Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: American Kids Are Struggling With Mental Health. Here's How We Can Help
Teens are struggling 鈥 and we鈥檙e not doing enough to help them. That鈥檚 the clear message from a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Lisa Jarvis, 2/16)
American teenagers鈥攅specially girls and kids who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or questioning鈥攁re 鈥渆ngulfed鈥 in historic rates of anxiety and sadness. And everybody seems to think they know why. (Derek Thompson, 2/16)
A new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention聽offers a heartbreaking illustration of just how many teens are being pushed to the brink under the mountain of pressure. (Jessica Karl, 2/16)
Yet again this week we are grappling with the news of another mass shooting on school grounds, this time at Michigan State University. Some students who were present at the MSU shooting are also survivors of another Michigan school shooting almost 15 months ago at Oxford High School. (Sonali Rajan, Charles Branas, Mark S. Kaplan, 2/16)
Having watched her son lose more of himself every time he鈥檚 hospitalized, Kimberly has become convinced that he needs one of the last options available to their family: conservatorship. (Lulu Garcia-Navarro, 2/16)
Also 鈥
A recent study of medical error published in The New England Journal of Medicine reached a shocking conclusion about patient safety: Nearly a quarter century after a highly publicized Institute of Medicine report on the prevalence of patient harm sparked vows to cut the rate by half in five years, 鈥渋n-hospital adverse events鈥 remain so common that they affect roughly one in four patients. At larger institutions, the rate can be 40% or higher. (Michael L. Millenson, 2/17)
In the State of the Union, President Biden stated that 鈥渨e have broken COVID鈥檚 grip on us.鈥 Indeed, COVID-19 deaths are down about 75% since last year鈥檚 speech. Consistent with that progress, the Biden administration announced in January that it will end the public health emergency (and national emergency) declarations on May 11. Yet nearly 500 Americans are dying from COVID-19 per day. (Wendy Netter Epstein and Daniel Golderg, 2/16)