PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Evaluate children's stress after natural disasters

University of Miami study shows that PTSD and depression together make it harder for children to recover

2012-08-29
(Press-News.org) CORAL GABLES, FL (August 28, 2012) -- As Hurricane Isaac nears the Gulf Coast, one may wonder what the impact of natural disasters are on children. Who is most at risk for persistent stress reactions? How can such youth be identified and assisted in the aftermath of a destructive storm?

Dr. Annette M. La Greca, a professor of psychology and pediatrics at the University of Miami, and her colleagues, have been studying children's disaster reactions following Hurricanes Andrew (1992), Charley (2004) and Ike (2008). Recent findings from Hurricane Ike shed light on these questions about children's functioning.

The new findings suggest that it is important to evaluate children's symptoms of post-traumatic stress and depression, in order to identify those who may be the most adversely affected. Findings also suggest that helping children cope with stressors that occur during or after the disaster may improve children's psychological functioning. "Children may have to move or change schools. Their neighborhood may not be safe for outdoor play and they may not be able to spend time with their friends. Children need help coping with these and other post-disaster stressors," La Greca says.

In collaboration with Scott and Elaine Sevin, Dr. La Greca developed a workbook for parents to help their children cope with the many stressors that occur after disasters. The book gives parents tips for helping children stay healthy and fit, maintain normal routines, and cope with stressors and with emotions, such as fears and worries. The After the Storm workbook is available at no cost at www.7-dippity.com.

A paper to be published in the Journal of Affective Disorders indicates that, eight months after the disaster, children with signs of both post-traumatic stress and depression represent a high-risk group for longer-term adverse reactions. Such children are less likely to recover by 15 months post-disaster than other youth. They also report more severe levels of psychological symptoms and experience more post-disaster stressors than other youth. The authors on this paper are Drs. Betty Lai and Annette La Greca from the University of Miami, Dr. Beth Auslander from the University of Texas Medical Branch, and Dr. Mary Short from the University of Houston-Clear Lake.

### The University of Miami's mission is to educate and nurture students, to create knowledge, and to provide service to our community and beyond. Committed to excellence and proud of our diversity of our University family, we strive to develop future leaders of our nation and the world. www.miami.edu.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Kindergarten readiness: Are shy kids at an academic disadvantage?

2012-08-29
CORAL GABLES, FL (August 28, 2012)—Parents of young children hope for a successful kindergarten experience that will set their youngsters on the right path of their educational journey. Some worry about their kids not adapting to the school environment, particularly when the children are talkative and overactive. Yet, a new study by the University of Miami (UM) shows that overly shy preschool children are at greater academic risk than their chatty and boisterous peers. The study is one of the first to follow the social and academic progress of children throughout the preschool ...

Pretend play may not be as crucial to child development as believed, new study shows

2012-08-29
Pretend play can be fun for preschool children, but a new University of Virginia study, published in a recent online edition of the journal Psychological Bulletin, finds that it is not as crucial to a child's development as currently believed. Pretend play is any play a child engages in, alone, with playmates, or with adults, that involves uses of the imagination to create a fantasy world or situation, such as making toy cars go "vrrooooom" or making dolls talk. Based on a number of key studies over four decades, pretend play is widely considered by psychologists – and ...

URMC researchers connect new genetic signature to leukemia

2012-08-29
University of Rochester Medical Center scientists believe they are the first to identify genes that underlie the growth of primitive leukemia stem cells, and then to use the new genetic signature to identify currently available drugs that selectively target the rogue cells. Although it is too early to attach significance to the drug candidates, two possible matches popped up: A drug in development for breast cancer (not approved by the Food and Drug Administration), and another experimental agent that, coincidentally, had been identified earlier by a URMC laboratory as ...

Diagnosis often missed for Hispanic children with developmental delay, autism

2012-08-29
This press release is available in Spanish.(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) — Hispanic children often have undiagnosed developmental delays and large numbers of both Hispanic and non-Hispanic children who first were thought to have developmental delay actually had autism, researchers affiliated with the UC Davis MIND Institute have found. The study, one of the largest to date to compare development in Hispanic and non-Hispanic children, is published in the journal Autism. The results lead the study authors to recommend increased public health efforts to improve awareness, especially ...

Protein found to regulate red blood cell size and number

2012-08-29
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (August 28, 2012) –The adult human circulatory system contains between 20 and 30 trillion red blood cells (RBCs), the precise size and number of which can vary from person to person. Some people may have fewer, but larger RBCs, while others may have a larger number of smaller RBCs. Although these differences in size and number may seem inconsequential, they raise an important question: Just what controls these characteristics of RBCs? This question is particularly relevant for the roughly one-quarter of the population that suffers from anemia, which ...

Beliefs drive investors more than preferences, study finds

2012-08-29
COLUMBUS, Ohio - If experts thought they knew anything about individual investors, it was this: their emotions lead them to sell winning stocks too soon and hold on to losers too long. But new research casts doubt on this widely held theory that individual investors' decisions are driven mainly by their feelings toward losses and gains. In an innovative study, researchers found evidence that individual investors' decisions are primarily motivated by their beliefs about a stock's future. "The story is not about whether an investor hates losing or loves gains – it's not ...

Magnetic vortex reveals key to spintronic speed limit

Magnetic vortex reveals key to spintronic speed limit
2012-08-29
UPTON,NY -- The evolution of digital electronics is a story of miniaturization - each generation of circuitry requires less space and energy to perform the same tasks. But even as high-speed processors move into handheld smart phones, current data storage technology has a functional limit: magnetically stored digital information becomes unstable when too tightly packed. The answer to maintaining the breath-taking pace of our ongoing computer revolution may be the denser, faster, and smarter technology of spintronics. Spintronic devices use electron spin, a subtle quantum ...

Male snails babysit for other dads

Male snails babysit for other dads
2012-08-29
Pity the male of the marine whelk, Solenosteira macrospira. He does all the work of raising the young, from egg-laying to hatching — even though few of the baby snails are his own. The surprising new finding by researchers at the University of California, Davis, puts S. macrospira in a small club of reproductive outliers characterized by male-only child care. Throw in extensive promiscuity and sibling cannibalism, and the species has one of the most extreme life histories in the animal kingdom. The family secrets of the snail, which lives in tidal mudflats off Baja ...

Tracking shuttle exhaust reveals more information about atmospheric winds

Tracking shuttle exhaust reveals more information about atmospheric winds
2012-08-29
On July 8, 2011 the Space Shuttle Atlantis launched for the very last time. On that historic day, as the world watched its last ascent up into orbit and commentators discussed the program's contributions to space flight and scientific research over 20 years, the shuttle helped spawn one last experiment. As the shuttle reached a height of about 70 miles over the east coast of the U.S., it released – as it always did shortly after launch – 350 tons of water vapor exhaust. As the plume of vapor spread and floated on air currents high in Earth's atmosphere, it crossed through ...

NASA sees Hurricane Isaac affecting the Northern Gulf Coast

NASA sees Hurricane Isaac affecting the Northern Gulf Coast
2012-08-29
NASA and NOAA satellites continue to provide detailed information on Hurricane Isaac as the storm bears down on the U.S. Gulf coast. NASA's TRMM and Terra satellites captured imagery, and NOAA's GOES-13 satellite provided animations of Isaac's march toward the coast today, Aug. 28. Residents along the northern Gulf coast are bracing for the arrival of Isaac, which was recently upgraded to a hurricane by the National Hurricane Center as of 1:00 p.m. CDT. At that time, the center of Isaac was located about 55 miles (~85 km) south-southeast of the Mississippi and was moving ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Most US neurologists prescribing MS drugs have received pharma industry cash

A growing baby planet photographed for first time in a ring of darkness

Brain’s immune cells key to wiring the adolescent brain

KAIST develops AI that automatically detects defects in smart factory manufacturing processes even when conditions change​

Research alert: Alcohol opens the floodgates for bad bacteria

American Gastroenterological Association, Latica partner to assess living guidelines using real-world evidence

University of Tennessee collaborates on NSF grants to improve outcomes through AI

New technique at HonorHealth Research Institute uses ultrasound to activate drugs targeting pancreatic cancer

Companies 'dumbed down' cryptocurrency disclosures in good markets prior to reporting standardization, Rotman research finds

MSU study: What defines a life well-lived? Obituaries may have the answers.

Wind isn’t the only threat: USF-led scientists urge shift to more informed hurricane scale

Study: Fossils reveal reliable record of marine ecosystem functioning

New Simon Fraser University–University of Exeter partnership fast-tracks path to become a lawyer

Busy bees can build the right hive from tricky foundations

Deep sea worm fights ‘poison with poison’ to survive high arsenic and sulfide levels

New monthly pill shows potential as pre-exposure prophylaxis HIV drug candidate

Estalishing power through divine portrayal and depictions of violence

Planetary scientist decodes clues in Bennu’s surface composition to make sense of far-flung asteroids

For students with severe attention difficulties, changing school shifts is not the solution

Novel virtual care program enhances at-home support for people with heart failure

Giving mRNA vaccines a technological shot in the arm

Study IDs what can help collaborative groups actually accomplish their goals

Simpler models can outperform deep learning at climate prediction

Expert on catfishes publishes updated volume on catfish biology and evolution

Inaugural editorial: the Energy and Environment Nexus

As World Alzheimer’s Month approaches, supporting personhood for family members with dementia is key

Acosta to examine moisture-driven polar ice growth & its impact on global sea level

Mount Sinai scientists identify three potent human antibodies against mpox, paving the way for new protective therapies

Smarter robot planning for the real world

Optimization of biosafety laboratory management via an AI-driven intelligent system

[Press-News.org] Evaluate children's stress after natural disasters
University of Miami study shows that PTSD and depression together make it harder for children to recover