Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Black Veterans Were Denied PTSD VA Benefits More Often: Report
A newly surfaced 2017 internal Veterans Affairs report shows Black veterans were more often denied benefits for post-traumatic stress disorder than their white counterparts.聽(Strickler, 3/17)
In other military health news 鈥
A Pentagon study has found high rates of cancer among military pilots and for the first time has shown that ground crews who fuel, maintain and launch those aircraft are also getting sick. The data had long been sought by retired military aviators who have raised alarms for years about the number of air and ground crew members they knew who had cancer. They were told that earlier military studies had found they were not at greater risk than the general U.S. population. (Copp, 3/19)
More on mental health 鈥
School districts across the country are increasingly taking on social media, filing lawsuits that argue that Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube have helped create the nation鈥檚 surging youth mental health crisis and should be held accountable. The legal action started in January, with a suit by Seattle Public Schools, and picked up momentum in recent weeks as school districts in California, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Florida have followed. Lawyers involved say many more are planned. (St. George, 3/19)
Jayme Banks worried last summer 鈥 at the end of a school year that was tough for nearly everyone, with students coming off a year of pandemic-forced virtual classes, in a city traumatized by gun violence 鈥 that kids鈥 mental health was fragile. 鈥淚 was just thinking: 鈥楬ow do I know the kids are OK? How do I know that they have resources?鈥欌 said Banks, the Philadelphia School District鈥檚 deputy chief of prevention, intervention, and trauma. (Graham, 3/20)
A recent study says that despite the embarrassment that "dad jokes" can cause, it might do some kids good in the future. Humor researcher Marc Hye-Knudsen published a study in British Psychological Society鈥榮 journal this week arguing that "dad jokes" actually have a positive effect on development. (Vacchiano, 3/18)
COVID-19 has killed millions and caused widespread disruptions to people's lives and global economies 鈥斅燽ut a major new study finds people are slightly happier than before the pandemic began. The 10th annual World Happiness Report, published Monday to coincide with the International Day of Happiness, surveyed over 100,000 people and found that Finland was the happiest country for the sixth consecutive year, while Afghanistan was the least happy, leaving the Taliban-controlled nation ranking last at No. 137. Meanwhile, the report found global misery has declined slightly during the pandemic. (Falconer, 3/20)
In other health and wellness updates 鈥
A company in Oregon is recalling frozen fruit distributed to major food retailers such as Costco and Trader Joe's following an outbreak of Hepatitis A illnesses. The recalled products are frozen organic strawberries sold at grocery stores in certain states and a frozen organic tropical fruit blend sold at Trader Joe鈥檚 nationwide. (Habeshian, 3/17)
You鈥檝e definitely heard of the Mediterranean diet and the MyPlate method, but what about Harvard University鈥檚 Healthy Eating Plate? Back in 2011, nutrition experts at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health worked alongside researchers at Harvard Health Publications to compile an eating plan for optimal health. 鈥淚n terms of major chronic diseases like prevention of cardiovascular disease, different types of cancers [and] Type 2 diabetes, this way of eating is going to be helpful to prevent those diseases that are common in America, and the world,鈥 says Lilian Cheung, lecturer of nutrition at Harvard鈥檚 school of public health. (Onque, 3/19)
The rise of childhood obesity in the United States did not happen quickly. But, to medicine, 鈥渋t sort of cropped up overnight,鈥 says Bob Siegel, a pediatric obesity specialist at Cincinnati Children鈥檚. Despite the fact that obesity rates among children and adolescents have been steadily climbing since the 1960s, researchers and clinicians have had no consensus approach to slowing down the 鈥渙besity epidemic.鈥 (Cueto and Gaffney, 3/20)