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Suicidal Ideation Increasingly Affecting Younger Children Amid COVID-19 Pandemic, Data Show
USA Today (12/8, Keveney) reports suicidal ideation “is increasingly affecting young children.” USA Today adds, “At emergency rooms in 38 children’s hospitals across the nation, the number of suicide and self-injury cases in the first three quarters of 2021 was 47% higher among 5- to 8-year-olds and 182% higher among 9- to 12-year-olds than they were for the same period in 2016, according to statistics compiled by the Children’s Hospital Association.” The increasing rates “among children reflect a growth in the suicide rate among Americans of all age groups, which rose every year from 2006 to 2019, when more than 47,000 people died from suicide, according to the American Psychiatric Association.”
Related Links:
— “More young children are killing themselves: The COVID-19 pandemic is making the problem worse “Bill Keveney, USA TODAY, December 8, 2021
Surgeon General Warns On “Devastating” Mental Health Effects Young People Are Facing
According to the New York Times (12/7, Richtel), on Dec. 7, in a “rare public advisory,” US Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy, MD, MBA, “warned that young people are facing ‘devastating’ mental health effects as a result of the challenges experienced by their generation, including the coronavirus pandemic.” Murthy, “in a 53-page report [PDF],” delineated how “the pandemic intensified mental health issues that were already widespread by the spring of 2020,” citing “significant increases in self-reports of depression, anxiety and emergency-room visits for mental health challenges.” For example, in the US, emergency department “visits for suicide attempts rose 51 percent for adolescent girls in early 2021 as compared to the same period in 2019,” while “the figure rose four percent for boys.”
Related Links:
— “The pandemic worsened young people’s mental health crisis. ” Matt Richtel, The New York Times, December 7, 2021
Harm Reduction Strategies Will Be Eligible For Federal Grants Under $30M, Three-Year Program Announced By Biden Administration
MedPage Today (12/8, Frieden) reports, “Harm reduction strategies, including syringe service programs and use of fentanyl test strips, will be eligible for federal grants under a $30 million, three-year program announced” on Dec. 8 “by the Biden administration.” What’s more, “in addition to the harm reduction grants – which will be given at a rate of $10 million per year for three years – the administration also released model legislation for states that want to start up or refine their syringe service programs, formerly known as needle exchange programs.” Click here to read more about the grant funding opportunities.
Related Links:
— MedPage Today (requires login and subscription)
Anorexia Nervosa Diagnoses, Hospitalizations Among Children And Adolescents Rising During COVID-19 Pandemic, Research Indicates
Forbes (12/7) contributor Anuradha Varanasi writes research “shows there was an almost 66 percent jump per month in anorexia diagnoses among girls between the ages of 9 to 18 years during the first wave of the pandemic.” What’s more, researchers “further observed that the number of hospitalizations for” patients newly diagnosed with anorexia “nearly tripled compared with pre-pandemic rates.” The study, published in JAMA Network Open, included “1883 children and adolescents with newly diagnosed anorexia nervosa.”
Related Links:
— “Anorexia Cases Among Children & Teens Have Risen During Covid-19: Study “Anuradha Varanasi, Forbes, December 7, 2021
Gen Z Reporting Higher Levels Of COVID-19-Related Stress Than Other Age Groups, Survey Finds
The Washington Post (12/7, Jeong) reports, “Gen Z is feeling the stresses of the pandemic more than any other age group, according to a U.S. survey” that found “higher proportions of Americans between ages 13 and 24 say the pandemic has made their education, career goals and social lives more difficult, compared with millennials and Gen X.” The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey “polled 3,764 people between ages 13 and 56 from Sept. 1 to Sept. 19.”
Related Links:
— “The Washington Post (requires login and subscription)
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