Latest Trending
Last Updated, Jan 28, 2022, 12:52 PM
Mental Health of Students Must Figure in Restarting Classes

By Amy Braun
For NewsUSA

(NU) – As officials across the nation decide how best to open schools, one aspect too often overlooked is students’ mental health. Awareness of the pressures on our children is the first step towards helping them heal and preparing them to learn.

COVID-19 has left many kids feeling lonely and isolated. Research on the effect of the lockdowns published in the June issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry concludes that young people experiencing loneliness may be as much as three times more likely to sink into depression in the future, but additionally that their mental health could be impacted for at least nine years because of it.

One answer? Since 2003, HealthCorps has worked in high-need schools, supplementing existing health and wellness programs emphasizing physical activity, nutrition, mental resilience and civic engagement. These are teenagers who, even in normal circumstances, experience disparities in access to health services based on their socioeconomic status, geographic region, race or ethnicity – with perhaps predictable results. Specifically, higher rates of chronic disease (including stress) and lower measures of both quality of life and life expectancy.

And yet, through our unique curriculum – created by top heathcare professionals and constantly updated to match students’ needs – the students we work with have flourished. They exercise more, eat better, and practice positive thought. And, yes, they engage with their communities.

Since stress has always been an issue for many of these teens, one of the most requested lessons we were asked to bring to classrooms even before the pandemic hit was  “Bust My Stress.”  And now? Add the coronavirus-induced feelings of isolation to that equation, and you begin to see how fragile our nation’s teens may be.

As one of our Florida students so heartbreakingly told us amid the lockdowns: “I still keep it in, but I still think negative like every night. I cry it out so I won’t have to feel that way again in the morning.”

Building mental resilience has become an increased focus of our work.

Of course, parents have their own role to play in their teenagers’ healing process.

“They can help by reassuring teens that, just because they’re nervous or scared, doesn’t mean they’re really in any danger,” says Mark Goulston, M.D., a HealthCorps advisory board member and widely quoted expert on building a positive culture. “By reminding them that their bodies don’t really understand the fear, and by talking it out and discussing the fear, both the parent and child will feel better and closer.”

The HealthCorps program is delivered by highly trained recent college graduates who are future medical and health policy professionals. They interact with teens on a daily basis – though, these days, virtually – and have developed some simple steps that can help youths through these trying times. Among them:

• Meditate or try deep-breathing methods, which increase your body’s natural ability to relax during high-stress moments.

• Get moving.

• Prioritize sleep.

• Talk things out with someone you trust.

• Do or watch something that makes you laugh.

• Keep a non-judgmental journal to help process thoughts.

• Practice gratitude and positive self-talk.

One last thing. These tips and others, available on our new @teenhealthvibe Instagram channel can also apply to adults.

Amy Braun is the CEO of HealthCorps, a national not for profit providing health and wellness resources to teens, parents and faculty at high-need schools.

24World Media does not take any responsibility of the information you see on this page. The content this page contains is from independent third-party content provider. If you have any concerns regarding the content, please free to write us here: contact@24worldmedia.com

Latest Post

Common Mistakes When Using Athletic Field Tarps

Last Updated,Jun 5, 2024

High-Performance Diesel Truck Upgrades You Should Consider

Last Updated,May 14, 2024

Warehouse Optimization Tips To Improve Performance

Last Updated,May 6, 2024

Fire Hazards in Daily Life: The Most Common Ignition Sources

Last Updated,Apr 30, 2024

Yellowstone’s Wolves: A Debate Over Their Role in the Park’s Ecosystem

Last Updated,Apr 23, 2024

Earth Day 2024: A Look at 3 Places Adapting Quickly to Fight Climate Change

Last Updated,Apr 22, 2024

Millions of Girls in Africa Will Miss HPV Shots After Merck Production Problem

Last Updated,Apr 18, 2024

This Lava Tube in Saudi Arabia Has Been a Human Refuge for 7,000 Years

Last Updated,Apr 17, 2024

Four Wild Ways to Save the Koala (That Just Might Work)

Last Updated,Apr 15, 2024

National Academy Asks Court to Strip Sackler Name From Endowment

Last Updated,Apr 12, 2024

Ways Industrial Copper Helps Energy Production

Last Updated,Apr 11, 2024

The Ins and Out of Industrial Conveyor Belts

Last Updated,Apr 10, 2024