Viewpoints: Social Security’s ‘Disabled Adult Child’ Cutoff At 22 Doesn’t Make Sense; How AI Can Help Psychologists
Opinion writers weigh in on these topics and others.
The cutoff at age 22 reflects an outdated assumption about how adulthood unfolds. (A. P. D. G. Everett, 2/10)
Most of a clinician鈥檚 difficult thinking happens alone. After a session that raises questions, the therapist mentally replays the encounter, notes personal reactions, and consults the literature to see whether others have described similar situations. (Harvey Lieberman, 2/11)
As I鈥檓 a pediatric ophthalmologist, parents whose children have myopia all ask me the same question: 鈥淐an you stop this from getting worse?鈥 And I must explain that while I can prescribe off-label treatments, the Food and Drug Administration has kept a proven pharmaceutical option out of reach 鈥 despite telling the manufacturer exactly what evidence it needed and then rejecting that very evidence when it was delivered. (David G. Hunter, 2/10)
The HPV vaccine is the only medical intervention that prevents six distinct cancer types across both sexes. Its population-level impact is still building鈥攙accinated cohorts have not yet aged into peak cancer incidence, and the 86% to 88% reductions in cervical cancer documented across multiple countries represent only the beginning. If this working group engages honestly with the accumulated evidence, it will arrive at the same conclusion every prior review has reached. The concern is not that the evidence will be examined. The concern is that the process has been engineered to reach a different conclusion. (Jake Scott, MD, 2/10)
If my research is successful, we will better understand how some cancers spread throughout the body 鈥 and, hopefully, be able to stop them. If my research is successful, we will better understand how some people get heart disease 鈥 and, hopefully, be able to prevent it. (Moriah Beck, 2/10)