Generation Next Blog

November 2022

‘What shall we have for dinner?’ Choice overload is a real problem, but these tips will make your life easier

By |2022-11-24T11:50:32+11:00November 22nd, 2022|Categories: Wellbeing|

Janneke Blijlevens, RMIT University It’s been a long day. Your partner messages you: “let’s just order in, I don’t feel like cooking”. With a sense of relief, you open your usual takeaway app and start scrolling through the many restaurants and dishes available. Thai, pizza, burgers, Korean, Lebanese… oooh this one has free delivery! Hmm, [...]

Diverting children away from the criminal justice system gives them a chance to ‘grow out’ of crime

By |2022-11-24T11:50:13+11:00November 22nd, 2022|Categories: Society & Culture|

Faith Gordon, Australian National University Prison is no place for a child. Putting children in youth justice facilities can have long-lasting consequences for their physical, psychological and emotional health, wellbeing and development. Prison can aggravate existing health conditions and result in new ones, such as depression, suicidal thoughts, and post-traumatic stress disorder. We heard this [...]

What’s it like being a young person with long COVID? You might feel like a failure (but you’re not)

By |2022-11-22T12:48:36+11:00November 22nd, 2022|Categories: COVID|

Ana Leite, Durham University; Damien Ridge, University of Westminster, and Nisreen Alwan, University of Southampton Imagine you’re young, healthy and active. Then, one day, the rug is pulled out from under you. You initially have symptoms akin to a cold, so you take a lateral flow test, which shows you have COVID. But it’s nothing [...]

Pharmacists could help curb the mental health crisis – but they need more training

By |2022-11-22T12:48:50+11:00November 22nd, 2022|Categories: Mental Illness|

Joseph A Carpini, The University of Western Australia; Deena Ashoorian, The University of Western Australia, and Rhonda Clifford, The University of Western Australia Chances are you live within 2.5 kilometres of a community pharmacy and visit one about every three weeks. You don’t need an appointment. The wait time is usually short. These factors make [...]

How to talk to your child about their autism diagnosis – the earlier the better

By |2023-02-10T15:01:44+11:00November 22nd, 2022|Categories: ASD|Tags: |

Josephine Barbaro, La Trobe University and Marie Camin, La Trobe University With better awareness and acceptance, approximately one out of every 50 children is receiving an autism diagnosis. More and more families are deciding when to share this information with their child. Some parents worry that doing so will “label” their child, or make [...]

Attachment and Teenagers

By |2022-12-01T16:56:49+11:00November 11th, 2022|Categories: Podcast, Wellbeing|Tags: , |

Join Andrew Fuller as he chats with guest John Hendry OAM on understanding attachment as it relates to teenagers The cognitive and emotional effects of attachment Whether teenager life inevitably disrupts family attachments How we can re-secure less-attached teenagers Identity formation and attachment Listen now below: Host: Andrew Fuller, Clinical Psychologist and Family Therapist, [...]

This new ‘risky’ playground is a work of art – and a place for kids to escape their mollycoddling parents

By |2022-11-11T13:23:45+11:00November 10th, 2022|Categories: Nature Play, Resilience|

Sanné Mestrom, University of Sydney Imagine this: a heap of colourful plastic buckets stacked on top of each other to form a climbable bridge, monolithic bluestone boulders holding up a contorted slide, a pile of concrete demolition debris moonlighting as a resting spot. At every point, children can be seen swinging their bodies from warped, [...]

COP27: Reigniting youth passion for greater climate change action

By |2022-11-11T16:44:55+11:00November 8th, 2022|Categories: Society & Culture|

Izzy Zhu-Maguire, Master of International Relations student, Monash University Young people are beginning to lose hope. We’re living in the climate crisis we thought we wouldn’t yet have to face. I have faith that many young people won’t stop fighting for climate action, but I have a fear that many others are beginning to feel [...]

Disempowered, shut off and less able to afford healthy choices – how financial hardship is bad for our health

By |2022-11-08T17:34:24+11:00November 8th, 2022|Categories: Society & Culture|

Edward Jegasothy, University of Sydney and Sarah Hill, University of Sydney Australia is facing a cost-of-living crisis. Rising costs of rent, fuel, food and power have increased financial stress for many households. While financial pressures are now being felt by a broader section of society, for many Australians, such pressures are constant. The health costs [...]

Does methamphetamine use cause Parkinson’s? And what do pizza boxes have to do with it?

By |2022-11-08T17:34:05+11:00November 8th, 2022|Categories: Drugs & Alcohol|

Nicole Lee, Curtin University and Steven Bothwell, University of Newcastle The South Australian government is planning to roll out a new mass media campaign about the impact of using methamphetamine, including crystal methamphetamine or “ice” and powdered methamphetamine or “speed”. The campaign includes warning messages on pizza boxes – presumably because young people are the [...]

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