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Publication |
Daedalus

The Missing Piece: A Population Health Perspective to Address the U.S. Mental Health Crisis

The COVID-19 pandemic has enhanced our focus on mental health. Concerns about the high levels of mental disorders in the United States are not new, with rising trends–particularly among youth–observed prior to the pandemic. However, the pandemic may have exacerbated and accelerated these trends. The silver lining is that we can leverage this moment to reevaluate and reimagine not only how we treat mental health problems, but also how we promote emotional well-being throughout the life course. We argue that scholars, policymakers, and practitioners should broaden their view of mental health, and consider it as a full spectrum ranging from serious mental illness to robust emotional well-being. This perspective recognizes the importance of treatment access and quality, but also elevates the value of prevention, particularly at the population level. Greater attention to preventing problems before they occur will not only reduce manifest disorders but also encourage higher rates of psychological resilience and, ultimately, better physical health.
Publication |
Daedalus

New economic models for U.S. journalism

Publication |
Daedalus

Why race still matters

Publication |
Daedalus

“Now Is the Time”: Civic Learning for a Strong Democracy

Publication |
Daedalus

Women, Power & Leadership

Publication |
Daedalus

Seeing Guns to See Urban Violence: Racial Inequality & Neighborhood Context

Publication |
Daedalus

Performing the humanities at the Ethiopian Millennium

Publication |
Daedalus

Toward a 2.0 Compact for the Liberal Arts

Publication |
Daedalus

Genetics, biosocial groups & the future of identity

Publication |
Data Publication

The State of the Humanities: Funding 2014

Publication |
Data Publication

The State of the Humanities: Higher Education 2015

Publication |
Research Paper

Probing Human Origins

“Probing Human Origins” explores, from various perspectives, how humans became human. This collection of papers acknowledges the importance of genetic ‘blueprints’ but rejects the idea that the DNA sequence of the human genome contains a book of instructions that defines being human. Instead, it promotes the idea that during humankind’s evolutionary history, genic changes occurred in ancestral genomes that were positively selected to help shape the distinctive human phenotype.
Issue |
Summer 1991

Religion and Politics

Editor Stephen Richards Graubard
Publication |
Daedalus

Being Free in Obama’s America: Racial Differences in Perceptions of Contraints on Political Action

Publication |
Daedalus

Ghana’s Akosombo Dam, Volta Lake Fisheries & Climate Change

Publication |
Daedalus

Corporate Support for Legal Services

Publication |
Daedalus

Retooling Career Systems to Fight Workplace Bias: Evidence from U.S. Corporations

Publication |
Daedalus

Paying Too Much for Energy? The True Costs of Our Energy Choices

Publication |
Daedalus

The Unceasing Significance of Colorism: Skin Tone Stratification in the United States

Publication |
Daedalus

Building an AI Polymath

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