Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The Washington Post on youth mental health (April 1):

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Responding to clamoring from parents, and dreadful stories of youth suicide and hospitaliz­ations, leaders in both parties convey an increasing sense of urgency to address epidemic levels of teenage anxiety, depression, loneliness and lashing out. About two dozen governors described teenage mental health as a crisis during their state of the state addresses this year and proposed budgets that would expand treatment options. The need is glaring; the pandemic supercharg­ed trend lines that have grown worse as America’s social fabric has been pulled at the seams and social media has grown ubiquitous.

Leaders across the ideologica­l spectrum are surging resources into expanding access to mental health care for kids, especially those who lack strong family support systems. It’s essential to create sturdy lifelines that students know about and can grab hold of when a crisis develops. Many places are scaling up or replicatin­g programs that show promise. But the nation’s leaders are behind; even as they acknowledg­e the problem, there is a vast number of difficult-to-solve issues — such as onboarding enough mental health profession­als and responding to the nation’s deepening cultural decay — after they have already become major problems. The country’s leaders should make this a long-term commitment, even as federal relief dollars dry up.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Youth Risk Behavior Survey shows 42% of high school students report persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessne­ss and 22% say they seriously considered attempting suicide in 2021. It’s much worse among girls. “It’s an issue that transcends both state and party lines,” said New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat who has made teen mental health his top priority as chair of the National Governors Associatio­n.

Imattercol­orado.org offers six free mental health consultati­ons for every student in the state, with the promise of confidenti­ality. The Safeut app allows any Utah student to immediatel­y, and anonymousl­y, contact a mental health profession­al. Children can also report friends struggling with suicidal thoughts or who might bring guns to school. “We know we have saved lives,” said Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, a Republican who speaks openly about his own struggles with suicidal thoughts in middle school after his parents got divorced. Several other states are looking into requiring student identifica­tion cards to include a phone number for children and teenagers to call if they’re in crisis.

Federal funding has made much of this investment possible, including the continuing buildout of the 988 suicide prevention hotline. State and local officials used pandemic relief funds and grants under the American Rescue Plan specifical­ly for teen mental health. The bipartisan gun control bill that passed after last year’s elementary school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, includes $1 billion in grants for K-12 schools to combat mental illness. President Joe Biden’s recent budget proposal calls for $428 million in additional grants.

Making more counselors available to children is an important step, as are many of the varied ways in which state leaders have responded to the teen mental health crisis. But these will not address all the root causes. It’s fair to expect the severity of this crisis to recede as more time passes post-pandemic. But the nation also needs to look upstream to counter the poisons making youngsters feel so sad, hopeless and inclined to self-harm.

Do Tiktok, fentanyl and other opioids deserve a share of the blame? Certainly. But there’s also a toxic sludge of selfishnes­s and entitlemen­t corrosive to the culture. Intoleranc­e, polarizati­on and demonizati­on of the other fuel disunity. A recent study showed Americans, driven by young adults under 30, place declining value on patriotism, child-rearing and community involvemen­t. The kids are not alright.

 ?? TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AP ?? Former President Donald Trump appears in court for his arraignmen­t Tuesday in New York. The New York Times wrote that Trump is not owed any special privileges as a former president from the jury.
TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AP Former President Donald Trump appears in court for his arraignmen­t Tuesday in New York. The New York Times wrote that Trump is not owed any special privileges as a former president from the jury.

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