News Archive
Diet may hold key to disruption
Friday 13. of May 2005By: The Guardian - Felicity Lawrence
It takes about four months to get an appointment at the dyslexia clinic at Oxford University's department of physiology. Joshua's turn has finally come — he is eight years old, clever, well-behaved and doing well, but an...
Early life risk factors for obesity in childhood: cohort study
Friday 20. of May 2005By: British Medical Journal
John J Reilly, Julie Armstrong, Ahmad R Dorosty, Pauline M Emmett, A Ness, I Rogers, Colin Steer, Andrea Sherriff
for the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children Study Team
Gates gives $750m to fight deadly childhood diseases
Tuesday 25. of January 2005By: The Guardian - Sarah Boseley
Bill Gates, the chairman of Microsoft, has given $750m, his biggest ever donation, to an alliance dedicated to ending deaths from vaccine-preventable diseases among the poorest children in the world.
School whiteboards a danger to eyesight
Saturday 22. of January 2005By: The Times
This article is accessible by paid subscription to The Times archive only.
The greatest catastrophe - Aids worst disaster in history
Friday 10. of December 2004By: The Guardian - Rory Carroll & Sarah Boseley
The HIV/Aids pandemic is the worst catastrophe in history and is blighting childhood across the developing world, especially sub-Saharan Africa, the United Nations said yesterday.
Does the lack of sleep make you fat?
Tuesday 07. of December 2004By: University of Bristol
The recent rise in obesity may be partly due to the reduced amount of time we spend asleep, according to new research from the University of Bristol, UK.
An Orwellian Nightmare: Mandatory Mental Health Screening of Children
Wednesday 01. of December 2004By: AWSNA publication - John W Whitehead
In embracing a major new health initiative, which is based on a report by the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, the American government has taken a giant step toward an Orwellian nightmare. The commission has recommended...



