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COVID-19 pandemic may have increased mental health issues within families


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UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. When the COVID-19 pandemic hit in early 2020, many families found themselves suddenly isolated together at home. A year later, new research has linked this period with a variety of large, detrimental effects on individuals and families well-being and functioning.
The study led by Penn State researchers found that in the first months of the pandemic, parents reported that their children were experiencing much higher levels of internalizing problems like depression and anxiety, and externalizing problems such as disruptive and aggressive behavior, than before the pandemic. Parents also reported that they themselves were experiencing much higher levels of depression and lower levels of coparenting quality with their partners. ....

United States , Sunhye Bai , Mark Feinberg , Josepha Cifelli , Jin Kyung Lee , Samanthal Tornello , Emily Hotez , Jacqueline Mogle , Michellel Hostetler , University Of California , Prevention Research Center , National Institute Of Child Health , Penn State , Great Depression , Family Foundations , National Institute , Child Health , Huck Institutes , Life Sciences , Medicine Health , Public Health , Social Behavioral Science , Coping Phobias , Mental Health , Depression Anger , Stress Anxiety ,

Antidepressant use in pregnancy tied to affective disorders in offspring; no causal link


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IMAGE: Anna Rommel, PhD, Instructor, Department of Psychiatry, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
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Credit: Mount Sinai Health System
New York, NY - Major depressive disorder is highly prevalent, with one in five people experiencing an episode at some point in their life, and is almost twice as common in women than in men. Antidepressants are usually given as a first-line treatment, including during pregnancy, either to prevent the recurrence of depression, or as acute treatment in newly depressed patients. Antidepressant use during pregnancy is widespread and since antidepressants cross the placenta and the blood-brain barrier, concern exists about potential long-term effects of intrauterine antidepressant exposure in the unborn child. ....

New York , United States , Anna Sophie Romel , Department Of Psychiatry At Icahn Mount Sinai , Icahn School Of Medicine At Mount Sinai , Danish National Registers , Icahn School , Mount Sinai , Icahn Mount Sinai , Medicine Health , Developmental Reproductive Biology , Depression Anger , Stress Anxiety , Parenting Child Care Family , புதியது யார்க் , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , இக்ஹ்ன் பள்ளி ஆஃப் மருந்து இல் ஏற்ற சினை , இக்ஹ்ன் பள்ளி , ஏற்ற சினை , இக்ஹ்ன் ஏற்ற சினை , மருந்து ஆரோக்கியம் , வளர்ச்சி இனப்பெருக்கம் உயிரியல் , குழந்தை மருத்துவம் , மனச்சோர்வு கோபம் , மன அழுத்தம் பதட்டம் , பெற்றோருக்குரியது குழந்தை பராமரிப்பு குடும்பம் ,

How many mothers have lost a child: A global comparison


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IMAGE: Cumulative prevalence of mothers (45-49-years-old) bereaved by child death, expressed per 1,000 mothers
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Credit: USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
The inequality is enormous: Mothers in select African countries are more than 100 times more likely to have had a child die than mothers in high-income countries.
This is what Diego Alburez-Gutierrez (Researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research (MPIDR) in Rostock, Germany), Emily Smith-Greenaway (Researcher at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences in Los Angeles and Guest Researcher at MPIDR), and co-authors found in their recent paper published in ....

Los Angeles , United States , Max Planck Institute For Demographic Research , Sciences In Los Angeles , Global Health , Dornsife College Of Letters , Diego Alburez Gutierrez , Max Planck Institute , Demographic Research , Emily Smith Greenaway , Guest Researcher , Saharan Africa , Middle East More , Medicine Health , Death Dying , Public Health , Parenting Child Care Family , Developing Countries , Disease In The Developing World , லாஸ் ஏஞ்சல்ஸ் , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , அறிவியல் இல் லாஸ் ஏஞ்சல்ஸ் , உலகளாவிய ஆரோக்கியம் , டோர்ந்ஸிபே கல்லூரி ஆஃப் எழுத்துக்கள் , மக்கள்தொகை ஆராய்ச்சி , எமிலி ஸ்மித் கிரீன்வே ,

Outside factors may help children develop internal control


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PULLMAN, Wash. - The ability to control your own behavior, known as executive function, might not exist all in your head. A new theory proposes that it develops with many influences from outside the mind.
The theory, detailed in
Perspectives on Psychological Science, draws on dynamic systems theory which originated in mathematics and physics and has been used to describe complex organizing phenomena like cloud formation and flying patterns of birds. Now, a research team led by Washington State University human development assistant professor Sammy Perone is applying it to executive function, which has been shown to play a role in everything from children s readiness for school to their social relationships. Its development is also tied to long-term outcomes for adulthood. ....

Sammy Perone , Sabine Doebel , Washington State University , University Of Kansas , University Of Tennessee , Psychological Science , K 12 , Social Behavioral Science , Mental Health , Decision Making Problem Solving , Memory Cognitive Processes , Parenting Child Care Family , வாஷிங்டன் நிலை பல்கலைக்கழகம் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் கன்சாஸ் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் டென்னசி , உளவியல் அறிவியல் , சமூக நடத்தை அறிவியல் , மன ஆரோக்கியம் , முடிவு தயாரித்தல் ப்ராப்லம் தீர்க்கும் , நினைவு அறிவாற்றல் ப்ரோஸெஸஸ் , பெற்றோருக்குரியது குழந்தை பராமரிப்பு குடும்பம் ,

Anxiety among fathers is higher than recently reported, new study suggests


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New research suggests anxiety among men transitioning into parenthood is significantly higher than reported by the global World Health Organization (WHO) regional prevalence rates.
In a new study published in
The Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics & Gynecology, researchers from the Colorado School of Public Health on the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus studied the prevalence of anxiety among fathers during the perinatal period, which includes pregnancy through the first year of postpartum.
The transition to parenthood is a major life event that s often accompanied with new challenges related to financial, relationship, and work-life balance concerns. Despite those changes happening for both men and women, not much is known about the prevalence of anxiety among new fathers, said Jenn Leiferman, PhD, professor at the Colorado School of Public Health. To our knowledge, our study is the first meta-analysis to explore the prevalence rates o ....

University Of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus , World Health Organization , Colorado School Of Public Health , Psychosomatic Obstetrics , Colorado School , Public Health , Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus , Jenn Leiferman , Medicine Health , Social Behavioral Science , Sexual Orientation , Mental Health , Depression Anger , Perception Awareness , Stress Anxiety , Parenting Child Care Family , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் கொலராடோ அண்சச்சுட்ஸ் மருத்துவ வளாகம் , உலகம் ஆரோக்கியம் ஆர்கநைஸேஶந் , கொலராடோ பள்ளி ஆஃப் பொது ஆரோக்கியம் , உளவியல் மகப்பேறியல் , கொலராடோ பள்ளி , பொது ஆரோக்கியம் , கொலராடோ அண்சச்சுட்ஸ் மருத்துவ வளாகம் , மருந்து ஆரோக்கியம் , குழந்தை மருத்துவம் , சமூக நடத்தை அறிவியல் ,