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2025-06-25 00:00:00| Fast Company

As a child and adolescent psychiatrist, Ive spent the past two decades treating young people and working with families in crisis. And I can tell you this: The threats to youth mental health are bigger than we think, and theyre not coming from where you might expect.  While the stigma around therapy and psychiatric care may be slowly receding, access to care is under siege. We’re watching mental health supports erode at exactly the moment families need them most. And in the name of reform, new political efforts like the “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) executive order are introducing even more barriers.  To be clear, we should absolutely be thoughtful about how we deliver care and prevent misuse of medication in kids’ mental health treatment. But what we cannot do is politicize or pathologize the very tools that save lives.  A system in retreat  We are in the middle of a youth mental health crisis. According to the CDC, suicide was the second leading cause of death for youth ages 10 to 14 in 2023, the latest CDC data available. One in five children has a diagnosable mental health condition, yet almost two-thirds receive little to no treatment at all. And when care is delayed, the consequences can be severe: school dropout, addiction, chronic illness, even early death.   Yet, despite this, we’re watching key supports disappear:  School-based mental health programs are being defunded. These programs often catch problems early and are sometimes the only care option for underserved kids.  Telehealth access is under threat, despite being a lifeline for rural families and working parents during the pandemic.  Medicaid redeterminations have put millions of children at risk of losing coverage.  Mental health medication access is being undermined by supply chain issues and growing skepticism around use, especially for conditions like ADHD.  MAHAs emphasis on “over-utilization” of psychiatric medication only adds to the problem. When we focus on the wrong risks, we distract from the real ones: untreated illness, suffering families, and preventable tragedies.  Stigma with a new disguise  Im seeing more and more skepticism about psychiatric treatment. Questions like, “Are we overmedicating kids?” or “Shouldnt we be building resilience instead?”  The thing is, its not either-or. We treat diabetes with insulin and teach healthy habits. We manage asthma with inhalers and reduce environmental triggers. Mental health should be no different. Framing treatment as a failure, or something we should avoid unless weve tried everything else, only drives families deeper into shame. And for kids, that can translate into silence, hopelessness, and danger.  What kids and families actually need  We need a new model for mental health careone that meets families where they are, uses the best available evidence, and doesnt leave them to figure it all out alone.  Heres what that looks like:  Integrated, team-based care. No one provider can do it all. Kids need therapists, psychiatric providers, and coaches who work together.  Early, proactive support. The longer we wait, the worse outcomes get. Lets reach kids early, way before they actually hit a crisis.  Technology that expands access, not replaces care. Telehealth and digital tools can help families overcome logistical barriers, especially when thoughtfully designed.  Respect for families. Parents shouldnt feel judged for seeking care. They should be met with empathy and real options.  Investment in workforce and innovation. We need to train more clinicians, pay them fairly, and support research into better treatments.  How can policymakers and leaders help?   So what can we actually do? First, we need to protect telehealth paritybecause where a child lives shouldnt determine whether they can see a therapist. We need to fully fund school-based programs, so kids have access to care where they spend most of their time. And we have to stabilize Medicaid enrollment to prevent kids from falling through the cracks just because of paperwork.   We also must raise reimbursement rates for mental health carebecause when providers burn out or leave the field, families are the ones left scrambling. Finally, we need to push back on stigmaespecially in the way we write and talk about mental health in policy. This isnt the time for vague language or political posturing. Its time to be clear, evidence-based, and human.  Silence isnt neutral  It can feel risky to speak up. But as a clinician, a mom, and a human being, I cant stay quiet while kids fall through the cracks.  This isnt about left or right. Its about right and wrong. Its about whether were willing to invest in our childrens future or continue to make care harder to reach.  Mental health isnt a luxury. And every child deserves the chance to feel better. Lets stop building roadblocks and start building a future grounded in compassion, care, and real support.  Monika Roots, MD is a child and adolescent psychiatrist and the cofounder, president, and chief medical officer of Bend Health. 


Category: E-Commerce

 

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2025-06-24 23:30:00| Fast Company

“I know how this ends. Im sitting here watching it unfold like a slow-motion movieknowing exactly where it leads in 10 years from now, and feeling like I cant stop it.” That lineas one founder put it during a recent gathering, captures the emotional temperature across tech, philanthropy, and the social innovation world in 2025. People care. But theyre cautious. Panels are packed. Questions are asked. Yet action feels stuck. We dont need another diagnosis. We need a shift from performative hope to pragmatic optimism. From words to scaffolding. From reflection to response. The readiness signal Across recent Fast Company Impact Council, Skoll Forum, and European ESG Forum events, from New York to Oxford to Brussels, my team and I have been sensing the same tension. Different contexts, same emotional current: uncertainty, caution, yet unmistakable readiness to act. From Fast Companys Tech for Good and Human Leadership roundtables to Skoll Sidebar breakout rooms, the questions were strikingly direct: Can we still act globally in a world turning inward? How do we build trust without diluting purpose? Heres the real question, Will the answers leave the room and bring tangible change? As one insider framed it, How can we stay mission-driven while navigating expectations that shift almost daily? One statement today could feel outdated or risky by tomorrow. The appetite for action is real. Whats missing is the structure: reliable ways to experiment, collaborate, and scale without getting lost in noise or paralyzed by risk. The hesitation gap In the U.S., philanthropic collaboratives gained momentum in the early 2020s as a lean, expert-led model of giving. According to Bridgespans 2023 report, nearly 200 such collaboratives collectively deployed between $2 and $3 billion in 2021 alone. The report attributes this rise, in part, to growing interest among newer philanthropists in pooled giving platforms that resemble mutual funds for impact. For many, the appeal wasnt just scale, it was structure. Donors were looking for ways to contribute without building foundations or going it alone. What this signals is important: Philanthropy wasnt lacking intent. It was searching for shared, trusted vehicles to act. People want confidence that what they step into will work. Not another vague framework. Something proven, buildable, and timely. When building beats talking What if the best way forward isnt more debating, but better prototypes that take into consideration all those different interests? At Tech To The Rescue, were seeing glimpses of this future. Our AI for Changemakers nonprofit acceleration program has mobilized nearly 500 tech companies to co-build with more than 110 nonprofits since its 2024 launch. When small, focused tech teams co-build with urgency, the result isnt just a tool, its a proof of possibility. It looks like Alsama (UK/Lebanon), partnering with tech company to roll out innovative education programs in refugee camps, compressing 12 years of learning into six for refugee youth, AsyLex (Switzerland), which co-built an AI assistant helping asylum seekers file human rights appeals to UN bodies or Justdiggit (Africa), now building AI powered chatbots to spread regreening techniques to farming communities across African countries. These organizations didnt need another strategy session. They needed trusted co-builders, tools, and a chance to start building. This co-creation model is becoming a movement. The road isn’t simple, but it’s being paved one partnership at a time and it’s what I believe pragmatic optimism should look like in practice. If you want to help, build Thats why at Tech To The Rescue were shaping something newa collaborative model born from many conversations, especially during our recent EuroLab experience. Not a think tank, not a conference. A hands-on space where NGOs, technologists, and funders build together. Small teams. Time-boxed sprints. Open-source lessons. A replicable engine for pragmatic optimism designed to scale across sectors and geographies. If youre a funder, you should support models that can be scaled. If you lead a nonprofit, ask not who will invite you in, but what you can prototype. If youre in tech, make your skills available to working systems, not just solutions. Lets build co-creation labs, not just roundtables. Lets equip optimism with tools. Lets stop waiting. So lets start. If youre already prototyping solutions that tackle humanitys burning problems, share whats working with others. If youre stuck, find one small team and test an idea together. And if youre waiting for a model to follow, this is it. The time to build is (still) now. Jacek Siadkowski is CEO and cofounder of Tech To The Rescue.


Category: E-Commerce

 

2025-06-24 23:09:00| Fast Company

As I reflect on my personal health journey, its hard not to draw a straight line from the food I ate growing up to where I am today. Food has always been central to my wellbeing. But it wasnt until I became an adult, and sick with a disease that went undiagnosed for many months, that I fully grasped the power of food to either nourish or harm. During that extremely difficult period in my life, trapped in a cycle of inconclusive tests and debilitating symptoms, I came to understand food as medicine and realized that the way our food is grown impacts not just our bodies, but also the ecosystems that sustain us. As the CEO of Rodale Institute, I believe now more than ever that soil health is human health. The land is a living, breathing organism that must be fed and cared for, just like us. When we feed the land, it feeds us. Although Rodale Institute is 78 years old and the birthplace of the modern organic movement, we maintain a start-up mentality: ambitious, forward-thinking, and focused on accelerating regenerative organic agriculture across the country. Weve set a bold goal to transition one million acres of farmland to regenerative organic by 2035. Why? Because how we grow food is deeply connected to rising rates of chronic illnesses like cancer, heart disease, and diabetes. Its time to make a change. Damage the soil, damage ourselves The current state of industrial agriculture in America is alarming. This system prioritizes high yields, chemical inputs, and monocropping at the expense of human and environmental health. Modern farming depends on synthetic pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers, many of which have been linked to serious health concerns. Studies show people exposed to these chemicals, whether through agricultural work or food consumption, face higher risks of cancer, neurological disorders, and other illnesses. This is not a theoretical concern, its a public health crisis. Exposure to synthetic pesticides has been linked to increased rates of leukemia, non-Hodgkins lymphoma, and prostate cancer. These chemicals may boost short-term yields, but they degrade our soil, kill beneficial microorganisms, and upset the natural balance of ecosystems. When we damage the soil, we damage our food and ourselves. Many of these chemicals also seep into waterways, polluting communities far beyond the farm. A better way forward But there is a better way forward: regenerative organic agriculture. This holistic approach prioritizes soil health, biodiversity, and ecosystem restoration. Unlike conventional farming, regenerative organic methods avoid synthetic chemicals and instead build the natural fertility and resilience of the land. It starts with soil, rebuilding soil health through techniques like crop rotation, cover cropping, and composting. These methods increase organic matter in the soil, which helps it store carbon, retain water, and support microbial life. Healthy soil produces nutrient-dense crops, which nourish the animals and people who consume them. The benefits go beyond soil. Regenerative organic farms foster biodiversity, protect pollinators, and restore natural habitats. This isnt just about growing food, its about restoring balance to our environment and improving public health. Theres a direct link between food and health. When we eat food grown with synthetic chemicals, we ingest substances that can contribute to chronic disease. But when we eat food grown in healthy, organic soil, were fueling our bodies with the vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants they need to thrive. In this way, food becomes medicine. Ive seen this firsthand. Since changing my diet to organic foods, my energy, health, and well-being have dramatically improved. That mysterious illness? It was resolved with dietary and lifestyle changes. I farmed my body back to health. And Im not alone. Millions of Americans suffer from chronic diseases that may be linked to our food system. The evidence is clear. Our farming practices must change if we want to improve soil health and human health. Yet theres a major hurdle: Less than 1% of U.S. farmland is USDA-certified organic, even though consumer demand for organic food is growing rapidly. Transitioning to regenerative organic farming requires commitment, training, and investment, but its an effort we cant afford to delay. The benefits are clear, regenerative organic farming restores our soil, improves health outcomes, and protects our environment for future generations. But we need more than a few dedicated farmers to make this vision a reality. We need widespread adoption, public investment, and strong policy support. Farmers, policymakers, and consumers must come together to build a food system that prioritizes health, sustainability, and resilience. The current food system is broken, but we can fix it. By supporting regenerative organic agriculture, we ensure that our food nourishes our bodies and sustains the land. At Rodale Institute, the farm continues to teach us about reciprocity, nourishment, and connection. We are all stewards of the land and the food that we eat from it. Its time for America to make the transition to a healthier, more regenerative food systemfor our health and our future. Jeff Tkach is CEO of Rodale Institute.


Category: E-Commerce

 

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