Generation Next Blog

May 2016

F.D.A. Imposes Rules For E-Cigarettes In A Landmark Move

By |2020-10-30T12:44:58+11:00May 6th, 2016|Categories: Drugs & Alcohol|Tags: , , , , , |

After years of debate about the health risks of electronic cigarettes, the federal government on Thursday made it final: They need to be regulated and kept out of the hands of children. The Food and Drug Administration issued sweeping new rules that for the first time extend federal regulatory authority to e-cigarettes, banning their sale to anyone under 18 [...]

Yeast Infections Have Been Linked To Mental Illness

By |2016-05-16T11:33:39+10:00May 5th, 2016|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing, Science & Research|Tags: , , , , , |

Shutter Stock Yeast infections are a relatively common occurrence these days, and are easily treatable. But new research has just revealed a tentative link between the Candida fungus and schizophrenia in men, and memory impairment in mentally ill women, which suggestes that this kind of infection might have a longer-lasting impact on the body than [...]

The Years When Nurturing Makes Kids Smarter And More Resilient

By |2016-05-14T19:58:45+10:00May 3rd, 2016|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing, Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , |

Photo: Getty Images According to new research from Washington University School of Medicine, children whose mothers were more nurturing during the preschool years, rather than later on in childhood, have more robust growth in brain structures associated with learning memory and stress response, than kids with less supportive mums. As part of the study, [...]

How Schools Can Understand And Respond To Self-Harm

By |2016-05-02T17:04:58+10:00May 1st, 2016|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing, Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , |

Stock Images Given current national statistics, we can safely assume there are very few young people who haven’t known someone who has deliberately injured themselves by cutting, self-battery, overdosing or intentionally participating in risky behaviour. In 2015 the Australian Child and Adolescent Survey reported that approximately 10% of 12 – 17 year olds have self-harmed, with 8% self-harming [...]

More Than Half Of Australian Infants Have Risk Factors For Adult Mental Illness

By |2016-05-01T22:06:24+10:00May 1st, 2016|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing, Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , |

A study on mental health published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry reveals that one in 10 infants were born to mothers who consumed alcohol daily and two-thirds of children aged 12–13 years had parents who displayed low warmth or exhibited high hostility or anger. Photograph: Alamy More than half [...]

Are Electronic Cigarettes A Gateway To Adolescent Smoking?

By |2020-10-30T12:45:44+11:00May 1st, 2016|Categories: Drugs & Alcohol, Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , |

Adolescents are experimenting with electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) and there is speculation that this might lead some young people who would not otherwise have smoked cigarettes to progress to smoking (the gateway effect). However, after ten years of experience in other countries where e-cigarettes are widely available, there is no evidence that this is happening. In [...]

Breakthrough Study Found The ‘Happiness Genes’

By |2016-05-01T16:04:36+10:00May 1st, 2016|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing|Tags: , , , , , |

https://youtu.be/Nd7ffDXrw5U Everybody reacts to emotions differently. There are so many different ways that influence how one can experience emotions, and a new study suggests that DNA may be one of them. In a new study about human genetics, it was found that the "happiness gene" may affect how people experience happiness. For the very [...]

Psychologists Reveal One Of The Best Ways To Boost Your Mood

By |2016-05-01T22:00:02+10:00May 1st, 2016|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing, Science & Research|Tags: , , , , , |

Helping others boosts your mood more than helping yourself, new study suggests. Credit: Kelvin Murray/ Getty Images When we’re having a rough day, many of us tend to treat ourselves to some form of retail therapy, a favorite dessert or going out with friends in hopes of feeling better. But a new study published [...]

The War On Drugs Have Failed – Time To Stop Fighting And Start Thinking

By |2020-10-30T12:46:19+11:00May 1st, 2016|Categories: Drugs & Alcohol|Tags: , , , , , |

When the world’s nations committed to the sustainable development goals (SDGs) last year, they probably weren’t thinking about drugs. But they should have been. Without effective drug control strategies, marginalisation, poverty and inequality will persist in societies. Evidence shows that prohibitionist approaches have not worked – from 1998 to 2008 the number of people using [...]

Scientists Just Published A List Of The 50 Most Incorrectly Used Terms In Psychology

By |2016-05-02T10:15:29+10:00May 1st, 2016|Categories: Science & Research|Tags: , , , , , , |

Stock Images Words are hard to get right, particularly in science. Not only do the same words mean entirely different things whether you’re using them in regular conversation or in a  scientific context (hello, "theory"), but the more we use certain words and phrases, the faster they can lose their original meaning, or [...]

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