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Latest News Around the Web

Experts Say Pandemic Will Have A Long-Term Impact On People’s Mental Health

STAT (5/7, Joseph) reported while “the end of the emergency phase of the pandemic is in sight in the United States,” experts have warned the events of this past year will have “a long-term impact on people’s mental health.” While some people will see their “feelings of anxiety and depression that emerged during the pandemic…resolve as routines resume,” other people “will face new or worse mental health issues that persist or even appear down the road, a number that could be quite large given the magnitude of despair and disruption.”

Related Links:

— “As the Covid-19 crisis ebbs in the U.S., experts brace for some to experience psychological fallout ” Andrew Joseph, STAT, May 7, 2021

Drug Overdose Deaths Surge During Pandemic

The AP (5/8, Landers) reported that according to the CDC, “at least 87,000 people died of a drug overdose in America” in the 12-month period ending last September, “an increase of 27% from the previous 12 months and a record for the most such deaths in a single year.” In that same period, “deaths attributed to synthetic opioids, mainly fentanyl, increased 53% nationwide.”

Related Links:

— “Tragedies pile up with drug overdoses surging amid pandemic “Jamie Landers, AP, May 8, 2021

Mental Health Professionals Report Increase In Number Of Black People Seeking Their Services In The Past Year

The New York Times (5/9, Taylor) reports across the US, mental health professionals say they have seen a growing number of Black people seek their help in the past year. Following the police killing of George Floyd, “mental health experts across the country say they have seen African-Americans, whose skepticism of therapy has been documented by research, seeking it in growing numbers.”

Related Links:

— “After a Traumatizing Year, Black People Turn to Therapy ” Derrick Bryson Taylor, The New York Times, May 9, 2021

Rates Of Cannabis Vaping Among High School Students Increasing, Survey Data Indicate

MedPage Today (5/6, Gever) reports, “Just as reports of severe lung illnesses related to vaping began to make headlines in 2019, rates of cannabis vaping among high school students were soaring, according to high-quality survey data.” Data “from the long-running Monitoring the Future study showed that 4.9%…of high school students reported “frequent” vaping of cannabis products – 10 or more times in the previous month – up from 2.1% in 2018.” Meanwhile, “rates of any cannabis vaping in the previous month also increased dramatically, from 7.5% in 2018…to 14.0% in 2019.” The findings were published in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

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