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Compared with 10–20 years ago, the health profile of U.S. children has shifted in worrying ways. A comprehensive 2025 study spanning more than 170 indicators found broad declines since 2007, including higher mortality than peers in other wealthy nations and rising burdens of chronic conditions [1]. Youth mental health has deteriorated over the past decade; in 2023, about 40% of high-school students reported persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessness [2].
Youth mental health: Anxiety, depression, and suicide risk remain elevated; 40% of U.S. high-schoolers reported persistent sadness or hopelessness in 2023 [2].
Roughly 1 in 5 U.S. children has obesity, with prevalence increasing by age; disparities persist by race/ethnicity [7–8].
RSV, influenza, and COVID‑19 continue to affect schools/childcare; CDC highlights core infection‑prevention steps for K‑12 settings and recommends RSV immunization strategies for infants and during pregnancy [13–14].
Keep every well-child visit: and use the pediatric screening schedule. Establish a “dental home” by age 1. [16–17]
Stay on-time with vaccines (including yearly flu and any recommended COVID updates). Use the current CDC child/adolescent schedule. [18]
Protect infants from RSV: during pregnancy (weeks 32–36) get the maternal RSV vaccine, or use infant nirsevimab as recommended. [14]
Use “sick-day basics”: keep kids home when ill, wash hands with soap for 20 seconds, and practice good respiratory etiquette. [13,19]
Store firearms locked, unloaded, with ammunition locked separately and ask about gun storage where your child plays. [20,6]
Create a Family Media Plan; keep devices out of bedrooms at night and aim for age-appropriate sleep. [21–22]
Check in daily on mood and stress; know warning signs; save 988 (call/text/chat) for any mental-health crisis. [2,23–24]
Keep nutrition simple: water and plain milk as default drinks; limit added sugars (≈≤25 g/day for ages ≥2). [25–26]
Build movement into the day: kids 6–17 need at least 60 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous activity daily (active play for younger kids). [27]
Safety at home & outdoors: use the right car/booster seat and bike helmets; store medicines “up and away”; on hot or smoky days, check HeatRisk/AQI and move play indoors. [28–32]
At Eastern Medicine Center, we have some herbal formula developed on the foundation of classical Traditional Chinese Medicine prescriptions, enhanced to meet the challenges of modern life. While ancient formulas were effective for the conditions of their time, today’s Children face additional stressors, environmental toxins, processed foods, hormonal disruptors, and fast-paced lifestyles, that require more targeted support. These formulas have been carefully refined to provide stronger and more comprehensive benefits for children with ADHD, Depression, anxiety, stress, Sleep issues, please check our website under “What we Treat” section with detailed on how treating the mental disorders such as ADHD, Tics, Depression, Stress and much more.
How to integrate. Treat these as adjuncts not replacements for medical and psychological care. Start small (e.g., 5 minutes of breathing practice nightly; a weekly family “laughter time”), track sleep/mood/focus changes, and coordinate with your pediatrician and licensed acupuncturist/herbalist to personalize frequency, formulas, and goals.
[1] Forrest CB, et al. JAMA. 2025. Trends in U.S. children’s mortality, chronic conditions, and well-being, 2007–2023 (multi-source analysis of >170 indicators).
[2] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) Data Summary & Trends Report: 2013–2023 (released 2024); includes 2023 persistent sadness results.
[3] Goldstick JE, Cunningham RM, Carter PM. New England Journal of Medicine. 2022. Firearm-related injury as the leading cause of death among U.S. children and adolescents.
[4] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Fast Facts: Firearm Injury and Death (children and adolescents).
[5] U.S. Surgeon General. Advisory on Firearm Violence in America (overview and recommendations).
[6] CDC. MMWR. 2024. Firearm Storage Behaviors—BRFSS 2021–2022 (secure storage reduces access and harm).
[7] CDC/NCHS. QuickStats. 2020. Childhood obesity rose from 13.9% (1999–2000) to 19.3% (2017–2018).
[8] CDC. Childhood Obesity Facts (current prevalence and disparities).
[9] CDC SchoolVaxView. 2025. Vaccination coverage and exemptions among kindergartners, 2024–2025 school year.
[10] KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). 2025. Kindergarten routine vaccination rates continue to decline; exemptions at ~3.6%.
[11] U.S. Surgeon General. Social Media and Youth Mental Health—Advisory (risk and recommendations).
[12] American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). 2024. Climate Change and Children’s Health: Policy Statement.
[13] CDC. Preventing Spread of Infections in K-12 Schools (consolidated guidance).
[14] CDC. Clinical Guidance for RSV Immunizations (maternal vaccine and infant nirsevimab), updated 2025.
[15] CDC. MMWR. 2024. Tobacco Product Use Among Middle and High School Students — United States, 2024.
[16] AAP. Bright Futures / Preventive Care Periodicity Schedule (updated Feb 6, 2025).
[17] American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD). The Importance of the Age One Dental Visit (policy brief).
[18] CDC. Child & Adolescent Immunization Schedule, United States, 2025 (with 2025 addenda).
[19] CDC. About Handwashing—Clean Hands (20-second handwashing guidance).
[20] HealthyChildren.org (AAP). Guns in the Home: How to Keep Kids Safe (updated 2025).
[21] HealthyChildren.org (AAP). Make a Family Media Plan (2024).
[22] CDC / American Academy of Sleep Medicine. Sleep recommendations for school-age children and teens.
[23] U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, Office of Population Affairs. Mental Health for Adolescents—Common Warning Signs.
[24] 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (call/text/chat 988).
[25] HealthyChildren.org (AAP). Recommended Drinks for Children Ages 0–5 (water + plain milk).
[26] HealthyChildren.org (AAP). How to Reduce Added Sugar in Your Child’s Diet (aim <25 g/day ≥2 yrs).
[27] CDC. Physical Activity Guidelines—Children & Adolescents (≥60 minutes/day).
[28] HealthyChildren.org (AAP). Car Seats: Information for Families.
[29] HealthyChildren.org (AAP). Bike Helmets for Kids: Parent FAQs.
[30] CDC. “Up and Away” medication safety campaign (store medicines up and away).
[31] CDC. Heat and Young Children—Heat Health guidance (protect infants and children on hot days).
[32] EPA AirNow. Air Quality & Outdoor Activity Guidance for Schools (use AQI to modify outdoor activity).
[33] Carneiro BD, et al. 2025. Mindfulness-based interventions for children/adolescents: systematic review & meta-analysis. PMC
[34] Luo S, et al. 2024. Network meta-analysis of mind–body therapies (including Tai Chi) for adolescent depression. Frontiers
[35] Lin G, et al. 2024. The efficacy of laughter therapy on psychological well-being: meta-analysis. PubMed
[36] Sun X, et al. 2023. Humor therapy and mental health: systematic review. PMC
[37] Tan Y, et al. 2024. Acupuncture for depression: systematic review & meta-analysis. PMC
[38] Li M, et al. 2022. Acupuncture for generalized anxiety disorder: meta-analysis. PMC
[39] Lu Y, et al. 2022; Yu Y, 2025. Acupuncture for (chronic) insomnia: systematic & network meta-analyses. PubMedPMC
[40] Yang M, et al. 2023. Suan Zao Ren (Ziziphi spinosae) for insomnia: meta-analysis. PMC
[41] Wang Y, et al. 2023. Xiao Yao San for anxiety: systematic review & trial sequential analysis. PubMed
[42] Li J, 2024. Xiao Yao San for depression: systematic review of RCTs. Lippincott Journals
[43] Jun JH, et al. 2014. Gan Mai Da Zao decoction for depression: systematic review & meta-analysis. PubMed
[44] Ang L, et al. 2023. Acupuncture for ADHD in children: updated systematic review.