Health Rewind: More Young People Getting Mental Health Care
Plus, is your preschooler depressed?
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Health Care Reform Bringing Mental Health Services to Young Adults - New study found that thanks to Obamacare more young adults are getting linked into mental health services. According to data, after the Affordable Care Act went into effect, 33 percent of young adults ages 18-25 who showed signs of mental health and addiction issues sought out care compared to 31 percent before, writes Health Day. —Kellee Terrell (Photo: Dale May/Corbis)
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How Gun Violence Wrecks Your Emotional Health - MSNBC’s Tyrmaine Lee highlights the emotional wreckage that gun violence in Chicago creates for its city’s already vulnerable residents. People who live in these areas are 13 times more likely to suffer from PTSD, depression, anxiety and anger issues. Past data also found that living in areas ridden with gun violence also impacts brain function and development. (Photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images)
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Second American With Ebola Taken to Atlanta - Nancy Writebol, the second American medical missionary diagnosed with Ebola virus in Liberia, has been taken to Emory University in Atlanta to seek treatment, USA Today reported. While she was carried in the hospital on a stretcher, the doctors say that she is improving. (Photo: AP Photo/David Goldman)
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Inmates in Prisons That Ban Smoking Are Healthier - Prisons that ban smoking find that inmates are less likely to die from tobacco-related illnesses like cancer and heart disease. Researchers saw that in prisons where this ban had been in place for more than nine years, the risk of dying was 11 percent lower and 9 percent lower in prisons that established this ban later than nine years, says Health Day. (Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
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Poor People With Diabetes More Likely to Lose Their Limbs - Amputations and infections are 10 times more common among poor Americans living with diabetes, a new report found. Researchers from UCLA found that living under the federal poverty level, not speaking English as a main language, being a person of color, being male and older than 65 all put people more at risk for losing a limb, writes USA Today. (Photo: Image Source/Getty Images)
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