Teen mental health emergency visits decline in U.S. as pandemic eases,
CDC says
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[May 12, 2023]
(Reuters) - U.S. adolescents made fewer weekly emergency
department (ED) visits for mental health conditions in Fall 2022
compared to a year earlier, researchers at the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) reported on Thursday.
By late 2022, pandemic restrictions had been loosened or lifted and
adolescents had generally returned to schools, with better social
engagement and reduced isolation linked with improved mental and
behavioral health, the researchers noted.
However, while mental health emergency visits for adolescents overall
during that year fell by 11%, poor mental and behavioral health in this
age group remains a substantial public health issue, they said.
Between Fall 2021 and Fall 2022, weekly ED visits for opioid-involved
overdoses increased by 41% in adolescent males and by 10% in females,
according to data published in the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report.
And compared to three years earlier, the number of ED visits by females
in Fall 2022 was unchanged for mental health conditions overall, 14%
higher for suicide-related behaviors, and 16% higher for drug overdoses,
the researchers found.
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A general view of the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) headquarters in Atlanta,
Georgia September 30, 2014. REUTERS/Tami Chappell
Among adolescent males, numbers of
weekly visits in Fall 2022 for mental health conditions overall were
lower than in Fall 2019 but were unchanged for suicide-related
behaviors and drug overdoses.
Any adolescent overdose is concerning, particularly with
adolescents' increased access to highly potent and lethal
counterfeit pills containing illicitly manufactured fentanyl via
social media platforms, the CDC said.
A recent report by the CDC also showed that fentanyl-related deaths
in the United States more than tripled over five years.
The CDC said early identification of at-risk individuals and
trauma-informed interventions, coupled with evidence-based,
comprehensive prevention efforts, are needed to support adolescents'
mental and behavioral health.
(Reporting by Sriparna Roy in Bengaluru; Editing by Nancy Lapid and
Aurora Ellis)
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