An enormous quantity of drugs are dispensed to treat depression. and it is difficult to say in how many cases such treatment is justified.
What you may think is depression may be nothing more than bad case of boredom or the blahs. In other cases, depression is a feeling of “what’s the use?” that seems to hit people at a certain time in the- lives, typically the forties. Executives and professional people may fall into this kind of depression not long after they have entered the very peak of their careers and become overwhelmed with the feeling that al their efforts have somehow not been personally rewarding. A person whose interests are home centered may become depressed after the children are grown. What I am trying to get at is that depression is. a certain sense, sometimes “natural,” and a few sessions with a psychologist may be more appropriate than drug therapy.
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Posted on July 31st, 2008 by admin | No Comments »
Could your baby’s IQ even be influenced by breastmilk? Researchers say “yes.” Consider this: In a study published in 1993 in the British medial journal Lancet, eight-year-olds who were given breastmilk in the first month of life scored 8.3 IQ points higher than another group fed formula.
In another study published in 1996 in the Journal of Human Lactation, 4-month-old babies exclusively fed breastmilk were compared to another group of four-month-olds fed formula or breastmilk supplemented by formula. The researchers found that babies fed only breast-milk “differed significantly” from the other groups, including the group fed a combination of mother’s milk and formula. Exclusive breastfeeders were ahead in both physical and behavioral development, keeping up with all of those “what your baby may be doing” charts and even exceeding many of the developmental milestones, unlike many in the other group. They were checked and compared again at a year and the differences still held up.
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Posted on July 15th, 2008 by admin | No Comments »