Consider This from NPR - The Kids Are Not Alright
Episode Date: May 5, 2023A new advisory out this week from the US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy has deemed loneliness a public health challenge that needs immediate attention. And some of those most severely affected are ...young people.But it's not just loneliness. Across the country, kids are struggling with challenges to their mental health - from social isolation to poor grades at school. NPR's Sarah McCammon speaks to Lisa Damour, a psychologist, and author of the book "The Emotional Lives of Teenagers: Raising Connected, Capable, and Compassionate Adolescents", about what's going on with kids and how they can be helped.In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment to help you make sense of what's going on in your community.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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If you're a parent or a caregiver or someone with kids in your life,
you've probably been hearing some concerning news about the state of young people today.
And a warning for our listeners, this conversation includes a discussion of serious mental health issues. The U.S. Surgeon General has called it an urgent public health crisis, a devastating decline in the mental health of kids across the country.
Kids and adolescents are struggling with depression and anxiety.
According to the CDC, the rates of suicide, self-harm,
anxiety, and depression are up among adolescents.
With their schoolwork.
Report cards are in and they show student test scores drop to alarmingly low levels.
With social connections.
Tonight's Health Watch.
When it comes to socializing, many children are having a hard time.
And with loneliness.
A new advisory out this week from the U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. Vivek Murthy,
has deemed loneliness a public health challenge that needs immediate attention.
And it may surprise some to learn that loneliness is a big problem with young people.
He spoke with NPR.
It turns out that one in two adults
report measurable levels of loneliness,
and the group that's actually most lonely
in our population are actually young people,
despite how connected they may be by technology.
And I'm worried about this from a public health perspective
because it turns out that being socially disconnected
has real consequences for our health.
It increases our risk of depression, anxiety, and suicide,
but it also increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, of dementia, stroke, and premature death.
Study after study has raised alarms about the many ways kids have been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic,
from loneliness to depression and anxiety to faltering
grades. And those who track the well-being of young people say problems were emerging
long before the pandemic. Consider this. Right now, it's an especially difficult time to be a kid.
After the break, we'll hear from a psychologist about what's going on with our kids
and how they can be helped.
From NPR, I'm Sarah McCammon. It's Friday, May 5th.
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T's and C's apply.
It's Consider This from NPR.
We've known for a while now that the kids are not all right.
The information is troubling, and lately
there's been a lot of information. Lisa DeMoore is a psychologist and the author of the book,
The Emotional Lives of Teenagers, Raising Connected, Capable, and Compassionate Adolescents.
We asked her to help us understand the big picture, and she started on a positive note.
What I can tell you is that a lot of kids are functioning really well. They look like teenagers before the pandemic. They are thriving. They are living their lives in healthy and forward-looking ways. We are also seeing teenagers who are still suffering as a result of the pandemic or suffering as a result of things subsequent to the pandemic or they were struggling before the pandemic and the pandemic made it worse. The other thing we are seeing now is a much higher rate of teenagers who don't go to school
on a regular basis. Across the board, we are hearing from schools that, you know, they call
it a lot of different things, truancy or school absenteeism or school avoidance, that those rates
are higher than anyone remembers historically. And do researchers, do you think that that is a pandemic effect or is there something more going on?
I think our sense is that's a result of the pandemic, that one of the things we know to be true is that avoidance feeds anxiety.
And kids are out of school for a long time.
And so a lot of them became anxious about returning to school.
And when kids don't go routinely, they fall out of the loop socially, they fall out of the loop academically, and it makes it that much harder
to go back to school. And you said initially some kids are doing okay. Some seem almost like the
pandemic never happened. Others are struggling more. I mean, what makes the difference? Who's
the most affected by all this? Well, when we look at the data, we do know, unsurprisingly but very upsettingly, that teenagers who were suffering or marginalized prior to the pandemic definitely bore the brunt of the negative emotional impact of the pandemic.
So minoritized groups, young people who were already having emotional difficulties, were not in any way helped by the pandemic.
And in fact, we seem to think quite a bit more harmed by the pandemic.
And I think it's important that we get used to the idea that this is going to be a complex story,
that some kids continue to suffer quite a bit and other kids are thriving.
And in terms of really trying to understand what's going on, you know,
one thing that stuck out to me is we're seeing these declines across several measures of well-being. We're talking about mental health,
social connections, also school performance. Are there connections here between these different
data points? I mean, is academic decline related to mental health and vice versa?
We can definitely see those two traveling together. You know, that part of what helps
kids to feel good is feeling like they're succeeding. And so then if they're not succeeding, they're going to feel worse.
So it's not altogether surprising that we're going to see all of these things impacted at once.
It's also the fact that there can be other factors that impact those same measures. So,
for example, sleep. Teenagers don't sleep nearly as much as they need to. Teenagers generally require about nine hours
of sleep a night. Very few are getting that. So we have to be really open-minded when we're looking
for causal explanations and open to the idea that there are things that we can do that really do
help teenagers. And certainly, whatever else is going on, protecting their sleep and making sure
they're getting enough will almost always help, and it certainly never hurts.
When you talk about teens not getting enough sleep, you know, I'm a mom. I'm thinking about
my kids on their phones, that constant battle for so many parents. Is that the reason, or is
something else happening there?
I think for a lot of kids, that's a reason. And I think that's one of the more negotiable things we can use here to impact how much sleep kids are getting is making sure that technology is not interfering with their sleep. But there are some kids who aren't sleeping enough because they have incredibly heavy academic demands that take up a lot of time. And there are some kids who aren't sleeping enough because they're working two jobs to try to support their family while also trying to go to school.
So sleep is an interesting indicator because there's so many different things that can inform it.
But it's also, I always think, a very good place to start, you know, to look at the question of what is interfering with a young person's sleep and then to look at what can be done to change that.
You talk to a lot of children for your work.
What kinds of things are they saying about what they're feeling right now? their young person who's feeling very anxious. So we know that these things weigh heavily on teenagers' minds. Climate change weighs heavily on their minds. So there's big social factors.
And yet also, and this is why teenagers are so wonderful, they're worried about how they're
going to make friends in college and, you know, if they're going to be able to find a date to
the dance. You know, the same things that have always made adolescence complex, those are there too, alongside bigger, very powerful, and often negative factors that surround our teenagers.
You know, we heard from Dr. Vivek Murthy, and a lot of people might be surprised when he talks about how even though teens seem very connected online, there is a big problem with teen loneliness.
A lot of those concerns you just mentioned about making friends. Social media is often kind of a boogeyman when it comes to what's
harming kids these days. But where do you fall on that? What's behind the loneliness that kids
are feeling? Well, social media may be a factor. And one of the things that we are getting a clearer
picture on is that social media tends to amplify whatever that young person is
experiencing in real life. So for teenagers who have good, rich friendships, those often carry
over to how they are interacting on social media and they're enhancing those relationships.
For teenagers who feel isolated, their interactions on social media can make them feel worse. They can
scroll and scroll and feel left out, or they
might engage in, you know, conflict online. But, you know, Dr. Murthy did such, you know, an
incredible service to call our attention to loneliness and social isolation. And in the
excellent new advisory that came out, one of the things that's pointed out is that the starkest decline of in-person activity was actually for
people ages 15 to 24. He reports a 70% drop over two decades in terms of in-person time spent by,
you know, teenagers and young adults. And what about these other trends,
the academic declines we're seeing? How do we. What are some solutions for that?
Well, I think we shouldn't be shocked that having school be massively disrupted by a global pandemic is going to have an impact on academic functioning. So I think it's to be expected. I think what's key
is to focus on talking about it in terms of delay as opposed to loss. And I think sometimes the loss narrative can be
pretty grim, hard for kids to hear and leave adults feeling helpless. Whereas if we talk
about it in terms of delay and trying to shore up delays, I think that creates an opening for
thinking about how we get kids back on track. Now, we think and talk so much about the impact
of the pandemic for obvious reasons,
but I wonder, have these declines, are these really new? What's been going on with kids for
the past five or 10 years, if you look back further? Yeah, they're not new, actually. The
CDC has been tracking adolescent mental health for decades, and starting in about 2010, we were
seeing rising rates of depression and anxiety.
Now, unsurprisingly, that was accelerated by the pandemic.
But it's not the case that these are all new findings or all new concerns.
We've been worrying about teenagers for a while now. You know, we're seeing this data about young people experiencing spikes in anxiety and depression.
And I can't help but wonder, are those problems getting worse,
or are we just better at talking about them, or is it some combination?
We do try in the methodologies to account for, you know, how comfortable any given group of
young people is with reporting how they're feeling. And because people do ask that question,
is it just that kids talk about depression and anxiety more, and so we're hearing about it more? And the methodologies we
have really do try to control for that, which is to say, no, we really think it's worse. It's not
just that kids are talking about it more. We do think that we're seeing higher rates of depression
and anxiety. And we have things we can point to. Pre-pandemic. In 2018, the American Psychological Association
put out a report on stress in America. And what they found was that Generation Z,
so 15 to 21-year-olds roughly that they were looking at, reported that they far more than
older people worry about things like climate change and gun violence and political polarization.
So young people do have things
that weigh on them that are new and also that weigh on them more, it seems, than they do on
adults. And of course, you mentioned the long-term trends toward loneliness and isolation, which have
gotten worse, it sounds like. What is at stake here for the long term? Well, what's at stake is that people are suffering.
And human suffering under any condition is something that we should work to prevent and ease.
But also what's at stake is that we want young people to thrive.
And we want them to thrive both for themselves and also because they are the ones who are moving up into the workplace.
They are moving up into adult roles in society.
And so it really matters that we take seriously adolescent mental health,
their need for connection, their need for meaning,
their need to feel purposeful,
because that both will help them to thrive in the short term,
and it also helps to create the kind of adults that we want in our society.
I know we've talked a lot about the concerns here.
And I know as parents, we all want to address the concerns head on, help our kids.
But I wonder, are there things when you talk to kids today, things that you look out sort of over the landscape, are there things that give you hope?
Well, yeah.
I mean, I think teenagers are fascinating because they are just so vibrant and they're
so growth oriented and i think that's as true of teenagers today as it ever was another thing that
gives me hope though just besides the nature of adolescents themselves is that we have studied
adolescent mental health for decades and what we know is that the single most powerful
force for adolescent mental health is strong relationships with caring adults. And I think
we need to really lean into that, that we need to make sure that every teenager is connected to an
adult who has their back and that that teenager feels, really gets, and cares for them. And so
this is something we can all do. You don't have to be
the parent. You can be the boss or the mentor or the neighbor or the uncle who is making sure that
they have created a working and powerful connection with a teenager in your life. And I think that we
can find our way through. Lisa DeMoore is a clinical psychologist and the author of The
Emotional Lives of Teenagers, Raising Connected, Capable, and Compassionate Adolescents.
Thank you so much for your time.
You're welcome.
If you or someone you know may be considering suicide or is in crisis, please call or text 988 to reach the Suicide in Crisis Lifeline.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Sarah McCammon.
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