Generation Next Blog

April 2015

Homeless Young People Not ‘Too Difficult’: 3 Strategies for Better Engagement

By |2019-04-02T09:37:17+11:00April 2nd, 2015|Categories: Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , |

Counselling homeless young people is arguably one of the most difficult areas of work for registered psychologists. Homeless young people are often put in the ‘too hard’ basket, but there are three strategies that can be used to overcome the challenge – engagement, rapport and trust building, and a transparent approach to reporting. Homeless young [...]

Switching Back From Smartphones to Dumb Phones

By |2019-04-02T09:42:11+11:00April 1st, 2015|Categories: Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , |

"When you've got a simpler phone you become more liberated by the fact you don't have something consuming you all the time. You kind of forget about your phone sometimes."Studies show smartphones can disrupt sleep and focus, damage relationships and make users more selfish, stressed and depressed. A 2013 study found smartphone users check their [...]

Alcohol-Drenched Sporting Culture Needs to Change

By |2020-10-30T17:47:55+11:00April 1st, 2015|Categories: Drugs & Alcohol, Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , |

Alcohol companies advertise during sporting events, and sponsor sports and teams so as to link sporting success with alcohol and to reach our children, the next generation of potential drinkers. And they do it very successfully. We know that the earlier children are exposed to alcohol advertising the more likely they are to commence drinking [...]

Alertness to Mental Disorders Key to Preventing Youth Suicides

By |2019-04-02T10:43:00+11:00April 1st, 2015|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing, Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , |

Youth suicide is an immensely complex interplay of social, psychological, neurological, biological and cultural variables. The problem is that these variables carry unequal weights and no single one has been demonstrated to be necessary or sufficient to cause an individual to take their own life. This makes it very difficult to predict whether a young [...]

Inside Europe’s Biggest Sex Offenders’ Prison

By |2019-04-02T10:39:18+11:00April 1st, 2015|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing, Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , |

Europe's biggest prison for sex offenders is in Nottinghamshire. How does it try to rehabilitate the inmates, asks Rex Bloomstein. "Whatton's a great leveller," says Lynn Saunders, governor of HMP Whatton, the largest prison for adult male sex offenders not just in the UK, but in Europe. "We've got everybody here you could imagine," she [...]

March 2015

8 Ways You May be Raising Your Child to Be a Bully

By |2015-03-30T14:50:26+11:00March 30th, 2015|Categories: Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , , |

We want our kids to grow up happy and successful, but putting happiness and success before caring is raising a generation of bullies. Admit it. You've watched and wondered: is my kid a bully? Not all the time. Not most of the time. But some of the time. The rough-handed grab, pushy attitude, resentful looks. [...]

The Feel-Good Gene: Those with Naturally High Levels of Anandamide Less Anxious and Fearful

By |2019-04-02T10:46:42+11:00March 27th, 2015|Categories: Mental Health & Wellbeing, Science & Research|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , |

In Australia, anxiety is even more common than depression. In fact, about one in four of us suffer from it. The general belief is that stress or circumstances cause it. But, this might not necessarily be the case. Richard Friedman, a professor of clinical psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College, says some of us have a feel-good [...]

Network Theory Sheds New Light on Origins of Consciousness

By |2019-04-02T10:48:24+11:00March 27th, 2015|Categories: Science & Research|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |

Where in your brain do you exist? Is your awareness of the world around you and of yourself as an individual the result of specific, focused changes in your brain, or does that awareness come from a broad network of neural activity? How does your brain produce awareness? Vanderbilt University researchers took a significant step [...]

Breast-Fed Babies Grow Up Smarter and Richer

By |2019-04-02T10:50:31+11:00March 27th, 2015|Categories: Science & Research|Tags: , , , , , , , |

Babies who were breast-fed for at least 12 months have higher IQs and could earn an extra £200,000 in their lifetime compared with bottle-fed youngsters, scientists have suggested. Researchers followed 3,500 infants for 30 years, recording how long they spent in education, their employment and earnings and their level of intelligence. They found that breastfeeding [...]

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