Brisson said.

“Privacy is a patient’s right to not disclose information about themselves to their doctor,” he said. “For example, a patient may choose not to tell his dermatologist that he is also seeing a therapist for anxiety. That information is personal and unrelated to his skin issue.”

Brisson and Tyler also pointed out that the students who used electronic health records to track their patients often did so on their own — without the direction of a supervisor.

Still, Brisson said that, overall, “patients should not be concerned,” about the practice.

“This is not the same issue as a third party, such as an employer, reviewing patient records,” he explained. “Medical students, like physicians, are bound by confidentiality, which means they will never disclose information about their patients.”

Also, “follow-up fosters curiosity, which is a virtue that can improve clinical reasoning and promote empathy,” Brisson reasoned. “These are good things for patients.”

In their interviews with patients, most were fine with the e-record follow-up, Brisson said.

“They felt that follow-up encourages students to think of the whole patient and not just the disease, which might make students more caring doctors,” he said. “However, they also felt that patients should be aware of this practice and have the option to refuse.”

“Based upon input from patients and a review of the ethical concerns related to this issue … we are developing guidelines for students on how to preserve the educational benefits of follow up in the electronic health records, while also maintaining patient privacy,” Brisson added. “We hope to publish those guidelines early next year.”

The study was published July 25 in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services provides more information on electronic health records.





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‘Heat Dome’ Contines to Scorch Much of U.S.

MONDAY, July 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — The massive “heat dome” that sent temperatures in the United States soaring over the weekend continued to suffocate the central and eastern parts of the country on Monday, as experts offered tips on how to stay cool in the sweltering weather.

With a heat dome, a massive ridge of high pressure essentially traps hot air underneath it, and miserably hot weather is the inevitable result, according to The Weather Channel.

Over the past two days, roughly 110 million Americans saw heat indexes rise above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, Fox News reported Sunday. Washington was the only state in the lower 48 that did not see temperatures in at least the 90s, and the network said that the oppressive dome will not release its grip on the country until mid-week or later.

Meanwhile, experts say the risk of heat exhaustion, heat stroke, and even death, remains.

“Although preventable, many heat-related illnesses, including deaths, occur annually. Older adults, infants and children, and people with chronic medical conditions are particularly susceptible,” said Dr. Barry Rosenthal. He is chair of the department of emergency medicine at Winthrop-University Hospital, in Mineola, N.Y.

“However, even young and healthy individuals can succumb to the heat if one does not take appropriate precautions,” he added.

Rosenthal outlined how to reduce the risk of heat-related illnesses during such hot weather. One of the best ways is to be in an air-conditioned building. If your home doesn’t have air conditioning, go to a cooling center or an air-conditioned public place such as a library or shopping mall.

Wear loose, lightweight and light-colored clothing, wear a hat or use an umbrella, and apply sunscreen to any exposed skin. It’s also important to drink plenty of water, to stay hydrated. Avoid alcoholic, caffeinated and sugary beverages, Rosenthal advised.

Ask your doctor or pharmacist if any medications you’re taking increase your risk of heat-related illness. For example, diuretics (water pills) can pose a risk during hot weather. If you’re taking a medication that raises the risk of heat-related problems, ask your doctor if there are additional steps you need to take to reduce the risk.

If possible, limit strenuous outdoor activity and exercise to early morning or evening, when temperatures are lower. Monitor local news and weather channels or contact your local public health department during extreme heat for health and safety updates.

Check on people who are at increased risk for heat-related illnesses, such as elderly loved ones and neighbors.

“At first signs of heat illness — dizziness, nausea, headaches, muscle cramps — move to a cooler place, rest a few minutes, then slowly drink a cool beverage. Seek medical attention immediately if conditions do not improve,” Rosenthal said.

More information

Visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for more on the dangers of extreme heat.





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1.6 Million Child-Bearing Women in Latin America Could Get Zika: Study

MONDAY, July 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Up to 1.6 million child-bearing women in Central and South America may be at risk for infection with the Zika virus by the end of the first phase of the epidemic, new research suggests.

Mosquito-borne Zika has been linked with serious birth defects including microcephaly, where babies are born with too-small heads and brains. Thousands of such cases have already occurred in Latin America, largely in Brazil.

However, “it is difficult to accurately predict how many child-bearing women may be at risk from Zika, because a large proportion of cases show no symptoms,” Andrew Tatem, a geographer at the University of Southampton in England, pointed out in a university news release.

An estimated 80 percent of Zika infections do not cause symptoms, his team noted.

The large number of symptomless cases, “largely invalidates [prediction] methods based on case data and presents a formidable challenge for scientists,” he said.

The researchers also estimate there could be a total of more than 90 million Zika infections overall in Latin America and the Caribbean. Brazil is expected to have the largest number of infections — by more than threefold — due to its size and favorable conditions for transmission of the virus.

In its research, Tatem’s team projected the spread of Zika by assessing its likely impact at very local levels — a scale of five kilometers squared — and combined this local data to model regional infection rates.

The researchers also drew on data from prior outbreaks of similar mosquito-borne infections such as dengue. They combined that data with information on climate, pregnancy and birth data and other factors to come up with their estimates.

“These projections help allow for better planning for surveillance and outbreak response, both internationally and locally,” Tatem said.

The findings were published July 25 in the journal Nature Microbiology.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides more information on mosquito-borne diseases.

This Q&A will tell you what you need to know about Zika.

To see the CDC list of sites where Zika virus is active and may pose a threat to pregnant women, click here.





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CDC Updates Zika Guidelines for Pregnant Women

MONDAY, July 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — U.S. health officials on Monday updated their Zika virus guidelines, saying that pregnant women could contract Zika from a sex partner of either gender.

The virus can cause serious birth defects including microcephaly, where babies are born with abnormally small heads and brains.

The new update follows news last week of the first recorded female-to-male transmission of the virus during sex.

While mosquitoes are by far the most common form of transmission, cases of sexual transmission can occur, either male-to-female, female-to-male or female-to-female.

For that reason, experts at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say the new guidelines “include the possibility of sexual transmission from an infected woman.”

“CDC recommends that all pregnant women with sex partners (male or female), who live in or traveled to an area with Zika, use condoms during sex or abstain from sex for the remainder of their pregnancy,” the agency said.

“Sex includes vaginal, anal and oral sex, and may also include the sharing of sex toys,” the CDC clarified.

These precautions now include either straight or lesbian couples where one partner could pass the virus on to her pregnant partner.

Any pregnant woman who suspects that she may have been exposed to Zika — either through a mosquito bite or sexual contact with an infected person — should also be tested for the virus, the agency stressed.

The CDC also pointed out that “new information has indicated that some infected pregnant women can have evidence of Zika virus in their blood for longer than the previously recommended seven-day window.”

Because of that new data, the agency now recommends that the time frame for blood testing for Zika be lengthened to 14 days.

The vast majority of cases of Zika infection and associated microcephaly have occurred in Latin America, especially Brazil, where thousands of cases have been reported.

However, Zika may be making inroads into the United States. Late last week, Florida health officials said they were investigating a second possible case of locally transmitted Zika infection.

The first possible case of local infection in the continental United States was reported last Tuesday by the Florida health department. That case involved a woman in Miami-Dade County, while the newer, second case involved a resident of Broward County, north of Miami.

Florida health officials said they are capturing and testing mosquitoes in the neighborhoods where the two unidentified patients live. Meanwhile, Gov. Rick Scott has asked for assistance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, The Miami Herald reported.

The CDC said it has provided $2 million for Zika preparedness and another $5.6 million was just allotted, the newspaper reported.

There have been more than 1,400 confirmed Zika cases in the United States, but so far all of them have been contracted through travel abroad — either by a mosquito bite or by sexual intercourse with someone who had traveled to a Zika-infected area.

Brazil has been the epicenter of the Zika epidemic to this point. Infections have also been reported in other Latin American and Caribbean nations.

CDC officials have said repeatedly they expect to see cases of local transmission of the Zika virus this summer in southern states with warm, humid climates such as Florida, Louisiana and Texas. The virus is typically transmitted through the bite of Aedes mosquitoes.

The CDC has reported 14 cases of sexually transmitted infections. These infections are thought to have occurred because the patients’ partners had traveled to countries where Zika is circulating, the CDC said.

Typically, the Zika virus doesn’t cause serious illness. Only about 20 percent of patients notice symptoms.

But the virus also has been linked to a rare paralyzing condition called Guillain-Barre syndrome.

The CDC advises pregnant women not to travel to an area where Zika transmission is ongoing, and to use insect repellent and wear long pants and long-sleeved shirts if they are in those areas.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides more information on mosquito-borne diseases.

This Q&A will tell you what you need to know about Zika.

To see the CDC list of sites where Zika virus is active and may pose a threat to pregnant women, click here.





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1 in 10 Alzheimer’s Patients at Risk for Avoidable Hospital Stays

By Karen Pallarito
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, July 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Some people with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias may often land in the hospital simply because of poor management of other health problems they have, a new study suggests.

One in 10 people with Alzheimer’s disease or dementia had at least one hospital stay in 2013 that may have been preventable, the researchers reported.

“We found a lot of patients who go to the hospital for things that should not have happened, and this is costing a lot of money,” said study first author Pei-Jung Lin, an assistant professor of medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston.

More than 369,000 potentially avoidable hospitalizations involving patients with Alzheimer’s or other dementias were recorded, costing Medicare upwards of $2.5 billion in 2013, the report found.

The study doesn’t pinpoint exactly what went wrong for these patients. Rather, the findings suggest that care for health conditions they suffer, such as diabetes and heart disease, is slipping through the cracks.

It’s estimated that 75 percent of people with Alzheimer’s have multiple health problems requiring ongoing treatment, the researchers said.

Yet, many patients may not be capable of taking care of themselves, said Lin, who also serves as project director of the Center for the Evaluation of Value and Risk in Health at Tufts Medical Center.

“Perhaps they forget to take medications, perhaps they are not able to understand what doctors said to them in terms of measuring their blood sugar, blood pressure, things like that,” she explained.

Nina Silverberg is director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Centers program at the U.S. National Institute on Aging. She said many dementia patients continue to live alone even after being diagnosed, and they may need more help managing other conditions.

Gaps in the coordination of care across the entire spectrum of health services that people with dementia receive also persist, she added.

Part of the problem, Lin explained, is that guidelines for managing chronic conditions fail to consider that patients may have multiple chronic conditions plus dementia.

The new study was funded by the Alzheimer’s Association.

Using Medicare claims data, Lin and her colleagues from Boston and New York measured rates of potentially avoidable hospital stays for conditions that can be treated outside of the hospital. They also tallied what Medicare spent on those hospitalizations.

In all, they identified 2.7 million people, aged 65 and older, who were enrolled in the traditional “fee-for-service” Medicare program in 2013 and had a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease or related dementias.

Of these questionable hospitalizations, stays for chronic conditions such as respiratory or heart problems accounted for 53 percent of the cost. The remainder of cost was linked to acute conditions, like pneumonia or urinary tract infections.

Half of patients with any potentially avoidable hospitalizations had late-stage dementia.

Even after adjusting for factors such as age, race, gender and region of the country, late-stage dementia and having multiple chronic conditions were significantly associated with potentially avoidable hospital stays, the authors noted.

“Not only are these hospitalizations expensive, but they can also be dangerous for Alzheimer’s patients,” Lin said.

“If you imagine someone who has no grasp of reality, if you put them in the hospital, they can get even more confused and even more disoriented,” she said.

Plus, being hospitalized put patients at risk for hospital-acquired infections, Lin added.

The study authors concluded that case management programs for people with Alzheimer’s and dementia should involve strategies to reduce avoidable hospitalizations, improve patient outcomes and lower costs.

Silverberg said there are steps dementia patients and caregivers can take to improve management of multiple health conditions.

At a minimum, she said, have health providers write down the patient’s medicines and frequency of use. Local Agencies on Aging or social workers can help with getting a plan for managing dementia patients’ health care needs. And technology-savvy caregivers may want to look into mobile apps that help with prescription management, Silverberg added.

The findings were to be presented Monday at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference, in Toronto. Research presented at medical meetings is considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

More information

The U.S. National Institute on Aging has more tips for caring for someone with Alzheimer’s.





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Edible Pot Sends Toddlers to Colorado ERs

By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, July 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Young children in Colorado are winding up in the emergency room after ingesting pot-laced goodies left out in the open by adults, doctors report.

In 2014, Colorado and Washington became the first two states to legalize recreational marijuana. Shortly after, a sharp increase occurred in the number of Colorado kids younger than 10 who fell ill after being exposed to pot, researchers found.

Edible products — cannabis-laced brownies, cookies, candy and the like — were responsible for about half of these cases, said senior study author Dr. Genie Roosevelt, a pediatric emergency medicine specialist with the Denver Health and Hospital Authority.

“Edible marijuana products look very much like a regular food product, and so they’re very attractive to kids because it’s candy and baked goods, and also very palatable,” Roosevelt said.

The average rate of marijuana-related visits to Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora nearly doubled following legalization. The rate two years after legalization was 2.3 children per 100,000 population, compared with 1.2 per 100,000 population two years prior to legalization, the study found.

The regional Poison Control Center that serves Colorado also saw a more than fivefold increase in reported cases of children made ill from marijuana — from nine in 2009 to 47 last year, the researchers said. And the average increase in calls to poison centers statewide was nearly twice that of the rest of the country.

Most kids became very sleepy after their exposure to marijuana, or experienced a loss of balance or coordination, Roosevelt said.

But, Roosevelt added, “we have seen some very sick children who have been put on a ventilator and admitted to the ICU. It sedates them so much that it interferes with their ability to breathe.”

Parents were the most frequent source of the pot, the investigators found, along with grandparents, neighbors, friends, babysitters and other family members.

People have become more careless in how they store their marijuana following legalization of recreational use, said Dr. J. Michael Bostwick. He is chair of consultation and hospital practice for the Mayo Clinic psychiatry and psychology department in Rochester, Minn.

“It stands to reason,” Bostwick said. “With legalized marijuana, there’s no longer a reason to be as careful hiding it. It’s more openly around. It’s becoming woven into daily life in Colorado, and when that happens, kids will find the product and do stuff with it.”

For this paper, researchers analyzed admissions to Children’s Hospital Colorado and Poison Control Center reports between 2009 and 2015.

The authors identified 81 children treated at the hospital and 163 marijuana exposure calls to poison control. Average age was about 2, and most kids spent about 11 hours at the hospital following their marijuana exposure.

Edible marijuana products recently went on the recreational market in Oregon, and public health officials there are bracing for a similar increase in child exposure cases, said Dr. Zane Horowitz. He is medical director of the Oregon Poison Center at Oregon Health & Science University.

“Before, when marijuana came in leaf form and was rolled into cigarettes or joints, children didn’t really eat those things,” Horowitz said. “But when you have cookies and brownies and gummy bears, and tomato sauce and everything else made from marijuana derivatives, it looks just like food but it’s laced with a drug that can create a very scary experience for a 2-year-old.”

Colorado requires child-resistant packaging for marijuana products, but careless adults thwart that precaution, Roosevelt said.

“We found in some of our ingestions that the product was left out in front of the child, not kept in the child-resistant packaging,” Roosevelt said.

Parents need to make marijuana-infused products inaccessible to their children, just like other substances that might harm a kid, Bostwick said.

“Lock your stash away. Lock your medicines away. Lock your liquor away. Lock your rat poison away,” he said. “You have to make your house child-proof. I can’t imagine that any parent, even if they’re a cannabis proponent, would think it’s a bad idea to protect their child from inadvertent exposure.”

Manufacturers of pot products could help the situation by making their edibles look less like regular cookies and candies, Roosevelt said.

Serving sizes are also misleading, both for adults and children, Roosevelt added. Full-size cookies and candy bars are sold loaded with THC, the intoxicating chemical in marijuana. Customers are advised to break them up into a number of smaller servings to prevent overdose.

Paul Armentano, deputy director of the pro-marijuana legalization group NORML, agreed.

“It may further be argued that these foodstuffs ought to be packaged in single servings in order to better avoid such adverse and unintended consequences,” Armentano said.

However, Armentano also noted that “cannabis is incapable of causing lethal overdose.”

The findings were published online July 25 in JAMA Pediatrics.

More information

For more on marijuana, visit the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse.





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Delirium Common in Cancer Patients Seen in ER

MONDAY, July 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Delirium is fairly common, yet often missed, in advanced cancer patients who visit emergency departments, a new study says.

Delirium is a serious disturbance in thinking and awareness, according to the U.S. National Cancer Institute.

Researchers looked for delirium in 243 advanced cancer patients seen at an emergency department. The patients were between the ages of 19 and 89. The researchers found that 22 patients — 9 percent — had delirium.

Eighteen had mild delirium and four had moderate delirium. Ten percent of the 99 patients older than 65 had delirium, compared with eight percent of the 144 patients younger than 65. This suggests that advanced cancer patients of all ages should be considered at high risk for delirium, the researchers said.

ER doctors failed to diagnose delirium in nine (41 percent) of the patients with delirium, the study said.

The findings were published online July 25 in the journal Cancer.

“We found evidence of delirium in one of every ten patients with advanced cancer who are treated in the emergency department,” study leader Dr. Knox Todd, who’s with the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, said in a journal news release.

“Given that we could only study patients who were able to give consent to enter our study, even 10 percent is likely to be a low estimate,” he said.

“We also identified many psychoactive medications that could have contributed to delirium, and sharing this information with treating oncologists may help them avoid such complications in the next patient they treat,” Todd added.

The study shows the important role emergency department doctors can play in monitoring the quality of cancer patient care and their potential role in preventing complications of cancer treatment, the researchers said.

More information

The U.S. National Cancer Institute has more about delirium.





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Painkillers for Teen Athletes Won’t Spur Addiction: Study

By James Bernstein
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, July 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Teenage athletes are less likely to abuse prescription painkillers than kids who don’t play sports or exercise, a new study finds.

The study results run counter to some research in recent years detailing concerns about injured teen athletes abusing opioid painkillers prescribed by doctors and then moving on to use heroin.

Dr. Wilson Compton, deputy director of the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse, said he was “surprised” by the findings. He said, “A key risk (for teenage athletes) is a desire to please and for acceptance. But this study shows overall rates (of use) are declining.”

For the study, University of Michigan researchers examined data from nearly 192,000 students in 8th and 10th grade who participated in a federally funded study between 1997 and 2014. Over these years, doctors wrote many more opioid painkiller prescriptions for children and teens, and nonmedical use of opioids increased sharply as well.

At roughly the same time, overdose deaths involving opioids such as Vicodin, OxyContin, Percocet and heroin nearly quadrupled in the United States, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

However, the study results suggest that daily participation in sports and exercise may actually serve as a protective factor with respect to painkiller and heroin abuse, said report co-author Philip Veliz. He is with the university’s Institute for Social Research.

Even kids who participated in sports just once a week had lower odds of reporting any painkiller or heroin abuse, the study found.

Anecdotal evidence suggests that prescribing opioids to teens after a sports injury may lead some of them to become heroin addicts, Veliz explained. It’s said these kids become addicted to their painkillers and eventually resort to heroin, which is also an opioid, because it’s cheaper and easier to obtain.

While the narratives are compelling, Veliz said, no large-scale studies have assessed whether abuse of recommended painkillers is actually leading to an “epidemic” of heroin use among teens who frequently engage in sports and exercise.

On the contrary, this new study suggests there may be “positive social connections embedded in sports that can deter youth from serious types of illicit substance use,” such as heroin or cocaine, he said.

But some types of intense contact sports place teens “at greater risk” for painkiller abuse, Veliz noted. More research is needed into why this may be the case, he said.

For instance, other research has suggested that participation in wrestling or football may result in higher degrees of painkiller abuse. Veliz acknowledged that the chance of severe injury is greater in those sports than in other sports, such as baseball. He said he hopes to search for more definitive answers.

Overall, the new study found a decline in painkiller abuse by young athletes as well as non-athletes. Veliz and Compton agreed that greater awareness by parents and youngsters has helped lead to this decline.

“Maybe this is a sign that people are being more vigilant” about their children’s use of painkillers, Veliz said.

The study found that more than half of the students reported involvement in sports and exercise almost daily the previous year. Almost two out of five participated weekly at most, while about 8 percent reported no athletics or exercise.

Among the daily participants, nonmedical use of opioids declined from about 9 percent in 1997 to less than 5 percent in 2014. Heroin use fell from about 2 percent to less than 1 percent in that period, the study revealed.

The media’s focus on a rise of painkiller abuse by college students and young adults has also hammered at the dangers of opioid use by teens, Veliz said. Public messages on television, the internet and at schools have played a role as well, he said.

However, Compton said, painkiller abuse remains a rising problem among college students and young adults. Primarily, this is the result of less supervision by adults, the pressure to succeed at college and in the workplace, and the easy availability of such drugs on the streets, he noted.

“The young people are going in different directions” on this issue, Compton said.

While the new report assures that sports and regular exercise don’t lead to painkiller abuse, Veliz recommended more study on sports injury and pain management. Such studies help expand knowledge of the risks and benefits of teenage sports participation, he said.

The study findings were published online July 25 in the journal Pediatrics.

More information

The U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse outlines signs of drug abuse and addiction.





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