About 3.5% Americans identify themselves as lesbian, gay, or bisexual while 0.3% identify themselves as transgender. The LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) community belongs to almost every race, ethnicity, religion, age, and socioeconomic group. The LGBT youth are at a higher risk for substance use, sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), cancers, cardiovascular diseases, obesity, bullying, isolation, rejection, anxiety, depression, and suicide as compared to the general population. LGBT youth receive poor quality of care due to stigma, lack of healthcare providers’ awareness, and insensitivity to the unique needs of this community. The main objective of this literature review is to highlight the challenges faced by the LGBT youth and to enhance the awareness among physicians about the existing disparities in order to provide a more comprehensive, evidence-based, and humane medical care to this community.
This review article aims to provide insight into the mechanisms of action, pharmacokinetics, clinical efficacy, safety and tolerability of four novel antidepressants including desvenlafaxine, vortioxetine, vilazodone, and levomilnacipran. Following keywords are used in PubMed and Scopus to search for relevant articles: (depression) AND (psychopharmacology OR desvenlafaxine OR levomilnacipran OR vortioxetine OR vilazodone). Patients with a lack of effectiveness or tolerability to certain antidepressants may get benefit from selecting a new antidepressant with different mechanism of action. These medications can be an option in the selection of newer antidepressants. Depression may not be caused by the simple deficiency of serotonin in the brain, but rather a complex interplay of various neurotransmitters including serotonin, norepinephrine, glutamate, and histamine at certain brain areas. The above-mentioned novel antidepressants exert their therapeutic benefits by acting on multiple neurotransmitters. The complexity of underlying the neurobiological mechanism should be considered while formulating a plan of care.
Pregnancy can be a colossal change for some women, with the commencement of motherhood possibly generating emotional health problems, including peripartum depression (PPD). PPD significantly affects the parent-child relationship, which is the foundation for the socioemotional development of the child. In this article, we reviewed the association between PPD and resilience, and identified their mediators and moderators. Eight studies were included after a rigorous screening process. There was a significant relationship between PPD and childhood resiliency, resulting in an increased risk of psychiatric disorders in children and adolescents. Maternal sensitivity and emotional availability were possible mediators. Maternal education, income level, maternal trauma, life adversities, marital conflicts, and perceived social support were reported moderators. This article highlights the need for timely recognition and treatment of PPD with targeted interventions to improve the parent-child relationship. [ Psychiatr Ann . 2021;51(7):322–330.]
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