Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
New York City Labels Social Media A Hazard To Public Health
New York City on Wednesday designated social media a public health hazard for its effect on youth mental health, becoming the first major city in the United States to take such a step, Mayor Eric Adams (D) said in an address. 鈥淐ompanies like TikTok, YouTube, Facebook are fueling a mental health crisis by designing their platforms with addictive and dangerous features,鈥 Adams said in the annual State of the City address. (Ables, 1/25)
Bill sponsor Fiona McFarland, R-Sarasota, called social media 鈥渄igital fentanyl.鈥 鈥淪ocial media companies themselves know how addictive their technology is, and they鈥檙e even unable to police the bad guys,鈥 McFarland said on the House floor before the vote. 鈥淒espite their best efforts, content about human trafficking and child pornography keep slipping into the algorithm.鈥澛 (Soule, 1/24)
A former insider at tech giant Meta has said that social media companies are failing to keep kids safe online, and that government regulators must step in. 鈥淩egulators are our last hope at peace. They really are our last hope,鈥 Arturo B茅jar told POLITICO at a cafe in central London on Tuesday, shortly before a meeting with the country鈥檚 media regulator Ofcom, which will be tasked with enforcing Britain鈥檚 sprawling new internet rulebook, the Online Safety Act. (Manancourt, 1/24)
Fragmented and focused social platforms might be good for helping you find a knitting community. But extremist groups are also using them to normalize darker content. (Zuckerman, 1/14)
In related news about mental health 鈥
麻豆女优 Health News: Native American Communities Have The Highest Suicide Rates, Yet Interventions Are Scarce聽
Amanda MorningStar has watched her children struggle with mental health issues, including suicidal thoughts. She often wonders why. 鈥淲e鈥檙e family-oriented and we do stuff together. I had healthy pregnancies. We鈥檙e very protective of our kids,鈥 said MorningStar, who lives in Heart Butte, Montana, a town of about 600 residents on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation. (Platzman Weinstock, 1/25)
Colorado has for years been short on in-patient psychiatric beds for people with severe mental illness, creating a backlog that means people wait months for care and sit in jail instead of a hospital. The last time the national Treatment Advocacy Center released a status report on the psychiatric bed shortage, Colorado placed 34th among states with 543 beds. (Brown, 1/24)
Each day is different for Nils Dybvig, a senior social worker with Hennepin County who works out of the Brooklyn Park Police Department.聽Dybvig has been a social worker for decades and joined the police department鈥檚 Alternative Response Team in December of 2022, when the program first launched. (Thamer, 1/25)
In the wake of the death of a New Jersey sheriff, who appeared to have taken his own life in a restaurant, Gov. Phil Murphy and other state and local officials have emphasized that mental health resources are available for law enforcement officers and first responders. Research has shown that police officers and firefighters are more likely to die by suicide than in the line of duty. Despite the resources available, the stigma around asking for help is still there. (Wallace, Myers, Fagan, Nguyen, 1/25)
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