Tonko said that focusing on mental health will be part of "rebuilding America" after the pandemic, especially for medical professionals and emergency responders.
"Every day they show up to work, they risk exposure to this deadly virus and shoulder an unimaginable emotional burden for us, all to keep our families and communities safe. We need to do more to support them and make sure we work to understand even the hidden costs they are bearing," he said, adding that he urges his colleagues in the House and Senate to push the legislation forward.
Companion legislation, the Coronavirus Mental Health and Addiction Assistance Act, was introduced earlier this year to the House and Senate that would award grants to places offering mental health and addiction services, as well as authorize $100 million to initiate or expand such programs.
One study, published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry in February, found that emergency department visits related to mental health, suicide attempts, overdoses, intimate partner violence, and suspected child abuse were generally higher during the pandemic last year than during the same period the year before.
The study, from researchers at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, looked at the number of emergency department visits from December 30, 2018, to October 10, 2020, comparing the corresponding weeks in each year.
There were nearly 190 million emergency department visits during the entire study period, and more than 6 million involved mental health, substance abuse, or domestic violence. The researchers found emergency department visits related to mental health conditions, suicide attempts, drug, and opioid overdoses and suspected child abuse and neglect were significantly higher from mid-March to October 2020 compared to the same period in 2019,
Unique Challenges for Children
Youth suicides had generally been rising before the pandemic and it is too early to link an increase in deaths directly to school closures, Katrina Rufino, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Houston, told CNN in January.
Nationally, the proportion of emergency room visits related to mental health doubled between April and October for children between the ages of 5 and 11, and tripled for those between the ages of 12 and 17, compared to the same period in 2019, according to the CDC.
Rufino co-authored a study that found there had been a significant increase in the number of ER visits to a Houston children's hospital related to mental health since coronavirus hit the US.
In Houston, the rise in teenagers having suicidal thoughts and harming themselves coincided with shutdowns linked to the pandemic, including school closures, Rufino and colleagues wrote in the paper published in Pediatrics, the journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
"Our analysis found that there were significantly higher rates of suicide ideation in March and July 2020 -- that is when you really saw the effects here in Houston," said Rufino about the study, which examined ER admittance to Texas Children's Hospital for youth aged 11 to 21.
"March was when things were first hitting, things started shutting down. Here in Houston, we had the rodeo closed, schools went home after Spring Break. And then July is when we really started to see our surge here in Houston."
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