Social media scuffle

The ideas and innovators shaping health care
Nov 21, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Ruth Reader, Erin Schumaker and Daniel Payne

FORWARD THINKING

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JANUARY 31: In this photo illustration, a teenager uses her mobile phone to access social media on January 31, 2024 in New York City. Technology executives appeared at a Senate hearing to address accusations that their companies are endangering children's lives by not adequately policing predators and others who seek to   harm and exploit young social media users. (Photo illustration by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Parents can watch online content with their kids and talk about it to see how it makes kids feel and think, the APA said. Spencer Platt | Getty Images

The American Psychological Association has released recommendations for parents, policymakers and tech companies to help teens avoid mental health problems from social media use. But the organization’s chief science officer says it’s no replacement for government oversight.

Why it matters: Surgeon General Vivek Murthy has said that social media negatively impacts youth mental health and has called on Congress to require warning labels for such platforms. More than 30 state attorneys general have echoed that call and also asked Congress to pass the Kids Online Safety Act, which would require social media companies to consider kids’ safety when designing their platforms.

The Senate passed KOSA as part of a two-bill package in July, but it’s stalled in the House. Some states have passed laws requiring social media companies to keep kids safe online, but much of the burden has fallen to parents.

What parents can do: Here are some sample recommendations from the APA:

Help their kids seek out supportive communities online. Teach kids how to find positive content on the social platforms and communities that affirm them.

Use the tools that social media companies offer to augment their online experience. This can include turning off push notifications or restricting the hours they can use a platform. Parents can also show kids how to limit who can contact them online.

 Co-view content and talk about it. Watch the content your kids watch and talk about it to see how it makes them feel and think. Parents can also help their kids recognize hateful and manipulative content and create filters to avoid it.

 Watch how social media is impacting your kid. Is their social media use interfering with their sleep or eating habits? The APA advises parents to be on the lookout for unusual changes in their kids’ behavior.

 Model good media consumption habits. Having good social media habits demonstrates to kids how to be online in healthy ways.

However, Mitch Prinstein, chief science officer for the APA, acknowledges these best practices are a tall order for parents.

“Kids are now able to watch whatever they want, whenever they want, with no oversight,” he said. “We really need for the companies that host video content and for the government to put some guardrails in place.”

Even so: Not all media is bad, Prinstein notes: “Allowing teens to watch content about teens’ lives and how they get through difficult relationship situations and seeing good modeling of appropriate empathic behavior, joyful content — all of that actually is helpful."

WELCOME TO FUTURE PULSE

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This is where we explore the ideas and innovators shaping health care. 

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SAFETY CHECK

** ADVANCE FOR WEEKEND EDITIONS MAY 8-9 ** In this photo taken on Thursday, May. 6, 2010, Medical Director Radiologist, Dr. Gerald Iba, checks mammograms at The Elizabeth Center for Cancer Detection in Los Angeles. The financially-strapped California Department of Public Health temporarily banned new enrollments to the Every Women Counts program from Jan. until July 1. But it also upped the age to qualify for the program from 40 to 50. The changes are intended to reduce   the number of mammogram recipients to 259,000 this fiscal year from last year's 311,000. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Some experts worry that radiologists might become overly reliant on AI imaging, which is concerning if AI products make mistakes. Damian Dovarganes | AP

The American College of Radiology has launched a new registry to keep tabs on imaging technology that relies on artificial intelligence.

How so? Assess-AI, the latest AI resource from the nearly 40,000-member radiology group, can monitor results from participating radiology facilities and then provide analytics on their clinical AI products’ performance over time.

Participants can also compare their results to peers in the industry that use similar AI products.

Why it matters: While AI has been widely deployed in radiology, integrating it into existing systems still presents a challenge.

“Most legacy radiology systems were not built to support activities to ensure algorithms used in clinical settings are operating as expected,” Dr. Christoph Wald, vice chair of the ACR Board of Chancellors and chair of its Commission on Informatics, said in a statement.

Some experts also worry that radiologists might become overly reliant on AI imaging, which is especially concerning if AI products make mistakes. Ongoing performance monitoring could guard against that by ensuring patient safety while the field adopts the new technology.

 

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THE LAB

A doctor (R) writes a drugs prescription for a patient (L) on September 25, 2012 in Godewaersvelde, northern France, during medical exams. AFP PHOTO PHILIPPE HUGUEN (Photo by Philippe HUGUEN / AFP) (Photo by PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP via Getty Images)

Researchers are trying to collect enough data in under a minute to quantify how the nervous system is processing pain. Philippe Huguen | AFP via Getty Images

Researchers at Children’s National Hospital want to more precisely measure pain — a major health concern among women — thanks to an $8 million award from the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health.

How so? Traditional pain-assessment tools, like rating scales with smiling or crying faces, are imprecise and frustrate both patients and their doctors.

The portable device researchers are designing, called the AlgometRx Nociometer, will use noninvasive technology and algorithms to analyze pupil dilation and how certain nerves respond to painful stimuli. The goal: collecting enough data in under a minute to quantify how the nervous system is processing pain.

Why it matters: "Research studies have long shown that pain in women and girls is underestimated and undertreated," Dr. Julia Finkel, a pediatric anesthesiologist and director of Pain Medicine Research at the Sheikh Zayed Institute for Pediatric Surgical Innovation at Children’s National, said in a statement.

"Creating a novel technology to quantify pain has tremendous applications in pinpointing and effectively treating pain, potentially altering treatment in nearly any medical setting."

Big picture: The award is part of ARPA-H's Sprint for Women's Health, which supports President Joe Biden’s 2023 White House Initiative on Women’s Health Research, aimed at accelerating biomedical research to improve women’s health.

 

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