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Wednesday, Oct 25 2023

Full Issue

Dozens Of States Allege Instagram's Tech Is Addictive, Harming Young Users

The lawsuit accuses Meta, Instagram's parent company, of using allegedly addictive features that hurt children's mental health. As reports highlight the ongoing youth mental health crisis, researchers find young adults in the U.S. experience anxiety and depression twice as frequently as teens.

Dozens of states sued Instagram-parent Meta on Tuesday, accusing the social media giant of harming young users鈥 mental health through allegedly addictive features such as infinite news feeds and frequent notifications that demand users鈥 constant attention. In a federal lawsuit filed in California by 33 attorneys general, the states allege that Meta鈥檚 products have harmed minors and contributed to a mental health crisis in the United States. (Fung, 10/24)

While Republican and Democratic lawmakers appear more incapable than ever of working together to pass legislation, they largely agree on one thing: Meta鈥檚 negative impact on children and teens. (Vanian, 10/24)

New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella filed a separate lawsuit in Merrimack Superior Court Tuesday against Meta for allegedly violating state consumer protection laws. Eight states and D.C. filed related actions in state and federal courts. 鈥(Meta) has broken and continues to break the mental health of our kids, and it鈥檚 time we put a stop to it,鈥 Formella said at a press conference in Concord on Tuesday. He said New Hampshire has been particularly hard hit by a mental health crisis. (GoKee, 10/24)

More on the youth mental health crisis 鈥

Young adults in the United States experience anxiety and depression twice as frequently as teenagers, according to a new nationally representative survey by Making Caring Common, a project of Harvard University鈥檚 Graduate School of Education. Thirty-six percent of young adults 鈥 ages 18 to 25 鈥 reported anxiety, compared with 18 percent of younger teenagers 鈥 ages 14 to 17 鈥 while 29 percent felt depression, compared with 15 percent in the younger age group in the survey. (Lewis, 10/24)

A children's mental health crisis in Chicago and across the nation that predates the isolation and chaos of the COVID-19 pandemic has outgrown the abilities of psychiatrists and therapists to treat it alone. (Asplund, 10/23)

For years, Peter Gray, a research professor of psychology and neuroscience at Boston College, has been closely following two disturbing trends: the dwindling of independent activity and play afforded to children over the past half-century, and the accelerating rise in mental health disorders and suicides among youth during that same period. There are familiar factors that surface in discussions of the youth mental health crisis in America, with screen use and social media often topping the list of concerns. But Gray suspects a deeper underlying issue: The landscape of childhood has transformed in ways that are profoundly affecting the way children develop 鈥 by limiting their ability to play independently, to roam beyond the supervision of adults, to learn from peers, and to build resilience and confidence. (Gibson, 10/24)

In related news about mental health 鈥

Care farms are agricultural places for people with physical or mental health challenges to process their emotions, while performing farming tasks and working with animals. Participants are able to receive formal or informal care to address things like anxiety, depression and grief. It鈥檚 a popular concept in Europe that hasn鈥檛 gained as much traction in the United States yet. But a new national network hopes to change that. (Gabriel, 10/29)

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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