OKLAHOMA CITY (KOCO) -- While mental health has become a huge focus nationwide, some point out itโs not just adults, and more needs to be done for the youth.
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OU Health University of Oklahoma Medical Center said the situation has been so serious that it has added extra beds to its emergency room to keep up, but doctors say thereโs still more that can be done to tackle the issue.
The hospital said cases with kids have become a daily occurrence, with several reasons for the uptick.
โAfter an evening in the ER, weโll come in during the morning and probably have four new people to see that are in crisis and emergencies,โ said Dr. Robyn Cowperthwaite, consultation physician for Oklahoma Childrenโs Hospital.
OU Health said about 15 years ago, only one or two kids would come into the hospital with severe mental health problems. Now, it is happening every single shift.
โWe can see 10 to 14 people a day sometimes,โ Cowperthwaite said.
Cowperthwaite works with children and teens regularly and told KOCO 5 that part of the increase stems from the lack of trained professionals and resources.
โWe donโt have the numbers needed for outpatient therapists or psychiatrists or psychologists, social workers. There are really long wait times,โ Cowperthwaite said.
She said there are kids that need treatment between five and 10 days at times, and the biggest driver of mental health issues is comparing their own lives to those of others through social media.
โHaving the sense that things seem to be better for other people than they are for me,โ Cowperthwaite said.
She said young girls are a specific category where this is prevalent, and even though kids and teens can differentiate between reality and whatโs online, the digital world still takes a toll.
โKids can know that, and theyโre still susceptible to those social comparisons, that this person looks perfect, their life looks perfect, theyโre always on vacation, and itโs quite unrealistic,โ Cowperthwaite said.
A second big factor is sleep. Kids need it, but they arenโt getting enough. It sounds simple, but when these kids canโt put their phones down, thereโs a cost.
โTeenagers need about nine to 10 hours of sleep, and often thatโs not happening. Thereโs that fear of missing out, our kids get FOMO, and theyโre aware of that phone all the time, listening for texts and dings,โ Cowperthwaite said.
There are plans for a 72-bed psychiatric hospital at OU Health, which is planned to open in late 2026.