Blogs from Tracy Gladstone - ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř /WCW-Blog-Bloggers/Authors/Tgladstone Fri, 02 May 2025 21:00:04 -0400 Joomla! - Open Source Content Management en-gb Mental Health Screenings at School Can Help Teens in Crisis /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/entry/Mental-health-screenings-at-school-can-help-teens-in-crisis /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/entry/Mental-health-screenings-at-school-can-help-teens-in-crisis Over the past few years, you may have read about the crisis in youth mental health. In October 2021, the American Academy of Pediatrics declared a national emergency in child and adolescent mental health, and in December 2021, the U.S. surgeon general highlighted the urgent need to address the nation’s youth mental health crisis. Just this month, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended screening for depression in adolescents aged 12 to 18. October is National Depression and Mental Health Screening Month, so we’d like to highlight one of the tools WCW has been using to approach the youth mental health crisis that is in line with that recommendation: school-based mental health screenings. Mood Check, our program, partners with schools to screen all students in designated grades and offers additional support to adolescents at high risk for depression and/or suicidal behaviors. We have a multi-pronged approach: We offer resources that increase...

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Women Change Worlds Fri, 28 Oct 2022 13:25:38 -0400
Despite Challenges of Pandemic, Depression Study Finds Silver Linings /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Despite-challenges-of-pandemic-depression-study-finds-silver-linings /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Despite-challenges-of-pandemic-depression-study-finds-silver-linings In 2018, I began a multi-year clinical trial to compare the effectiveness of two approaches to preventing depression in teens. One of the approaches is an online intervention -- an app -- called CATCH-IT and the other is an in-person group therapy intervention. When we started recruiting teens to participate in the trial just this past winter, we encountered a number of challenges. It was difficult to get teens and their parents to commit to attending the weekly group therapy sessions, and to fill out the assessments we needed for our evaluation. Because we planned to hold these sessions at the clinics where our participants received their primary care, geography determined who could participate. We were busy working through these challenges throughout the early spring. Then the pandemic hit, and with it we noticed a spike in the number of teens we were encountering who were reporting significant struggles with depression...

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Women Change Worlds Sat, 10 Oct 2020 07:36:05 -0400
Promoting Resilience in Children at Risk for Depression /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Promoting-resilience-in-children-at-risk-for-depression /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Promoting-resilience-in-children-at-risk-for-depression

The teen sitting across from me avoided making eye contact as he responded to my questions. He provided thoughtful answers in a soft voice as he looked down at the rubber band in his hands, stretching and turning it repeatedly. Clearly this young man was struggling with symptoms of depression such that he was disengaged from his friends, skipping track practices, missing homework assignments, sleeping too much. Yet when I asked him if I could share his symptoms with his guidance counselor so that he could get some support in school, he quickly replied, “No,” saying that he didn’t want anyone at school to know. “I’m only telling you about this, “ he insisted, “because I’ll never see you again.” My colleagues and I routinely hear such statements from the adolescents we screen for depression and suicidal thoughts. Although these teens readily reveal their symptoms and struggles to us, adults who...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 08 May 2019 10:42:56 -0400
13 Reasons Why and the Need for Correct Messages About Teen Depression and Suicide /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/13-reasons-why /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/13-reasons-why

By now, parents and professionals have reacted to the new Netflix series, 13 Reasons Why. Mental health advocates and school administrators have highlighted the risks of depicting suicide as a means of revenge, of dramatizing teen suicide, and of showing school counselors as uncaring and ineffective. I would be remiss if I did not add my voice to others' by expressing my dismay that this program exposes teens to such unhealthy messages about such an important topic, and that teen depression is presented as a malady that can only be addressed through suicide. Rather than repeating the many critiques of this series, my purpose here is to share correct messages about adolescent depression and suicide that we, as professionals and parents, should know and should be sharing with our children. Of course this is a difficult topic to broach with adolescents, but given that so many teens have watched this series...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 10 May 2017 18:01:34 -0400
Preventing Depression in Young People /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Preventing-depression-in-young-people /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Preventing-depression-in-young-people

This policy brief originally appeared in the Spring/Summer 2016 Research & Action Report from the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř as part of the multi-media series Advancing the Status of Women & Girls, Families & Communities: Policy Recommendations for the Next U.S. President. Depression is Prevalent but Prevention Programs Are Limited According to the World Health Organization, depression is the leading cause of disability worldwide—it is the most common psychiatric disorder in the U.S., and is particularly common among lower income populations, and among women beginning in adolescence. The average age of onset for depression is 15, and about 20 percent of all people will have experienced an episode of depression by the end of adolescence. Youth depression is associated with a host of negative and long-term consequences, including poorer school performance, difficult peer and family relationships, increased risk of substance abuse, and poorer functional outcomes in adulthood. Of particular note is...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 20 Sep 2016 15:37:08 -0400
Suicide Prevention: The Depression Link /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Suicide-prevention-the-depression-link-1 /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Suicide-prevention-the-depression-link-1

This is a repost from an article originally published on this blog September 6, 2013. National Suicide Prevention Week (September 8-14) is a time to both raise awareness of suicide as a national public health issue, and to think critically about how suicide can be prevented. In the United States, suicide is the second leading cause of death among adolescents (Hoyert & Xu, 2012), and, in 2011, nearly 16 percent of adolescents in the United States reported seriously considering suicide. When thinking about preventing adolescent suicide, it is important to consider factors that increase the risk of suicidal thoughts and behaviors, such as depression. Suicidal thinking is a symptom of depression, and over half of the adolescents who completed suicide had a mood disorder at the time (Bridge, Goldstein & Brent, 2006; Nock et al., 2013). Fortunately, a number of researchers have developed empirically-supported interventions to prevent the onset of depression...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 08 Sep 2014 07:37:08 -0400
Suicide Prevention: The Depression Link /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Suicide-prevention-the-depression-link /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Suicide-prevention-the-depression-link

National Suicide Prevention Week (September 8-14) is a time to both raise awareness of suicide as a national public health issue, and to think critically about how suicide can be prevented. In the United States, suicide is the second leading cause of death among adolescents (Hoyert & Xu, 2012), and, in 2011, nearly 16 percent of adolescents in the United States reported seriously considering suicide. When thinking about preventing adolescent suicide, it is important to consider factors that increase the risk of suicidal thoughts and behaviors, such as depression. Suicidal thinking is a symptom of depression, and over half of the adolescents who completed suicide had a mood disorder at the time (Bridge, Goldstein & Brent, 2006; Nock et al., 2013). Fortunately, a number of researchers have developed empirically-supported interventions to prevent the onset of depression in teens, and prevention efforts that target adolescents at risk for depression may ultimately prove...

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Women Change Worlds Fri, 06 Sep 2013 11:17:00 -0400