2021年7月3日 星期六

8-Year-Olds in Despair

The mental health crisis is affecting younger children, and more stories from NYT Parenting.
A roundup of new guidance and stories from NYT Parenting.
Golden Cosmos

The headlines about plummeting mental health among caregivers, young adults and teens during the pandemic have been hard to miss. But a quieter crisis has been brewing for years among young children in the United States, and exploded during this period of remote schooling, health worries and isolation: Children younger than 13 have been wilting mentally under the strain of Covid life.

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This week, Christina Caron looks at the spike in emergency-room admissions and inpatient treatment for kids showing signs of mental illness over the past several years — a trend that has only grown worse during Covid, according to hospital data and providers.

"It's almost like the pandemic threw gasoline on embers that were already glowing," said Heather C. Huszti, chief psychologist at Children's Hospital of Orange County in Orange, Calif. "We've never seen it this bad."

Doctors say addressing the increase in mental health emergencies among children is a matter of equipping families, health care providers and educators with regular screening tools and open lines of communication to recognize that a child is suffering before the situation becomes critical.

Also this week, despite their parents' objections, some teens are seeking out the Covid vaccine and getting the shot without parental consent, Jan Hoffman reports.

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As families venture out more this summer, Melinda Wenner Moyer has advice for managing social situations if you have a shy child.

If you're looking for some indoor entertainment with a frightening edge, Dave Itzkoff talks to Ilana Glazer, a creator and star of "Broad City," about her new film "False Positive," which explores the terror of the modern birth system.

Finally, temperatures are soaring across North America, creating dangerous conditions that could lead to heat-related illnesses, like stroke and heat exhaustion. Dani Blum has tips on how to keep your family cool and safe.

Thanks for reading!

— Melonyce McAfee, senior editor, NYT Parenting

THIS WEEK IN NYT PARENTING

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Rachel Woolf for The New York Times

8-Year-Olds in Despair: The Mental Health Crisis Is Getting Younger

The number of children who need urgent mental health care has been on the rise for years, and spiked during the pandemic.

By Christina Caron

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Getty Images

How to Support a Shy Kid

For timid children, more social situations can pose particular challenges.

By Melinda Wenner Moyer

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Maranie Staab/Reuters

How to Stay Cool and Safe in a Heat Wave

As temperatures reach record highs, here's guidance on coping with extreme heat.

By Dani Blum

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Hulu

'False Positive' and the Horror-Filled Truth About Fertility Treatments

The new Hulu movie is the rare Hollywood production that portrays the struggles to conceive as women actually experience them.

By Dina Gachman

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Maria Alejandra Cardona for The New York Times

As Parents Forbid Covid Shots, Defiant Teenagers Seek Ways to Get Them

Most medical consent laws require parental permission for minors to get a vaccine. Now some places are easing restrictions for Covid shots while others are proposing new ones.

By Jan Hoffman

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Tiny Victories

Parenting can be a grind. Let's celebrate the tiny victories.

Mr. Rogers entertained my 2-and-a-half-year-old for 30 minutes while I made dinner, and then my son shared a bunch of facts about penguins he learned from the show. — Laura Kirby, Hamden, Conn.

If you want a chance to get your Tiny Victory published, find us on Instagram @NYTparenting and use the hashtag #tinyvictories; email us; or enter your Tiny Victory at the bottom of this page. Include your full name and location. Tiny Victories may be edited for clarity and style. Your name, location and comments may be published, but your contact information will not. By submitting to us, you agree that you have read, understand and accept the Reader Submission Terms in relation to all of the content and other information you send to us.

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2021年7月2日 星期五

Wonking Out: Alexander Hamilton and post-Covid America

Working from home was an "infant industry"; so was early retirement.
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By Paul Krugman

Opinion Columnist

In the spring of 2020, the U.S. economy went into what I described at the time as a "medically induced coma": We shut down much of the economy in an attempt to limit the spread of the coronavirus. This was, in retrospect, a wise policy that should have been followed much more thoroughly. After all, by slowing the spread of the virus, we didn't just avoid overwhelming the health care system; we also bought time for the development and dissemination of vaccines, so that tens of millions of Americans who would have been infected without the lockdowns ended up dodging the bullet.

But there was a huge initial cost in terms of reduced employment and, to a somewhat lesser extent, reduced G.D.P. Many analysts expected a sluggish recovery at best — similar to the sluggish recovery from the 2008 financial crisis. In fact, we seem to be bouncing back quickly, as some of us predicted we would. (Sorry, I just pulled a muscle patting myself on the back.)

But will the post-Covid economy look the same as the pre-Covid economy? Probably not — for reasons originally laid out by none other than Alexander Hamilton in 1791.

The founding father's "Report on the subject of manufactures" is widely regarded as the first important statement of what came to be known as the "infant industry" doctrine. At the time, the young United States was an overwhelmingly agricultural nation, relying on imports — mainly from Britain — to satisfy its demand for manufactured goods.

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However, Hamilton argued that U.S. industry would be able to compete with British industry if domestic manufacturers were given the opportunity to gain experience — that once Americans had seen that industry could be profitable, once they had had the chance to gain manufacturing experience, a U.S. industrial base would become self-sustaining.

So Hamilton called for, among other things, temporary tariffs to protect U.S. industry and give it time to become competitive. Economists then proceeded to spend the next 220 years arguing about whether and when infant industry protection is actually a good policy. But the idea that sometimes temporary protection for an industry makes it competitive in the long run clearly has a lot to it.

What does this have to do with Covid-19? The pandemic produced some extreme forms of de facto infant industry protection, forcing millions of Americans to work differently from the way they had before. And many, though not all, of these changes are likely to stick: Even with the vaccines, many individuals and businesses won't go back to the way things were before.

The obvious case, of course, is remote work. American workers with traditional office jobs weren't hit nearly as hard by the pandemic as, say, restaurant workers, and seem to be mostly though not all the way back to normal:

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Office workers are working again.FRED

But they aren't back in their offices. Office occupancy rates have gone up a bit, but they are still far below normal in major cities, presumably because of the prevalence of working from home:

But they're not back in the office.Kastle Systems

Many workers will, no doubt, eventually go back to the office. But the past year and a half has shown that much of what used to take place in conference rooms can be done on screens instead, with little loss of effective interaction and big savings in commuting time and personal wear and tear. (I've taught a graduate seminar via Zoom; I actually thought that student participation was better than in person, although that wouldn't have been true in a larger or less advanced class.)

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And we have, of course, all gotten much better at using the tools of remote work — just like Hamilton's industrialists, who he expected to get better at manufacturing after a few years' experience. "You're still muted" remains a common phrase, but in my experience, anyway, no more than "I'm sorry, could you please speak up" was in live meetings.

And remote work wasn't the only thing many Americans learned to do during the pandemic. Many others, perhaps millions, learned to do something different — namely, not work at all.

A vast majority of workers idled by pandemic restrictions will go back to work — mainly out of sheer necessity, but also because for many, work is a source of meaning in their lives. However, forced unemployment gave a significant number of Americans a chance to discover both that they really disliked their jobs and that they can manage financially without them, even without special government aid. Such workers won't be going back.

This is probably especially true among older workers, who have seen a much sharper drop in labor force participation than prime-age adults:

Will older workers come back?FRED

Many of these older workers were planning to retire fairly soon anyway; now they've learned that retirement is a better experience, and the extra money they can earn by working longer is worth less in life satisfaction than they realized. So the pandemic didn't just provide infant-industry protection to remote work; it also provided infant-industry protection to nonwork among certain groups.

And all of this is OK! The purpose of the economy isn't to maximize G.D.P.; it is to make our lives better. The time saved and aggravation avoided when people telework rather than fight traffic to get to and from the office isn't counted in G.D.P., but it represents a real gain. And though the increased life satisfaction some people get by retiring early and spending more time at home actually comes at the expense of G.D.P., it makes the nation richer in what matters.

So the post-Covid-19 economy will look different from what we had before: There will probably be a glut of office space, and total employment will probably be a bit lower — Goldman Sachs estimates by around one million — than it would have been otherwise, because of early retirement. But these changes will, on the whole, be good things: The pandemic was deadly and costly, but one small compensation is that it gave us a chance to think, work and live differently.

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