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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Jun 9 2026 UPDATED 9:18 AM

Full Issue

Experts Say Smartphone Use In Kids Younger Than 13 Linked To Depression, Obesity

In a new study published yesterday in JAMA Pediatrics, scientists say that the earliest a child should receive a smartphone is age 13. They found that use from that age, while still linked to poor sleep, is not associated with an increased risk of depression or obesity. Plus: Apple expands tools to protect kids online; the U.K. will announce a social media ban for kids; and more.

Thirteen. At the earliest. That鈥檚 when parents should consider getting their child a smartphone, according to a new study published in JAMA Pediatrics. Parents are often told to wait until their children hit the teen years to give them their first phone, as research continues to roll in showing health worries tied to young people鈥檚 social media habits. The new findings back up conventional wisdom, showing a delay of even one year can lead to measurably better mental and physical health. (Inampudi, 6/8)

Apple Inc. is expanding tools for parents to protect children online, a move that comes as governments around the world increasingly ban social media for young people. The iPhone and iPad maker at its Worldwide Developers Conference Monday previewed new features that will let parents better control on devices when kids can use apps, what content they can access and with whom they can communicate. (Purnell, 6/9)

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is preparing to announce a ban on under-16s using social media within days after his position hardened following parents鈥 response to a government consultation. Nine in ten parents who responded to the consultation said they wanted to see such a ban, Technology Secretary Liz Kendall told Sky News on Tuesday morning. She said she鈥檚 considering two broad options: a 鈥渂lanket鈥 ban on under-16s using social media, or age restrictions on key features of social networks and apps. 鈥淎 ban is on the table,鈥 she said. (Wickham, 6/9)

Long championed as a leader in adopting digital technology, Sweden is set to ban mobile phones in schools beginning in the fall for the next academic year as part of a broad, international reversal on the use of screens in classrooms. (Brooks, 6/9)

More public health news 鈥

A report on alcohol鈥檚 health effects, commissioned by the federal government but unreleased under President Trump, came out Tuesday 鈥 in a scientific journal. The study finds even low levels of drinking may increase the risk of various diseases or even death. (Cueto, 6/9)

Parents used to be advised to keep allergenic foods like eggs away from babies, especially if allergies ran in the family. But based on recent and evolving evidence, the advice is now almost the opposite 鈥 and new research suggests the shift in guidance is paying off. (Howard and Anos, 6/8)

On Memorial Day, D. locked himself out of his East Bay apartment. It was the fourth or fifth time he鈥檇 done this recently. When a neighbor saw him sitting in front of his locked door sometime later, on a chair he鈥檇 dragged over from the communal patio, she invited him inside her unit, where he spent the night until he found someone who could let him back into his own home. (Allday, 6/8)

杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: Trivia Nights, Valentine鈥檚 Cards: Overlooked Social Connections Can Prevent Suicide

Nearly every Tuesday for a decade, Steve Siple attended a bar trivia night with friends in Birmingham, Alabama. After moving to North Carolina, he developed a new ritual 鈥 joining other Charlotte locals on Saturdays to pick up trash along the city鈥檚 light rail. These are more than fun outings to Siple. They help keep him alive. Siple has battled suicidal thoughts in the past. He lost his father to suicide, and one of his sons has struggled with thoughts of hurting himself. That鈥檚 made Siple vigilant about protecting himself and his family. (Pattani, 6/9)

杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: Could Your Kid Benefit From Counseling? Experts Offer 3 Questions To Help You Decide

HealthQ鈥檚 Cara Anthony and Blake Farmer share know-how for parents navigating the decision to seek out mental healthcare for a child. Divorce rocked the lives of Marcela Cabay and her daughter, who was a preschooler at the time. But counseling didn鈥檛 come until years later, when Cabay noticed her daughter was tensing up every time a storm rolled through or whenever they were preparing to be apart. 鈥淪he was experiencing just a lot of anxiety, really starting to think worst-case scenarios all the time, just really struggling in her daily life,鈥 said Cabay, who is a life insurance broker outside Austin, Texas. (Farmer and Anthony, 6/9)

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