The News Review:
- Rochester Regional Healthcare Association Standardizes on Voltage …
- YUR CHILD’S HEALTH: Sports lessons from the pros on concussion
- Uganda: Best Shield Against Mother Child Deaths
- Child marriage in India is major peril: Lancet
- Autism patients in California are dealt insurance setback
- Play Author Stuart Brown: Why Playtime Matters to Kids’ Health and …
- Parental arguments affect kids’ mental health
Rochester Regional Healthcare Association Standardizes on Voltage …
MSNBC
The agreement protects information transferred via email between healthproviders state and local government organizations and payors. Thesolution combines Voltage SecureMail with the. It includes more than 20000 initial licenses for enterpriseVSN and provides association members with on-demand access to encryptedemails files and documents — without the need for users to sign intomultiple accounts.
Related from Tcss-uk: EVGA Voltage Tuner Coming Soon
YUR CHILD’S HEALTH: Sports lessons from the pros on concussion
Daily News Transcript
11 but was not cleared to play a game until Jan. His health was the driving factor; not playing in a game. The currently accepted step-wise return-to-play protocol involves starting with rest and progressing slowly as follows: Step 1: No activity with rest Step 2: Light aerobic activity Step 3: Sport-specific exercise Step 4: Noncontact drills; progressive resistance training Step 5: Full contact training after medical clearance Step 6: Game playLike with Bergeron we have to be very cautious with concussions in young athletes and follow a similar plan. Returning to play too quickly and skipping steps can result in catastrophic neurologic events resulting in permanent issues or death. In addition we must recognize that one concussion increases the chance that more concussions will occur. We must recognize that the symptoms of a concussion are variable and can be as obvious as headache and loss of consciousness to as subtle as feeling "out of it" or being moody.
Uganda: Best Shield Against Mother Child Deaths
AllAfrica.com
In Uganda the day was marked under the theme: ‘Bridging the generation gap: Increase investment in girls’ education as the pre-requisite for development. ‘While many recited the theme and urged governments to revisit their commitments on the girl-child education few understand the link between women education uptake of health services empowerment and development. GA_googleFillSlot( “AllAfrica_Story_Inset” );Irene Nabusoba talked to Dr Sam kuonzi a research fellow with the African Centre for Global Health and Social Transformation and he puts the saying “educate a woman educate a nation” into perspective. Question: How would you assess our current strides in girl education?Answer: We have not done as well as we should but we have done something. There used to be a big gap between the girl and boy-child as far as education was concerned but this has reduced over time especially with the introduction of the universal primary and secondary education. Parents no longer have to draw priorities on whom to educate first because access is to everyone. Unfortunately the drop-out rate is higher among girls than their male counterparts starting from Primary Four.
Child marriage in India is major peril: Lancet
AFP
Specialists in public health from India and the United States looked at data for 22807 women aged 20-24 selected from a geographical and social cross-section of Indian society who took part in a survey in 2005 and 2006. 5 percent of the women had been wed by the time they were 18 set as the legal age for marriage since 1978.
Autism patients in California are dealt insurance setback
Los Angeles Times
If not it could be game over for parents. “I have a problem with their staying silent on the most effective therapy” said Bay Area parent advocate Kristin Jacobson. “Does every child who needs insulin — or cancer treatment — have to take it all the way to the Department of Managed Health Care?” she said. “This is the only thing where every family has to fight it every time. And that didn’t stop today. “Applied behavior analysis teaches skills by breaking them down into numerous steps and drilling them with positive reinforcement. Some studies have shown that as much as 47% of children who receive the therapy are able to enter school with no further intervention and few if any symptoms of the condition said Gina Green executive director of the National Assn.
Play Author Stuart Brown: Why Playtime Matters to Kids’ Health and …
U.S. News & World Report
But you say that there’s lots of evidence that kids actually do better in school with more play not less. How’s that?The evidence is solid and growing that not only academic performance but [also] attention span is improved in direct correlation to the amount of play. Just get kids doing rough-and-tumble play and their mental health improves. But the No Child Left Behind mandates have put a lot of pressure on teachers and that has meant less recess less PE time which means more sedentary kids with less playtime. The illusion that playtime hampers academic performance is one that has to be dispelled by the evidence of what play does. You’re a medical doctor a psychiatrist. How’d you decide to devote yourself to studying something as fluffy-sounding as play?Many years ago in 1966 I was enlisted to run a major study of a mass murderer in Texas the Texas tower sniper.
Parental arguments affect kids’ mental health
Great Dad
Findings published in the Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry reveal teenagers who are exposed to frequent parental arguments may be at a disadvantage later in life. Those who fell into this category were more likely than their peers to suffer from depression alcohol and drug dependence and antisocial behaviors when they reached 30 according to a study conducted at the Simmons School of Social Work. "We believe that exposure to increased family arguments in adolescence served as an important marker for impaired functioning into adulthood" said lead author Helen Reinherz. A previous study conducted at Cornell University found that fathers were more likely to argue with their children if their wives worked full time. The researchers suggested this was because more home responsibilities were shifted on to the men and led to increased stress.