Parent Child Relationship Current Events | Parent Child Relationship News | 2
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Pediatric oncologists should help with difficult decisions The oncologist should be the primary decision maker in some pediatric cancer situations, say researchers at Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) in Houston in an article appearing today in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. view more (2005-12-29)
Sibling relationships reflect family dynamics Most children in the United States grow up with sisters and brothers. Connections that usually last a lifetime, these relationships can be strained at times, especially during childhood. view more (2006-11-14)
Teenage alcohol and drug use: At best, parents know about it only half of the time Previous assessments of child psychopathology have shown that parents can be helpful in reporting symptoms of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD). A new study examines just how helpful parents are in assessing their children's alcohol and/or drug use and abuse. view more (2006-09-25)
Children seriously affected when a parent suffers from depression Life is hard for the children of a parent suffering from depression. Children take on an enormous amount of responsibility for the ill parent and for other family members. view more (2009-03-06)
Close ties between parents and babies yield benefits for preschoolers Having close ties with parents is obviously good for preschoolers, but what does that really mean? It means that the preschoolers are better able to control their own behavior by showing patience, deliberation, restraint, and even maturity. view more (2008-02-07)
Wrong type of help from parents could worsen child's OCD For most parents, soothing a child's anxiety is just part of the job. But for a parent whose child has obsessive-compulsive disorder, soothing anxiety and helping with behaviors linked to the disease could lead to more severe symptoms, University of Florida researchers say. view more (2009-06-18)
Going it alone: world-first study shows solo mothers choose donor insemination because time is running out to find a partner More than two-thirds of single women who choose to have a baby by donor insemination (DI) do so because they feel that they are running out of time to have a baby, according to a world-first study by researchers at the Family and Child Psychology Research Centre at City University, London, UK. However, children born this way appear to be thriving,... view more... (2002-06-29)
A higher risk of obesity for children neglected by parents Strategies for decreasing a child's risk for obesity often focus on improving eating habits and maintaining a high level of physical activity. view more (2007-11-14)
The quality of a father-child relationship effects intimate relationships in adulthood Recent research at the University of Haifa School of Social Work revealed a connection between father-child relationship and the ability to achieve interrelation intimacy in adulthood. view more (2007-02-20)
What women think during their first pregnancy Pregnant women who perceive having had a well-balanced relationship with their parents during their childhood will experience fewer difficulties in the transition to motherhood, as opposed to women whose relationship with their parents was characterized by unresolved anger or rejection. view more (2008-02-26)
Professionals can be deceived by intense grief of parents who smother their children Parents who smother their children are capable of intense outpourings of grief over the loss of their child(ren), says a report in the Archives of Disease in Childhood. And this may deter doctors and other professionals from believing that murderous intent was involved, so exposing other children to risk, say the authors. Some cases of deliberate... view more... (2001-11-20)
Mother-daughter conflict, low serotonin level may be deadly combination A combination of negative mother-daughter relationships and low blood levels of serotonin, an important brain chemical for mood stability, may be lethal for adolescent girls, leaving them vulnerable to engage in self-harming behaviors such as cutting themselves. view more (2008-03-06)
Parents shape whether their children learn to eat fruits and vegetables Providing fruits for snacks and serving vegetables at dinner can shape a preschooler's eating patterns for his or her lifetime. view more (2008-08-12)
Men with multiple sclerosis pass disease to offspring more often than women According to a new study, men transmit multiple sclerosis (MS) to their children 2.2 times more often than women in families where the father or mother and a child have multiple sclerosis. view more (2006-07-25)
World-first study finds that families with babies born after embryo donation are doing well, but only a third of parents plan to tell their children how they were conceived World-first study finds that families with babies born after embryo donation are doing well, but only a third of parents plan to tell their children how they were conceived Berlin, Germany: The world's first study of families in which babies have been born from donated embryos has revealed that only a third of parents planned to tell their... view more... (2004-06-28)
Warm, nurturing parents have well-adjusted adolescents Although preadolescents and adolescents might think their parents hold no sway over them, a study published in the September/October issue of the journal Child Development finds just the opposite - early parenting style makes a big difference in how a child turns out. view more (2005-09-14)
Divorced parents 'make conflict worse by going to court over child contact' Divorced and separated parents who resort to the law to settle chronic disputes over contact with their children risk making matters worse for all concerned. Research for the Joseph Rowntree Foundation contrasts the relative success of contact agreements that separated parents reach without legal intervention with the stress placed on children... view more... (2002-10-30)
Evolution of genomic imprinting How we come to express the genes of one parent over the other is now better understood through studying the platypus and marsupial wallaby - and it doesn't seem to have originated in association with sex chromosomes. view more (2007-09-07)
Parents comfortable with alcohol screening in pediatricians' offices Parents are surprisingly receptive to being screened for alcohol problems during a visit to their child's pediatrician, including those who have alcohol problems. And if they need help, many parents would look to their pediatrician for a referral, according to a new study in the November issue of the journal Pediatrics. view more (2008-11-03)
Unleashing Parent Power The way to unlock "parent power" when it comes to children's academic achievement is to be revealed by psychologists. Confusion about the role of parents in schooling can be seen in the terms used to describe them in the press and literature, such 'partners', 'consumers' and even 'problems'. But a recent Department for Education and... view more... (2004-01-08)
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