-
On "Florida Matters," host Bradley George talks with Lynn Hatter, the Health News Florida reporter who did our recent five-part series on children and the Baker Act.
-
The increased demand for intensive mental health care that has accompanied the pandemic has worsened issues that have long plagued the system.
-
When it comes to children, Florida's law regarding involuntary commitments for psychiatric treatment is applied inconsistently.
-
To keep children from being committed under the Baker Act, some schools are addressing early childhood trauma and changing their approach to student discipline.
-
Data shows children who are committed under the Baker Act often are referred by school officials. School shootings and other incidents have placed more pressure on officials to intervene.
-
Each year, about 36,000 children in Florida are involuntarily committed for psychiatric evaluations under the state's Baker Act and disabled kids are becoming increasingly ensnared.
-
The number of children who are taken for involuntary psychiatric evaluations in Florida increases every year. This is the first story in a five-part series about how the state's Baker Act affects children.
-
Dr. Howard Pratt, a child and adolescent psychiatrist at Community Health of South Florida, has advice on how to step in and support young people who are struggling with difficult emotions and stress.
-
The Florida Department of Education is making $2 million available to rural counties across the state to increase access to telehealth to provide mental…
-
Anxiety and depression among teens and youth are getting worse since COVID lockdowns began in March, early studies suggest, and many experts say they fear a corresponding increase in suicide.