Sleep or No Sleep after a Trauma?
By Jim Windell
Sleep or No Sleep after a Trauma?
By Jim Windell
By Jim Windell
Does the thyroid health of pregnant women play a role in the brain development of their fetus?
Alcohol Use During the Coronavirus Pandemic
By Jim Windell
By Jim Windell
Racism has multiple effects on Black people, including lasting impacts on their physical and mental health.
Why are Some Veterans More Susceptible to PTSD?
By Jim Windell
Does Writing by Hand Make You Smarter?
By Jim Windell
Professor Says that Violence in Portland and Kenosha was Both Predictable and Preventable
By Jim Windell
Which Depressed Young People May Benefit from Exercise?
By Jim Windell
Breakthrough in Memory Research
Jim Windell
Increasing Domestic Violence During the Pandemic
By Jim Windell
Retiring Early Not a Good Idea?
By Jim Windell
Recognizing Emotional and Psychological Symptoms in Children and Teens Following a Concussion
By Jim Windell
Which Kind of OCD Treatment Works Best?
By Jim Windell
Resilience, Posttraumatic Growth and Cancer
By Jim Windell
Emily Peck, a staff writer for the Huffington Post, just did a story examining what will happen to day care centers and childcare facilities as a result of the Covid-19 crisis. Although childcare centers may be more essential than ever when we’re all allowed to go back to work, many are not getting any funds or finances during the current shutdown. Therefore, it seems evident that many will just not survive.
While interviewing the owners of daycare centers, Peck also looked at data from the National Association for the Education of Young Children and the Center for American Progress. Both organizations have collected information about childcare facilities and programs. These organizations predict that about half of all available slots in licensed child care centers and homes are at risk of disappearing because of the pandemic.
People with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) face a higher risk of heart disease at an earlier age than people without PTSD. That was been fairly well established. But why?
A research team’s abstract, recently published in The FASEB Journal, a journal that publishes in the biological sciences, helps explain why.
When someone is charged with a serious crime, say, for instance, a murder do we have any neurological tests that will help us answer such questions “Was this person stable when he committed the crime?” or “Should he be held accountable under the law for his criminal actions?”
These kinds of questions were posed in a recent article in the American Bar Association Journal. In the article, written by Kevin Davis, it was pointed out that millions of dollars have been spent on research to better understand the human brain. Yet, the article wondered if a host of legal questions could be answered today – any better than in past decades.
“What’s going on in a person’s brain is relevant to so many domains of law,” says Owen Jones, director of the research network and the Glenn M. Weaver, M.D., and Mary Ellen Weaver Chair in Law, Brain and Behavior at Vanderbilt Law School. “Historically, there’s been no way to make those assessments,” Jones adds. “When you’re trying to understand the multiple causes of a person’s behavior, you want to try to understand what’s giving rise to their mental states.”
There is no doubt, Davis points out, that criminal defense lawyers use or cite neuroscience to help mitigate or explain their clients’ behavior. For example, it has been found that between 2005 and 2015, there were more than 2,800 judicial opinions in which neuroscience played a role.
If an individual owns a handgun, is he or she more at risk of suicide? If you are a therapist working with depressed clients or with those people who have other risk factors for violence, that question could have life or death consequences. Previous research on this question has either been conducted with small samples or over a limited period of time. The eight authors of this study, led by David M. Studdert, LL.B., Sc.D., planned and carried out a very ambitious study that looked at more than 26 million California residents over a 12-year period. The researchers, who were affiliated with Stanford University School of Law, Standard School of Medicine, the University of California at Davis, and other colleges, used survival analysis to estimate the relationship between handgun ownership and mortality, including death by suicide. The results were reported in the New England Journal of Medicine in early June, 2020.
Of the individuals followed in this study, 676,000 acquired one or more handguns during the study period, and 1.4 million died over the length of the study. Of those who died, almost 18,000 died by suicide and nearly 6,700 were suicides by firearm. The researchers found that rates of suicide by any method were higher among handgun owners. It turns out that the risk of suicide by firearm among handgun owners peaked immediately after the first acquisition of a gun, however, more than half of suicides by firearm among handgun owners occurred more than one year after they acquired a handgun.
Of the many ways the coronavirus pandemic has changed our lives, one of the most significant might be the way it has changed relationships.
In the U.S, and around the world, millions of couples who have led largely separate lives during the workday suddenly find themselves quarantined at home. They are stuck together all day, every day, with no end in sight.