New guidelines call for doctors to screen for anxiety: Why it matters, especially for women

New guidelines call for doctors to screen for anxiety: Why it matters, especially for women
New guidelines call for doctors to screen for anxiety: Why it matters, especially for women
Ghislain & Marie David de Lossy/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Jillian Hughes, 33, of Washington, D.C., said she dealt with symptoms of anxiety for more than a decade before getting a diagnosis of and treatment for anxiety disorder in her 20s.

Lanee Higgins, of Baltimore, remembers being labeled a “worrier” as a child, a label she said stuck with her all the way through this year, when, as a 30-year-old, she was diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder, a condition that “involves a persistent feeling of anxiety or dread that interferes with how you live your life,” according to the National Institute of Mental Health.

In California, Debbie Paperman, who is in her 40s, said she struggled with anxiety for at least two decades before being diagnosed with an anxiety disorder.

“Everyone’s anxiety is different, but I think too many people think anxiety is something you just have to blow off and not think it’s something to address,” Paperman told ABC News. “A lot of times, people think anxiety is something that is happening because of something and not just because it’s part of your brain structure.”

Anxiety is the feeling evoked when someone experiences fear of something bad happening, and it can lead to avoidance, panic attacks, excessive worrying or other symptoms. Anyone can have anxiety at times, but when anxiety becomes overwhelming to the point that it consistently interferes with daily life, it can be an anxiety disorder, according to the National Institute of Mental Health.

In the United States, anxiety disorders affect as many as one in five adults, data shows.

Now, for the first time, a panel of national medical experts has recommended that adults under age 65 get screened for anxiety during routine medical visits.

The draft recommendations issued last week by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force call on physicians to use standardized anxiety screenings like existing questionnaires to assess whether patients may have some of the signs and symptoms of anxiety.

The recommendations are intended as one way to help prevent mental health conditions from going undetected, according to Lori Pbert, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist and University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School professor, who serves on the task force.

“What we found was that screening for anxiety in adults younger than 65, including people who are pregnant and postpartum, can help identify anxiety early so people can be connected to the care they need,” Pbert told ABC News. “This recommendation is specifically for individuals who do not have a mental health diagnosis and are not showing recognized signs or symptoms of an anxiety disorder.”

People who have signs and symptoms of anxiety should proactively reach out to a doctor for help, she added.

The first-of-its-kind anxiety screening recommendation is seen as of particular importance to women, who suffer from anxiety disorder at greater rates than men, according to the National Institute of Mental Health.

Women are more than twice as likely as men to get an anxiety disorder in their lifetime, according to the U.S. Office on Women’s Health. Risk factors for anxiety disorders can include genetics, hormonal changes and traumatic events, according to the office.

All three women who spoke with ABC News about their anxiety disorders said they struggled with not having a diagnosis of anxiety for so many years.

All said they believe they would have benefited if their primary health doctors had asked about their mental health, anxiety in particular.

“I definitely would have appreciated at the ages of 13, 14, 15 or in my 20s, a screening and then a referral to resources that I could access,” said Hughes, now executive vice president of communications at Mental Health America, a nonprofit organization that supports mental health advocacy, education and research. “I definitely would have benefited from coping skills and some different framing in my mind of my anxiety and how it affects me.”

Paperman, of California, put it more simply, saying of her decadeslong wait for a diagnosis, “It shouldn’t have taken this long.”

Why women suffer from anxiety disorders at a higher rate than men is a discrepancy not yet completely understood from a medical perspective. Some experts say it may be due, in part, to women’s changing hormones during their menstrual cycle and reproductive years, and women may report symptoms of anxiety more frequently than men.

“I don’t know that anybody has clear evidence,” said Dr. Beth Salcedo, past president of the Anxiety and Depression Association of America and medical director of The Ross Center, a mental health treatment center. “With women’s reproductive changes, they’re a little bit more likely to see anxiety or mood disorders show up, but nobody really has an idea why it’s different among the sexes from a biological perspective.”

Salcedo, a practicing psychiatrist, said she applauds the task force’s recommendation for more frequent and accessible anxiety screenings, but said it’s only a first step in the process of getting care to people who need it.

“It’s a value-add overall, but the medical system needs to change to be able to manage these things,” Salcedo said. “If the government was willing to put a trained clinician in every one of these offices to look at the screens and evaluate the patients and make recommendations for therapy and give access to good treatment, that would be ideal, but that’s not what this is, unfortunately.”

Pbert said that with the recommendation that doctors include anxiety screenings in appointments, the hope is that people who may have vague symptoms they don’t recognize as anxiety can be helped early.

Symptoms of anxiety disorders can include physical symptoms like restlessness, fatigue and even sometimes chest discomfort or trouble breathing, as well as mental symptoms such as fear and dread about things that may happen, according to the Office on Women’s Health.

“Screening for anxiety disorders is not the only step. It’s the first step,” Pbert said, adding that if a person shows signs of an anxiety disorder on the screener, “they then can be linked up with appropriate treatment and follow-up care.”

Pbert said the task force’s recommendation will not be finalized until after the panel reviews public comments, which could take several months.

While the task force’s recommendation would not be mandatory for doctors, it carries enormous weight in the medical community and its recommendations often change the way doctors practice medicine.

What to know about anxiety disorders

Like most mental health conditions, anxiety falls on a spectrum, with differing degrees of severity.

There are four main types of anxiety disorders.

Generalized anxiety disorder, or GAD, is described as worrying “excessively about ordinary, day-to-day issues, such as health, money, work, and family,” according to the OWH. Women with GAD may be anxious about just getting through the day, may have difficulty doing everyday tasks and may have stress-related physical symptoms, like difficulty sleeping or stomachaches, according to the Office on Women’s Health.

Panic disorder, also twice as common in women as in men, may see people having panic attacks, described by the Office on Women’s Health as “sudden attacks of terror when there is no actual danger.” People having panic attacks may feel like they’re having a heart attack, dying or losing their minds.

A third type of anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, is diagnosed when people “become very anxious and self-conscious in everyday social situations,” including embarrassing easily, according to the Office on Women’s Health. People with social anxiety disorder can often have panic attack symptoms around social situations.

The fourth type of disorder, specific phobia, is an intense fear of something, such as heights, water, animals or specific situations, that possess “little or no actual danger,” according to the Office on Women’s Health.

Each type of anxiety disorder can bring with it different symptoms, but they all involve a “fear and dread about things that may happen now or in the future,” according to the Office on Women’s Health.

Treatment for anxiety disorders often includes a combination of counseling and medication — and both together are often most effective.

When it comes to counseling, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is often used to help people change thinking patterns around their fears, according to the Office on Women’s Health. With medication, a prescription medication to treat and prevent future episodes of anxiety on a long-term basis is different than a medication such as Xanax or Valium that is intended for infrequent treatment of acute anxiety.

Treatment options for anxiety are shown here.

Other factors such as physical activity, nutrition and mindfulness can also play a role in coping with anxiety, although less is known about the role they play in treating anxiety disorders, according to the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, an entity of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Melissa Presser, a mom of three in south Florida, said it took a combination of many therapies for her to learn how to cope with the anxiety she said she’s lived with for much of her life.

“Exercises that are quieting the mind, that has been a big part of my healing,” said Presser, also an attorney and writer. “Another big part of my recovery has been a peer group. That was so overwhelmingly helpful, to sit with peers who were also suffering to varying degrees.”

Presser said she has learned that anxiety disorders are not a condition you can diagnose by looking at someone, which is why she said it’s important for doctors to talk with patients about the condition and empower them to get care.

“People who suffer from anxiety, you would never know it for most people from the outside,” she said. “If you saw me on the street, you’d have no idea that I was suffering. I’m a person who functions with anxiety.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

After Hurricane Ian, neighbors rally to support local communities

After Hurricane Ian, neighbors rally to support local communities
After Hurricane Ian, neighbors rally to support local communities
The Washington Post / Contributor/ Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — Five days since Hurricane Ian made landfall as a Category 4 storm, hundreds of families are trying to pick up the pieces as the recovery process continues.

In the close-knit community of Harlem Heights in Fort Myers, Florida, Ian decimated the area, leaving some homes and buildings submerged in several feet of water. Among them is the Gladiolus Food Pantry, which provides about 250 low-income families with food and household goods like diapers and toothpaste on a weekly basis.

After the hurricane, Gladiolus Food Pantry was flooded and the essential supplies inside the building were all destroyed.

“I mean, when the storm came, we lost power. We don’t have any water. I mean, my food is spoiling in the refrigerator,” Keyondra Smith, a local resident, said.

Neighbors and community members have since teamed up to pitch in at Gladiolus, handing out food and water to anyone who needs them.

“People have worked their whole lives to get a tiny little sliver of something and it’s gone,” Jessica Woods said. “So that’s what hurts, I think, the most.”

Woods called her friends following Ian’s aftermath and they’re now volunteering to support their community in this crucial time of need.

“When everybody has cleared this tent, that’s when we’ll be done,” Woods said. “Our community is really hurting.”

Floyd Simmons, who has lived in Harlem Heights for the past 44 years, says his home is a “disaster” but he’s thankful for the volunteers in his community who are jumping in to help.

“It’s a beautiful thing,” Simmons said. “That’s showing love.”

Gladiolus’ director, Miriam Ortiz, said despite the storm’s immense impact, the food pantry will continue to operate. The pantry is currently accepting donations of food, water and other staples like blankets, as well as welcoming volunteers who can lend a helping hand.

For individuals looking to help, food-based organizations such as Feeding Tampa Bay and World Central Kitchen are helping local communities impacted by Hurricane Ian. Other groups are offering support beyond food needs, such as debris cleanup, financial assistance and more. These organizations include CDP Atlantic Hurricane Season Recovery Fund, Florida Disaster Fund, Good360 and Team Rubicon.

Click HERE for more information on organizations helping people impacted by Hurricane Ian.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 10/2/22

Scoreboard roundup — 10/2/22
Scoreboard roundup — 10/2/22
iStock

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Sunday’s sports events:

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

INTERLEAGUE
Chi White Sox 2, San Diego 1

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Detroit 5, Minnesota 2
Toronto 6, Boston 3
Cleveland 7, Kansas City 5
Houston 3, Tampa Bay 1
Baltimore 3, NY Yankees 1
LA Angels 8, Texas 3
Oakland 10, Seattle 3

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia 8, Washington 1
Chi Cubs 8, Cincinnati 1
Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 5
Miami 4, Milwaukee 3
Colorado 4, LA Dodgers 1
Final San Francisco 4 Arizona 3
Atlanta 5, NY Mets 3

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION PRESEASON
Golden State 104, Washington 95
Boston 134, Charlotte 93
Toronto 114, Utah 82
Houston 134, San Antonio 96

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE PRESEASON
Minnesota 3, Chicago 0
NY Islanders 2, Philadelphia 1
Los Angeles 2, Anaheim 1

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Minnesota 28, New Orleans 25
Atlanta 23, Cleveland 20
Buffalo 23, Baltimore 20
Dallas 25, Washington 10
LA Chargers 34, Houston 24
NY Giants 20, Chi 12
NY Jets 24, Pittsburgh 20
Philadelphia 29, Jacksonville 21
Seattle 48, Detroit 45
Tennessee 24, Indianapolis 17
Arizona 26, Carolina 16
Green Bay 27, New England 24 (OT)
Las Vegas 32, Denver 23
Kansas City 41, Tampa Bay 31

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER
New York City FC, 2 Orlando City 1
Los Angeles FC 2, Portland 1
Sporting Kansas City 1, Seattle 0
Houston 2, Nashville 1

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

HARDY injured in tour bus crash

HARDY injured in tour bus crash
HARDY injured in tour bus crash
Douglas Sacha

HARDY is asking for prayers after his tour bus was involved in an accident. 

“Following last night’s show, our tour bus was in an accident on our way home from Bristol,” he tweeted on Sunday afternoon. “There were just four of us, including myself, on the bus, however we were all treated for significant injuries.”

“Our friend, and bus driver, needs your prayers as he is still in the hospital,” HARDY continued. “His family is with him while he is being treated and we’re all pulling and praying for him.”

The “wait in the truck” singer added that he’s been released from the hospital but was “ordered by doctors to recover for the next few weeks which may cost us at a couple of shows.”

“My team and I will keep the fans updated on that as I rest in the coming days,” he shared. 

“Please keep our road family in your prayers and I promise to keep you updated in the days to follow,” he concluded. “God bless our medics and local and state officials for their quick response and incredible service.”

HARDY and his team were traveling from Bristol, Tennessee to Nashville early Sunday when the incident occurred. His next scheduled appearance is on October 8 with Morgan Wallen. It’s unclear if that will still happen. 

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‘SNL’ roasts Adam Levine and Armie Hammer scandals

‘SNL’ roasts Adam Levine and Armie Hammer scandals
‘SNL’ roasts Adam Levine and Armie Hammer scandals
Will Heath/NBC

Saturday Night Live took on Adam Levine and Armie Hammer‘s respective social media scandals on its season 48 opener.

Saturday’s host, Top Gun: Maverick star Miles Teller played the host of a game show called “Send Something Normal,” which challenged the Maroon 5 frontman and Call Me by Your Name actor — played respectively by Mikey Day and James Austin Johnson –plus Neil DeGrasse Tyson, played by Kenan Thompson, and Bowen Yang as himself, to come up with a normal reply to a woman’s DM. An appropriate response would earn them $100 million.

Day’s Levine was up first, asked to reply to a young woman who DM’ed him to say she was a “huge fan” and loved his music.

“OK. Tough call. Can I see her most liked vacation photo?” Day quipped. “All right. Going to kick things off with a ‘Holy moly!’ But I got three more, though. ‘Holy moly! Holy crap! Your body is making my penis smile.’”

Day’s line was a response to Levine’s alleged Instagram messages to 23-year-old model Sumner Stroh, one of which read, “It is truly unreal how f****** hot you are. Like it blows my mind.”

Green, spoofing Hammer’s alleged DMs describing himself as “100% a cannibal” and that he’d “want to eat” the recipients, insisted, “I’ve done a lot of work on myself, and I’ve changed,” before saying his DM reply would be, “I want to break open your bones and suck out the marrow.”

Last week, Levine addressed the DM allegations against him in an Instagram Story, saying he “used poor judgment” in speaking with anyone other than his wife in a flirtatious manner, and “crossed the line during a regrettable period in my life.”

Claims of Hammer’s text messages and patterns of allegedly violent behavior began to emerge in 2021. He has denied the accusations.

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“You’re Drunk, Go … to the studio”? Kelly Clarkson shares the hilarious story behind Kelsea Ballerini duet

“You’re Drunk, Go … to the studio”? Kelly Clarkson shares the hilarious story behind Kelsea Ballerini duet
“You’re Drunk, Go … to the studio”? Kelly Clarkson shares the hilarious story behind Kelsea Ballerini duet
ABC/Heidi Gutman

Kelly Clarkson lends her vocals to “You’re Drunk, Go Home,” one of the tracks on Kelsea Ballerini’s recently released Subject to Change album, along with Carly Pearce. And while Carly is a noted wine enthusiast, it was actually Kelly who might have been just a little bit overserved when she went to the studio to record her part of the song.

Kelly shared the story — at least, the parts of it fit for television — during a recent episode of The Kelly Clarkson Show, where Kelsea was on hand to discuss her new record.

The day Kelsea texted her about a duet, Kelly says, was last day of work before taking some time off, and she’d already gotten a head start on her vacation.

“I had already been celebrating that it was my last day of work,” the singer explains. But when she heard the song and got Kelsea’s request for a duet, she knew she had sing on it — so she went to the studio.

“So I had to sing a song called ‘You’re Drunk, Go Home,’ inebriated, trying to sing for soprano parts like I’m fine,” Kelly continues.

In fact, there’s a full recording that no one — not even Kelsea — has heard yet, the singer goes on to say. “There is a full track that we have to send to you of me just crying and laughing so hard,” Kelly says. “I almost peed my pants.”

Subject to Change came out September 23.

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Ciara says her “super R&B” new album feels just like her first project

Ciara says her “super R&B” new album feels just like her first project
Ciara says her “super R&B” new album feels just like her first project
Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images for BET

If you didn’t know, R&B diva Ciara has been working on a new album and revealed this week that she’s just as excited for it as she was for her very first project. 

Though Goodies debuted close to two decades ago, the singer says it’s still her best body of work. That may or may not be the case after creating her newest album — one that she says has her feeling like the old Ci Ci again. 

“I really mean this, my first album to me was my best album of my whole journey,” she told Apple Music 1’s Zane Lowe. “I feel like this album has taken me right there where that album was, energetic, energy wise, tonality, the R&B core that’s in this record.”

The singer admits she isn’t fond of listening to her own records. “It’s not that I don’t love my music,” she said, “It’s just, I feel weird listening to myself.” 

But with the new, unnamed project, she doesn’t feel that way. Maybe it’s due to the “super,” “hardcore R&B” throughout? Maybe it’s because of the album’s ability to make people want to dance? Either way, “there’s something about this record that just feels complete.”

The Grammy winner released her latest single, “Better Thangs” featuring Summer Walker, on September 28. The carefree, upbeat vibe of the track could be a symbol of what’s to come on the album. This summer she teased and released her now-popular hit “Jump” and the many accompanying dance videos on social media. 

As for what fans can expect from the new album, the star says there’ll be some “fun treats and surprises.”

“The fans have asked for a few things over the years, and they’re going to get what they wanted with this album,” Ciara says.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Is a Taylor Swift stadium tour in the works for 2023?

Is a Taylor Swift stadium tour in the works for 2023?
Is a Taylor Swift stadium tour in the works for 2023?
Terry Wyatt/Getty Images

The last time Taylor Swift wanted to stage live performances to support an album, the pandemic forced her to postpone her plans, and then cancel them altogether.  But now, there’s word that Taylor might be plotting a return to the road for 2023.

As you may recall, Taylor’s Lover Fest tour, announced in fall 2019 in support of her album Lover, was set to include four U.S. shows, 10 European shows and two concerts in Brazil. But due to COVID-19, in April of 2020, she postponed several of the dates until 2021. Others, including a headlining appearance at the U.K.’s Glastonbury Festival, were canceled outright. In February of 2021, she called the entire thing off.

But Page Six is now citing “multiple sources” as saying that Taylor is going to come roaring back in 2023 with a “massive” stadium tour.  “Taylor has some really ambitious plans in place,” an insider tells Page Six. “She’s excited to get back on the road after such a long but fruitful break.”

“Fruitful” is right: Since 2019, Taylor’s released two new albums — folklore and evermore — and recorded another one, Midnights, that’s coming out October 21. She also released re-recorded versions of two of her older albums: Fearless and Red. All four of those albums hit number one on the Billboard 200 chart.

Another source tells Page Six that several shows have already been booked for 2023, but Taylor’s rep didn’t respond to requests for comment. Stay tuned.

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Where is their mind? Pixies’ “brain opens up” on new album, ’Doggerel’

Where is their mind? Pixies’ “brain opens up” on new album, ’Doggerel’
Where is their mind? Pixies’ “brain opens up” on new album, ’Doggerel’
BMG

Pixies have never been a band to stick to a particular sound, and recording a new album for the first time during the pandemic era gave them even more license to experiment.

“When you go to record, you’re, like, ‘Well, I don’t know if anyone’s gonna be able to see this or play this, so why not? F*** it! Just do whatever you want,'” bassist Paz Lenchantin tells ABC Audio. “Your brain kinda opens up to this place that was different than before.”

The result of said brain-opening is Doggerel, the eighth Pixies studio effort. Among the new things the “Where Is My Mind?” outfit brought to the record were songs co-written by guitarist Joey Santiago for the first time. Having played in Pixies for nearly 40 years, Santiago couldn’t help but write a Pixies song.

“To be honest, I did have something in mind that it’s got to fit within the vernacular of Pixies,” Santiago shares. “Unbeknownst to me, these little tricks that we were doing were coming out.”

Doggerel is now the fourth album Pixies have released since the group reunited in 2004, matching the four-record output of their pre-breakup era between 1986 and 1993. Santiago sees the post-reunion albums as a “linear” continuation of Pixies’ earlier work.

“It went in the path where we should be,” Santiago says.

“None of our records really sound alike, none of them,” he adds, while noting, “There’s always a signature in them, and the signature’s still there.”

Doggerel is out now. Pixies are currently playing a run of U.S. headlining shows in support of the record, which continues Monday in Los Angeles.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Idina Menzel says ‘Loud Mouse,’ children’s book she wrote with her sister, may inspire an album

Idina Menzel says ‘Loud Mouse,’ children’s book she wrote with her sister, may inspire an album
Idina Menzel says ‘Loud Mouse,’ children’s book she wrote with her sister, may inspire an album
ABC Audio

Idina Menzel and her sister Cara Mentzel have collaborated on a new children’s picture book called Loud Mouse, about a young mouse named Dee who’s able to be her best self when she sings. Idina has written and recorded an original song to go with the book called “The Loud Mouse Song,” which is streaming now — and she says she could see making an entire Loud Mouse album in the future.

“I wanted to have a song that accompanied the book that kids and their parents could just sing…for days…ad nauseum, you know?” Idina laughs. Referring to her inescapable Frozen hit “Let It Go,” she jokes, “Because that’s what I like to do. I like to be the voice of songs that parents just love me for!”

Cara says the relationship between Dee and her sister Cara Lee in the book mirrors the “supportive” relationship she had with Idina growing up, when “being adjacent to this big talent was a joy and an adrenaline rush.”

Meanwhile, Idina thinks Loud Mouse is “in the tradition of” her Frozen character Elsa — and of her Wicked character, Elphaba — in the sense that it “gives [kids] the permission to be your biggest, bravest, loudest self.”

“I think that that sort of all comes together and is very meaningful for them, and for us,” she notes.

The sisters have already written a sequel to Loud Mouse, and Idina tells ABC Audio, “I’d like to start curating a list of children’s music, and writing children’s music” for the book series.

Idina explains that she discovered that while touring the world singing “Let It Go, “There’s just nothing better for a performer than…to be able to hold the microphone out and have [kids] sing your song, and to do that with them, and with their parents.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.