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       her for “caring” and requesting that, when they were ready to adopt a new pet, they wanted her to help
       them in the selection.  The staff placed the bouquet with the card on the office reception counter for all
       to see.
       Yes, as professionals, we have to exercise some restraint over our emotions.  But, our patients know the
       difference between crying for them and self-indulgence on our part. Sometimes, especially when there
       is nothing else we can offer, they just need our compassion.

       Think about it: “To cry or not to cry?  What kind of doctor do you want to be?”
                       “Do not apologize for crying. Without this emotion, we are only robots.”
                                            ― Elizabeth Gilbert, Eat, Pray, Love





















                                      Residency Update: San Mateo

             Combating Opioid and Meth Epidemics in the Age of COVID













                                        By Jiaochen Ke MD and Tomoki Kimura MD
                       RFM Reps from the San Mateo County BHRS Psychiatry Residency Program

     As the COVID pandemic once again rips through our communities at an astonishing speed, we are starting
     to get a clearer picture of its rippling impact on the hidden epidemic of substance use in this country.
     According  to  provisional  data  from  the  National  Center  for  Health  Statistics,  the  number  of  overdose
     deaths  from  5/2020-4/2021  exceeded  100,000  for the  first time  in  our  nation’s  history,  increasing  by
     31% compared to the year before and more than doubling the number from 2015 [1]. In San Francisco, the
     number of drug overdose deaths was more than twice the number of COVID deaths in 2020 [2], and the
     opioid-related  overdose  death  rate  in  2020  was  more  than  5  times  the  rate  in  2015  [3].  Meanwhile,
     methamphetamine-  and  other  psychostimulant-related  overdose  deaths  from  5/2020-4/2021  increased
     48% from the year prior nationwide [1], and according to the California Overdose Surveillance Dashboard,
     the 12-month rolling rate of psychostimulant overdose deaths in California increased by 71% between Q4

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         NORTHERN CALIFORNIA PSYCHIATRIC SOCIETY                                   Page 16      JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2022
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