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How to Keep Going When you Have Depression.
(Preview)
Hello! Let me just say starting out; I am not a Doctor, Psychiatrist, or even a Counselor. However, I HAVE gotten through 7 years of Major Clinical Depression. Sounds ominous, doesn't it? It is.......but somehow I am making it with my sense of humor intact. Here is my story..........I started...
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Early Retirement: Is It Better to Spend It at Work Or at Play?
(Preview)
More than one of every five Americans age 62 and older who expected to retire early are still working, according to a new analysis of the prevalence of unanticipated work in retirement and its consequences for the well-being of older adults.
The analysis, conducted by University of Michigan so...
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TV Effective “ Painkiller” for Kids
(Preview)
TV really does act like a painkiller when it comes to kids, reveals a small study published ahead of print in the Archives of Disease in Childhood.
The research team assessed 69 children between the ages of 7 and 12, who were randomly divided into three groups to have a blood sample taken.
One g...
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Women Turning Away from Math, Science Fields
(Preview)
Although women now make up about half the labor force, concerns about balancing career and family keep many young women from entering male-dominated fields, according to a study by researchers at RTI International, University of Minnesota, University of Michigan and Murdoch University.
T...
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How Cultural Beliefs Shape Natural Disaster Recovery and Preparedness
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A University of Arkansas researcher and his colleagues have found that fatalistic religious beliefs can affect how people perceive risk and recover from natural disasters and how these attitudes shape the way cities are rebuilt.
Survivors’ memories and residents’ attitudes about an earth...
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Infants, as Early as 6 Months, Do See Errors in Arithmetic
(Preview)
Using advanced brain sensor technology developed at the University of Oregon, researchers have confirmed often-debated findings from 1992 that showed infants as young as six months know when an arithmetic solution is wrong.
Andrea Berger and Gabriel Tzur, both at Ben-Gurion University of...
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Researcher Maps Slippery Slope of Teen Smoking
(Preview)
McGill epidemiologist Jennifer O’Loughlin has added another chapter to her six-year study of more than 1,200 adolescent smokers in Montreal, with a new map of 12 addiction “milestones” that will give fresh ammunition to both health-care professionals and anti-smoking advocates.
“This is...
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Teens Taking Antidepressants Might Be More Likely to Attempt, Complete Suicide
(Preview)
Antidepressant medications may be associated with suicide attempts and death in severely depressed children and adolescents but not in adults, according to an article in the August issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administr...
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Research Shows Benefits of Apple Juice on Memory
(Preview)
For those who think that apple juice is a kid’s drink, think again. Apples and apple juice may be among the best foods that baby boomers and senior citizens could add to their diet, according to new research that demonstrates how apple products can help boost brain function similar to medication.
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Screening Method Can Play Role in Disclosure of Intimate Partner Violence
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Reported prevalence rates for intimate partner violence can vary, depending on the screening method, type of questionnaire used and health care setting, and women prefer self-completed questionnaires, compared to face-to-face interviews, according to a study in the August 2 issue of JAMA, a t...
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