Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Alaska Misusing Institutionalized Mental Health Care For Kids: DOJ
A major U.S. Department of Justice investigation has concluded that children in Alaska with mental health issues are 鈥渇orced to endure unnecessary and unduly long鈥 institutionalization in locked psychiatric hospitals and residential treatment facilities because no alternatives exist. (Theriault Boots, 12/16)
In news about online mental health care 鈥
US drug enforcement officials are considering prohibiting online pharmacy Truepill from dispensing controlled substances after alleging that the company wrongly filled thousands of prescriptions for ADHD medicines such as Adderall. (Swetlitz, 12/16)
Remote treatment of mental-health problems surged in the pandemic, as in-person treatment became difficult while pandemic-driven isolation increased anxiety and depression. Digital mental-health companies plunged in, promising to provide millions with access to high-quality care by video, phone, and messaging. Many of the businesses, however, put a premium on growth. Investor-backed, they deployed classic Silicon Valley tactics such as spending heavily on advertising and expansion while often using contractors instead of employees to control costs. A strategy designed for mundane businesses such as food delivery, the formula can be badly suited to the sensitive activity of treating mental-health problems. (Winkler, 12/18)
In other mental health news 鈥
A growing number of adult women in the United States have been diagnosed with and are seeking treatment for ADHD, a development experts attribute to a long history of psychologists, parents and teachers overlooking symptoms in young girls. (Hopkins, 12/17)
A new survey about teens and social media shows that nearly half of teens say they have been cyberbullied. In a separate survey administered to a parent of each teen, the adults ranked cyberbullying as sixth out of eight concerns about social media. Their top concern was their child being exposed to explicit content. The survey results, released by Pew this week, aren鈥檛 surprising, says to Devorah Heitner, author of 鈥淪creenwise: Helping Kids Thrive (and Survive) in Their Digital World.鈥 鈥淭here鈥檚 just so much online aggression 鈥 aggression because of online disinhibition and the ways that we forget there鈥檚 another human being on the other end of the screen.鈥 (Chang, 12/16)
Jonathan Jones traces his gambling struggles back to a videogame he played in the fifth grade.聽Using lunch money or stealing small amounts from his parents, he would buy gaming gift cards and redeem them to spin a virtual wheel of fortune to collect prizes, such as weapons or armor, that could help him win the game, Zu Online, which is now discontinued. He would keep paying to spin again and again, a behavior that he says became compulsive and continued into other games. (Ansberry, 12/18)
Drug developers are designing new psychedelic compounds to treat depression and other mental-health conditions but skip the trip. Mind-bending psychedelics including MDMA (aka 鈥渆cstasy鈥), 鈥渕agic mushrooms鈥 and LSD are being studied as potential聽treatments for depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and addiction. Dozens of companies and academic laboratories are also making changes to the structure of those drugs, or designing similar compounds, to take advantage of their therapeutic properties without the high. (Hernandez and Abbott, 12/18)
The NFL鈥檚 social justice arm will help Chicago extend its mental health resources in 2023 thanks to the Inspire Change social justice initiative. The endeavor announced that Chicago鈥檚 Crisis Assistance Response and Engagement team will receive $200,000 in grant money from the organization. The CDC estimates there have been at least 13 million illnesses, 120,000 hospitalizations and 7,300 deaths, including 21 pediatric deaths, from the seasonal flu. (Rockett, 12/18)
Also 鈥
Roughly half of people who die by suicide don鈥檛 reveal or hint at their intentions beforehand. Research on people who have experienced suicidal thoughts reveals they might fear the person they confide in will call the police and have them hospitalized. Or they may cherish their privacy, fear burdening people with worry, dread others鈥 reactions or judgment, or just not want to be stopped from carrying out their suicide plan. (Freedenthal, 12/18)
If you are in need of help 鈥