Relationships Current Events | Relationships News | 5
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Constipation in women linked to anxiety, depression, and feeling "unfeminine" Chronic constipation in some women is linked to anxiety, depression, and feeling "unfeminine," suggests a study in Gut. Researchers from St Mark's Hospital, Middlesex, studied 34 women between the ages of 19 and 45 who had suffered from constipation for five years or more. The study group was then compared with women who had no history... view more... (2001-07-11)
Study links education to risk of cancer death A new American Cancer Society study finds having at least some education beyond high school is associated with a decreased risk of cancer death. view more (2007-09-12)
Bisexuality not a transitional phase among women, according to new research Bisexuality in women appears to be a distinctive sexual orientation and not an experimental or transitional stage that some women adopt "on their way" to lesbianism, according to new research published by the American Psychological Association. view more (2008-01-17)
Study Shows Residents May Benefit Most From Time in the Clinic A new approach to internal medicine residency training could improve patient care and physician-patient relationships, according to a University of Cincinnati study. view more (2008-07-25)
Cooperative classrooms lead to better friendships, higher achievement in young adolescents Students competing for resources in the classroom while discounting each others' success are less likely to earn top grades than students who work together toward goals and share their success, according to an analysis of 80 years of research. view more (2008-03-28)
Siblings' bad habits brush off Brothers and sisters are more powerful role models than friends or parents when it comes to teenage drinking and smoking, research has shown. view more (2006-01-16)
Study links early friendships with high-quality sibling relationships Children who experience a rewarding friendship before the birth of a sibling are likely to have a better relationship with that brother or sister that endures throughout their childhood. view more (2006-01-30)
In U of I study, kids learn to handle emotional responses to siblings A University of Illinois researcher has demonstrated successful strategies that children can use to handle the emotional ups and downs that go with being a brother or a sister and reported them in a new study published in Family Relations. view more (2009-02-24)
Gaining new insights into mentoring programs for adolescent girls A study of a Big Brothers Big Sisters of America formal mentoring program, which matched adolescent girls with women mentors, revealed that strong emotional support and improvement in girls psychosocial functioning from these relationships was a dominant theme coupled with the development of new skills and confidence through collaborations. view more (2009-04-03)
The culture of medicine Everybody is familiar with the stereotypes of medical education from the student perspective: grueling hours, little recognition, and even less glory. view more (2009-01-05)
New piece in the jigsaw puzzle of human origins In an article in today's Nature, Uppsala researcher Martin Brazeau describes the skull and jaws of a fish that lived about 410 million years ago. The study may give important clues to the origin of jawed vertebrates, and thus ultimately our own evolution. view more (2009-01-16)
Runaway girls reap strong benefits from nurse interventions A nurse intervention program that helps sexually exploited runaway girls re-connect to family, school and health care reduces trauma and restores healthy behaviors. view more (2009-08-26)
Scientists use world's fastest supercomputer to create the largest HIV evolutionary tree Supporting Los Alamos National Laboratory's role in the international Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology (CHAVI) consortium, researchers are using the Roadrunner supercomputer to analyze vast quantities of genetic sequences from HIV infected people in the hope of zeroing in on possible vaccine target areas. view more (2009-10-28)
Teenage depression can be enduring, but is more often short-lived Teenage depression is widespread and can become a life-long illness, but is more often transitory, said UCLA Psychology Professor Constance Hammen, who will discuss her research at an invited address May 27 at the American Psychological Society's annual convention in Los Angeles. view more (2005-05-27)
Social form of bullying linked to depression, anxiety in adults Spreading rumors and gossiping may not cause bruises or black eyes, but the psychological consequences of this social type of bullying could linger into early adulthood, a new University of Florida study shows. view more (2008-04-23)
High-quality marriages help to calm nerves A University of Virginia neuroscientist has found that women under stress who hold their husbands' hands show signs of immediate relief, which can clearly be seen on their brain scans. view more (2006-12-19)
Gender equality leads to better sex lives among people 40 and over Older couples who live in Western countries and who enjoy more equality between men and women are most likely to report being satisfied with their sex lives. view more (2006-04-19)
Tobacco industry courted African American leaders to boost sales and stave off anti-tobacco legislation The tobacco industry deliberately courted African American leadership organisations to increase its sales and defuse attempts to control tobacco use, reveals research in Tobacco Control. Compared with other racial groups in the US, African Americans bear the brunt of tobacco related disease, with a death toll of around 45,000 people every year.... view more... (2002-11-12)
Older Age Of Male Partners Makes Young Women More Susceptible To Hiv-1 Infection (p 1896) Results of a field study in Zimbabwe published in this week`s issue of THE LANCET highlight how cultural aspects of sexual behaviour are closely associated with an increased rate of HIV-1 infection among young women compared with young men. HIV-1 prevalence typically rises more rapidly at young ages in women than in men in sub-Saharan Africa. The... view more... (2002-05-29)
Groundbreaking New Journals from the Natural History Museum The Natural History Museum in association with Cambridge University Press is proud to announce the publication of two new journals. Both have a focus on systematics, the branch of biology concerned with the classification and study of living things and the relationships between them. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology Editor-in-Chief: Andrew B... view more... (2003-07-18)
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