Articles by: Geisel Communications

Can Surfing Reprogram the Veteran’s Brain?

Outside – Quotes Paula Schnurr, professor of psychiatry at the Geisel School of Medicine and executive director of the Veterans Affairs National Center for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), in an article discussing how the physicality and flow of surfing can give victims of PTSD some relief, and how PTSD has been linked to changes in the neurocircuitry and neurotransmitters that balance the retrieval of memories. “People have profound changes in how they think of themselves in the world,” says Schnurr.

E-Cigarettes May Be a Gateway to Marlboros

Esquire – Continued coverage on the recent study conducted by Dartmouth and the University of Pittsburgh, which found that young people who try e-cigarettes are much more likely to start smoking. The researchers evaluated 694 people between the ages of 16 and 26 who had never previously smoked cigarettes. Additionally, all participants—54 percent of whom were female, and 76 percent of whom were white—were determined to be “attitudinally nonsusceptible” to smoking because they responded “definitely no” when asked if they would try a cigarette offered by a friend or if they would smoke within the next year.

Study: Teens Using E-Cigs Much More Likely to Start Smoking Cigarettes

The Washington Post – Quotes Samir Soneji, assistant professor of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, on the new study that reports young people who use e-cigarettes are much more likely to become smokers than those who don’t. Researchers said one limitation of the study was the relatively small number in the sample size and that the findings need to be replicated with larger samples. Even so, after controlling for well-known risk factors, such as age, sex, socioeconomic status and risk-taking, “we think the effect is real,” says Soneji.