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Jay Trevaskis

Drugs - Teenagers - 3 views

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    Young people try drugs for many reasons including relaxation, socialising, curiosity or peer pressure. Alcohol, tobacco and cannabis are the most commonly used drugs by teenagers. Around one in five teenagers have tried cannabis at least once. Parents can reduce the risk of drugs for their children with some strategies.
Jay Trevaskis

Drug Use Factors - 5 views

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    Why people take drugs There are many reasons why people take drugs. Here are some of the factors which can influence them:
Jay Trevaskis

Understand why people use drugs - 1 views

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    If there are people around, then there are drug users around. It is simple as that, people have been using drugs to get high since prehistoric times, and they aren't going to stop anytime soon. Chances are you might be addicted to a drug, like nicotine or caffeine.
Jay Trevaskis

Why do young people use drugs? - 0 views

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    A person may or may not be aware of underlying reasons for their drug use. If you think about why you or others may use alcohol, this will give you some idea as to why young people like to use alcohol or other drugs. For example:
Jay Trevaskis

Why do people take drugs - 1 views

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    People take drugs because they want to change something about their lives. Here are some of the reasons young people have given for taking drugs:
Jay Trevaskis

Sydney CBD's violent side back on show - 0 views

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    SYDNEY punched and brawled its way through another two nights of alcohol-fuelled stupidity this weekend. No one was immune - tourists, locals, even women - were punched and kicked on the city's streets. They all ended up in the emergency ward of St Vincent's Hospital, the front line of treating victims of the violence that mars our streets after dark at the weekend.
Jay Trevaskis

The Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) in Canberra says a plan to extend the careers o... - 0 views

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    The Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) in Canberra says a plan to extend the careers of the nation's female sports stars, could lead to more active lives for Australian women. The AIS is currently studying how to prevent excessive calcium loss when exercising, which degrades the body's long-term capacity and can lead to osteoporosis.
Jay Trevaskis

10 Ways To Transform Toxic Thoughts - 1 views

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    If you've ever felt the way anger or fear can electrify the atmosphere in a room, you'll know what Sandra Ingerman means by "toxic thoughts." The author, a family therapist and shaman practitioner, believes our thoughts and emotions transmit an invisible but palpable energy that can affect our mental and physical well-being.
Jay Trevaskis

UAE's residents among the world's happiest, study finds - The National - 0 views

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    DUBAI // Residents of the Emirates are among the happiest in the world, a study shows. We are least likely to have negative thoughts about the country we live in, according to a "societal values survey". The study asked people about their perception of life, with only 12 per cent of answers negative.
Jay Trevaskis

Overview of Beck's Cognitive Theory of Depression - 0 views

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    This review provides a summary of literature pertaining to Beck's Cognitive Theory of Depression, as well as a general overview of the theory. Beck believed that the cognitive symptoms of depression actually precede the affective and mood symptoms of depression, rather than vice versa.
Jay Trevaskis

The extraordinary science of the addictiveness of junk food - 2 views

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    Article from the New York Times about why people find it so difficult to break the grip of Junk Food. It looks at the addictive nature of junk food.
Jay Trevaskis

Australia's drinking Culture - 0 views

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    DrinkWise Ambassadors Mike McKay, Dr Andrew Rochford, Rob de Castella, Liz Ellis and Susie ONeill share their thoughts and concerns about the drinking culture in Australia and attitudes to alcohol, including binge drinking and peer pressure amongst teenagers. For some binge drinking has become routine and many see drinking alcohol to get drunk as not only acceptable, but expected. Alcohol misuse is dangerous and increases a person's risk of injury or harm. Is it possible to change the national drinking culture? Generational change is the key to a healthier future for Australian society. Research shows that parents are their children's' most influential role models.
Jay Trevaskis

Type 2 Diabetes - 0 views

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    A simple yet informative animation about the role of Glucose and how it gets to the cells and how type 2 diabetes is formed and what happens in the cells.
Jay Trevaskis

How insulin gets glucose into a cell - 0 views

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    The basics of how insulin gets glucose into a cell. Includes mechanisms of possible defects in the system.
Jay Trevaskis

Young people who get drunk aware of risk of sex attack - 1 views

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    Unwanted sexual encounters and unsafe sex are rife among drinkers and drug users, a survey has found. Nearly one in four of the 6605 Australian respondents to the Global Drug Survey said they had been taken advantage of sexually because they were vulnerable after consuming drugs or alcohol.
Wendy de Jong

Kids Helpline - 0 views

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    Offers advice to teenagers on issues they face. Includes sections on respecful relationships.
Jay Trevaskis

We were hippies about immunisation - 0 views

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    Ian Williams is a smart guy - a scientist, an inventor, a businessman - but when it came to son Alijah's health he dismissed science and behaved like a "hippy", creating a situation where Alijah almost died. "Blood is dripping from his mouth and he is saying 'save me daddy'," Williams told the Sunday Star-Times. "I was holding the hand of my kid who had an arched back, the muscles could break his bones at any second, and his heart could stop."
Jay Trevaskis

Parents decisions about vaccination and gentle art of persuasion - 0 views

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    While a measles epidemic cannot be solely blamed on people who actively forgo vaccination - waning immunity in adults also contributes - it can be an important factor. We saw this play out in the United Kingdom in the late 2000s, when the now-debunked theory that the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine caused autism drove immunisation rates down to 80%
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