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News for your child’s health: March-Apr-26

Shared for the benefit of your child…..

1. New National Standards for School Nutrition
The government recently finalized updated nutritional guidelines for school meal programs. These changes focus on a phased reduction of added sugars and sodium while increasing the variety of whole grains offered in lunches.

    The Purpose: To combat rising rates of childhood obesity and type 2 diabetes by ensuring the two meals many children eat daily are nutrient-dense.

    Significance: This marks the first time “added sugars” have been specifically targeted in school meal history, shifting the focus from simple calorie counting to long-term metabolic health.

    Please follow the same at home too!

    2. Surge in School-Based Mental Health Screenings
    Health departments have reported a 25% increase in the implementation of “universal screening” programs in middle schools. These programs use brief, standardized digital check-ins to identify students at risk for anxiety or depression before a crisis occurs.

      The Purpose: To move from a reactive “crisis-only” model to a proactive preventative model for adolescent mental health.

      Significance: By normalizing mental health checks alongside vision and hearing tests, schools are identifying “quiet” students who might otherwise fall through the cracks of the healthcare system.

      If you suspect changes in your child’s behavior, talk to the school counselor or your child’s PCP

      3. Breakthrough in RSV Preventative Access
      New data from the past 30 days shows a significant drop in infant hospitalizations following the first full season of widespread monoclonal antibody treatments. There is a renewed push to streamline insurance coverage for these treatments ahead of the next viral season.

        The Purpose: To reduce the seasonal strain on pediatric intensive care units (PICUs) caused by Respiratory Syncytial Virus.

        Significance: RSV has historically been the leading cause of hospitalization for infants. This data proves that preventative immunization can fundamentally change the “triple-demics” that have overwhelmed pediatric hospitals in recent years.

        4. Digital Safety and Social Media Regulation
        Several states have introduced new “Age-Appropriate Design Codes.” These laws require social media platforms to enable the highest privacy settings by default for minors and prohibit features that encourage “infinite scrolling” or late-night notifications.

          The Purpose: To mitigate the social and psychological harms associated with excessive screen time and predatory algorithms.

          Significance: This shifts the burden of safety from parents to the platforms themselves, treating digital environments as public health spaces that require safety standards similar to physical playgrounds.

          This is good, but monitor your child’s social media usage!

          The views expressed in this article should not be considered as a substitute for a physician’s advice. Always make sure to seek a doctor or a professional’s advice before proceeding with anything suggested in this article.


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          Your Brain on Social Media: What Science Actually Shows

          Real talk: if you’re reading this, you’ve probably already checked TikTok, Instagram, or Snapchat at least three times today. And according to new research, that constant scrolling might be doing something wild to your brain physically, changing how it develops.

          The Numbers Don’t Lie

          Let’s start with where we’re at right now. About 73% of teens check YouTube daily, and roughly 60% visit TikTok and Instagram every day. But here’s the kicker: nearly half of teens say they’re online “almost constantly,” and researchers found that half of adolescents use their smartphones for over 4.5 hours a day. Some studies even show teens hitting up to 9 hours daily on their devices.

          If that sounds like a lot, you’re not wrong. And your brain knows it too. 45% of teens themselves admit they’re on social media too much, up from just 36% in 2022.

          boy lying on couch using cellphone
          Photo by chiến bá on Pexels.com

          What’s Actually Happening to Your Brain

          Here’s where it gets interesting (and slightly freaky). Scientists tracked over 8,000 kids aged 9-10 for four years, scanning their brains and monitoring their social media use. What they found was that kids who habitually check social media are becoming hypersensitive to feedback from their peers.

          Translation? Every time you post something, your brain is literally training itself to crave those likes, comments, and reactions more intensely. The parts of your brain that process rewards and emotions specifically your amygdala and prefrontal cortex that starts lighting up differently than kids who don’t check social media as much.

          Think of it like this: 78% of teens check their devices at least hourly, and 46% check “almost constantly”. Each time you do, you’re conditioning your brain to expect a hit of dopamine. Over time, researchers found that heavy social media users showed increased brain activity related to motivation and emotion, but decreased ability to control impulses. Basically, your brain gets better at wanting the scroll, but worse at stopping it.

          The ADHD Connection

          New research from Sweden and Oregon dropped some seriously concerning findings: there’s a significant link between screen time and ADHD diagnoses. As of 2022, over seven million kids and adolescents in the US had an ADHD diagnosis, up from just over six million in 2016, that’s a massive jump in only six years.

          The researchers suggest social media might be part of why we’re seeing this spike. One in nine US kids now lives with ADHD, with the CDC calling it an “expanding public health concern”. While social media isn’t the only factor, scientists believe the constant stream of content makes it harder for developing brains to focus on anything that doesn’t provide instant gratification.

          The Mental Health Factor

          The stats on mental health are equally concerning. One study found that when a social media platform rolled out to college campuses, it was associated with a 9% increase in depression and 12% increase in anxiety. When researchers applied that across all US college students, they estimated the platform may have contributed to over 300,000 new cases of depression.

          And it’s hitting girls particularly hard. 34% of teen girls say social media makes them feel worse about their own lives, compared to 20% of boys.

          The Demographic Breakdown

          Not everyone’s using social media the same way. Black and Hispanic teens use TikTok more than White teens (79% and 74% versus 54%), and teen girls are more likely than boys to use Instagram and TikTok. Meanwhile, boys dominate YouTube and gaming platforms.

          The Changing Pattern

          Here’s something that might surprise you: kids are starting to push back. 44% of teens have cut back on social media in 2024, up from 39% in 2023. More teens are recognizing something feels off, even if they can’t fully articulate it yet.

          The perception of social media is shifting too. The number of teens who say social media makes them feel supported dropped from 67% in 2022 to just 52% in 2024. People are waking up to the fact that infinite scrolling isn’t actually making them feel connected—it’s doing the opposite.

          The Bottom Line

          Your brain is literally still under construction until you’re about 21. During these years, it’s especially sensitive to social feedback and reward systems. Social media platforms know this and have designed their algorithms to exploit it. The constant notifications, the endless scroll, the carefully crafted feeds—they’re all engineered to keep you coming back.

          The science is clear: heavy social media use is associated with changes in brain development, increased sensitivity to social rewards, decreased impulse control, and higher rates of anxiety, depression, and attention problems. That doesn’t mean you need to delete all your apps tomorrow, but it does mean you should probably be way more intentional about how you’re using them.

          Your brain is adapting to whatever environment you put it in. Make sure it’s adapting in ways that actually serve you.


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          The secret lives of kids in online world

          Did you know:

          🎭 The Social Media Stage

          Imagine a world where most kids get their first smartphone at age 11. That’s right, before they even hit their teens, they’re stepping onto the grand stage of social media! 🎭

          • 📊 A whopping 95% of teens (13-17) are YouTube stars-in-training
          • 📸 67% are TikTok dancing queens and kings
          • 📱 62% are Instagram influencers-to-be
          • 👻 59% are Snapchat ghosters

          But wait, there’s more! Nearly 75% of students use social media as their primary news source. Talk about being in the know! 🗞️

          ⏰ Time Flies When You’re Having Fun

          Hold onto your hats, folks! Here’s how much time kids are spending on screens daily:

          • 🧒 Ages 8-12: 4 hours and 44 minutes
          • 🧑‍🦱 Ages 13-18: 7 hours and 22 minutes

          And that’s not even counting school work! 📚

          🎢 The Emotional Roller Coaster

          Social media can be a wild ride for our young digital natives:

          • 🌈 It can be a rainbow of connections and communities
          • 🌩️ But it can also bring storm clouds of anxiety and depression

          Did you know that spending more than 3 hours a day on social media might put teens at higher risk for mental health issues? Yikes! 😱

          🦸‍♀️ What can you as a Parent Do

          1. 🕵️‍♂️ Be a social media detective: Know what apps your kids are using
          2. 🚦 Set digital traffic lights: Create tech-free zones and times
          3. 🗣️ Keep the conversation flowing: Talk openly about online activities
          4. 🛡️ Equip them with a digital shield: Teach online safety and privacy
          5. ⏳ Master the art of time management: Use screen time monitoring apps

          💡 Fun Fact

          • 🚀 Almost half of 7th graders feel the need to respond to texts at lightning speed (within 10 minutes)!
          • 🙈 45% of kids (ages 9-12) have accidentally seen things online that made them go “Oops, my eyes!” 👀
          • 🎭 37% of young people have faced the digital playground bully