Mental Health Awareness Month

What Parents Can Do To Improve Their Children's Mental Health

mental health crisis warning

       May has been designated as Mental Health Awareness Month.  The theme this year is “Getting Back to Basics” which seeks to promote learning more about mental health conditions and what can be done to improve our mental health.  This coincides with several recent articles that center on the growing mental health crisis among children.

       One excellent article is The Mental Health Crisis Among Children and Teens: How Parents can Help from Harvard Health Publishing/Harvard Medical School which was published in March.  The article begins with this call to action: “We are in the midst of a pediatric mental health crisis — and parents need to take action.”  One of the main results of the pandemic is the “alarming amount of anxiety and depression in our children and teens.”

       What can parents do? The article suggests the following:

  1. Understand that your children’s mental health is just as important as their physical health.

  2. Have regular times to communicate with your children in a nonjudgmental way.

  3. Make sure that your children have time to relax and do things that they enjoy.

  4. Encourage more sleep and physical exercise.

  5. Monitor their social media so they develop safe and healthy habits.

  6. Keep in touch regularly with other adults in their lives, such as their teachers, coaches, and parents of their friends, to ensure that your children are getting the support they need. 

  7. Try not to judge them so much by having “expectations without judgment”.

  8. Ensure that your own mental health is taken care of as well.

 

The article provides many resources that you will find very helpful.  Please invest the time and effort in doing what you can to improve your children’s mental health.

  

To read the entire article, please visit:

https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/the-mental-health-crisis-among-children-and-teens-how-parents-can-help-202203082700

Children’s Mental Health Matters!

May is Mental Health Awareness Month and there is much being done to promote the importance of mental health in our communities especially due to all we have gone through as a result of the Covid 19 pandemic.   When we talk about mental health awareness, we must include our children as well.

            The American Psychological Association has some surprising news for us: about 1 in 5 children has a diagnosable mental health disorder and “child and adolescence mental health problems are at a point of crisis for our nation”.   The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) explains that mental health in childhood is “reaching developmental and emotional milestones, and learning healthy social skills and how to cope when there are problems.” The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s WIC Program also understands the importance of children’s mental health, stating that we must raise the awareness of the “significant role mental health plays in overall health and wellness and how vital positive mental health is to a child's development and everyone's well-being.”

            What can parents do to help their children?  The CDC website page shown below provides important information for parents.  It has wide variety of articles on such topics as what works for the treatment of disruptive behavioral problems and getting the facts on anxiety and depression in children.  There are even recommendations as to how to talk to your children about Covid 19. 

            The key is for parents to monitor their children.  Be aware of their moods and activities.  If parents notice anything different or concerning, they should immediately seek professional help for their child.  

 To learn more, please visit:

https://www.cdc.gov/childrensmentalhealth/index.html https://www.apa.org/advocacy/health/children

https://wicworks.fns.usda.gov/resources/2021-childrens-mental-health-awareness-week-and-mental-health-month