Teenagers and people in their 20s may feel more freedom to use racial slurs and insulting language online than they would in face-to-face conversation, but that doesn’t mean those words don’t still hurt, according to an AP-MTV poll, which surveyed 1,335 people between the ages of 14 and 24. Half
Month: September 2011
The concussions received by hockey players might be doing more than damaging their memories. According to a psychiatrist, the concussions are also linked with depression and perhaps subsequent suicides the sport has recently witnessed: Derek Boogaard, Rick Rypien and Wade Belak. Shree Bhalerao of Toronto said 30 percent of his concussion
Like the muscles of an athlete after physically taxing exercise, our brains also start to get strained and feel worn out after a lot of exertion, especially when dealing with tasks requiring a lot of concentration or repetition, researchers say. An article in the Wall Street Journal Asia highlights various
The Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh found that the United States has more to worry about than money problems during difficult economic times. As the Associated Press reports, a newly published study concluded that child abuse rose substantially during the economic recession — especially among infants. Researchers studied 422 abused children from
Columbia University researchers have concluded that people born after World War II – especially women – are more likely to binge drink and develop alcohol disorders. “The literature on alcohol consumption indicates that younger birth cohorts, especially women, are increasingly at risk for the development of alcohol use disorders,” said
Researchers from the University of Illinois are proposing that the 4.4 million children in the United States diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) might benefit from putting away the video games and playing outside. The study, which was recently published in Applied Psychology: Health and Well-Being, involved 400 children diagnosed with ADHD. The
A report by Seattle Children’s Research Institute, the University of Washington and Group Health Research Institute revealed that more than 70 percent of teenagers are not getting the mental health services they need. The newly published report, “Adolescents With Suicidal Ideation: Health Care Use and Functioning,” discovered that merely “13 percent of
Two new studies reveal that laughing long and laughing often not only feels good but is also good for you on what might be described as an evolutionary level. Researchers from the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore discovered through watching funny movies that laughing has positive impacts on
Previous studies have found more instances of high blood pressure, obesity, cardiovascular problems, poor self-reported health and premature disease-related disability in the African American population than in other races. A new study by the National Institute on Aging (NIA), National Institutes of Health suggests a link between these health problems
College students might not be “hooking up” nearly as much as their talk would suggest, but University of Nebraska-Lincoln researchers say the fact that this kind of talk has become commonplace could be leading to an increase in risky sexual behaviors. Ninety-four percent of the students polled were familiar with