Ramesh

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So far Dr Ramesh Manocha has created 2067 blog entries.

Teens say social media a positive in their lives

For the vast majority of teens, using social-media sites and texting has become a part of daily life, but they still prefer communicating face-to-face, according to a survey released Tuesday. Overall, the teens who participated in the study painted a positive picture of the influence of social media on their relationships and self-image. More than [...]

HPV Vaccine Does Not Raise Risk for Sexual Activity

Adolescent girls who get the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine are no more likely to show signs they may be engaging in sexual activity than girls who do not get the vaccine, according to a new study that challenges a widely held belief. HPV is the most common sexually transmitted virus, and some strains of the [...]

Barack Obama and the ’empathy deficit’

In 2011, researchers at the University of Chicago conducted a simple experiment to ascertain whether a rat would release another rat from a cage without being given a reward. The answer was yes. After several sessions, the rats learned intentionally and quickly to open the restrainer and release the caged rats. The rats also repeated [...]

By |2013-02-07T10:26:28+11:00February 7th, 2013|Categories: Science & Research, Society & Culture|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Could PET scans detect brain injury caused by football?

For years, researchers have had to use tissue obtained posthumously to diagnose chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or C.T.E., the degenerative brain disease that has bedeviled athletes, soldiers and others who have sustained repeated head hits and concussions. via Study Suggests PET Scan May Identify C.T.E. in Living Patients - NYTimes.com.

How a teen’s iPod can tell you if they will be trouble

A new study shows a strong, early penchant for gothic, punk, heavy metal and hardcore dance music can be a predictor of teens who will go astray. Lovers of "deviant" music by age 12 were "more engaged in minor delinquency in late adolescence", the four-year study, published in the journal Pediatrics, found. The bad behaviour [...]

High Sobriety

My tilt at sobriety came after 20 years of partying that had left me physically and emotionally spent. It was ironic, given my job. Sunday Age readers may remember an article I wrote at the time, in which I outed myself as the binge-drinking health reporter. During the week I wrote about Australia's booze-soaked culture. [...]

Apocalypse or new civilisation?

Surveys reveal deep social pessimism and public unease in developed nations, including Australia; pessimists outnumber optimists about our future quality of life. But environmental and resource issues are not the main reasons. The concerns are more immediate and personal; more social, cultural and economic; more about the quality of relationships than material conditions. We need [...]

By |2013-02-07T09:19:15+11:00February 2nd, 2013|Categories: Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

City’s poor get sick, the rich get drunk

Behind the healthy and wealthy facade of the northern beaches lies a secret problem: alcohol. For the second year in a row, a Fairfax Media analysis of health statistics has found residents of some of the northern suburbs are the healthiest when it comes to everything but alcohol use. Hospitalisations linked to alcohol use were [...]

By |2013-01-31T10:57:27+11:00January 31st, 2013|Categories: Drugs & Alcohol|Tags: , , |0 Comments

Kuwaiti education program aims to combat religious extremism

Australia could benefit from a world-first training program developed by the Kuwaiti government to combat religious extremism at its roots, one of its senior officials has advised. The program, which has been running successfully in Russia, Azerbaijan and the Ukraine, is aimed at eliminating radical ideology by educating religious leaders and those in positions of [...]

Material obsessions wither the spirit

Sure, being financially and materially well off is a legitimate and worthwhile goal, and our ingrained drive for possessions and status keeps our consumer economy vibrant. But, as those great philosophers Lennon and McCartney remind us, money can't buy us love. via Material obsessions wither the spirit.

By |2013-01-31T10:55:28+11:00January 31st, 2013|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing|Tags: , , , |0 Comments
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