Generation Next Blog

January 2016

Still in a Crib, Yet Being Given Antipsychotics 

By |2020-10-30T16:51:43+11:00January 24th, 2016|Categories: Drugs & Alcohol, Mental Health & Wellbeing|Tags: , , , , , , , |

Andrew Rios’s seizures began when he was 5 months old and only got worse. At 18 months, when an epilepsy medication resulted in violent behavior, he was prescribed the antipsychotic Risperdal, a drug typically used to treat schizophrenia and bipolar disorder in adults, and rarely used for children as young as 5 years. When Andrew screamed in his sleep and seemed to interact [...]

FSANZ Detects ‘Potentially Concerning’ Amounts of Phthalates in Food from Packaging

By |2016-01-25T13:40:06+11:00January 24th, 2016|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing, Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , |

FSANZ found half of 30 packaging chemicals studied were at detectable levels in food. Photo: Wayne Taylor Fresh bread, takeaway hamburgers and meat pizzas are some of the foods the national regulator has found contain hormone-disrupting chemicals that have leached from plastic packaging, a report reveals. Food Standards Australia New Zealand has detected [...]

Sir Anthony Seldon Says Test Obsession Wrecks Education

By |2016-01-25T13:39:02+11:00January 24th, 2016|Categories: Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , |

Class act: principal executive Anthony Seldon, Photo: John Lawrence Thomas Gradgrind, the notorious school-board superintendent in Charles Dickens’s novel Hard Times, is alive and well and running education systems around the world, it has been claimed. That is the view of Sir Anthony Seldon, historian, biographer and vice-chancellor of the UK’s only not-for-profit [...]

Long Term Health Impact of Road Rage Revealed

By |2016-01-17T11:23:31+11:00January 15th, 2016|Categories: Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , |

Getty Images RESEARCH into the health impacts of road rage has found courteous drivers could live longer, and help others do the same. RACQ has revealed the landmark research conducted through the University of the Sunshine Coast, a world first in the study of the long-term health impacts of road rage. RACQ Executive [...]

On Praising Kids for Effort

By |2016-01-18T11:46:40+11:00January 14th, 2016|Categories: Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , |

ALAMY It’s become something of a self-esteem cliché in the classroom: assuring kids that it’s fine if they messed up their homework assignment on long division, because, hey, they tried really hard. The underlying intention is a good one, and it can be traced back to Stanford psychologist Carol Dweck’s work on mind-sets. Dweck [...]

To End Bullying, Get the Cool Kids to Help

By |2016-01-18T11:47:57+11:00January 14th, 2016|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing, Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , , |

Gallery Hip For all of the efforts schools put into reducing bullying, there’s actually a dearth of rigorous evidence about what makes for effective anti-bullying intervention. The classic approach — pile kids into an auditorium and lecture them on the dangers of bullying, perhaps including a sad story about its effects along the [...]

What Really Causes Violent Brawls

By |2020-10-30T16:52:28+11:00January 14th, 2016|Categories: Drugs & Alcohol|Tags: , , , , , |

DOES alcohol cause violence or do violent people cause violence? It’s a surprisingly complex question which has led to a furious war of words between rival health experts. And the answer could have severe ramifications for how, where and at what time Australians are permitted to have a drink. Last week, 18-year-old Cole Miller died [...]

Loneliness As Harmful As No Exercise To Teenagers’ Health

By |2016-12-19T15:32:51+11:00January 6th, 2016|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing|Tags: , , , , , , |

Gallery Hip New research at the University of North Carolina has found that being lonely is as harmful to teenagers' health as not getting enough exercise. There have been many studies showing the health effects of social isolation on the elderly, but this is the first to look at the impact on the [...]

December 2015

Religious Children are Meaner than Their Secular Counterparts, Study Finds

By |2016-01-17T11:41:31+11:00December 21st, 2015|Categories: Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , |

The moment of truth. No pressure, kid. Photograph: Allen Donikowski/Getty Images/Flickr RM Children from religious families are less kind and more punitive than those from non-religious households, according to a new study. Academics from seven universities across the world studied Christian, Muslim and non-religious children to test the relationship between religion and morality. They [...]

Nurturing the Brain – Turmeric (Curcumin)

By |2016-01-25T13:38:14+11:00December 20th, 2015|Categories: Science & Research|Tags: , , , , , |

Stock Images Turmeric is a yellow dietary spice extracted from the rhizome of a plant in the ginger family named Curcuma longa. Turmeric has some well-known beneficial properties and it has been widely used for medicinal purpose for centuries, mostly in Asian countries. There are thousands of research articles describing the multitude of [...]

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