The Dose - A New Approach To Youth Mental Health Feat Dr Kevin Simon
Episode Date: January 11, 2026AI therapy for children with anxiety, mental health training for staff at nonprofits that work with young people, and an "art pharmacy" that prescribes free museum tickets to kids — these are just s...ome of the things Dr. Kevin Simon and his team are doing to help meet the mental health care needs of Boston's children. Simon, the city's first chief behavioral health officer, talks to host Dr. Joel Bervell on the new episode of The Dose, which centers on America's youth mental health crisis and the innovative things states and cities are doing for struggling children.
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The DOS is a production of the Commonwealth Fund, a foundation dedicated to health care for everyone.
My guest on this episode of The Dose is Dr. Kevin Simon, a triple board certified psychiatrist
in child and adolescent psychiatry, adult psychiatry, and addiction medicine.
Dr. Simon is also a health policy expert, and he directs the Justice Clinic at Boston Children's Hospital,
where he provides specialized care to youth and young adults with dual diagnoses of mental health
and substance use disorders.
He's also an assistant professor of psychiatry
at Harvard Medical School.
I'm so happy Dr. Simon has made time to join me for this update.
Last time he was on the dose was in March of 2022,
painting a searing portrait of the impacts of the pandemic
and the crisis in mental health care for young adolescents of color.
A few months later, Boston mayor Michelle Wu
appointed Dr. Simon as the city's first ever chief behavioral health officer,
saying that for a city known around the world for its standard of health care,
quote, we simply do not have enough mental health workers to meet our city's needs,
so we will be training more and more diverse community-based mental health workers.
Dr. Simon, thank you so much for coming back on the dose to show your insights,
as I know you're very busy on that mission in Boston right now.
Yeah, no, thank you for having me.
Now that you have the role of Boston's first chief behavioral health officer,
you have a budget, a strategy.
I want to talk about how that's all evolving.
It's your third year in this role.
I'm curious what you think is possibly scalable for other cities.
Yeah, so year one, which was 2022, we were really thinking about, okay,
what does it actually look like from a public health perspective to be a city where mental
health is in all policy and mental health is at the table?
and really in terms of thinking upstream,
because the resources are limited, right?
And we can't only place resources in direct care service
because they'll just run out too quickly.
So, okay, what are the avenues in which we can create a plan
with the feedback of constituents and citizens and community groups?
And so this is where we thought to ourselves,
okay, let's focus on youth mental health because many people, the youth themselves, teachers, parents,
loved ones, many people were identifying youth mental health being an issue. Now, what do we do with it?
Well, there's help that young people need in schools because they spend a lot of time in school.
Then there's a thought about, oh, could we upskill individuals that just engage with young people, right?
because there's a lot of nonprofit community agencies in Boston,
but I'm sure many other cities,
that do programming specifically for young people
who undoubtedly bring to them concerns that are in the mental health realm,
yet you're thinking to yourself, oh, I'm not a therapist,
not exactly sure what to do with that.
We also heard from schools.
A young person brings something up,
and it's Thursday, but they bring up the thing from Monday
And they're like, let's call 911.
And this happens.
And the young person gets to our emergency room, gets an evaluation, and we're like, okay, but we're going to discharge you.
This isn't an acute crisis.
Well, many people are frustrated by that.
The parent, the school, they're like, why didn't you do anything?
And so then become, okay, let's really understand communication what our language is, right?
So a crisis for me is one thing.
A crisis in a classroom is another thing.
A crisis from an ER or EMT perspective is another thing.
So we've taken several steps to say, wait a minute, let's actually look at the full landscape.
Let's bring as many partners together across our city.
So Boston Police Department, Boston Public Health, Boston Public Schools, many departments that engage young people.
But then also we do recognize that training.
is important. And so we've had an idea about training several hundred residents of Boston
who will undoubtedly end up coming back to be providers, clinicians, back into Boston Public
School. So that way people see, our students see, parents see, people who look like themselves
represented in the clinicians that are going to be engaged. The framing was what we were doing
really year one. Year two, we've had the allocation of the resources to many communities,
agencies and so we're implementing it and now two into three we're really trying to see okay
what's our next move in terms of the investments that we're making from a year and a half ago
we fully recognize that some are going to yield fruit soon but there are going to be some that
it takes time and so in terms of your question which was what's scalable right so I think what's
scalable is the idea of investing in young people. And so, for instance, we've had youth advisory
boards. I think other cities can have youth advisory boards. And then in terms of the partnerships,
so we've partnered with UMass Boston to support the training of citizens who want to go back
to school or who are pursuing school to work in mental health. Many cities obviously have
local universities. So I think that there are multiple things that we're doing locally that could
be done in other municipalities and national. I love that. This all takes resources. And it's important,
as you mentioned, to see where those resources are going, where they've come from, so that we can make
sure that they stay around if it's actually doing good work in the community. You've written a lot,
especially in JMA Open recently, about the mental health impacts on racism, on black teens. I'm curious,
what are the specific supports that you see that black adolescents need?
And then are places like schools, LinkedIn supports that you see working?
Yeah, so the JAMA open article was a reflection on a study that looked at
are a thing that we can do or that have been done to mitigate racism.
And so there is evidence, and I don't think that this would be surprising to people,
that when youth, but particularly in this context, black youth, are,
supported, when they're uplifted, when they're surrounded by individuals, whether they do or
don't look like them, so there doesn't necessarily have to be racial concordance. But when they
are surrounded by individuals that are supportive of them, they actually can and have demonstrated
greater resilience in the experiences that they have, being who they are and what they look like.
And so in terms of what does that look like, that looks like the teacher or the coach or the school counselor or the parent really recognizing that how we communicate, literally, how we say you are good, you can do this, combating the negative kind of automatic thoughts that we sometimes hear, oh, I'm not good at math.
literally there's a document evidence that when we are able to really counter the narrative
that is sometimes kind of flooding some kids' minds in terms of the negative, we actually can be
pretty protective of black youth. And yes, those are things that actually can be done by a general
lay person. You don't need a master degree. You don't need a medical degree to be able to be
supportive of somebody. Absolutely. And in the way they're talking about,
about it reminds me a lot of the idea of fixed versus growth mindset, but also having those
people around you that are allowing you to see those mindsets and how it can shift your belief in
yourself and your belief in the community and the resources that you have around you, which I think is so,
so key. Right. How are apps and tech being used to close this gap right now as well?
Yeah, so this is a good question. And yes, there is some evidence, depending on demographics,
for the general population. There has been evidence in terms of depression and anxiety.
The use, for instance, of AI chat box or therapy chat boxes, the adult population,
demonstrating efficacy and helping to lower some of the anxiety and depressive symptoms.
So that does exist.
There are a bevy of apps, not all of them well-vetted, but they do and can create communities
for individuals to feel connected.
I have had patients described to me participating in a group.
They don't know the people, but they do feel.
a connection because those who have selected to be a part of the group share a
commonality and that commonality might be anxiety it might be LGBTQIA related
identity it could be an eating disorder identity and so we fully recognize that
in terms of a holistic approach we often are asking them to engage in some
other social activity it just happens to be that now that social activity can
potentially be on an app.
And so there are some pros to it,
but there obviously are potential risks
that also exist in those kind of platforms.
Absolutely.
And I have to go back to one that you mentioned,
the AI tool piece of it.
I'm always very curious about that
because as they become more integrated into healthcare,
I'm curious what role you see them playing in mental health,
both in kind of expanding access,
but then also the idea of privacy, accuracy, or even equity.
Yeah, so there have been
anecdotes, long-form journalism that has been done about some, not just the AI chat boxes, but
online mental health platforms. And one of the challenges, well, let me talk about the opportunity.
The opportunity does exist to widen access. Because truthfully, at least for a child
psychiatry, there are about 8,000 of us, I think, nationally. That's a very small number for
as many millions of kids exist, right? So, and then if you start talking about,
some of your rural areas, it's going to be very difficult to identify a therapist.
And so it is potentially possible that an AI tool improves access.
So that's great.
The challenge is, and we tend to see this, is maybe if it's for mild, it's fair.
Maybe if it's for a moderate condition, potentially it's fair.
The challenge is the young folks that I see and the young folks I know that many of my colleagues see are past mild and moderate.
And so when you now get to a severe case of depression and you're potentially having suicide ideation with intent or your anxiety is so great that you can't go to school.
And I've had situations eight-year-old screaming at their parents.
No, I'm not going.
I will not go.
I'm not sure how useful an AI tool will be there.
And I'm particularly cautious about the idea of an AI tool being utilized
and the AI tool not having the humanness to understand really what's happening.
Because if someone's, for instance, in acute distress, you're now asking that person
who's in acute distress to then somehow be calm enough to engage the tool,
that's very difficult to do.
right? And we see this, for instance, to bring it inside the hospital.
Well, someone could be so distressed that they have difficulty engaging a nurse who's trying to be appropriate and calm and engaging.
And unfortunately, we've also seen instances where the AI tool did not respond appropriately,
and young people have acted on the response of the AI tool.
So there's definitely promise, but there definitely also is.
significant risk, and so we still have to be very cautious.
Absolutely. I appreciate that nuance that you pointed out there.
I want to transition a little and talk about substance use, especially among young people.
I'm curious maybe vaping is a good place to start, especially because it gives such a high
concentration of concentrated formulation. In my own clinic, I see a lot of patients that are
using vaping right now, but then not understanding the dangers of it.
I would love to get your thoughts on kind of substance use trends in what's happening around that.
Yeah, so in reference to substance use, particularly among young people, we do see, so nationally, the data actually would suggest that there is a dropping of overall substance use, which is great.
The challenge is the ongoing substance use that is present is still in the millions, so that's a problem.
And then also in terms of youth-related substance mortality, that is also going up, right?
So there's a paradox here.
That implies the supply of where young people are getting their substances because you're clearly not going potentially to the dispensary or to a place that an adult could go.
That supply is adulterated with other things, right?
And so you don't know where you're getting this substance from, you place yourself at risk for an unintended consequence.
So that is something that I would say first.
In terms of particularly vaping, yes, it is common and we see it occurring younger and younger.
And the challenges that exist are, you know, I'm holding a pen.
They have vapes that are smaller than this pen that no parent could probably detect a teacher of how.
can't detect it. They unfortunately have smart vapes that look like little
handheld devices that if you just looked at it from afar you'd like, oh, that must
be like a new toy. It's not a new toy. It's actually like a Bluetooth device that can
play the phone call. You can have a phone call on it and you can put up to you
know inhale and get a babe. So there definitely unfortunately is a what seems to be
although no company would acknowledge this it seems to be at the
There's a target towards the younger youth population in terms of the colors that are utilized, the flavors that are advertised.
I have patients who are in the 11-year-old, 12-year-old age range who have began to engage in nicotine and or marijuana cannabis vaping.
And I'm thinking about when I'm with a patient, they'll ask the question, but isn't this safer than smoking?
and it's like, well, it's a very good question.
Yes, technically, it is.
However, well, you never were smoking.
So, you know, for a certain population, yes,
if we transition the person from a traditional cigarette
to a vape, that is a form of harm reduction.
But if you're 12 and you never were smoking,
it's like, well, the fact that you're doing it is not safe
and the population that this is intended for to help them off of a cigarette,
you're not that population.
And yet because they've already started to engage,
they've already, unfortunately, gotten that dopamine fix.
Yeah, I think that's so important.
It's relative to what, right?
If you're smoking, it's healthier, but if there's nothing healthier,
then not starting to vape in the first place.
Yes.
And when we talk about youth mental health and substance use,
should we also be talking about undiagnosed or untreated or untreated or under-treated ADHD?
even autism spectrum issues.
Is there a connection at all and a link to engagement?
Yeah, so this is a beautiful question.
It is not uncommon that there are untreated mental health conditions
that we learn about when we're doing a full psychiatric
or substance use evaluation where we're now asking about the history
and, hey, when did you start?
And I've had patients who are 17, 18, 19,
seeing me because they have a cannabis-induced psychotic episode that landed them in the hospital.
Now they're in the outpatient world.
And I'm coming to learn, oh, wait a minute, you've had anxiety for a while.
You actually were engaging in, I'd call it, non-suicidal self-injury, cutting, scratching.
But you never engage in therapy.
You never engage in medication management.
And then something traumatic or stressful, the stressing happened.
and it seemed to you at the time that engaging with the cannabis or engaging with the substance
seemed to relieve some kind of distress.
However, when you're introduced to that so early and you have not learned other mechanisms
by which to be able to calm yourself down, you then use it again and then use it again.
And then you've actually created a pattern now.
It's actually not even causing you to feel distress, but now when you don't have it,
feel even heightened stress. And so that is something that I see pretty regularly. And so the
undiagnosed mental health clinicians, depression, anxiety, definitely. ADHD, for sure. And we have
evidence that untreated ADHD does lead to the risk of engaging in substances. And I do have colleagues
that have also found autism in a greater percentage showing up to substance use clinic. And then
as a consequence of the substance use engagement,
which becomes a parent to somebody,
they need help.
Well, actually, they need to help long before
the engagement with the substance.
But at that time, it might have been more invisible, right?
Oh, he or she's kind of corky.
Or, well, you know, she doesn't like to hang out.
And it's like, well, we're dismissing true concern
that young people may be having
and trying to bring up to someone.
But it's, you know, unfortunately, stigma is really still prevalent.
It's not uncommon that I meet people and they're with me and they still feel shame about the idea that they have, quote-unquote, the mental health conditions.
It's like, it's okay.
Like, if you had diabetes, you'd be like, don't treat it.
No, let's figure out, let's manage it.
And I've seen it when I was a first.
fellow, I rotated in a chronic headache clinic. I'd say 95% of that was mental health conditions,
but people were far more comfortable because it was a quote-unquote headache clinic to come and
talk about it. So we do see this pretty regularly and widely in our patient population.
And I think even physicians and clinicians, we have a bias that we have to get through when it
comes to really thinking about it as a mental health diagnoses that can be treated for patients.
And I see this as well all the time now in my residency and in internal medicine where we're really having to look at everything,
but recognizing that so many people maybe left something behind because it didn't seem like it was real enough in that sense.
I want to turn to pro-social initiatives.
What approaches have you seen work best both within communities and at home?
Yeah, so there's a movement now for art pharmacy, the name of the organization.
But really what they're doing is pairing.
pairing with primary care providers.
And the doc might recognize, wait a minute,
you're actually not being social.
You're not going out.
And so healthcare institutions are actually being able to, like,
literally prescribe, hey, here's a free ticket for you to go to the museum.
Here's a free ticket for you to participate in an art event.
Again, I would count this as mental health related.
so our Boston public school students have free admission on certain days of the month to go to the Science Museum, Art Museum.
These are things that get you out into community, get you out exploring, and being able to experience a calm, non-stressed environment, and I would hope that other municipalities can think about that.
Another thing that we do in terms of partnership, so we really do want people to just kind of have a good positive relationship with law enforcement.
And so our Boston Police Department has a unit that is strictly about community engagement.
They have an ice cream truck.
You see them engaging in community in a positive way to give young kids and really family the visual of we are here to help and we are here to serve.
and our Boston Public Library.
We recognize, oh, wait a minute, we have homeless shelters that we manage,
yet during the day they've got to get cleaned.
And so people can't stay there during the day.
So sometimes where did it go?
They go to the library.
Oh, wouldn't it be great if we had a clinical social worker at the library
that could help maybe help people figure out what resources that they could apply for.
And so we put a social worker in a public library.
Interesting enough, they get utilized.
Love that. Love that so much. I know that you personally have depoted yourself to looking ahead and strengthening efforts to bring more black students into the field. When you're on the podcast in 2022, you talked about the reality that about 5% of child psychiatrists are black or brown. So Rachel Concordance with Care is just not possible in some instances. I'm curious if you can give us an update now today about what the pipeline is looking like and if there's momentum towards recruiting and retaining students.
Yeah, so in reference to the pipeline or the pathway of diverse students entering into, for instance, medical school,
I do recognize that there's been differences post-Supreme Court decision-making.
However, I can say as it pertains to, like, for instance, psychiatry.
And again, this is specific to this medical school and those that have the opportunity to get the fourth year.
There has been an uptick steadily over the last several years of more individuals pursuing
psychiatry. So that's great. In part, yes, there will be more psychiatrists. And so if there's more
psychiatrists, you didn't have an opportunity to have more child psychiatrists. So that is there.
We do see significant interest in pursuing mental health career. So from that side, I am
rather hopeful and optimistic. And there are states, Massachusetts is one of them, that is actually
putting resources behind people pursuing mental health careers. If you're a physician,
If you're a licensed clinical social worker, if you're in mental health at all, you potentially
could have some percentage of your loans forgiven if you work in underserved environment and
community. Absolutely. I love that. Well, going back to the pandemic, during the pandemic,
you spoke on this podcast about the overwhelming demand for adolescent mental health care,
emergency rooms that were filled up, patients waiting in hallways, and weeks-long delays oftentimes,
both inpatient and outpatient treatment. And I know at that time,
you noted that the crisis wasn't new, but rather an acceleration of a trend from the prior decade
when more and more adolescents were seeing broken care systems. Has that demand leveled off,
or has the capacity to deliver care increased? Yeah, so I can speak specifically to Boston,
greater Boston area, and I suspect that this would also be true nationally. So the demand has not
necessarily decreased. We still see high numbers of individuals who are looking for services,
parents who are looking for services. A week does not go by without someone reaching out to me
to inquire about if I'm aware of somebody that's taking new patients. Now, some states and some
cities have implemented programs that have been novel in the sense of what are other ways that we can
begin to address some of the demand, right? Because not all intervention needs to be in the context
of in a hospital or in the context of in a clinic. And so I think we are seeing more preventative
measures, more emphasis now on what can occur from a school dynamic and what can occur
in and where people live, eat and pray. So locally we are attempting to do that and funding that,
given that training for clinicians, be that psychologist, psychiatrist, clinical social worker,
that takes time. And so what can we do now? And that's where we come with the models of what are
opportunities where we can actually upskill individuals that engage with young people to a better
degree. Yeah, I think that's so important, meeting kids where they're at. So like you said,
schools and services where you eat, live and pray, trying to find that wrap around services so it's not
having to be in the hospital. Well, Dr. Simon, thank you again so much for joining me today
and for sharing your words of wisdom and perspective. I think it's clear, and I'm sure our listeners
will hear this, just how deeply committed you are to reshaping systems and creating
opportunities for young people, families, and communities to thrive. I truly always say this,
but leadership like yours is what's possible when policy and practice work hand in hand.
I know our listeners will take away not only a better understanding of the challenges we face,
but also where progress can take us.
So truly, thank you again for joining us today.
Yeah, no, thank you for having me
and thank you for sharing this kind of information
to our larger public.
This episode of The Dose was produced by Jody Becker,
Mickey Kapper, and Naomi Leibowitz.
Special thanks to Barry Scholl for editing,
Jen Wilson and Rose Wong for art and design,
and Paul Frame for web support.
Our theme music is Arizona Moon by Blue Dot Sessions.
If you want to check us out online, visit the dose.
dot show.
There, you'll be able to learn more about today's episode and explore other resources.
That's it for the dose.
I'm Joelle Burvell, and thank you for listening.
