10 Ways to Help When Your Child is Depressed

1. Recognize that clinical depression is a disease. Internalizing this fact will help your child in two ways. One, it will hopefully keep you from blaming yourself or your child. This is no one's fault. Second, if you think of depression as a disease instead of a choice your child is making, you won't say anything stupid like, "Why don't you just pull yourself together," or "Stop feeling sorry for yourself."

2. Don't freak out. This will definitely not help your child. Clinical depression can be successfully treated more than 80% of the time. As long as your child has a good doctor and supportive parents, he or she has a very good chance of recovering. Notice that last part - while everyone with depression really needs a good doctor, supportive parents are absolutely critical for a child with depression.

Read on

Posted: Jul 17, 2009

tags: ,

| More
---

Sad Dads May Lead to Crying Infants

(HealthDay News) -- Don't automatically blame mom: A crying, colicky baby can be just as much the result of dad's state of mind, Dutch researchers report.

Other studies have found that depression among mothers can be related to excessive crying or colic, a common problem with newborns, but the researchers said that little was known about whether fathers' emotions and behavior also have an effect.

Read on

Posted: Jul 01, 2009

tags: , ,

| More
---
---