Child

Family Care Center Opens Clarksville Clinic to Increase Access to Outpatient Mental Health Care

Retrieved on: 
Friday, April 5, 2024

CLARKSVILLE, Tenn., April 5, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Family Care Center, one of the nation's premier mental health providers, is expanding with a new outpatient clinic in Clarksville, TN, making integrated mental health care more accessible to Montgomery County.

Key Points: 
  • CLARKSVILLE, Tenn., April 5, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Family Care Center, one of the nation's premier mental health providers, is expanding with a new outpatient clinic in Clarksville, TN, making integrated mental health care more accessible to Montgomery County.
  • Family Care Center offers therapy, psychiatric care and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in an outpatient setting
    "As we continue our expansion throughout Tennessee, we're committed to breaking down stigma and delivering compassionate mental health care for all ages," said Chief Executive Officer Wayne Cavanaugh.
  • "Whether you're a child, individual, couple, or a family, everyone can now access the mental health support they need at a single, convenient location."
  • "TMS is a groundbreaking treatment that is not often available in outpatient mental health clinics," said Family Care Center Founder and Chief Medical Officer Dr. Chuck Weber.

As a child psychiatrist, I know it’s critical for kindergartens to embrace playful learning

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Would you like to go back there if you could, if only for a moment?

Key Points: 
  • Would you like to go back there if you could, if only for a moment?
  • Unfortunately, fewer and fewer children are having the opportunity to have experiences like this, which is disturbing for many reasons.
  • Along with many others who work in health, as a child psychiatrist I am deeply concerned about this.

Importance of playful learning


Learning to read does not come naturally. Reading requires developing new neural pathways.
This requires some direct instructions for the development of specific skills, and this can be done through playful learning that need not mean a loss of play. This will depend on:
the kindergarten team (comprised of a teacher and early childhood educator) fully understanding their roles and the new curricula priorities;
the team knowing how to support play-based learning in the classroom, and mapping out how they will combine some direct instruction with rich play- and inquiry-based activities;
the team being sufficiently equipped and resourced. Ideally, this would mean being supported by a literacy coach well-versed in evidence-based learning strategies for supporting children’s emerging literacy and for supporting play.

Read more:
To help children learn how to read in the pandemic, encourage writing messages as part of play

Play is not the opposite of learning

  • Until fairly recently, many people considered play to be the opposite of work and learning, believing play is done when the real work of learning has been finished.
  • But once people know that experiences accompanied by emotional connections are much more memorable, you can organize play in ways that increase the amount of learning.
  • From a health perspective, the absence of play, especially outdoor play, leads to rising obesity rates.

The science of learning


There has been an explosion in the study of the science of learning which asks: how does the brain learn? Kathy Hirsh Pasek, a professor of psychology at Temple University, with her team, is leading scholars in this science of learning. According to their research, learning happens best when:
children are active with “minds on” rather than passively sitting for long periods of time with teacher talking or instructing;
they are engaged;
the information is meaningful;
they are socially interacting;
the learning is “iterative,” meaning information or concepts are repeated in varied contexts, and across subject areas, to help children see new ways to combine smaller parts;
they are having fun.
Crucial to success is this: teachers must see that a shift towards playful learning is essential for achieving both engagement and academic success. Principals need to be on board and supportive of this approach.

Teacher-guided play

  • Teachers need to understand the different types of play as described and researched by child development professor Angela Pyle.
  • As her work outlines, play is considered to be on a continuum from free play to guided play to formal games.

Protecting the loss of childhood

  • British education advocate Sir Ken Robinson famously said that felons in jail have more outdoor play time daily than children on average across the globe spend outside playing.
  • Research from other countries has also documented how an increasing sense of business in children’s lives has also crowded out play.
  • There is nothing more basic than the right to belong and the right to play.


Jean Clinton does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

The Vatican says gender theory threatens human dignity – but Judith Butler believes the ‘threat’ is social change

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 9, 2024

It has become an “overdetermined” concept, “absorbing wildly different ideas of what threatens the world”, writes American feminist philospher Judith Butler.

Key Points: 
  • It has become an “overdetermined” concept, “absorbing wildly different ideas of what threatens the world”, writes American feminist philospher Judith Butler.
  • For the Vatican, the traditional family will be ruined and children are now vulnerable to “ideological colonization”.
  • And for right-wing politicians and heads of state, (from Liberal senator Alex Antic, who believes gender dysphoria is a “trend”, to Marjorie Taylor Greene and Vladimir Putin), gender is a weapon of social destruction.
  • Butler’s overarching argument is that “gender” – the overdetermined concept to which “anti-gender ideologists” object –  is really a nightmarish bogeyman, a “phantasm with destructive powers, one way of collecting and escalating multitudes of modern panics”.
  • Read more:
    Judith Butler: their philosophy of gender explained

Misplaced fears and misunderstandings

  • The first, to which much of the book is dedicated, is to expose the absurdity of arguments against gender ideology.
  • Butler demonstrates the ways “gender ideology” critics invert, externalise and project the very harms they claim “gender ideologists” pose.
  • Then there’s the supposed threat of sexual violence to cisgender women if transgender women are allowed into single-sex spaces like prisons.
  • Read more:
    'Toxic masculinity': what does it mean, where did it come from – and is the term useful or harmful?

More than two sexes

  • Feminists like Butler reject “sexual dimorphism”: the belief there are two, and only two, sexes.
  • But we expect to find two sexes because that is how many sexes we have learned to see.
  • And we look for two sexes because we only recognise two genders.
  • And because we expect to find two sexes in humanity, we automatically start to explain away any evidence (like intersex diversity) that would contradict this received truth.

Fighting back

  • These rules, we think, apply both to ourselves and others.
  • To critics, “gender ideologues” are breaking all the organisational rules of gender, inverting all sense and order.
  • When we question gender as an organising principle, it introduces further questions about the right way to live.
  • Ultimately, Butler’s point is that while gender seems scary to many, the reality is: it’s not.
  • Take a pause and ask, they suggest: what are the agendas of those who may try to convince you otherwise?
  • But in imagining a shared future together, we can “emerge into a world committed to cohabitation and equality across difference”.


Louise Richardson-Self receives funding from the Australian Research Council for two projects: DE190100719: Hate Speech Against Women Online: Concepts and Countermeasures; and DP200100395: Religious Freedom, LGBT+ Employees, and the Right to Discriminate.

Lost for words? Research shows art therapy brings benefits for mental health

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Art therapy uses creative processes, primarily visual art such as painting, drawing or sculpture, with a view to improving physical health and emotional wellbeing.

Key Points: 
  • Art therapy uses creative processes, primarily visual art such as painting, drawing or sculpture, with a view to improving physical health and emotional wellbeing.
  • Art therapy can be used to support treatment for a wide range of physical and mental health conditions.
  • In a study published this week in the Journal of Mental Health, we found art therapy was associated with positive outcomes for children and adolescents in a hospital-based mental health unit.

An option for those who can’t find the words

  • Where possible, after finishing an artwork, a person can explore the meaning of their work with the art therapist, translating unspoken symbolic material into verbal reflection.
  • However, as the talking component is less central to the therapeutic process, art therapy is an accessible option for people who may not be able to find the words to describe their experiences.
  • Art therapy has also been linked to improved outcomes for people with a range of physical health conditions.

Our research

  • While most care takes place in the community, a small proportion of young people require care in hospital to ensure their safety.
  • However, these “restrictive practices” are associated with negative effects such as post-traumatic stress for patients and health professionals.
  • Read more:
    'An arts engagement that's changed their life': the magic of arts and health

    Our research looked at more than six years of data from a child and adolescent mental health hospital ward in Australia.

  • Confirming the effect of a therapeutic intervention requires controlled clinical trials where people are randomly assigned one treatment or another.
  • Although ours was an observational study, randomised controlled trials support the benefits of art therapy in youth mental health services.

What do young people think?

  • In previous research we found art therapy was considered by adolescents in hospital-based mental health care to be the most helpful group therapy intervention compared to other talk-based therapy groups and creative activities.
  • In research not yet published, we’re speaking with young people to better understand their experiences of art therapy, and why it might reduce distress.

A promising area


The burgeoning research showing the benefits of art therapy for both physical and especially mental health highlights the value of creative and innovative approaches to treatment in health care. There are opportunities to expand art therapy services in a range of health-care settings. Doing so would enable greater access to art therapy for people with a variety of physical and mental health conditions.

  • She has received funding from the Health Education and Training Institute (HETI) for the Mental Health Research Award.
  • Iain Perkes works for the University of New South Wales and the Sydney Children's Hospitals Network which is part of NSW Health.
  • He is affiliated with Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA) and the Health Education and Training Institute (HETI, NSW Health).

Nine out of 10 kids are not developmentally on track in literacy and numeracy – study of 8 African countries

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 9, 2024

This may explain why the region has the lowest proportion of children who are developmentally on track when it comes to literacy and numeracy.

Key Points: 
  • This may explain why the region has the lowest proportion of children who are developmentally on track when it comes to literacy and numeracy.
  • Recently, I set out with a colleague to assess how children in eight west African and central African countries were faring in this regard.
  • Only about one in every 10 children (11.9%) in our sample were developmentally on track in literacy and numeracy.
  • For all three activities, children who were developmentally on track were more likely than other children to have interacted with a caregiver.

The data

  • The data was collected between 2017 and 2021 by the Multiple International Cluster Surveys (MICS).
  • This global programme collects nationally representative data on maternal and child health using household surveys.


identify or name at least 10 letters of the alphabet
read at least four simple, popular words in any language
know the name and recognise the symbol of all numbers from 1 to 10.

  • That makes it especially important to study in a sub-region where an estimated 89% cannot read and understand a simple text by the time they are 10 years old.
  • The major takeaway from our study is that cognitively stimulating activities with caregivers matter.

What should be done

  • Caregivers must be taught how important it is to regularly engage young children in these activities.
  • Read more:
    How playing the 'School Game' helps kids on their journey to literacy

    This is particularly important for caregivers without formal education.


Pearl S. Kyei does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Orphan designation: melatonin Treatment of perinatal asphyxia, 02/04/2012 Positive

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Overview

Key Points: 
  • Overview
    On 2 April 2012, orphan designation (EU/3/12/978) was granted by the European Commission to Dr Nicola J Robertson, United Kingdom, for melatonin for the treatment of perinatal asphyxia.
  • At the time of orphan designation, there was no treatment for perinatal asphyxia authorised in the EU.
  • Key facts
    - Active substance
    - melatonin
    - Intended use
    - Treatment of perinatal asphyxia
    - Orphan designation status
    - Positive
    - EU designation number
    - EU/3/12/978
    - Date of designation
    - Sponsor
    UCL Research Limited
    Review of designation
    The Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products reviews the orphan designation of a product if it is approved for marketing authorisation.
  • EU register of orphan medicines
    The list of medicines that have received an orphan designation in the EU is available on the European Commission's website:

Orphan designation: Allogeneic cultured postnatal thymus-derived tissue Treatment of CHARGE syndrome, 26/02/2019 Positive

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Orphan designation: Allogeneic cultured postnatal thymus-derived tissue Treatment of CHARGE syndrome, 26/02/2019 Positive

Key Points: 


Orphan designation: Allogeneic cultured postnatal thymus-derived tissue Treatment of CHARGE syndrome, 26/02/2019 Positive

Orphan designation: Eflornithine Treatment of neuroblastoma, 27/09/2011 Withdrawn

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Orphan designation: Eflornithine Treatment of neuroblastoma, 27/09/2011 Withdrawn

Key Points: 


Orphan designation: Eflornithine Treatment of neuroblastoma, 27/09/2011 Withdrawn

Aqua-Tots Swim School Invites Sterling Community To Celebrate Grand Opening With Swim-sational Extravaganza

Retrieved on: 
Monday, March 25, 2024

Sterling, Virginia, March 25, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Aqua-Tots Swim School , the largest international swim school franchise, is celebrating the grand opening of its brand-new location in Sterling, Virginia with a splash-tastic party!

Key Points: 
  • Sterling, Virginia, March 25, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Aqua-Tots Swim School , the largest international swim school franchise, is celebrating the grand opening of its brand-new location in Sterling, Virginia with a splash-tastic party!
  • Activities will include free swim lessons (walk-in or scheduled), face painting, balloon animals, music, unlimited Anita's frozen cotton candy,  giveaways and raffles.
  • Owned by business partners and local residents, Mark Wilkinson and Stephen Bosanko, the duo also has locations in Centreville and Leesburg.
  • Their new school is conveniently located to serve the Loudon County communities of Sterling, Dulles, Reston, Ashburn, Oak Grove, Potomac Falls and Broadlands.

Foundation for Opioid Response Efforts (FORE) Announces $1.4 Million Grant to Equal Justice Works to Launch National Legal Fellowship Program

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, March 21, 2024

New York, March 21, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Foundation for Opioid Response Efforts (FORE) today announced it is awarding a grant of $1,361,005 over 30 months to Equal Justice Works to launch a national Opioid Crisis Response Legal Fellowship Program that will address the legal consequences of the opioid crisis.

Key Points: 
  • New York, March 21, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Foundation for Opioid Response Efforts (FORE) today announced it is awarding a grant of $1,361,005 over 30 months to Equal Justice Works to launch a national Opioid Crisis Response Legal Fellowship Program that will address the legal consequences of the opioid crisis.
  • “The opioid crisis cannot be fully addressed without multidisciplinary interventions, including legal assistance,” said Karen A. Scott, MD., MPH, President of FORE.
  • “We thank the Foundation for Opioid Response Efforts for their generous grant,” said Verna Williams, CEO of Equal Justice Works.
  • “FORE’s support will mobilize six Equal Justice Works Fellows to address critical legal needs frequently arising from opioid use disorder, such as child custody matters, housing, healthcare, and employment.