From Our Newsroom Partners

Religious Contacts, Student Volunteers Find Themselves in Midst of Mental Health Crisis

From Grady Newsource

Rylie Hamilton meets on Tuesday evenings with three female University of Georgia students to discuss a range of topics, from spirituality to navigating the dating sphere to test anxiety. Mental health is frequently part of the conversation.

A 12-year-old killed herself at a Spokane hospital that recently closed its youth psychiatric unit

From InvestigateWest

A12-year-old girl died by suicide this month after workers say she was left unsupervised at Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center, where she was waiting for a long-term psychiatric placement.

Language lives on for tribes in Oklahoma despite determined erasure attempts

From KOSU

More than a century after U.S. Indian boarding schools attempted to erase Indigenous cultures and languages, tribal nations in Oklahoma are working to reclaim and teach their languages to the youth. Despite research showing how language learning can improve mental health outcomes, world language credits are not required for graduation following recent state legislation.

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Mental health issues complicate treatment for sickle cell patients

From The Daily Memphian

April Ward-McGrory is a sickle cell patient, double amputee and advocate for those living with sickle cell disease.Black patients in Memphis with sickle cell disease often report being misdiagnosed or treated as drug seekers when they show up in emergency rooms during pain crises.

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When children are rushed to the hospital in Memphis, trauma counselors are there waiting for them

From The Institute for Public Service Reporting

An errant bullet fired from a street in South Memphis last year hit 16-year-old Evan sitting inside his home watching TV. The bullet tore a hole through his arm and leg.

Instantly, before anyone could call 911 — even before the teenager was fully aware of what had happened — first responders in his brain and body rushed into action.

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Oklahoma sends a growing number of kids with complex needs out of state for treatment

From The Frontier

Amber Boyer spent early mornings last spring crawling out of her bedroom window and into her garage to make breakfast and gather medications for her then 14-year-old son Davin.

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Poor access to mental health care leaves Georgia children who need a psychiatrist in the lurch

From Georgia Public Broadcasting

When Layken Edenfield was little, her moods would switch quickly, her mother, Teresa Edenfield remembers.

“One minute she’d be happy and laughing, and the next minute she’d be crying her eyes out,” Edenfield said. “She was really hypersensitive about certain things around, or really terrified.”

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Arizona’s anti-immigrant policies foster a culture of fear and create barriers to mental health care for undocumented communities

From Cronkite News

Ileana Salinas has to renew her immigration status this year. If she misses the deadline or doesn’t get approved, she doesn’t know what will happen to her job, her family, or her life in the United States. Living each day in survival mode has taken a toll on her mental health, and the ever-changing slew of immigration policies are compounding the problem.

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Alcohol addiction treatment is available in Colorado, but people struggle to get the help they need

From The Denver Post

Some people with addiction face insurance hurdles, unaware of options beyond AA or rehab.

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Beer and wine became more widely available in Colorado even as drinking deaths rose

From The Denver Post

Five years ago, a workgroup tasked with finding ways to reduce Colorado’s rate of drinking-related deaths — among the highest in the country — issued a simple recommendation: cut back on when and where people can buy alcohol.

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Colorado has some of the lowest alcohol taxes and highest drinking deaths. That’s no coincidence, experts say.

From The Denver Post

Colorado’s taxes on alcohol are among the lowest in the country, and even though the state consistently ranks as one of the worst for drinking deaths, lawmakers have shown little interest in making beer, wine and spirits more expensive.

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Colorado alcohol deaths surged 60% in 4 years, but there’s been no public outcry or push to save lives

From The Denver Post

Fatal drug overdoses had been slowly rising for a decade, but when the number of Coloradans killed by fentanyl soared during the first two years of the pandemic, state leaders, law enforcement officials, public health managers — even ordinary people — called for drastic action.

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