Surgeon general hones dual focus on mental health, gun violence – The Mercury News

Sandhya Raman | CQ-Roll Call (TNS)

WASHINGTON — The nation’s top doctor said the United States is “falling short” in protecting the public health of children and adolescents from the impact of social media and firearm violence — and both are areas where he wants Congress to take additional action.

Surgeon General Vivek Murthy is no stranger to the task of influencing the federal government’s public health priorities and the nation’s understanding of the biggest public health issues.

Between his tenure as surgeon general in the Obama administration from December 2014 to April 2017 and his current role under President Joe Biden since March 2021, he’s had one of the longest careers as surgeon general since the 1950s — more than five and half years.

The surgeon general job has taken different forms over the years, with some physicians serving more as an advocate for healthy behavior and others pushing novel and sometimes controversial policy changes.

The late C. Everett Koop gained prominence in the Reagan administration for a surgeon general report recognizing that nicotine could be as addictive as cocaine and heroin and spearheading a mass mailing to all households educating about AIDS. Under President Bill Clinton, Joycelyn Elders was forced to resign over her comments on sex education.

Murthy has straddled that line, offering increasingly bold proposals in his effort to tackle the youth mental health and loneliness crisis.

“It became increasingly clear to me during my first term as surgeon general that the mental health challenges we faced were far bigger and deeper than we were acknowledging as a country and certainly than we were responding to,” Murthy said this week in an interview.

This year he has issued two calls to action — both met with mixed reception from industry and the broader health community — tackling the impact of social media on youth mental health and reducing the public health impact of firearm violence.

“Our most sacred responsibility as a society is to take care of our children, and when it comes to protecting them from the harms of social media and gun violence, we are falling short, and we’ve got to do better,” Murthy said. “The ripple effects are extraordinary for anyone who has had a child in their life.”

His priorities have shifted since his first Senate confirmation in 2014, and many of his ideas are shaped by the ongoing conversations with community members that he began having after taking the job. Some of those conversations inspired the first federal report on electronic cigarettes in 2016, he said.

Murthy joined the Biden administration in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic. Even amid that crisis, he said he understood that loneliness and isolation from the pandemic could have wide-ranging mental health implications.

“We’ve got to approach these issues with the urgency that they deserve,” Murthy said. “Our problem is not a lack of good ideas, it’s the will to implement those ideas and to ultimately protect our kids.”

Social media

Murthy published an editorial in the The New York Times on June 17 calling for social media companies to use warning labels illustrating the adverse effects the platforms can have for youth. The call to action also advised Congress to take steps to reduce online harassment and exploitation of children and adolescents online and echoed an advisory he had issued the prior year.

His 2024 push ultimately came with congressional backing: The Senate passed its package of two children’s online safety bills last month, 91-3, despite some industry objections.

Numerous lawmakers have cited Murthy’s guidance and his op-ed in their support for the package and the need to take action. Murthy called the congressional action “really important steps forward,” but he cautioned against drawing early conclusions on the impact.

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