Science Friday - Surgeon General Takes On Parental Stress And Mental Health
Episode Date: September 23, 2024Parenting is a tough job. Some days are absolutely overwhelming, balancing a job, a home, and a child’s needs. One thing goes wrong and it’s like a house of cards falling apart. Not to mention, be...ing keenly aware of how the parents around you are doing. Are you keeping up?Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy is paying close attention. His most recent advisory is about parental stress and mental health. It’s been a busy summer for Dr. Murthy. He’s called for a warning label on social media because of its effects on mental health and declared gun violence a public health crisis. Ira talks with the Surgeon General in depth about these latest initiatives.Transcripts for each segment will be available after the show airs on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
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The latest focus of the Surgeon General's mental health agenda, parents.
Millions of parents are struggling with overwhelming stress,
and it's time for us to pull back the curtain on this silent struggle
and talk about what they're actually going through and how to get them the support that they need.
It's Monday, September 23rd, and you're listening to Science Friday.
I'm SciFRI producer Kathleen Davis.
If you're a parent, you know that it's a tough job.
You might be balancing your career, your home, and your child's needs.
One thing goes wrong, and it's like a house of cards falling apart.
Surgeon General, Dr. Vivek Murthy, is paying close attention.
His most recent advisory is about parental stress and mental health.
It's been a busy summer for Dr. Murphy.
He's called for a warning label on social media because of its effects on mental health
and declared gun violence a public health crisis.
He joins Ira to talk to talk.
more about all those initiatives. Dr. Murthy, welcome back to Science Friday. Well, thank you so much,
Ira. I'm so glad to be back. Good to have you back. Let's start with your recent advisory about the
stress and mental health challenges of parenting entitled Parents Under Pressure. Now, you wrote
something really interesting that when it comes to parenting, chasing unreasonable expectations
has left many families feeling exhausted, burned out, and perpetually behind.
Tell us more about what you mean by that.
Well, I think many parents, and I include myself and this as a parent of two young kids who are six and eight, many of us feel caught in this wheel.
That's going faster and faster where we're chasing expectations.
Sometimes some of these are old expectations, the generations of face, because raising kids has never been easy.
But there are also new expectations that are often accelerated and amplified, you know, online, particularly on social media.
And we chase those because we feel we have to do that to be successful as parents or to do right by our children.
And it is impossible to keep up.
Right now what's happening in our country, Ira, is millions of parents are struggling with overwhelming stress.
And it's time for us to pull back the curtain on this silent struggle and talk about what they're actually going through and how to get them the support that they need.
When I put together this advisory, it was actually not something I had planned three and a half years ago.
when I started in office, it was something that I decided to do because of conversations that I was
having with families across the country. And it began when I was working at the youth mental health
crisis. And I quickly came to see that our kids aren't the only ones who are in crisis,
that parents too are struggling. And if we don't address what's happening with parents,
if we don't address the fact that 48% of parents are saying that most days their stress is
completely overwhelming, then we actually can't solve the youth mental health.
health crisis because we now know that the mental health of parents does in fact affect the mental
health of their kids.
So how is this different, though, from raising kids when we were kids?
I mean, the old saying, it takes a village.
What is there about our current moment that makes it especially challenging?
Yeah, this is a really important question because some of the dialogue that I have seen since
our advisory came out has actually focused on this with some people saying, hey, hasn't
parenting always been hard?
Isn't this the same old?
And the truth is, yes, parenting has never been easy.
And there are some familiar challenges parents are dealing with today that they've been contending with for generations.
For example, worrying about the safety of your kids, worrying about whether, you know, your kids are going to be healthy and well,
worrying about how to manage the teenage years when your kids are striving and looking for more independence.
These have always been challenging.
But there are new things that the current generations of parents are dealing with.
The prior generations didn't have to.
for example, managing phones and social media, which is one of the top two sources of stress
at parents' site. The other issue is think about the youth mental health crisis that we're living
through with extraordinarily high levels of depression, anxiety, and suicide among kids.
This is an extraordinary source of stress in parents' lives as well, as is the broader loneliness
epidemic that is hitting kids particularly hard and worrying parents deeply.
But in addition to all of that, just think about the fact that gun violence has not
now become the number one cause of death among children and adolescents, age one through 19.
That is so hard to believe. That is unbelievable. Well, it is unbelievable and it's also something that
we should not just assume as the new normal and accept as just the way things are or have to be.
Because this is not normal. When I talk to parents around the country, they tell me they're worried
about what's going to happen each day when they drop their kids off at school. They're worried about
sending their kid to the mall or to a concert or sometimes even to church because these have all been
places where we have seen shootings take place in communities. So all of these are a relatively
new sources of stress. But keep in mind also that something different has happened with how
parents are spending their time. Compared to a few decades ago, parents, moms and dads are
both spending not only more time at work, but they're also actually spending more time taking
care of their kids, which may surprise people. And so the question is, where is that extra time
coming from? Well, it's coming from the time parents used to spend recuperating, resting,
socializing with friends, which are a vital source of sustenance for your well-being.
Do we need a cultural reset in terms of what is expected of parents? Or parents putting their own
expectations too high on themselves? And is that part of this stress you're talking about?
Well, I do think that this stress is coming in part from expectations that are high and
unrealistic. And a lot of those expectations are being driven by dialogue and culture online,
which involves us comparing ourselves constantly to other people. Now, here also is something that,
look, for millennia, people have been comparing themselves to others. But there's a massive difference
between the kind of comparison that occurred a generation or two ago, or maybe you compared
yourself to the parents in your neighborhood, or maybe in your church group, or maybe in your
workplace. But now parents, especially online and through social media, sometimes are comparing
themselves to thousands of other parents, including many parents they don't know. They're seeing trends
about everything from how to optimize your child's diet to how many extracurriculars your kids
should be and to how to ensure that they're learning six instruments, four sports,
and three languages in order to be successful as a human being. And all of that ratches up to pressure.
And you can say on one hand, you step back and say, well, you know, parents should feel pressured by
those, those are clearly unrealistic. Well, I'll tell you this, when you're a parent caught in the
middle of this vortex of comparison, it doesn't necessarily feel like it's clearly ridiculous.
It feels like, no, this is the reality. And especially when you look at the future, a future that is
increasingly hard to predict and understand, given the rapid pace of change, then parents, you know,
feel that they need to grasp on to more and more in terms of predictable, you know, patterns,
and schedules, et cetera, that will help their kids be successful. So I do think that the pressure
has become enormous on parents. There's one last thing that's missing, that for generations
has helped us deal with pressure, that we are increasingly missing today. And that's our villages,
our community, our social connection. That old notion that raising children takes a village,
that is actually quite accurate. And in fact, that's quite historically descriptive of how
we've typically raised children, but somehow we've come into this notion that the job of raising
a child is solely and exclusively and only the responsibility of their parents and that no one
else seems to have a role here. And we've also, this has collided with the loneliness
epidemic we're dealing with where many people have lost their actual villages. And this
has made even the older stresses that we had to deal with as parents much harder to deal with
because social connection at the end of the day is a natural and powerful buffer for stress.
You know what else is something unexpected?
I can tell you as a grandparent because of the stresses on our children.
We grandparents are feeling stresses in our senior ages that we never thought we would be feeling.
You know, it's not easy for senior citizens to keep up with taking care of the things that the stressful parents can't take care of in our old age.
So I just would throw that in as someone who is involved in that at an older age.
I read that I just want to underscore that.
That's a really important point you just brought up because it's not just mothers and fathers who are struggling.
It's caregivers more broadly.
And we are seeing increasingly that more grandparents have had to step into those caregiver parental roles.
And people are adopting children more.
Others are stepping in to play these caregiver roles.
and many of them are experiencing this kind of stress.
We do fundamentally need a cultural shift in our country with regard to parenting,
a shift that allows us and I think compels us to recognize and value parenting for the
invaluable work that it is, and then to ultimately invest in supporting parents and kids
so that not so that we can remove 100% all distresses of parenting, parenting will always be hard,
but so that we can make it a little bit more manageable so that parents can make it through
without sacrificing their mental health.
And we don't have guaranteed parental leave.
There's a lack of affordable child care.
And to really make a dent in this parental stress,
does it require policy solutions?
Is that what you're advocating for?
It is one of the things, yes, I'm advocating for.
I think many of these challenges are cultural,
but they're also structural and can be addressed with policies and programs.
Yes, we do need paid time off for parents
so that they can be with a child who's sick.
We need families to be able to get reliable mental health care that's affordable when they or when their children are struggling with their mental health.
But we've also got to address the lack of safety of social media.
We've got to address the threat of gun violence.
These are major stressors for parents that a parent can't solve alone.
I may be as dedicated to my kids as anyone could be as a dad, but that doesn't mean that I can single-handedly make social media safer for my kids or solve the problem of gun violence.
This is where policymakers need to step up.
And my hope is that we can make the kind of investments and prioritize making parenting better supported.
Because it's one thing, again, to say parenting is important.
It's another thing to say it's a priority.
And right now, I think we'd all agree it's important, but we have not, as a society, made it a priority that it needs to be.
Taking off on that issue of youth mental health, I want to point out that earlier this summer,
you called for a warning label on social media platforms.
What would that kind of warning accomplish?
Well, a warning label on social media would help inform parents, caregivers, and young people
themselves about what we now know, which is that social media is associated with significant
mental health harms for adolescents.
It would also help parents understand that social media has not been demonstrated to be
safe. Now, this may be a surprise to many parents out there who are used to medications for children,
car seats, and other products that kids use undergoing rigorous safety testing. Yet we have taken
a product that 95% plus of children are using, and we have failed to subject it to rigorous
safety tests. And instead, in the face of growing evidence of harm, we have failed to do
anything to intervene as a country. And this is, I think, an example of where, I think, from a
policy perspective, we have fundamentally dropped the ball on our most sacred responsibility, which is
to protect our children. And it's time for us to correct that. A warning label is just one part of that.
I want to be clear about that. There are a number of other changes we have to make to make social media
safer, which I called for last year in an advisory I issued on this topic of social media and
youth mental health, and they include putting in requirements that companies have to share all the
data they have on the impact of their platforms on mental health. It also involves putting in place
policies that protect our kids from harmful content, from features that we seek to manipulate
their developing brains into excessive use, and from other dangers that we are now seeing kids talk
about, you know, with regard to social media, but we would reach to this point fail to address.
Last week we had on Dr. Emily Weinstein, the co-director of the Center for Digital Thriving at Harvard University,
and she talked about the research on the effects of social media as being somewhat nuanced.
And she explained it this way.
Researchers are actually quite divided about whether social media and smartphones are a cause,
the cause, or a symptom of a problem that actually has different roots.
Dr. Murthy, what do you think?
Well, I think you have to look at the question of safety and harms broadly. There's nobody I have met in the research community, much less among parents or others, who contest the fact that social media has not been proven to be safe, that it's not been held to any safety standards the way we do other products and medications that kids use. That lack of safety, that lack of putting safety first should be a concern in and of itself. But then go beyond that. Yes, there are questions, more research questions we have to answer about.
about the kind of harms and nature of harms that are accruing to kids from social media.
But we do know from multiple studies that there is an association with harm.
We see that kids, adolescents who use social media for three hours or more per day,
that that's associated with the doubling of risk of anxiety and depression symptoms.
But let's also look at the data more broadly.
Let's look at what adolescents are telling us themselves.
In surveys, adolescents are saying nearly 50% of them that using social media makes them feel
worse about their body image. A third of adolescent girls are saying they feel addicted to social
media. A third of adolescents are saying that they are saying up to midnight or later on school
nights using their devices, and much of that is social media use. They are having a hard time
getting off of these platforms. And the truth is I see this, and I hear this, when I travel around
the country, having now talked to thousands and thousands of adolescents and young adults,
that they say, yes, I don't like how social media makes me feel. Now,
that can coexist with some benefits that they may perceive as well.
Some say social media does give them a chance to express themselves,
to reconnect with old friends, and sometimes to feel like they're learning about new information.
But when you ask them about how that balances out against the harms that they're experiencing,
that's when you get the more full picture, and many of them are deeply worried about the harms,
as are their parents.
And finally, let's just keep this in mind.
There are now hundreds, if not thousands, of examples of cases,
where parents and kids have experienced harms directly
and have spoken publicly about it
or reported it directly to platforms.
I myself, as a single individual,
have encountered countless parents
who have told me that their child engaged in self-harm
and in some cases ultimately took their own life
after being encouraged to do so
by videos that the algorithm fed them on social media.
That is one of the most painful experiences
I've had as Surgeon General is sitting across from a parent who has lost their child
and hearing this story about how it happened.
And many of these parents say this should never happen.
My child should, you know, at a moment where they were vulnerable, where they broke up with,
you know, in terms of a relationship or they had a major disappointment and they went to
social media looking for comfort, they should not be fed videos that are encouraging them
to take their own life and walking them through the nuts and bolts of how they would do that.
And if that seems like an obvious should never happen, it is, yet it is continuing to happen to so many children.
So if you look at any of these instances and you say that we should just keep doing more research and asking more questions and not take any action now,
well, then I think that you have failed to understand what's fundamentally happening to our children.
And if this happened with a medication, can you imagine if I told you that there was a new medication on the market and 10 children, let's say, had lost their lives,
after taking this medication. We wouldn't say, well, you know what, let's just keep
gathering information and not change anything about what we're doing. Let's just, there's nothing
to see here. We would say that's preposterous. We should investigate. We should understand because
when the lives of our kids are at stake, nothing else is more important. And my question is,
why have we failed to do this on this particular issue when we behave so differently with other
products that our children use? That's why I issued this advisory last year. It's why I called for
warning labels as part of a broader suite of solutions. And this is a real test for us as a society.
Do we say our kids are important to us, or are we willing to back that up with action? And it's a
question that policymakers in particular need to grapple with. We have to take a break. And when we come
back, I'll continue my conversation with Surgeon General Vivek Murthy about his mission to spotlight
the mental health issues facing the nation. When we first had you on the show the first time in
2021. We were talking about COVID. Everybody was talking about COVID. And usually the nation's
surgeon general talks about opiates or smoking or general advice like that. But you told me back then
that you would be turning toward mental illness, talking about mental illness. When did you see that?
When did you make that turn and decide this is where you're going to plant your flag?
That's interesting, Ira. I actually started to see the broader mental health challenges during
my first term as Surgeon General.
because that was between 2014 to 2017,
because I was traveling around the country
and doing as much listening as I could,
and I started to hear the stress, the strain,
the stories of depression and anxiety
that adults and kids were contending with.
When I finished that term,
I hadn't been able to really build, you know,
the kind of mental health initiatives I would have liked to,
but this was on my mind when I came back
because as a private citizen,
observing what happened during that first year of COVID,
I was not only just struck and deeply disturbed by the loss of life,
but I was also very concerned about the ripples in terms of the mental health impact
that the pandemic was going to have.
And I continue to see just more and more evidence that the mental health challenges I saw
during my first term had actually gotten a lot worse during this second term.
Because the truth is, mental health is our fuel.
It's what allows us to show up at work for our families and our neighborhood in schools.
and if we aren't taking care of our mental health,
and we're not investing and strengthening that,
then I worry that we're ignoring a vital part of people's overall well-being,
and I think we're seeing the consequences of that now.
I want to pivot slightly to talk about another advisory you issued earlier this summer
when you declared gun violence as a public health crisis
and connected the issue to mental health.
How is the threat of gun violence contributing to a decline in mental health?
Well, gun violence has had far-reaching consequences for our country. I worry that it has led to severe mental health consequences that are often invisible and behind the shadow, so we don't fully appreciate it. There's no doubt that the greatest consequence we pay for gun violence are in lives lost, and we sadly lose nearly 50,000 lives a year to gun violence. But if you think about the profound ripple effects of gun violence, you think about the profound ripple effects of gun violence, you think about,
about the people who are shot but who survive and live with the physical and mental trauma of that.
Think about the family members and others who survive, the community members who witness these
incidents, the children who are scared to go to school because they're worried about a shooting
in their school as more than 50% of our kids are. And you start to realize that the fear of
gun violence has really infiltrated the psyche of America in ways that have profoundly changed
how we live our lives and how we worry. You know, six out of ten,
adults are worried about losing a loved one. And you can understand that when you recognize
that more than half of Americans, that's 54% to be exact, have had some experience either
themselves or through a loved one with gun violence. And that could mean losing a loved one.
It could be being attacked themselves. It could be having to use a weapon and self-defense
when their safety was at risk. So this is a pervasive issue. What we have to do is to stop looking at it
as a political issue and start seeing it as a public health issue and take the kind of public
health approach we've taken with tobacco and other challenges which have allowed us to save lives
and make progress. That's such a politically charged issue? Do you think there's any headway that
can be made on that? I do. And I wouldn't do this if I didn't think that it was both necessary,
but also possible. For example, what could happen? So here are a few things that could happen. In fact,
these are a number of the strategies that I have laid out in my advisory. Number one, we could see
at a community level a greater investment in community violence intervention programs, which we know
are powerful and effective in reducing violence. We could see healthcare systems doing more around
safe storage education, which is really vital because we lose so many children in particular,
but adults across the board due to weapons that are unlocked and loaded left at home and then
ultimately used to take a life.
And there are other things we can do at a policy level as well, solutions, which it turns out the majority of Americans actually support things like making sure that we have a strong background check system, making sure we have what are called red flag laws in place, which would transfer weapons out of the hands of people who are in imminent danger of harming themselves or others.
I talk also about the importance of looking at a ban on assault weapons, and because assault weapons are associated with,
with greater injury and greater death in mass shootings compared to such events that take place
with other types of weapons.
And states, in some cases, are trying to move these forward on their own.
But this is a place where we need a national solution to what has become a national problem.
And I do believe that even some of the recent movement that we've seen, a few years ago,
we saw Congress finally, after 30 years of starving gun violence, you know, in terms of research funding,
we saw finally a modest sum allocated to addressing gun violence research.
It was a small drop in the ocean of what's needed, but that was progress.
Just two years ago, we saw Congress for the first time in three decades past the first
legislation to actually address gun violence in the form of the Bipartisan and Saver Communities Act.
These are all promising steps, but they're not enough.
So you don't feel really frustrated then.
We've been talking about these issues for years, that you don't feel that these are
intractable. You think, or are you frustrated? Of course I'm frustrated. I'm frustrated and I,
and I'm upset not just as a surgeon general, but as a parent that we haven't done more to protect our
kids. You know, when our kids are under threat, people step up to respond. And we do that in an
individual level. The other day, I was at my school picking up my kids and a bunch of kids were
playing on the playground there. And one of the kids on the monkey bars actually fell down. And it looked
like he hurt himself, and his parents weren't around at that moment. There were somewhere else
in the school grounds, but all the other parents rushed up to make sure he was okay. That is what
we do. That is our instinct, you know, as human beings. It's to reach out when we see our kids in
particular suffering, even if they aren't our own. Yet on this issue, where gun violence has become
the leading cause of death among children and adolescents, we have not made this the priority that
it needs to be. We've allowed the politicization of this issue to paralyze us, and the cost can be
measured in lives lost and lives altered. And that is what we have to change. Last question. Do you
expect to be staying on through the next administration? And if you're not, what's next for you?
I don't know what's next for me. I really don't know what comes next. But whatever it is,
I hope it will involve contributing to these causes like loneliness, like mental health, and the
over our well-being of our kids that remain just so important to me, not just as
Surgeon General, but most importantly as a father. Dr. Murthy, we thank you for your service,
whether you're back as Surgeon General or not. We thank you for the time you've always taken
over the years to be with us. Thank you very much for taking that time. I always enjoy our
conversations, Ira. Thank you for this thoughtful conversation. You're welcome. Dr. Vivek Murthy,
you as Surgeon General, joining us from Washington, D.C. That's just about all the time that we have for
today, lots of folks help make the show happen, including
Dee Petersmith, Felice Amaz, Emma Gomez, Jackie Hirschfeld, and many more.
Tomorrow, tasting environmental crises.
We're talking about pollution cookies.
Yep, you heard that right.
You won't want to miss it.
I'm SciFRI producer Kathleen Davis.
Thanks for listening.
