Monday, December 18, 2023

 

New method paves the way for new antibiotics


A combination of two new substances effectively kills methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus


Peer-Reviewed Publication

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

Fighting MRSA bacteria with two drugs 

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AMANDA HOLSTAD SINGLETON IS THE LEAD AUTHOR IN A STUDY SHOWING HOW THE COMBINATION OF TWO NEW SUBSTANCES EFFECTIVELY KILLS MRSA. THE SUBSTANCES ARE WELL TOLERATED BY HUMAN CELLS, MAKING THEM A PROMISING CANDIDATE FOR A NEW ANTIBIOTIC. 

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CREDIT: PHOTO: JANA SCHEFFOLD




“Antimicrobial resistance is a major problem, and being able to help solve it is really great,” says Amanda Holstad Singleton, a PhD candidate at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU).

Singleton is the lead author of a study that shows how a combination of two new substances effectively kills methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).

These substances have been developed at NTNU and may become a completely new antibiotic that is effective against a wide group of bacteria.

“It's one thing to develop new antibiotic candidates which when combined prove to be well tolerated by human cells, but developing a technology to study how the antibiotic works inside the bacterial cells is equally important,” says Singleton.

Red light for internal processes

In order to be able to analyse how the two substances worked, the NTNU research team has developed a method that analyses how the bacterium’s signalling proteins react to the treatment. The method provides researchers with a completely new tool in the search for new antibiotic candidates.

“Up to 10,000 proteins can be found inside a bacterial cell. Instead of looking at all of them, we ‘fish’ out the 2000 or so proteins that are signalling proteins. These proteins control much of what happens in the cells” says Singleton.

The method allows researchers to see whether each of these proteins is activated or deactivated after adding the substance they want to test.

“These proteins can be compared to traffic lights, which can change from red to green and back again. By getting them to change to red, you stop an important signalling pathway inside the cell,” says Singleton.

If a substance is found to influence a signalling protein by switching the traffic light to red for a key process inside a cell, it is considered a candidate for a new antibiotic. If a substance is found to yield a red light for several different processes in a cell, it is an even better candidate. 

That is precisely what NTNU researchers have done after combining two different substances that could become a new antibiotic.

“In a study recently published in the Frontiers in Microbiology journal, we show that a combination of two new substances developed at NTNU kill MRSA much more effectively than when used separately,” says Singleton.

Prevents DNA copying

Approximately four years ago, researchers at NTNU’s Department of Clinical and Molecular Medicine published the bactericidal properties of a particular type of peptides. These peptides, in combination with a compound developed at NTNU’s Department of Chemistry, may now become a completely new type of antibiotic.

“Peptides are chains of amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. What is special about these particular peptides is that they bind to a protein in the bacteria that is absolutely essential for bacteria to be able to copy their DNA,” says Professor Marit Otterlei.

The peptide prevents DNA copying, and thus, the bacterium dies.

“No other antibiotics attack this protein. That means it is a new target, and there are therefore no bacteria that are resistant to these peptides. Since this target protein is found in all bacteria, these peptides also work on multidrug-resistant bacteria,” says Otterlei.

Synergy effect

While Otterlei and her colleagues continued working on the peptides, researchers Eirik Sundby and Bård Helge Hoff at NTNU’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering and the Department of Chemistry were working to find substances that effectively prevented the formation of DNA building blocks. They had also developed compounds, known as kinase inhibitors, that could be used in the method of fishing out signalling proteins from the bacterial samples.

“When the method was ready, we tested it on bacteria treated with peptides in combination with one of these new molecules that was thought to affect the production of DNA building blocks. We found that the new molecules had a different mechanism of action than we thought, but they did produce a very good combination effect with our peptides, a so-called synergistic effect,” says Otterlei.

It turned out that the new molecules developed by Sundby and Hoff inhibited energy metabolism inside the bacterial cell. In combination with Otterlei’s peptides, they also resulted in the activation of proteins linked to multiple stress responses in the bacterial cells. This did not take place when the substances were administered separately. This extra activation caused the bacteria to die more efficiently.

According to the researchers, this is the first time the effectiveness of antibiotics has been studied in this way.

“This gives us a completely new way of assessing new antibiotic candidates,” says Otterlei.

Prevents mutations that can cause resistance

It also provides researchers with a new way to prevent the development of resistance to new antibiotics.

“We must remember that developing resistance is a natural part of evolution. It is inevitable. However, developing resistance is costly for the bacterium. It has to make some sacrifices,” says Otterlei.

Singleton explains that there are two ways bacteria can develop resistance to antibiotics: either by the bacterium coming into contact with other bacteria that are already resistant and exchanging DNA among themselves, or that there is a mutation in the bacterium’s genes that protects it against the antibiotic.

“This type of mutation comes at a cost, it affects the bacteria’s fitness. One trait is sacrificed in order to obtain another that provides protection against the antibiotic.

If the advantage of being protected against the antibiotic outweighs the disadvantage, the bacterium will multiply, and we get many new antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

However, if the bacterium has to develop resistance to two substances at the same time, which work in completely different places inside the bacterial cell, the job becomes a lot harder.

If you attack two different processes, developing resistance to both will be too much of a burden, and the bacteria will become less viable,” says Singleton.

It becomes even more difficult if you also create an antibiotic that attacks the very way the bacterium develops resistance.

“In our case, the protein that our new antibiotic candidate attacks plays such a key role in copying the bacterium’s DNA before it can divide, that if a mutation occurs, the loss of fitness becomes so great that the bacterium dies,” says Singleton.

Source:
Amanda Holstad Singleton, Marit Ottelei et al: Frontiers | Activation of multiple stress responses in Staphylococcus aureus substantially lowers the minimal inhibitory concentration when combining two novel antibiotic drug candidates (frontiersin.org)

How the process works (IMAGE)

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

 

Brief teacher training better prepares medical students for patient education & communication


Peer-Reviewed Publication

BOSTON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE




(Boston)—Teaching is an integral communication skill central to the practice of medicine. The art of teaching extends beyond disseminating information. The skill directly translates to health provider-patient communication, the success of which is positively correlated with improved patient outcomes.

 

“Teaching is a large part of medicine - patient education is critical to providing high quality patient centered care. Education helps patients understand the 'why' and 'what' of their treatments and allows them to be better participants in their own care, and in shared decision making,” said author Susan White, MD, assistant professor of obstetrics & gynecology at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine.

 

In an effort to foster near-peer inter-professional teaching and teamwork, the school has developed a curriculum using medical students as teaching assistants, called Educational Fellows, to work with students studying to become physician assistants (PA).

 

“Our Educational Fellows curriculum allows medical students to learn the art of teaching (pedagogy) and learning theory and to practice what they had learned in working with PA students in the classroom,” explains White, who also is director of the Physician Assistant  program at the school. “We expect that the Educational Fellow experience will make those medical students better prepared for patient education.”

 

White and her colleagues present their experiences and lessons learned from establishing this program that 1) introduces select medical students to PA students in the context of a near-peer teaching framework during pre-clinical training; 2) trains the medical students in best practices of teaching and learning; and 3) provides an additional source of instructors for basic science courses.

 

White believes the program could be modified for other training programs that use peer-peer or near-peer teaching for tutoring or as teaching assistants. For example, PA students might work with students in nursing or physical therapy to provide tutoring or assistance in lab setting, or PhD graduate students might be teaching assistants for undergraduate courses. He hopes that all graduate level programs in medicine will adopt the curriculum to better prepare their graduates to teach and educate their patients, whether it be bedside nurses teaching patients home care skills or surgeons explaining a complex procedure.

 

These findings appear online in the journal Medical Science Educator.

 

Funding for this project was provided by the John E. and Sarah M. McGinty Foundation, the Campbell Foundation, and the anonymous benefactors who donated to the Physician Assistant School, and to the Boston University Aram V. Chobanian & Edward Avedisian School of Medicine, Anatomy and Neurobiology Start-up fund to support student mentored research.

 

Local Philadelphia area business owner recognized as national champion for health equity


Fitness franchise owner and coach named the American Heart Association 2023 National Leaders of Impact


Grant and Award Announcement

AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION




DALLAS, December 15, 2023 — Devon Mitchell, an American Heart Association local volunteer and franchise owner at Anytime Fitness in Delaware, is the 2023 National Leaders of Impact™ Winner. Mitchell, one of the 295 leaders in cities across the country, worked to improve heart health in his community while raising funds to fuel the mission of the Association. The Leaders of Impact campaign pairs community leaders in a head-to-head competition to support the health equity work of the American Heart Association by combatting the social determinants of health - including structural racism, lack of access to quality healthcare and scarcity of healthy food options. These factors can directly impact life expectancy which can vary by up to 20 years depending on where someone lives.[1]

Mitchell earned this prestigious recognition for his support of the lifesaving mission of the American Heart Association, a global force for healthier lives for all. Funds raised through Leaders of Impact will support the Association’s efforts to advance cardiovascular health for all which includes identifying and improving health equity by advocating for healthy policies and driving system and environmental changes. As the national winner, Mitchell will be recognized across the country and will be celebrated locally at the 67th annual Heart of Philadelphia Heart Ball on March 23 at the National Constitution Center.

“The community leaders that participated in this campaign represent trailblazers in cities across the country that are dedicated to making a lasting impact on the health and wellbeing of future generations,” said Marsha E. Jones, volunteer chairperson of the board of the American Heart Association. “Devon’s hard work and commitment, along with all nominees, will only help amplify our mission and fuel our critical work.”

Mitchell is a franchise owner and coach with a passion for improving health and wellness within the Philadelphia community. His inspiring journey began with a phone call from his best friend who had suffered a heart attack during a triathlon. Mitchell wants the care and treatment his friend received to be available to everyone, everywhere.

"Embracing this opportunity was a natural choice," Mitchell said. "As a gym franchise owner, I recognize my distinctive position, allowing me to channel my profound passion into meaningful action to improve the health and wellness within my community. I am not merely a business owner; I am a steward of well-being entrusted with the responsibility to cultivate a positive impact."

This year the annual Leaders of Impact campaign launched on Sept. 29, World Heart Day, and culminated on Nov. 15, National Philanthropy Day. Participants were nominated by the Association’s peer volunteers to participate in the seven-week initiative where they worked to raise awareness for heart disease and stroke, drive action to improve health and fund the mission of the American Heart Association.

For more information about the Leaders of Impact campaign and the American Heart Association’s lifesaving mission, visit www.heart.org

Additional Resources:

  • Multimedia is available in the right column of the release link.
  • Spanish news release to be added as available. 

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About the American Heart Association

The American Heart Association is a relentless force for a world of longer, healthier lives. We are dedicated to ensuring equitable health in all communities. Through collaboration with numerous organizations, and powered by millions of volunteers, we fund innovative research, advocate for the public’s health and share lifesaving resources. The Dallas-based organization has been a leading source of health information for nearly a century. Connect with us on heart.orgFacebookX or by calling 1-800-AHA-USA1.   


[1] 1 Life Expectancy Data Viz (cdc.gov) 

 

Bringing quantum computing to light


Grant and Award Announcement

UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCE

UVA Engineering Associate Professor Xu Yi 

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ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING, XU YI

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CREDIT: TOM COGILL




As a technology still in its nascent stages, quantum computing holds the promise of revolutionizing various fields, provided it can surmount the challenges of scalability and error resilience. Scalability refers to handling larger tasks, akin to opening a ton of windows but your computer doesn’t slow down. Resilience involves maintaining reliability, like when you drop your phone but it keeps working.

What if the particle-like properties of light — tiny packets of energy called photons — hold the answer? The University of Virginia’s Xu Yi , an associate professor in the Charles L. Brown Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, received a National Science Foundation CAREER Award to explore the use of quantum optical technology to try to solve both problems.
 

Quantum Insights from a Nobel Laureate

Caltech professor Richard Feynman, along with Julian Schwinger and Shin’ichiro Tomonaga, earned the 1965 Nobel Prize in physics for his work on quantum electrodynamics.

In his book “Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman!” he is quoted as saying, “Nature isn’t classical, dammit, and if you want to make a simulation of nature, you’d better make it quantum mechanical, and by golly it’s a wonderful problem, because it doesn’t look so easy.”

He and many researchers, including Yi who also hails from Caltech, believe that some problems can’t be solved until we master quantum computing. This is because traditional or classical computing can only measure slivers of a problem – and take educated guesses about the rest -- because of its relatively small computing capability. Quantum computing can potentially analyze enormous data sets like the myriad possibilities of chemical interactions within a human body system and in short order.

But Feynman was proved to be right, it’s not so easy.
 

Applied Quantum Computing

A good example of how quantum computing could be applied to a quantum problem is drug development. In the pharmaceutical business, it typically takes more than 10 years to develop a new drug because it’s impossible to know how the drug molecules will behave and how they will interact with the atoms in the body. This interaction is quantum mechanical. Once scaled-up quantum computing is a reality, it’s possible that this problem can be solved using “true-to-life” quantum mechanical simulations. Quantum computers will potentially be able to process the piles of data and ultracomplex algorithms needed to deduce how an entire system really works without going tilt.

Then scientists will be able to develop new drugs faster and more efficiently and possibly reduce research and development spending for new drugs. Currently, some drugs are so expensive that people can’t afford them, and some are not covered by insurance, which limits who can benefit from them.

Increasing pharmaceutical availability could impact health equity dramatically.
 

Where We Are Now

Recent developments like quantum-computing-friendly hardware and advanced algorithms have made hefty contributions toward the feasibility of quantum computing, but the technology is still considered emergent. Two problems must be solved to access the full power and viability of quantum computing: increasing scalability and maintaining stability — or accuracy — at scale.

While quantum computing front-runners like IBM and Google are using superconducting circuits as processors to manipulate and store quantum information, the metal materials used for constructing these components offer too many opportunities for error in computations. Wrangling qubits, the building blocks of quantum information, relies on managing quantum aspects like probability and entanglement, which is much more difficult than managing the ones and zeros of traditional computing. Because of these challenges, scaling quantum computing with semiconductor technology has been extremely slow going.

 

Leveraging the Power of Light

That’s why Yi aims to leverage the properties of light — photons — to greatly reduce the number of physical components needed for quantum operations.

If Google and IBM want a thousand qubits, they need a thousand physical units. And each time they try to add more units, the opportunities for error multiply.

A good analogy is the way fiber communication uses different wavelengths to transmit information. When the bandwidth is increased, all the wavelengths still travel within the same fiber. One fiber can support thousands of wavelengths. Yi and his team took this idea and applied it to quantum computing.

His work uses optical components that can each support hundreds of thousands of wavelength messages — a  far cry from the one-to-one requirement of semiconductors. With fewer components, Yi’s system greatly reduces opportunities for error while offering a vehicle for scaling.

 

From Tabletop to Chip Scale

Photonic quantum computing was first developed at UVA by physics professor Oliver Pfister on a tabletop more than 10 years ago using different wave colors in quantum mechanics. He has shown he can entangle up to 3,000 different photonic qubits (technically called modes) together.

But entanglement — getting the photons to relate to each other in a quantum way — isn’t the same thing as computing, it’s only the first step. With Yi’s help, Pfister’s 3,000-qubit prototype has the potential to surpass IBM’s top computational qubits number of 1,121.

Creating a usable photonic quantum method means reducing all the photonic mechanical equipment from a tabletop to the size of a chip. Downsizing all the mechanical equipment decreases the margin of error because the wavelengths have a shorter distance to travel and controlling computations in a smaller space is easier.
 

A Quantum Leap in Healthcare

When Yi can prove the same entanglement capability at chip scale that Pfister proved at tabletop scale, he’ll start controlling the wavelengths for computations and then expand and scale.

When they get this far, human chemistry and whole-system biological simulations could be right around the corner.

 

A mathematical framework for evo-devo dynamics


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF ST. ANDREWS




Natural selection acts on phenotypes constructed over development, which raises the question of how development affects evolution. Classic evolutionary theory indicates that development affects evolution by modulating the genetic covariation upon which selection acts, thus affecting genetic constraints. However, whether genetic constraints are relative, thus diverting adaptation from the direction of steepest fitness ascent, or absolute, thus blocking adaptation in certain directions, remains uncertain. This limits understanding of long-term evolution of developmentally constructed phenotypes. Here we formulate a general, tractable mathematical framework that integrates age progression, explicit development (i.e., the construction of the phenotype across life subject to developmental constraints), and evolutionary dynamics, thus describing the evolutionary and developmental (evo-devo) dynamics. .The framework yields simple equations that can be arranged in a layered structure that we call the evo-devo process, whereby five core elementary components generate all equations including those mechanistically describing genetic covariation and the evo-devo dynamics. The framework recovers evolutionary dynamic equations in gradient form and describes the evolution of genetic covariation from the evolution of genotype, phenotype, environment, and mutational covariation. This shows that genotypic and phenotypic evolution must be followed simultaneously to yield a dynamically sufficient description of long-term phenotypic evolution in gradient form, such that evolution described as the climbing of a fitness landscape occurs in “geno-phenotype” space. Genetic constraints in geno-phenotype space are necessarily absolute because the phenotype is related to the genotype by development. Thus, the long-term evolutionary dynamics of developed phenotypes is strongly non-standard: (1) evolutionary equilibria are either absent or infinite in number and depend on genetic covariation and hence on development; (2) developmental constraints determine the admissible evolutionary path and hence which evolutionary equilibria are admissible; and (3) evolutionary outcomes occur at admissible evolutionary equilibria, which do not generally occur at fitness landscape peaks in geno-phenotype space, but at peaks in the admissible evolutionary path where “total genotypic selection” vanishes if exogenous plastic response vanishes and mutational variation exists in all directions of genotype space. Hence, selection and development jointly define the evolutionary outcomes if absolute mutational constraints and exogenous plastic response are absent, rather than the outcomes being defined only by selection. Moreover, our framework provides formulas for the sensitivities of a recurrence and an alternative method to dynamic optimization (i.e., dynamic programming or optimal control) to identify evolutionary outcomes in models with developmentally dynamic traits. These results show that development has major evolutionary effects.

 

Ultrafast lasers map electrons 'going ballistic' in graphene, with implications for next-gen electronic devices


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS

Ultrafast Laser Lab 

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RESEARCH AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS' ULTRAFAST LASER LAB COULD LEAD TO BREAKTHROUGHS IN GOVERNING ELECTRONS IN SEMICONDUCTORS, FUNDAMENTAL COMPONENTS IN MOST INFORMATION AND ENERGY TECHNOLOGY.

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CREDIT: UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS



LAWRENCE — Research appearing in ACS Nano, a premier journal on nanoscience and nanotechnology, reveals the ballistic movement of electrons in graphene in real time.

The observations, made at the University of Kansas’ Ultrafast Laser Lab, could lead to breakthroughs in governing electrons in semiconductors, fundamental components in most information and energy technology.

“Generally, electron movement is interrupted by collisions with other particles in solids,” said lead author Ryan Scott, a doctoral student in KU’s Department of Physics & Astronomy. “This is similar to someone running in a ballroom full of dancers. These collisions are rather frequent — about 10 to 100 billion times per second. They slow down the electrons, cause energy loss and generate unwanted heat. Without collisions, an electron would move uninterrupted within a solid, similar to cars on a freeway or ballistic missiles through air. We refer to this as ‘ballistic transport.’”

Scott performed the lab experiments under the mentorship of Hui Zhao, professor of physics & astronomy at KU. They were joined in the work by former KU doctoral student Pavel Valencia-Acuna, now a postdoctoral researcher at the Northwest Pacific National Laboratory.

Zhao said electronic devices utilizing ballistic transport could potentially be faster, more powerful and more energy efficient.

“Current electronic devices, such as computers and phones, utilize silicon-based field-effect transistors,” Zhao said. “In such devices, electrons can only drift with a speed on the order of centimeters per second due to the frequent collisions they encounter. The ballistic transport of electrons in graphene can be utilized in devices with fast speed and low energy consumption.”

The KU researchers observed the ballistic movement in graphene, a promising material for next-generation electronic devices. First discovered in 2004 and awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2010, graphene is made of a single layer of carbon atoms forming a hexagonal lattice structure — somewhat like a soccer net.

“Electrons in graphene move as if their ‘effective’ mass is zero, making them more likely to avoid collisions and move ballistically,” Scott said. “Previous electrical experiments, by studying electrical currents produced by voltages under various conditions, have revealed signs of ballistic transport. However, these techniques aren’t fast enough to trace the electrons as they move.”

According to the researchers, electrons in graphene (or any other semiconductor) are like students sitting in a full classroom, where students can’t freely move around because the desks are full. The laser light can free electrons to momentarily vacate a desk, or ‘hole’ as physicists call them.

“Light can provide energy to an electron to liberate it so that it can move freely,” Zhao said. “This is similar to allowing a student to stand up and walk away from their seat. However, unlike a charge-neutral student, an electron is negatively charged. Once the electron has left its ‘seat,’ the seat becomes positively charged and quickly drags the electron back, resulting in no more mobile electrons — like the student sitting back down.”

Because of this effect, the super-light electrons in graphene can only stay mobile for about one-trillionth of a second before falling back to its seat. This short time presents a severe challenge to observing the movement of the electrons. To address this problem, the KU researchers designed and fabricated a four-layer artificial structure with two graphene layers separated by two other single-layer materials, molybdenum disulphide and molybdenum diselenide.

“With this strategy, we were able to guide the electrons to one graphene layer while keeping their ‘seats’ in the other graphene layer,” Scott said. “Separating them with two layers of molecules, with a total thickness of just 1.5 nanometers, forces the electrons to stay mobile for about 50-trillionths of a second, long enough for the researchers, equipped with lasers as fast as 0.1 trillionth of a second, to study how they move.”

The researchers use a tightly focused laser spot to liberate some electrons in their sample. They trace these electrons by mapping out the “reflectance” of the sample, or the percentage of light they reflect.

“We see most objects because they reflect light to our eyes,” Scott said. “Brighter objects have larger reflectance. On the other hand, dark objects absorb light, which is why dark clothes become hot in the summer. When a mobile electron moves to a certain location of the sample, it makes that location slightly brighter by changing how electrons in that location interact with light. The effect is very small — even with everything optimized, one electron only changes the reflectance by 0.1 part per million.”

To detect such a small change, the researchers liberated 20,000 electrons at once, using a probe laser to reflect off the sample and measure this reflectance, repeating the process 80 million times for each data point. They found the electrons on average move ballistically for about 20-trillionths of a second with a speed of 22 kilometers per second before running into something that terminates their ballistic motion.

The research was funded by a grant from the Department of Energy under the program of Physical Behavior of Materials.

Zhao said currently his lab is working to refine their material design to guide electrons more efficiently to the desired graphene layer, and trying to find ways to make them move longer distances ballistically.

 

Substance-abuse stigma impedes treatment in various ways, scientists say


Peer-Reviewed Publication

ASSOCIATION FOR PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE




Addiction is one of society’s most misunderstood and rebuked health conditions. That stigma discourages many people from seeking treatment for substance dependence, according to a new report published in Psychological Science in the Public Interest, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. 

Research on stigma toward people with substance use disorder (SUD) is relatively sparse, the report adds.

“Characterizing the nature and etiology of SUD stigma is critical for developing tailored and effective interventions to combat it,” wrote psychological scientist Anne C. Krendl and sociologist Brea L. Perry of Indiana University, Bloomington, in their review.

Substance dependence has become a national health threat. Drug overdose rates in the United States have climbed over the past 20 years, driven primarily by opioid and stimulant use. In a recent national survey, nearly 66 million Americans reported abusing alcohol over a 1-month period, and about 20 million reported using illegal narcotics and prescription drugs for nonmedical reasons.

Researchers measure stigma around both SUD and mental illness\ along three dimensions:

  • public stigma—society’s negative beliefs toward those who struggle with those disorders
  • self-stigma—negative beliefs that the individuals hold toward themselves
  • structural stigma—systemic rules, policies, and practices that discriminate against individuals with those disorders.

Overall, stigma research has focused primarily on mental health problems, the authors wrote. But studies indicate that SUD is typically more stigmatized than mental illness, in part because substance use is viewed as more controllable. (Schizophrenia, however, elicits similar levels of stigma as does SUD, research shows.)

Experiments that have framed SUD as uncontrollable show some reduction in stigma, but that may have the unintended consequence of casting substance dependence as insurmountable, the authors wrote.

Studies of public stigma indicate that Americans express concerns about interacting with substance users, although that resistance ebbs toward individuals described as being in active recovery.  People with SUD may face housing discrimination, reduced employment opportunities, and lowered income.

Studies also show variability in stigma among different types of substance dependence. For example, individuals who abuse illegal drugs such as heroin are perceived as more dangerous than those who abuse alcohol or prescription opioids.

The consequences of public stigma, along with structural and self-stigma, discourage individuals with SUD from seeking and persisting with treatment, research suggests.

Some studies have identified strategies aimed at reducing stigma, such as education designed to counter inaccurate beliefs, but those approaches have shown limited progress. This calls for researchers to develop stronger methods for reducing stigma. Strategies may include emphasizing an individual’s recovery and the reduction of structural treatment barriers, such as inadequate insurance coverage and lack of access to evidence-based interventions.

In a commentary accompanying the report, APS James McKeen Cattell Fellow Stephen P. Hinshaw, a distinguished professor at University of California, Berkeley and University of California, San Francisco, points to successful treatments as possibly the “ultimate game-changer” in stigma reduction. Hinshaw, whose work focuses on developmental psychopathology and mental illness stigma, notes that HIV/AIDS received massive stigma before antiretroviral therapies transformed it from a terminal to survivable condition.

In another commentary, APS Fellow Kenneth J. Sher, a University of Missouri scholar renowned for his work on alcohol use disorder, calls for a more nuanced view of SUD stigma. Terms such as SUD are “grossly nonspecific” and may lead to a broadened array of stereotypes, Sher said. The U.S. National Institutes of Health has proposed developing alternatives to SUD-related terminology such as “addict” and “abuser,” but research should focus on the effects of that relabeling on stigma, he asserted. 

 

The Association for Psychological Science is the home of thousands of leading psychological science researchers, practitioners, teachers, and students from around the world. APS is dedicated to advancing scientific psychology across disciplinary and geographic borders and committed to disseminating psychological science to the public, incentivizing global collaboration among researchers, catalyzing the further development of psychological science, and promoting the application of psychological science to public policy.