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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Aug 22 2022

Full Issue

Calls To Missouri Mental Health Centers Rise 30% After 988 Hotline Launch

State officials say more than 4,000 people called the state鈥檚 mental health crisis centers in the month after the national mental health line launched. Separately, North Carolina Health News reports "unsustainable" burdens on emergency rooms by people needing mental health support.

During the first month of a national mental health crisis line, calls to Missouri mental health centers have gone up 30%, state officials said. (Fentem, 8/19)

KHN: Journalists Dig Into Questions About The 988 Hotline And Inflation Reduction Act聽

KHN correspondent Aneri Pattani discussed social media criticism of the new 988 mental health hotline on NPR鈥檚 鈥淲eekend Edition Saturday鈥 on Aug. 13 and on WAMU鈥檚 鈥1A鈥 on Aug. 16. ... KHN chief Washington correspondent Julie Rovner discussed the health policy implications of the Inflation Reduction Act on WAMU鈥檚 鈥1A鈥 on Aug. 16. (8/20)

In related news about the burden on emergency departments 鈥

A 9-year-old girl with mental health issues spent at least four months this spring living in a Novant Health emergency room in Wilmington: sleeping, eating, doing school work. During that time, emergency department staff searched for an available mental health facility that could take a child so young. (Knopf, 8/22)

In other news about mental health 鈥

After a lengthy review, the Food and Drug Administration approved a fast-acting depression treatment from Axsome Therapeutics on Friday, clearing the way for the first new oral therapy for major depressive disorder in decades. (Garde, 8/19)

Depression sucked the life from Lori Jackson鈥檚 time on this earth for nearly 40 years. On her darkest days in college she hung a blanket over her dorm room window to block out the light and slept, skipping classes. (Gutierrez, 8/22)

Meena Thiruvengadam faced a choice when her therapist stopped taking health insurance about a year ago. She could try to find someone else who would take her insurance, or she could pay her therapist 鈥 whom she trusted and had already been seeing for years 鈥 out-of-pocket, without using insurance. (Schencker, 8/21)

The start of a school year can be exciting and full of possibility, from the feel of fresh lined notebook paper to the promise of routine, friendship and belonging. But two years of pandemic-induced stress, anxiety and grief have been heaped atop the overflowing plates of children who were already struggling with the anxiety and depression of living in an unstable and unsafe world. The consequence: a staggering rise in the numbers of kids with poor mental health. (Brookland, 8/22)

鈥淪ome of my co-workers are very engaged with helping people, and they鈥檙e able to do the work,鈥 said Elissa Hardy, a trained social worker who until recently supervised a small team of caseworkers providing services in the Denver Public Library system. Denver boasts some 50 lives have been saved since library staffers five years ago began volunteering for training to respond to drug overdoses. (Scheier, 8/21)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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