Aggression

Getting a good night’s rest is vital for neurodiverse children – pediatric sleep experts explain why

Retrieved on: 
Friday, April 19, 2024

If you’re a parent with kids at home, it often leaves you and your children on edge.

Key Points: 
  • If you’re a parent with kids at home, it often leaves you and your children on edge.
  • Children with neurodiverse conditions, such as autism and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, are even more susceptible to the effects of poor sleep, given their emotional reactivity and impulsivity..
  • Struggles with sleep have been linked to increased aggression, irritability, inattention and hyperactivity in children with autism spectrum disorder.

The science behind sleep difficulties

  • There are multiple reasons why neurodiverse children don’t sleep well, including medical conditions, biological causes and behavioral and environmental factors.
  • Medical conditions, such as obstructive sleep apnea or epilepsy, can affect a child’s sleep.
  • Medications that are used to treat medical conditions, such as antidepressants for mood disorders or stimulants for ADHD, can further disrupt sleep.

Treating sleep problems


All of these factors can be addressed and treated. A thorough evaluation by the child’s health care provider may reveal a medical cause, or medication, that is interfering with sleep. Behavioral approaches can make a big difference in improving sleep. These might include:
Changes to daytime habits, including getting lots of morning light and physical activity.
Shifts in evening habits, such as removing all screens (TV, computers, phones, etc.) and establishing calming bedtime routines.
Modifications to how a parent interacts with their child for those families who would like a child to fall asleep and stay asleep independently.

  • It’s important to note that not all families want their children to sleep on their own.
  • Because there are so many factors that can cause disrupted sleep, addressing sleep problems cannot be a one-size-fits-all approach and should be done in partnership with parents.
  • Our team has developed a family-centered approach to address sleep problems in neurodiverse children.

The ups and downs of melatonin

  • While behavioral approaches are recommended as a first-line treatment, melatonin can be helpful in jump-starting a behavioral routine.
  • Overdoses can result from children eating a bunch of gummies, or parents not understanding how much melatonin is safe to give.
  • To help parents sift through all the resources and articles on melatonin on the internet and social media, one of us created a video and wrote several blogs on melatonin safety.
  • These include topics like whether children can become dependent on melatonin supplements over time, whether taking melatonin will delay puberty, whether children might experience side effects from taking melatonin and more.

Promoting healthier sleep


Here are some general tips for helping your child sleep better, regardless of whether they are neurodiverse:
Choose a consistent bedtime and wake time. This consistency will help children’s own natural melatonin kick in.
Make sure bedtime isn’t too early. For example, an 8 p.m. bedtime is too early for most 10-year-olds. Neurodiverse children may struggle to sleep and will become more anxious, which makes going to sleep even harder.
Help your child get natural sunlight in the morning. Morning sunlight sets our brain’s internal clock so that we can fall asleep more easily at bedtime.
Ensure your child is getting physical activity during the day.
Minimize naps longer than one hour, or after 4 p.m. for school-age children. Naps can interfere with going to sleep at night.
Avoid caffeine, including many types of soda, tea and chocolate.
Turn off all screens and smartphones at least 30 minutes before bedtime.
In the evening leading up to bedtime, turn down all lights in the house. Consider using red night lights, if possible. Set any devices to night mode in the evening to limit exposure to blue light.
Create wind-down time in place of screens. Have your child identify an activity they enjoy that is calming and soothing, such as reading a book, coloring or listening to music. If a bath is stimulating, move it to earlier in the evening, such as after dinner.
Help your child learn to fall asleep without needing you or their devices to be there with them. That way, they will settle down on their own at bedtime. And when they wake up throughout the night, since we all wake up in the night, they will be able to go right back to sleep without becoming fully awake.
For more tips, see Autism Speaks for free downloads of brochures and visual aids.

  • She also receives funding from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.
  • She has received funding from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine and Autism Speaks for research on sleep in children with ASD.

Press release - Geopolitical situation makes voting in European elections even more important

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, April 18, 2024

The European Parliament’s last Eurobarometer survey before the elections in June reveals awareness among citizens and concern for the current geopolitical context. Source : © European Union, 2024 - EP

Key Points: 


The European Parliament’s last Eurobarometer survey before the elections in June reveals awareness among citizens and concern for the current geopolitical context. Source : © European Union, 2024 - EP

Press release - European Parliament Press Kit for the Special European Council of 17 and 18 April 2024

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, April 18, 2024

In this press kit, you will find a selection of the European Parliament’s press releases reflecting MEPs’ priorities for topics on the summit agenda. Source : © European Union, 2024 - EP

Key Points: 


In this press kit, you will find a selection of the European Parliament’s press releases reflecting MEPs’ priorities for topics on the summit agenda. Source : © European Union, 2024 - EP

The Trial of Vladimir Putin: Geoffrey Robertson rehearses the scenarios

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, April 18, 2024

In The Trial of Vladimir Putin, barrister Geoffrey Robertson answers that question by dramatising what might happen within the walls of a future courtroom.

Key Points: 
  • In The Trial of Vladimir Putin, barrister Geoffrey Robertson answers that question by dramatising what might happen within the walls of a future courtroom.
  • The question of whether Putin is guilty of aggression is fairly straightforward.
  • Evidence would be needed that he is responsible in his role as a commander for actions carried out by subordinates.
  • Instead, a special aggression tribunal would have to be established in the tradition of the trials of Nazis at Nuremberg.
  • It is not pure fiction; it is speculation informed by Robertson’s experience.
  • The details he imagines will bring these potential future trials to life for readers who are less familiar than he is with the inside of a courtroom.
  • Does Robertson really need to tell us three times that any judgements should be uploaded to the internet?

Rhetorical devices

  • Whether Putin should be tried even if absent is a hard question because there are arguments on both sides.
  • Instead, he uses rhetorical tools such as hyperbole: if “international law is to have any meaning”, he writes, then a trial in the defendant’s absence “must be acceptable”.
  • Robertson criticises this with the remark that it “entitles a man who has given orders to kill thousands to stand back and laugh”.
  • It is that he gives the impression that the complexities do not exist.
  • Dismissive language is a more general feature of his writing style.
  • The implication is that Robertson is atypical among lawyers, someone who will sweep aside conventions and assumptions.
  • Read more:
    An inside look at the dangerous, painstaking work of collecting evidence of suspected war crimes in Ukraine

The United Nations

  • One of the bolder elements in the book is what Robertson says about the United Nations.
  • One of them is that the Security Council could authorise, say, the United States to take military action against another nuclear-armed major power: is that outcome “obviously right”?
  • The same logic might be used to justify expelling the United States, Britain and Australia, which were accused of unlawfully invading Iraq in 2003.
  • Robertson compares the UN unfavourably with its predecessor, the League of Nations, which “expelled the USSR for attacking Finland”.


Rowan Nicholson 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.

Why the government’s haste in changing the health system could come back to haunt it

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, April 18, 2024

However, in the health sector this need for speed entails policy risks that could come back to bite the government before the next election.

Key Points: 
  • However, in the health sector this need for speed entails policy risks that could come back to bite the government before the next election.
  • The biggest such risk comes from the disestablishment of the Māori Health Authority-Te Aka Whai Ora.

More health sector confusion

  • While the parts of the act referring to the Māori Health Authority have been excised, the act retains its primary focus on reducing health inequities.
  • To date, health minister Shane Reti has avoided using the words “equity” or “inequities”, instead preferring a generic focus on improving health outcomes, including for Māori.
  • But the planning and decision making mandated under the legislation still require government health agencies to address health inequities.
  • Despite having misgivings about the re-centralisation of the health system, the government has not reversed the merging of 20 District Health Boards into Health New Zealand.

Health targets rebooted

  • Other changes resemble initiatives introduced during the last National-led government in 2009, including specific health targets.
  • The health targets involve specified performance levels, such as ensuring that 95% of patients visiting emergency departments are seen within six hours.
  • Health New Zealand bears either the cost of continuing to fund security guards or the reputational risk of their reduced presence.
  • The government may have already dented minister Reti’s chances of building positive relationships with health sector leaders and interest groups.
  • The Māori Health Authority had widespread support from health sector groups.
  • While governments often draw criticism from the health sector, few have done so quite this rapidly.


Tim Tenbensel receives funding from the Health Research Council. He is affiliated with Health Coalition Aotearoa.

EQS-News: Dermapharm Holding SE fulfils all expectations despite multiple macroeconomic challenges

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Grünwald, 28 March 2024 – Dermapharm Holding SE ("Dermapharm"), a rapidly growing manufacturer of branded pharmaceuticals, today published its full Annual Report 2023.

Key Points: 
  • Grünwald, 28 March 2024 – Dermapharm Holding SE ("Dermapharm"), a rapidly growing manufacturer of branded pharmaceuticals, today published its full Annual Report 2023.
  • Despite a difficult macroeconomic environment, Dermapharm succeeded in maintaining its growth trajectory and hitting the upper end of the guidance range in 2023.
  • "In addition to the end of the boom phase associated with vaccine production, 2023 was also shaped by various other macroeconomic and geopolitical challenges.
  • The Annual General Meeting of Dermapharm Holding SE will take place on 27 June 2024.

Press release - EU job seeker’s aid worth €3 million for 835 dismissed steel workers in Germany

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 9, 2024

On Monday, the Committee on Budgets approved Germany’s request for support from the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund for Displaced Workers (EGF).

Key Points: 
  • On Monday, the Committee on Budgets approved Germany’s request for support from the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund for Displaced Workers (EGF).
  • Following years of financial losses, a number of restructuring and downsizing measures and a dedicated recovery plan were launched in 2018.
  • The total cost of the proposed measures is €4.97 million, with the EGF covering 60% (€2.98 million) and the remaining funds provided by German national sources.
  • Tailor-made support for dismissed workers
    The support includes guidance, including counselling and vocational orientation, job search assistance like job scouting and participation in job fairs, as well as training offers.

Press release - Deal on trade support for Ukraine with more protection for EU farmers

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 9, 2024

These unilateral trade liberalisation measures will help stabilise the Ukrainian economy and facilitate the country’s gradual integration into the EU’s internal market.

Key Points: 
  • These unilateral trade liberalisation measures will help stabilise the Ukrainian economy and facilitate the country’s gradual integration into the EU’s internal market.
  • Quote
    Rapporteur Sandra Kalniete (EPP, LV) said: "The ripple effects of Russia's relentless targeting of Ukraine and its economy are being felt by EU farmers.
  • Under this new agreement with the Council, we have fortified safeguards to protect EU farmers in case of market turbulence sparked by Ukrainian imports.
  • The current trade measures expire on 5 June 2024, and new regulations should enter into force immediately following this date.

Your Cryptocurrency Could Help Ukrainians to Protect Their Home and “Stay Connected”

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, March 21, 2024

This project has focused on the importance of staying connected, ensuring that, despite the challenges, Ukrainian defenders will always get the help they need.

Key Points: 
  • This project has focused on the importance of staying connected, ensuring that, despite the challenges, Ukrainian defenders will always get the help they need.
  • Imagine this: half of Ukraine's population, that's about 18 million people , now need help with the essential stuff.
  • The company has also transferred telecom and IT equipment for more than UAH 41 million to help the Ukrainian Defense Forces.
  • Whitepay is a SaaS company that provides cryptocurrency solutions for business and charity: crypto acquiring, POS terminals and payment pages.

Creditor Law Group: Trusted Ally in Disputing FDCPA Breaches

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, March 13, 2024

However, it's disheartening to note that this law is frequently violated, leaving debtors at the mercy of harassing collection agencies, thus worsening their predicament.

Key Points: