Surgeon General urges warning labels for social media
NASHVILLE (BP)—U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy on June 17 called for warning labels to be placed on social media, saying in a post to X it is “an important contributor” to a youth mental health crisis.
“Congress’ top priority should be making these platforms safer by passing legislation to protect kids’ health, safety and privacy,” he said.
Among those cheering the surgeon general’s actions, there is also some doubt as to its potential impact. Similar steps in the past appear to have been at least somewhat effective when it came to tobacco products. They have appeared less effective in regard to music with questionable lyrics.
Murthy’s statement comes a year after his release of an advisory about social media and youth mental health.
“I love that the surgeon general says this, but unless the social media platform is being held legally accountable for the things that take place there, I think it becomes an exercise in futility,” said Chris Martin, director of content for Moody Radio and author of The Wolf in Their Pockets: 13 Ways the Social Internet Threatens the People You Lead.
The result is “warning-labeling” things and getting the same amount of attention that comes with FBI anti-piracy screens at the start of a DVD, he pointed out. That said, such a step could be helpful in a “collective reflection on how social media is negatively affecting all of us, but especially young people.”
Guide for parents
On the same day of the surgeon general’s announcement, Yale Medicine re-issued an updated parent’s guide on how social media affects teens’ mental health.
Among suggestions such as keeping devices out of the bedroom and lines of communication with your child open, parents need to model a responsible relationship with technology.
“It’s central,” Martin said. Just as parents often abdicate their roles as key disciplers of Scripture to the church, he added, they can make the same mistake when it comes to social media and technology.
“In the life of a child, it is the parents above anyone else in overseeing their children’s relationship with social media, the internet and technology,” Martin said. “This requires them to have a relatively healthy relationship themselves. They don’t have to be perfect, but it’s going to be hard to tell your 16-year-old daughter to get off Instagram at the dinner table if the 46-year-old mother is on Facebook at the same time.
“Parents need to lead by example here, or their words are going to ring hollow and hypocritical.”
Source of distraction
The dinner table, of course, isn’t the only place where it’s important to be focused on something other than getting another “like.” Phones at camp have become a point of debate among student ministries, with it becoming more common to ban their presence altogether.
“I’m all for the warning labels,” said Nick Hampton, associate pastor of youth at First Baptist Church in Quitman, Ga. “We don’t allow phones at camp because they are a major distraction.”
Taking it out of the equation, he said, led to one of his students making a profession of faith in Christ at camp recently.
“Part of the reason he gave for hearing from God was that he is usually too distracted by his phone,” Hampton said. “Our students didn’t even ask for their phones back when we got back on the bus to head home. We have to help them say no to social media just like we encourage them to say no to other things.”
Parents can set the example, Martin said, and thereby help children steer clear of the ways social media impacts them specifically.
“It affects them differently in a number of ways,” he said. “They’re still forming their sense of self … with all of these different input sources talking at them. It’s a pressure young people feel that their parents didn’t. There’s a social pressure you feel as a teenager that you don’t feel at 35 or 45.”
Hampton urged parents to consider the long-term dangers of social media.
“We are slowly creating addicts to these micro dopamine hits that they get from doom scrolling online,” he said. “Social media is shortening attention spans and keeping our teenagers from engaging with the world around them. I think parents need to take a hard look at what they are allowing their teenagers to engage in online.”
Minette Williams Drumwright Pratt, missions advocate and denominational servant, died June 15. She was 93. She was born Nov. 3, 1930, in Nixon to Tallie Williams and Minnie Musgrave Williams. Shortly thereafter, her family moved to San Antonio where her father was pastor of Northside Baptist Church until he retired. She earned an undergraduate degree in English from Baylor University in 1951. At Baylor, she met and fell in love with Huber L. Drumwright Jr., a young pastor and doctoral student at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. They married shortly after her graduation. While he went on to become pastor of churches in Texas and Oklahoma, she led numerous missions action projects, Bible studies, Bible schools and Woman’s Missionary Union groups. The Drumwrights moved to Fort Worth in 1960 for Huber to become a professor of Greek and New Testament at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. He later became dean of the School of Theology, and she took on the duties of a dean’s spouse while continuing many of her own pursuits. Her passion for missions action flourished through a cutting-edge initiative, the Baptist Center at Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth. She designed and led programs for low-income women, battered women, orphans, unwed mothers and women prisoners. She was in great demand as a speaker and served on boards of the Woman’s Missionary Union, Home Mission Board (now North American Mission Board), Baptist General Convention of Texas, Seminary Woman’s Club, Woman’s Club of Fort Worth, Friends of the Fort Worth Library, Lena Pope Children’s Home, Edna Gladney Home and Dorcas House. She attended Southwestern Seminary and later served as president of the Southwestern Seminary Alumni. In 1978, she wrote a seminary extension study guide, Women in the Church. She received the Mrs. J.M. Dawson Award for outstanding contributions to the denomination from the Southern Baptist Convention Ministers’ Wives Conference in 1984. In 1980, the Drumwrights moved to Little Rock, Ark., where he served as executive director of the Baptist General Convention of Arkansas. After 18 months, Huber died of a sudden heart attack when Minette was 50 years old. Shortly thereafter, she was asked to join the leadership team of Keith Parks and Bill O’Brien at the Foreign Mission Board in Richmond, Va. She worked at the FMB 13 years and was the inaugural director of international prayer strategies, through which she designed programs to engage churches and individuals in prayer for foreign missions. She launched a prayer line relaying the latest prayer requests of missionaries, and she traveled the world to speak, teach, preach and lead programs on prayer in places such as Moldova, China and Africa. As she stated, “Although some governments won’t let missionaries in, they can’t keep the effects of prayer out.” She wrote two books—The Life That Prays: Reflections on Prayer as a Strategy and When My Faith Feels Shallow: Pursuing the Depths of God—and a seminary extension study guide, Women in the Church. After retiring, she returned to Fort Worth. She served on the Baylor University board of regents from 1999 to 2008. She fell in love with William (Bill) Pratt, a retired Baptist pastor and psychologist, and they married in 2002. He was a devoted, loving partner to her through her long battle with Alzheimer’s Disease until his death in April of 2024. She is survived by two daughters, Minette (Meme) Drumwright and husband H.W. Perry Jr., and Debra Underwood and husband Max; three grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren; two stepchildren—Martha Pratt Wainwright and husband Larry, and James Pratt and wife Dana; six step-grandchildren; and many step-great-grandchildren. The family requests that donations be made to Baylor University—Drumwright Family Lecture Fund (Honors College), William and Minette Pratt Scholarship Fund (Dianna R. Garland School of Social Work), Louise Herrington School of Nursing—or Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth.












