Síntomas de ansiedad y depresión aumentan entre los adolescentes y adultos jóvenes. Los expertos en salud advierten que las redes sociales están jugando un papel en el deterioro de la salud mental. El cirujano general de EE. UU., el doctor Vivek Murthy, emitió un aviso sobre las redes sociales y la salud mental de los jóvenes. La doctora Susanna Block, pediatra de Kaiser Permanente en Seattle, dice que la niñez y la adolescencia son momentos críticos para el desarrollo del cerebro y que la cantidad de niños en las redes sociales nunca ha sido mayor.
"Hay mucha preocupación sobre la cantidad de tiempo que nuestros hijos pasan en las redes sociales y a lo que están expuestos, y es muy difícil para los padres navegar por esto," explicó también Block.
Las redes sociales y la pandemia se han combinado para dañar la salud mental de los jóvenes, según los estudios. La Kaiser Family Foundation encontró que la mitad de las personas entre las edades de 18 y 24 años experimentaron síntomas de ansiedad o depresión este año. Mayo es el mes de la concientización sobre la salud mental.
Block dice que el uso de las redes sociales puede ser un problema difícil de abordar para los padres, pero agrega que un paso importante consiste en crear un plan familiar de redes sociales.
"Desactivar las notificaciones es útil. Hacer que las horas del día estén libres de pantallas: sin duda, las horas de las comidas deberían estar libres de pantallas. Asegurarse de que los niños no se acuesten con sus teléfonos o tabletas para que puedan dormir," indicó además la entrevistada.
Block informa que los padres no son los únicos responsables de confrontar los efectos de las redes sociales en los jóvenes.
"Esta advertencia de salud pública abre una conversación más amplia sobre cómo todos, desde la legislación hasta los padres, las escuelas y los proveedores de tecnología, cómo podemos ayudar a proteger a nuestros hijos y usar las redes sociales de manera segura," analizó Block.
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Indiana families are preparing kids for back-to-school season, and mental-health experts say emotional readiness is just as important as school supplies.
Beth Trammell, a psychologist and professor at Indiana University East, said kids often carry anxiety into the new school year. She encouraged parents to help children identify those fears.
"We as parents or caregivers think, 'Don't worry, or don't stress.' Instead, we might want to say, 'OK, well, let's talk about what it is you're worried about. What is the worst thing you think could happen?' If we draw it out of them," she said, "it may give them space to kind of let that out."
Helping kids feel heard can reduce stress. But experts also urge balance, keeping mornings calm, easing into routines, and not overloading schedules the first few weeks.
Nicole Brady, chief medical officer at UnitedHealthcare, said mental-health support should remain a priority throughout the year.
"Though we want our kids to be involved in activities and be social," she said, "we have to watch their academic performance, their mood, those sleep patterns, and making sure that those are staying healthy."
Brady added that parents should talk regularly with kids, model healthy coping and seek help early if warning signs appear.
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After a legislative session which opened doors to expand mental health care services across Montana, a state commission said it is considering the Billings area to build the state's second forensic facility.
For people involved in Montana's justice system whom a judge has deemed not mentally fit for their own defense, there are 53 beds in the state's only forensic facility in Galen. The daily waitlist hovers at about 100 people.
Matt Kuntz, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness-Montana, said it is not meeting the immense need.
"It's just a really bad situation for the people that are in the jails, for the people that are caring for them, for the taxpayers," Kuntz outlined. "It just doesn't work for anybody."
At a recent commission meeting, Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services Director Charlie Brereton said the state is identifying a location for a new facility. The department received nearly $27 million from the state in April to fund project planning.
Kuntz noted the Montana Legislature passed many bills this session centered on mental health care.
"We really were able to get big wins in access to outpatient care, access to crisis care and for people in need of forensic hospital," Kuntz explained. "Overall, it was really an amazing legislative session for Montanans with mental health conditions."
Other mental health legislation will boost school-based services, youth in residential care, the state's 988 crisis line and certified community behavioral health clinics.
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The California Parent and Youth Helpline is in serious jeopardy after Gov. Gavin Newsom cut it from the new state budget, saying the money was needed to support medical services.
Advocates said they are puzzled because the governor has championed the helpline for years, and lawmakers approved $3 million from a separate fund dedicated to mental health, which does not affect the deficit.
Lisa Pion-Berlin, president and CEO of the nonprofit Parents Anonymous, which runs the helpline, said it is still operating 24/7, for now.
"We're holding on for the next month or so," Pion-Berlin pointed out. "But we need the state to step up, or one of these well-off philanthropists who cares about having that immediate help for emotional support, which is so vital."
Advocates are hoping funding can be restored via a budget trailer bill in the next few weeks. People can call or text and reach the helpline's trained counselors at 877-427-2736. The free helpline has connected with more than 120,000 people since its inception five years ago, and the website CAParentYouthHelpline.org has reached a million more.
Pion-Berlin noted a study in the Journal of Technology in Human Services found a call to the helpline can quickly ease parents' suffering and feelings of isolation.
"The research said that 85% of the callers in less than 30 minutes feel more positive, more hopeful and able to address their issues," Pion-Berlin reported. "There is no other service or pill I know that can do that in 30 minutes or less."
Parents Anonymous also offers free weekly support groups to steer parents and kids through emotional crises of all kinds.
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