(HealthDay)—Given the news of the devastating effects of head injuries among professional football players, parents may wonder if their mini athletes are at risk, too.
CDC releases national action plan to prevent unintentional child injuries children and teens, unintentional injuries often go unrecognized. Fortunately, a new nationwide effort is working to raise awareness and rally communities ... K Krisberg - 《Nations Health》 被引量: 0发表: 2012年 Work-related...
Folks, this is the jab. There is no other viable possibility, especially when we consider how even the CDC and other agencies have acknowledge the Covid “vaccines” cause increases in heart problems for young people, including myocarditis, pericarditis, and he...
Nearly 28,000 American children and teens have died because of firearms in the past decade—second only to the 44,800 who died in motor vehicle collisions.
But reports like these suggest it may not be as “rare” as the CDC, Big Pharma, and the corporate media want the public to believe. They are clearly slanting their coverage as pro-vaccine pro-pharma, not wanting any negative information put forth that would hurt sales and their desire to...
of self-harm might be rising among young teens and tweens because girls are heavier social media users than boys, because girls are now entering puberty at slightly younger ages or because social contagion is happening: Like an infection, suicidal thoughts may spread among groups of youn...
For example, Miami Children's Hospital requires that parents prove they have a proper infant car seat before the child can leave the hospital, Malvezzi said. Dr. Alan Kaplan, director of emergency medicine at Plainview Hospital in Plainview, N.Y., agreed that prevention efforts are essential. ...
Falls caused most nonfatal injuries (about 2.8 million a year) and were associated with more than half of the nonfatal injuries in children younger than one year. Transportation-related injuries and deaths were highest among children ages 15 to 19. The report, "CDC Childhood Injury Repo...
(HealthDay)—There's good news and bad news from a new study of children visiting U.S. emergency departments for head injuries: The rate of these potentially serious events has fallen among boys, but risen for girls.
Young people who vape tend to dismiss such risks, Blaha said, as evidenced by the dramatic increase in vaping among teens in recent years. "They're only worried about the here and the now. I'm not sure too many of them are thinking about what this might be doing a decade or more la...