Hisey is not alone in fearing the worst. Just about every mom and dad in this rural northern Ohio town gets nervous whenever their children get a sinus infection or a stomachache lingers. It's hard not to panic since mysterious cancers have sickened dozens of area children in recent years. - Yahoo! News
Friday, December 31, 2010
Ohio child cancers confound parents, investigators
Hisey is not alone in fearing the worst. Just about every mom and dad in this rural northern Ohio town gets nervous whenever their children get a sinus infection or a stomachache lingers. It's hard not to panic since mysterious cancers have sickened dozens of area children in recent years. - Yahoo! News
US teen birth rate still far higher than W. Europe
A Third of 9-Month-Olds Already Obese or Overweight
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Kozol on The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America
Independent Lens | Children of Haiti
Filthy streets and beaches jeopardize the health of Denick and his friends.
In the midst of Haiti's lush mountains and historical relics is an epidemic of over 500,000 orphan children who wander the streets day and night. Known as the "soulless" and forgotten by their own people, they do what they must to survive each day. This film follows three teenage boys who share a common dream of education, government assistance, and social acceptance.
Find out more about Children of Haiti: http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/ch... Learn more about "Independent Lens":http://www.pbs.org/independentlen
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Four reasons to avoid high fructose corn syrup
By Sara Novak, Planet Green
By now, you've more than likely seen one of the ads put out by the Corn Refiners Association. The ads tell the story of a "natural" sweetener made from corn. They go on to insinuate that high fructose corn syrup has been unfairly portrayed and that this truly American ingredient is fine in moderation.
Lloyd wrote about this massive $30 million ad campaign last year. The campaign claims that high fructose corn syrup has the "same natural sweeteners as table sugar and honey." Since then, the association has released a number of ads with the same message.
But when push comes to shove, what are the facts about high fructose corn syrup? How is it made? Is it healthy in moderation to the body and the planet? Here are the facts, so that the next time you're asked, you can confidently dispel any high fructose corn syrup rumors.
1. The process of making high fructose corn syrup is pretty weird
2. High fructose corn syrup does weird stuff to your body
3. There might be mercury in your corn syrup
4. The environmental impact of high fructose corn syrup is huge
Our advice: Skip the high fructose corn syrup
Obesity: A supersized problem
It’s not so unusual for someone in their 50s to deal with hypertension or high cholesterol.
But what if you haven’t even made it to your 10th birthday?
Childhood obesity is on the rise in the U.S., nearly tripling in the number of cases over the last 30 years.
Alabama, which is second in the nation in the number of obese adults at 31.2 percent, ranks sixth nationwide with 36.1 percent of its children, ages 10-17, falling into the obese category.
Studies indicate states with high numbers of overweight or obese youth also have high rates of childhood poverty with low scores in measurements of childhood wellbeing. | The Demopolis Times
Tobacco Company Found Guilty of Giving Free Cigarettes to Black Children
According to the Associated Press, the Suffolk Superior Court in Boston announced the guilty verdict against Lorillard Tobacco following weeks of testimony in the case. | The Afro-American Newspapers
White House outlines tax benefits for Black families
No Easy Decision › Full Episodes | MTV's Abortion Special
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Exodus 1:10 Come on, let us deal wisely with them; lest they multiply, and it come to pass, that, when there falleth out any war, they join also unto our enemies, and fight against us, and so get them up out of the land.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Mexico drug cartels increasingly turn to youths to do bloody work
More than 25% of Kids and Teens in the U.S. Take Prescriptions on a Regular Basis
By ANNA WILDE MATHEWS
These days, the medicine cabinet is truly a family affair. More than a quarter of U.S. kids and teens are taking a medication on a chronic basis, according to Medco Health Solutions Inc., the biggest U.S. pharmacy-benefit manager with around 65 million members. Nearly 7% are on two or more such drugs, based on the company's database figures for 2009. read more…
Xtranormal charges for formerly free cartoon tools
The change reflects the higher costs of running Xtranormal as the site's popularly grew. - Yahoo! News
Delaying Sex Makes Better Relationships, Study Finds
Delaying sex makes for a more satisfying and stable relationship later on, new research finds.
Couples who had sex the earliest - such as after the first date or within the first month of dating - had the worst relationship outcomes.
"What seems to happen is that if couples become sexual too early, this very rewarding area of the relationship overwhelms good decision-making and keeps couples in a relationship that might not be the best for them in the long-run," study researcher Dean Busby, of Brigham Young University's School of Family Life, told LiveScience. - LiveScience.com
Congress Fails to Pass Increases for Education and Early Learning
Children's Defense Fund
We are grateful the Senate consented to ratify the New START treaty last week which reduces the number of nuclear weapons and makes the world a safer place for our children. But as many of you know, significant increases for education and early learning were lost when the Senate failed to pass an omnibus spending bill for next year. Congress has instead passed a Continuing Resolution (CR) that will last until March 4 anddoes not include the increased funding for education and early learning programs like Race to the Top, Investing in Innovation, CCDBG, Head Start/Early Head Start, and the Early Learning Challenge Fund. Thank you to all who urged their networks and Members of Congress to support early learning and education programs throughout the year—but the work is not over! We will be tested in the months ahead and will need to work to stave off deep cuts in programs which benefit children. Learn more about how these programs help children by visiting the early childhood development and education portions of our Web site.
CDF Needs Your Help Now More Than Ever
With the current Congress’ recent failure to invest in early learning and the incoming Congress already rattling the saber to slash deficits by cutting back on existing safety nets that protect children and families, CDF needs your financial support now more than ever. With your help, we will work tirelessly to continue our programs and campaigns totrain the next generation of young leaders, and put forth the most accurate and pertinent data, reports and arguments which prove beyond a doubt that there is no wiser investment our nation can make than to ensure all children a better 2011 and that we move forward—not backwards—as a country in preparing our young to compete in the global economy. Please take a moment to make a donation, helping us to reach our goal of raising $150,000 this December.
Children in America Held Captive (by Poverty)
This Christmas season 15.5 million children in America, more than one in five, are living in poverty, a number of them in extreme poverty. This is the highest child poverty rate the nation has experienced since 1959. Each one of these children has a name, a unique face and story to tell. That is why CDF has just released a new report, “Held Captive”: Child Poverty in America, which chronicles the real life toll child poverty is having on millions of children in the richest nation in history. The report, commissioned by CDF and written by Pulitzer prize winning journalist Julia Cass, found foreign aid supporting programs for children in an impoverished county in Mississippi, Katrina-displaced children still struggling in Baton Rouge, La., and childhood disrupted for the newly poor in Long Island, N.Y. Cass reports that despite safety net protections put in place over the past generation, poor children are still adrift in a sea of poverty with their future in jeopardy. Download and read the full report, share it with your friends and get ready to join the fight to end child poverty in 2011 and beyond.
MTV to air special report tackling abortion Dec. 28 (Exclusive)
Dr. Gabor Maté on the Stress-Disease Connection, Addiction, Attention Deficit Disorder and the Destruction of American Childhood
Today, a Democracy Now! special with the Canadian physician and bestselling author, Dr. Gabor Maté. From disease to addiction, parenting to attention deficit disorder, Dr. Maté’s work focuses on the centrality of early childhood experiences to the development of the brain, and how those experiences can impact everything from behavioral patterns to physical and mental illness. While the relationship between emotional stress and disease, and mental and physical health more broadly, is often considered controversial within medical orthodoxy, Dr. Maté argues too many doctors seem to have forgotten what was once a commonplace assumption, that emotions are deeply implicated in both the development of illness, addictions and disorders, and in their healing. Read more…
Monday, December 27, 2010
The Demography of Muslim Youth and the Future
demographers can do nearly definitive projections about population trends until then. What they're telling us is that a lot of the world's little ones are coming up in Muslim households and societies.
Those Muslim five-year-olds better get serious quick. Look what they're facing. iViews.com
Saturday, December 25, 2010
Michael Jackson Keeps Giving to Youth even in death: Neverland Ranch Could Be Turned into Teen Music School
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg Wants State to Release Control of Young Inmates
Youth urged to rekindle spirit of volunteerism
He said it was worrying to note that the youth, these days, usually think of benefits whenever they are called upon to render services rather than their contribution towards the success of projects. Read more...
Teen girls in most deprived areas 5 times as likely to be assaulted
Teen girls living in the most deprived areas are five times as likely to be assaulted as their affluent male and female peers, reveals research published online in Emergency Medicine Journal.
Young men are twice as likely to be a victim of assault as young women, but the link between deprivation and assault is far stronger for their female peers, the study shows.
Violence is the third leading cause of death among 15 to 19 year olds and the 14th leading cause of death among 10 to 14 year olds worldwide. In 2007, around 66,000 children and teens in England and Wales were treated for injuries sustained during violent assault. Read more...
KISSing a theory goodbye in the link between puberty and nutrition status
Young Black Males Bear Brunt of Economic Crisis | Dissident Voice
While Manhattan salaries surged this year, up 12% because of Wall Street’s recovery, young black males continue to bear the burden of the economic crisis that ensued in 2008. A new report by the Community Service Society (CSS) indicates that only one in four young black men between the ages of 16 and 24 in New York City is employed. The group tied the shockingly low employment rate to the effects of the economic crisis, which rendered already inferior jobs training and alternative education structures even more ineffective. | Dissident Voice
If your child is obese make sure they are screened for obesity related complications
Researchers say the findings are a call for action, since such complications could be part of the reason why heavy kids appear to have shorter lives than their slimmer peers. - Yahoo! News
Childbirth deaths from spinal anesthesia rising
US teen birth rate at all-time low, economy cited
The birth rate for teenagers fell to 39 births per 1,000 girls, ages 15 through 19, according to a government report released Tuesday. It was a 6 percent decline from the previous year, and the lowest since health officials started tracking the rate in 1940. - Yahoo! News
Is Big Pharma skewing another report about the benefits of Alternative medicines
Thursday, December 23, 2010
A force behind the lower teen birthrate: MTV's '16 and Pregnant'
But according to a new government study that shows the US teen birthrate falling dramatically in 2009 after a five percent increase from 2005 to 2007, experts say the network may have redeemed itself with its gritty "16 and Pregnant" documentary series, which many teens credit with opening their eyes to the consequences of unprotected sex and early parenthood.- CSMonitor.com
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Nearly 1 in 4 fails military exam
Nearly one-fourth of the students who try to join the U.S. Army fail its entrance exam, painting a grim picture of an education system that produces graduates who can't answer basic math, science and reading questions, according to a new study released Tuesday.
The report by The Education Trust bolsters a growing worry among military and education leaders that the pool of young people qualified for military service will grow too small. - Yahoo! News
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
South Africa holds Youth & Students Festival
The World Festival of Youth and Students is held every four years. In its 65 years of existence, this was its first meeting in Africa. PressTV
Tyler Perry Saves At-Risk Youth Training Center With His Amazing Gift
Orrin 'Checkmate' Hudson announced that Mr. Perry has stepped forward to match an anonymous $14,000 donation that will save the struggling BE SOMEONE youth center from a December 31st deadline to make critical improvements which, if not completed, would have meant the closure of the BE SOMEONE center. PRNewswire
Monday, December 20, 2010
One More Way to Avoid Diabetes: Breastfeed
New moms know that breastfeeding can be good for babies, providing them with much-needed nutrition as well as a shot of antibodies and other cells that help build immune systems. Now, evidence suggests that the practice may keep the mothers themselves healthier too.
Researchers led by Dr. Eleanor Bimla Schwarz at University of Pittsburgh found that women who breastfeed are half as likely to develop type 2 diabetes as women who do not. - TIME
Study: Breast-Feeding Improves Academic Performance, Especially for Boys
Evidence for the long-term benefits of breast-feeding - well beyond infancy - continue to grow. In the latest analysis of the academic performance of children who were breast- or bottle-fed, researchers found that breast-fed babies scored higher on tests of math, reading and writing skills at 10 years old, compared with those who were bottle-fed as babies. - Yahoo! News
Study maps need for kids' doctors in rural areas
By CARLA K. JOHNSON
CHICAGO – There are enough children's doctors in the United States, they just work in the wrong places, a new study finds. Some wealthy areas are oversaturated with pediatricians and family doctors. Other parts of the nation have few or none.
Nearly 1 million kids live in areas with no local children's doctor. By moving doctors, the study suggests, it would be possible for every child to have a pediatrician or family physician nearby. - Yahoo! News
Hollywood-style special effects give girl new ear
Facial prosthetics are becoming more realistic and longer-lasting, and Elise's journey offers a glimpse of the tricks that help: Titanium rods adapted from dentistry that bond with bone to hold them in place. More flexible silicones. Even "flocking," using those nylon particles that make the velvety insides of jewelry boxes can help give silicone "skin" more dimension — and not in flesh tones, but flecks of bright reds, plums, blues, oranges. - Yahoo! News
Sunday, December 19, 2010
A cuddle for baby boy with the youngest parents in the UK... but 14-year-olds are living apart and arguing already
Cradling the new arrival, April Webster may look like the proud big sister.
But the baby-faced schoolgirl and her sometime boyfriend Nathan Fishbourne have just become Britain’s youngest parents after conceiving son Jamie when they were both only 13.
April and schoolfriend Nathan started having unprotected sex after they began dating in September last year. | Mail Online
Internet pornography: Parents to be allowed to block sexual imagery
Internet pornography sites will be automatically blocked from home computers unless households request access under an ‘opt-in’ system.
Ministers want to reverse the current situation in which such sites are accessible to anyone surfing the internet, including children, unless a lock is installed.
Under the plans, those who want access to pornography sites would have to ask their broadband firm to make them available. | Mail Online
Facebook knows your face. Is that a problem?
Facebook will soon unveil a new face-recognition functionality, reps for the social network have announced. The software – which should hit Facebook by next week – crawls recently-added photos and rapidly coughs up a series of suggested tags, based on its analysis of the data. Facebook says the feature should make it easier for users to tag large numbers of pictures. - CSMonitor.com
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Senate Blocks Bill for Young Illegal Immigrants
By DAVID M. HERSZENHORN
The Senate on Saturday blocked a bill that would have created a path to citizenship for certain young illegal immigrants who came to the United States as children, completed two years of college or military service and met other requirements, including passing a criminal background check.
The vote by 55-41 in favor of the bill, which is known as the Dream Act, effectively kills it for this year, and its fate is uncertain. - NYTimes.com
The corporate takeover of American schools
The top positions in state education across the US – for example, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, recent chancellors Joel Klein (New York) and Michelle Rhee (Washington, DC), and incoming Chancellor Cathleen P Black (New York) – reflect a tru st in CEO-style leadership for education management and reform. Along with these new leaders in education, billionaire entrepreneurs have also assumed roles as education saviours: Bill and Melinda Gates, and Geoffrey Canada. | guardian.co.uk
WikiLeaks Cables: Pfizer fraudulent drug tests on Nigerian children.
Diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks show the pharmaceutical giant Pfizer hired investigators to find evidence of corruption against the Nigerian attorney general to pressure him to drop a $6 billion lawsuit over fraudulent drug tests on Nigerian children. Researchers did not obtain signed consent forms, and medical personnel said Pfizer did not tell parents their children were getting the experimental drug. Eleven children died, and others suffered disabling injuries including deafness, muteness, paralysis, brain damage, loss of sight, slurred speech. We speak to Washington Post reporter Joe Stephens, who helped break the story in 2000, and Musikilu Mojeed, a Nigerian journalist who has worked on this story for the NEXT newspaper in Lagos. Read more…
Friday, December 17, 2010
Top 10 Food Additives to Avoid
Some food additives are worse than others. Food Matters suggests these as the top ones to avoid:
- Artificial Sweeteners
- High Fructose Corn Syrup
- Monosodium Glutamate (MSG)
-
Trans Fat
-
Common Food Dyes
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Sodium Sulphite
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Sodium Nitrate/Sodium Nitrite
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BHA and BHT
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Sulphur Dioxide
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Potassium Bromate
Daily Marijuana Use Rises Among Youth: New U.S. Survey
Facebook’s Top 10 Status Update Trends of 2010 Reflect Its Global Youth
Ypulse Toolbox: Tween Safety Resources Online To Know
Today we're looking at online safety resources specifically geared towards tweens and their parents. Take a look at what we found and let us know in comments if we missed any you think should be featured. | Ypulse
Youth exposure to alcohol ads on TV growing faster than adults
“One a day is great for vitamins but not for young people being exposed to alcohol advertising,” said David H. Jernigan, PhD, CAMY director. “This is a significant and troubling escalation, and shows the ineffectiveness of the industry’s current voluntary standards.” Read more....
New Federal Report Shows Drop in Child Abuse Rates
The rate of child maltreatment in the U.S. decreased in 2009 for the third consecutive year, according to new federal figures.
Although the decrease was slight, it ran counter to the predictions of some experts that the onset of the recession in late 2008 would trigger an upsurge of abuse.
Read more @ | BET.com
Thursday, December 16, 2010
A Vote for Healthy Foods for Healthy Kids
A LIVE Twitter Chat with Bill Nye the Science Guy, Thur. Dec. 16 from 6-7pm est
- What kinds of activities inspire kids to pursue education and careers in math and science?
- Do kids make the critical connection between math and science skills and landing their dream jobs?
- Why are kids in other countries celebrated for being good in math & science while high-achieving students in the US are portrayed as “uncool” or “unpopular?”
Marijuana use overtakes smoking in teens
The Monitoring the Future Survey - compiled from 46,000 anonymous questionnaires given to teens – found that 8% of eighth-graders say they've smoked marijuana within the past 30 days, up from 6.5% just last year. More than 16.7% of 10th-graders and 21.4% of 12th graders say they've smoked pot within the last month as well.
Only 19.2% of 12th-graders are smoking cigarettes in any given month. - CNN.com Blogs
Woman sues McDonald's over Happy Meals
A California woman is suing McDonald's claiming the fast-food giant uses toys to market directly to young children. Monet Parham, a Sacramento, California, mother of two small children filed the lawsuit Wednesday in San Francisco along with health, nutrition and food safety advocates Center for Science in the Public Interest . CSPI is seeking court approval to proceed as a class action.
Parham, a 41-year old state employee, says her kids repeatedly ask for Happy Meals, mainly for the toys. - CNN.com Blogs
'Purple Drank' Addiction Sweeps the Inner City
Apollonia Jordan
There is a new addiction going around among young people in inner-city communities. The latest trend is a legal but deadly cocktail, a mixture of Sprite and Promethazine/Codeine cough syrup.
The drug has been popularized by hip-hop artists, and has even spawned its own music style. But it’s also turning young people into zombies. - New America Media
Clock Running Out On Child Care For 55,000 California Children
Chris Levister
As promised, Assembly Speaker John Perez (D-Los Angeles), introduced an emergency bill to reinstate CalWorks Stage 3 funds for welfare-to- work child care subsidies through the rest of fiscal year ending June 30. The bill, AB 1, requests the restoration of $233 million in state funds, and was the first item of business to be taken up Monday by the new Legislature. - New America Media
Kids write Santa this year for basic needs instead of toys
Santa Claus and his elves are seeing more heartbreaking letters this year as children cite their parents' economic troubles in their wish lists.
U.S. Postal Service workers who handle letters addressed to Santa at the North Pole say more letters ask for basics — coats, socks and shoes — rather than Barbie dolls, video games and computers.
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Obama Signs Child Nutrition Bill
President Barack Obama Monday signed a bill aimed at improving child nutrition and ending child hunger across the country.Also read:
Speaking at a local elementary school in Washington, D.C., Obama said that the measure, which was a major priority for First Lady Michelle Obama, would be a "vitally important" step in improving the health and welfare of America's children.
"It is worth noting that this bill passed with bipartisan support in both houses of Congress," President Obama said. "It reminds us that no matter what people may hear about how divided things are in Washington, we can still come together and agree on issues that matter for our children's future and for our future as a nation."
He added, "That's really what today is all about."
The bill, Obama said, tries to tackle the dual problems of not enough children having access to meals at school and improving the nutritional quality of the meals that are offered. INO.com News
Obama Signs Child Nutrition Bill Into Law as Part of Anti-Obesity Push
President Obama signs child nutrition bill into law
Obama signs child nutrition bill, championed by the first lady
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Young Environmentalists Challenge U.N. Climate Delegates: "Stop Talking. Start Planting"
In a courtyard outside within the Moon Palace Resort in Cancún, young environmentalists dug holes for 193 baby trees, one for each nation in the world. Their message for the delegates at the U.N. Climate Change Conference: “Stop talking. Start planting.” Felix Finkbeiner, the 13-year-old founder of Plant for the Planet, says their goal is to plant one million trees in every country, a feat that has already been accomplished in his home country of Germany. We speak to Felix and 10-year-old Alessa Miridis Monroy of Cancún. [Young Environmentalists Challenge U.N. Climate Delegates: "Stop Talking. Start Planting"]
Global Children's Campaign to Climate Delegates: Stop Talking. Start Planting
This years UN climate change conference has attracted many children from around the world. In Cancún, Mexico, Democracy Now! had the chance to speak with two children from the youth-led group Plant-for-the-Planet.
"Click Here for Full Cancún Climate Summit Coverage."http://www.democracynow.org/tags/cancnclimatesummit
Click Here for Full Climate Change Coverage
Global Children's Campaign to Climate Delegates: Stop Talking. Start Planting
California Law Forces Parents of Gang Members to Attend Training Classes
Monday, December 13, 2010
Unemployed African youth to benefit from UN-backed finance programme
YouthStart, co-sponsored by UN Capital Development Fund (UNCDF) and the MasterCard Foundation, which has made a four-year, $12 million contribution, is a competition-based programme that will identify and support up to 12 financial institutions to pilot and roll out sustainable financial services tailored to youth. Read more...
Israeli rights group says law broken in Palestinian youth arrests
The group says it has documented the arrest of 81 Palestinian minors in the flashpoint East Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan for stone-throwing during a 12-month period, from November 2009 through October 2010. - CNN.com
Why do One in Ten Kids in the US Have ADHD
A U.S. government survey claims that 1 in 10 U.S. children now has ADHD. This is a sizable increase from a few years earlier. ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) makes it hard for children to pay attention and control impulsive behavior.
About two-thirds of the children diagnosed with ADHD are on some form of prescription medication. Read more….
Also read:
What Causes ADHD? Myths and Facts
Father Harassed By CPS For Feeding Kids Organic Food
Paul Joseph Watson
A father of two was harassed and investigated by Child Protective Services and police for feeding his daughters organic food, refusing to make them drink fluoride-poisoned tap water and not having them injected with mercury-laden vaccines, all of which constitutes “suspicious activity” in the new Sovietized America, a foretaste of what’s to come once Big Sis’ Wal-Mart spy campaign gets up and running.
Relating his story to the Sherrie Questioning All blog, the man states that a child abuse investigation was launched after one of his neighbors reported him to the authorities, prompting a CPS worker to visit his home accompanied by a police officer, during which she bombarded him with questions and conducted a warrantless search of his house, even down to the contents of his refrigerator.
Consumer Reports Warns Pregnant Women Against Canned Tuna
Pregnant women and children have long been warned that they should be wary of eating certain kinds of seafood because of the risk of mercury contamination. It's a real threat — mercury is a neurotoxin, and exposure in-utero at high levels can damage an infant's developing cognitive skills. – TIME
General Mills cuts sugar content in children's cereals but still uses GMOs
Breakfast cereal giant General Mills recently announced plans to slightly cut the sugar content in its children's cereals in accordance with overall pressures on major food producers to fight childhood obesity and its related diseases by making healthier products. However the company continues to use genetically-modified (GM) ingredients in its cereal products, as well as corn syrup, artificial flavors, and artificial colorings -- all of which wreak havoc on health. Read more...
Bedtime routines are important for children
Bedtime routines are important for children. Regardless of age, regular schedules and bedtime rituals greatly impact our ability to obtain sound sleep and function at our best. When it comes to children, this is especially true. Establishing and maintaining good sleep habits helps your child fall asleep, stay asleep, and awake rested and refreshed. It may also prevent future sleep problems. Good sleep habits can not only take the stress out of bedtime, but can help make it the special time it should be for you and your child. Read more...
One of the Worst Parenting Mistakes You Can Make
No matter how physically active a child is, time spent in front of the computer or television screen is associated with psychological problems.
In other words, children can't make up for TV time by spending extra hours exercising.
The findings also suggest that the way children spend their sedentary time, in addition to how much time they spend being sedentary in the first place, matters for their mental health. Read more,,,
Nine month old twins die just minutes after measles vaccination
When the first girl began to experience distress -- breathing heavily and vomiting -- her sister had not yet been vaccinated. Sharma asked the doctor to hold off on vaccinating the second girl, but he insisted on going ahead. The second girl went into distress, and both girls lost consciousness.
"Even as the condition of one of my daughters deteriorated, the doctor told us that we need not worry since it was a normal reaction to the vaccine," the girls' father, Sunil Sharma, said. "The deteriorating condition of the baby did not deter him from administering the vaccine to my other daughter." Measles Vaccination
Study: 99% of Children Living in Apartments May Be Exposed to Secondhand Smoke
There are fewer and fewer places where smokers can light up these days, with smoking bans being instituted by governments and private companies in virtually every public place, from offices and airplanes to bars and restaurants. And now there's evidence that supports bringing no-smoking policies to the only remaining place (other than outdoors) where smokers can still light up — inside their homes.
Or, at least where smokers are living in apartments. In a study of tobacco exposure from secondhand smoke in more than 5,000 children, researchers led by Dr. Karen Wilson at University of Rochester found that youngsters aged 6 to 18 years who lived in multi-unit housing had a 45% increase in a chemical byproduct of tobacco in their blood compared with children who lived in detached family homes. And these were youngsters who lived in units where nobody smoked inside the apartment itself, meaning that the exposure was occurring primarily via secondhand smoke drifting in from other units. - TIMECDC and ADA Now Advise to Avoid Using Fluoride
Exposure to high levels of fluoride results in a condition known as fluorosis, in which tooth enamel becomes discolored. The condition can eventually lead to badly damaged teeth. The new study found that fluoride intake during a child's first few years of life is significantly associated with fluorosis, and warned against using fluoridated water in infant formula. Read more...
National KIDS COUNT 2010 Data Book
According to data in the 21st annual KIDS COUNT Data Book, overall improvements in child well-being that began in the late 1990s stalled in the years just before the current economic downturn. Find national data and state-by-state data and rankings on 10 key indicators of child well-being.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Autism Research: Breakthrough Discovery on the Causes of Autism
A study just published in The Journal of the American Medical Association by researchers from the University of California, Davis called "Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Autism" (i) discovered a profound and serious biological underpinning of autism -- an acquired loss of the ability to produce energy in the cells, damage to mitochondria (the energy factories in your cells), and an increase in oxidative stress (the same chemical reaction that causes cars to rust, apples to turn brown, fat to become rancid, and skin to wrinkle). These disturbances in energy metabolism were not due to genetic mutations, which is often seen in mitochondrial problems, but a condition the children studied acquired in utero or after birth.
Bottom line, if brain cells cannot produce enough energy, and there is too much oxidative stress, then neurons don't fire, connections aren't made and the lights don't go on for these children.
Video Game Designers Play to Solve Real-World Problems
By JOHN TIERNEY
By the age of 21, the typical American has spent 10,000 hours playing computer games, and endured a smaller but much drearier chunk of time listening to sermons about this sinful habit. Why, the experts wail, are so many people wasting their lives solving meaningless puzzles in virtual worlds?
Now some other experts — ones who have actually played these games — are asking more interesting questions. Why are these virtual worlds so much more absorbing than school and work? How could these gamers’ labors be used to solve real-world puzzles? Why can’t life be more like a video game? - NYTimes.com
Eliminating tooth decay: Breakthrough in dental plaque research
The University of Groningen researchers analysed glucansucrase from the lactic acid bacterium Lactobacillus reuteri, which is present in the human mouth and digestive tract. The bacteria use the glucansucrase enzyme to convert sugar from food into long, sticky sugar chains. They use this glue to attach themselves to tooth enamel. The main cause of tooth decay, the bacterium Streptococcus mutans, also uses this enzyme. Once attached to tooth enamel, these bacteria ferment sugars releasing acids that dissolve the calcium in teeth. This is how caries develops.
Eliminating tooth decay: Breakthrough in dental plaque research
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Alternative ADHD Treatments
By Tina Pavane
When parents learn their child has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, they often find themselves facing a mountain of treatment approaches to improve their child's well-being. Most parents will find an element of control in one or more of the many psychosocial, behavioral or pharmaceutical treatments available for ADHD. Dr. Eugenia Chan, director of the ADHD program at Children's Hospital Boston says there's no "instant fix" for ADHD.
Students get 'Urkeled' for baggy pants
If students’ pants are sagging a little to low, they’ll get “Urkled,”...meaning “Family Matters” TV character Steve Urkle and his signature style. And all it takes are a few zip ties...
'You slide it over. Take out the remaining slack, and it's almost impossible to get it off,' said the principal, Bobby White. Read more...
13% of People Say They Drove Drunk in the Past Year | Driving Under Influence of Drugs & Alcohol, Drunk Driving
The New Jim Crow: Reforming Today's Penal System
Gun violence is devastating black youth, group says
'We now find ourselves standing at the crossroads, wondering which way to go as violence among our young people has once again reached devastating and overwhelming proportions,' said Monica Willie of the Canadian Communities Youth Alliance in a news conference held Friday at City Hall. - CTV News