
| Media Assistance:
Neil Schoenherr News Writer; Assoc. Record Editor nschoenherr@wustl.edu (314) 935-5235 |
Washington University has many distinguished faculty and staff members who are experts in topics related to youth concerns, including nutrition, education, health and diversity issues.
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Showing Youth / Teenage Experts 1 through 5 of 17. - Show More |
| Ramesh Raghavan Assistant professor of Social Work (http://news-info.wustl.edu/sb/page/normal/794.html) Ramesh Raghavan's clinical, policy and administrative expertise in public health and psychiatry fuel his research interests in mental health services and policies for children in the child welfare system. Prior to joining the faculty at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work and the School of ... Expertise: public health, mental health services, children in the child welfare system, health policy, Medicaid Direct contact: 314-935-4469 / raghavan@wustl.edu |
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| Monica Matthieu Research Assistant Professor (http://news-info.wustl.edu/sb/page/normal/777.html)
Matthieu's expertise centers on mental health services. She is available to discuss suicide prevention, mental health in the aftermath of disasters, the mental health impact of trauma as well as the mental health of veterans. Her current research focuses on provider and organizational change required ... Expertise: mental health services, trauma, veterans, suicide prevention and disaster mental health Direct contact: 314-935-7516 / mmatthieu@wustl.edu |
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| Renee Cunningham-Williams visiting associate professor of social work (http://news-info.wustl.edu/sb/page/normal/737.html)
Cunningham-Williams' expertise centers on the comorbidity of mental health disorders, particularly those relating to behavioral addictions, risk taking, and antisocial behaviors. Expertise: gambling addiction, substance abuse, risk taking, antisocial behaviors, crisis intervention Direct contact: (314) 935-4563 / williamsr@wustl.edu |
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| Yunju Nam Assistant Professor of Social Work (http://news-info.wustl.edu/sb/page/normal/725.html) Yunju Nam is available to comment on social and economic equality, poverty, welfare policy, domestic violence, child welfare, and asset-building policy for the poor. She is particularly interested in the effect of welfare reform on poor children and women. Expertise: welfare, welfare police, domestic violence, child welfare, asset-building policy Direct contact: 314-935-4954 / ynam@gwbmail.wustl.edu |
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| John Constantino Associate Professor of Psychiatry (Child Psychiatry) (http://news-info.wustl.edu/sb/page/normal/705.html) Constantino is an expert on genetic and environmental factors that influence early social development. In particular, he studies the genetic influences that contribute to autism. In other research he also is working with very young children and their parents, hoping to better understand the earliest ... Expertise: autism, early social development, genetic influences on autistic social impairment, psychiatric disorders in children Media assistance: (314) 286-0110 / jdryden@wustl.edu |
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Showing Youth / Teenage Experts 1 through 5 of 17. - Show More |
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| More than 1,000 Okla. babies receive $1,000 for college savings Okla. State Treasurer and Washington University in St. Louis partner through new study on children's savings accounts (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/11842.html) June 3, 2008 -- More than 1,000 Oklahoma babies are receiving a $1,000 jumpstart on saving for college thanks to SEED for Oklahoma Kids (SEED OK), a seven-year study designed to determine the economic and educational impact of "seeding" a college savings account for children at birth. SEED OK, announced June 3 by Governor Brad Henry and State Treasurer Scott Meacham, is a collaboration between the Oklahoma State Treasurer and the Center for Social Development (CSD) at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis. |
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| Sexual responsibility week lecture "Loveline with Dr. Drew" (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/10954.html) Feb. 1, 2008 --
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| Sounds like a good idea Audiology expert urges caution in selecting loud toys for children (http://mednews.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/10710.html) Dec. 6, 2007 -- As the holidays approach, toy store shelves are stocked with toys that make noise. While toys with sound may be appealing to children, William Clark, Ph.D., director of audiology and communication sciences at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, cautions parents to be careful in choosing such toys. |
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| In Oklahoma and Maine, Babies Get Funds for College Savings Plans
U.S. News & World Report online blog June 13, 2008 -- Education blog on programs in Oklahoma and Maine to provide college savings accounts to newborns. WUSTL social work professor Michael Sherraden talks about the effort in Oklahoma. |
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| Should states lower the legal drinking age?
Los Angeles Times June 9, 2008 -- Several states are considering lowering the legal drinking age from 21 to 18. Evidence is accumulating that waiting until age 21 to drink dramatically cuts the risk of developing alcoholism. One study on women and alcohol dependence was led by WUSTL psychiatry professor Richard Grucza. |
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| Taking Them Out to the Ballgame
The Washington Post May 29, 2008 -- Interest in the baseball among black youths is a topic of concern for MLB as more of that demographic seems to be interested in football and basketball. WUSTL professor Gerald Early, an expert on black culture, attributes this to the lack of availability of baseball in many black communities. |
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| Elite Colleges Reach Deeper Into Wait Lists
The Wall Street Journal May 21, 2008 -- More students are being accepted from wait lists at elite schools this year because colleges found it harder to predict how many graduating seniors would join the freshman class. Some state colleges and smaller liberal-arts schools are also drawing more from their wait lists. |
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| Exercise may protect girls from future breast cancer
Associated Press and 206 others May 14, 2008 -- New research shows exercise during the teen years — starting as young as age 12 — can help protect girls from breast cancer when they're grown. "This really points to the benefit of sustained physical activity from adolescence through the adult years, to get the maximum benefit," said WUSTL surgery professor Graham Colditz, the study's lead author. |
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| Parents learn how to let go in the technological age
NPR Morning Edition Feb. 8, 2008 -- When kids head off to college, parents are forced to separate themselves from what has been a constant hands-on job for years. Parents and students comment on "Letting Go: A Parents' Guide to Understanding the College Year," by WUSTL's Karen Levin Coburn. |
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| Why smoking behind the bike sheds could harm your grades
New Scientist (UK) Jan. 8, 2008 -- Parents may now have another reason to worry about their children smoking. Nicotine may cause the teenage brain to develop abnormally, resulting in changes to the structure of white matter — the neural tissue through which signals are relayed. WUSTL School of Medicine's Richard Todd comments. |
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| Smoking link to hearing problems
BBC News online and 3 others Jan. 3, 2008 -- Teenagers who smoke, or whose mother smoked in pregnancy, are at higher risk of hearing problems and understanding what is being said, a Yale University study says. WUSTL psychiatry professor Richard Todd comments. |
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| Saggy Pants Bans May Not Be Lawful
Associated Press and 74 others Dec. 3, 2007 -- Pine Lawn, a mostly black municipality outside St. Louis, is among a growing number of U.S. cities enacting laws that ban low-slung pants. Critics say the bans amount to government attacks on youthful fashion that some find offensive. And constitutional scholars say they may not be lawful. WUSTL law professor and First Amendment expert Neil Richards comments. |
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| Cell phones on campus make cutting the umbilical cord more difficult
Miami Herald and 7 others Aug. 20, 2007 -- A cell phone can be an "electronic leash," as some teens call it. And mom and dad are quickly reachable if something goes awry. If asked to help solve a manageable problem, parents should not provide step-by-step instructions. They shouldn't brush off the problem, either. Realize that students can feel overwhelmed at first, advises WUSTL's Karen Levin Coburn, co-author of Letting Go: A Parents' Guide to Understanding the College Years. |
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| Back to Campus: Parental Anxiety 101 -- What moms and dads need to know
Newsday (NY) Aug. 20, 2007 -- Parents across Long Island are asking questions these days as they help pack their children's belongings or accompany them to campuses across the country. Their minds are filled with questions about crime and campus security, communicating with their students, finances, academics, social life, and separation anxiety. One of the experts commenting is Karen Levin Coburn, WUSTL's associate dean for freshman transition and co-author of Letting Go: A Parent's Guide to Understanding the College Years. |
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| Parents often naive about children's drug use
Atlanta Journal-Constitution and 16 others Sept. 27, 2006 -- Parents are largely unaware of their children's alcohol and drug use, according to new WUSTL research published in the October issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experiemental Research. WUSTL psychiatry professor and study researcher Jean Bierut comments. |
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| How To Raise A Smarter Child
Forbes.com July 26, 2006 -- Article looks at how parents can raise a smarter child. It was once thought that intelligence was completely determined by genetics, but it turns out that isn't true. The environment a child is raised in and whom a child is raised by play huge roles in determining how smart and socially adept he or she will be. WUSTL pediatrics and genetics professor Jonathan Gitlin comments. |
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| Disaster strikes psyches of victims, rescuers and a transfixed nation
Associated Press, Fox News online and 66 others Sept. 7, 2005 -- Hurricane Katrina has greatly affected the lives of survivors, rescue workers and even a transfixed nation that watched the catastrophe unfold. Experts say survivors may suffer significant psychological trauma, but stress that people are remarkably resilient, and that most who survived the storm and floodwaters won't be permanently impaired. One of the experts commenting is WUSTL psychiatry professor Barry Hong. |
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| Mini Medical School open to all walks of life
The New York Times and 7 others April 26, 2004 -- A program at the School of Medicine called Mini Medical School gives laypeople, from husbands and wives to lawyers and musicians, an abridged medical education that helps them to interact more effectively with health-care providers. Unlike a regular medical-school course, in which classmates share a basic knowledge of anatomy and cell biology, Mini Medical School mixes people with solid science backgrounds and people whose medical knowledge is limited to their experience on the cold end of the stethoscope. |
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| Lighten up!
The New York Times April 6, 2004 --
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More News:
Spelling patterns key to helping children learn to spell, read (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/2003/culture-living/reading.html)
March 2003 - Virtually every school child has heard the "i before e" rhyme at least once as he or she struggled with spelling. But according to child development psychologist and reading development expert Rebecca Treiman, the "i-e" rule is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to spelling patterns to be found in the English language. Research by Treiman and colleagues at Washington University in St. Louis suggests that teaching children to recognize and use these patterns may help them learn to spell and read more easily.
Teen revenge: Study examines how stereotyping plays role in adolescents' approval of violent behavior (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/2003/culture-living/teen_violence.html)
March 2003 - Teen violence, whether it is in the schoolyard or on the streets, is a concern worldwide. For those who study youth violence, a question that hasn't been explored extensively is how do adolescents justify the use of violent behavior? A recent study, to be published in the March/April 2003 issue of the journal Child Development, examines the effects of negative racial and cultural stereotypes on teens' reasoning or justification for peer violence.
Take advantage of outdoor summer concerts to expose children to the standards (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/2002/culture-living/concerts.html)
June 2002 - Summer concerts in the cities and towns of America offer relaxed and inexpensive opportunities for parents to introduce their children to all kinds of music, says Sue Taylor, Ph.D., a lecturer in musicology at Washington University in St. Louis. Performances of light classical music, Broadway show tunes, concert band and jazz band music are offered in parks and other informal venues throughout the summer months, notes Taylor. "These concerts offer much of what we call the standards, which children today seldom encounter on their own."
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