Authors say this finding may help identify patients who could benefit from screening for an eating disorder
Increases seen in median days per month of e-cigarette use and number of e-cigarette users within five minutes of waking
Increase especially pronounced for Black adults and adults with lower educational attainment
Those with a family history or higher self-perceived risk are more likely to participate
Volumes of adolescents and young adults seeking inpatient, outpatient care for eating disorders increased, particularly during the first year of the pandemic
Authors say routine screening for these symptoms may be beneficial in clinical practice
Authors say these changes coincide with restrictions on the sale of sweet and fruit-flavored e-cigarette products
Reduction in caregiver depressive symptoms may have positive impact on child asthma outcomes, partially mediated by child depressive symptom severity