The latest findings may surprise parents who were told to wait on common allergens.
Scientists in Norway have found that exclusively breastfed babies are less likely to develop ADHD symptoms, with girls ...
It's funny how much media coverage is devoted to anything suggesting that phones might be ruining kids—and how little coverage goes to studies suggesting the opposite. So it goes with a new report ...
Conventional wisdom says more screen time is bad for kids. But new research suggests that may not be the full story. In the latest episode of “The Poynter Report Podcast,” Dr. Justin Martin, the chair ...
The health of U.S. children has deteriorated over the past 17 years, with kids today more likely to have obesity, chronic diseases and mental health problems like depression, a new study says. Much of ...
Luby is an infant/preschool psychiatrist clinician researcher at Washington University School of Medicine. Barch is a clinical scientist researcher at Washington University in St. Louis. The New York ...
Allowing very young children to access televisions and other screens could lead to sensory challenges for them later in childhood, according to a new study from Drexel University in Pennsylvania. The ...
It may be important to teach children theology, but kids are much more likely to experience God and his love through something simpler: the presence of caring, trustworthy adults. That’s according to ...
According to a Harvard study, having kids pitch in with chores around the house on a regular basis has a huge impact on how successful they’ll be later in life. Of the various hopes and dreams parents ...
New research finds that there is a correlation between eating soybeans and soy products and enhanced attention and processing speed in school-aged kids. nungning20 - stock.adobe.com See more of our ...
The U.S. Motion Picture Association helps parents limit the amount of violence and sexual content their kids see by requiring a guardian to accompany children under 17 when attending R-rated movies.
Despite parents’ strong food skills, new Canadian research finds no link to their children’s cooking abilities, suggesting hands-on experience matters more than observation alone. Study: Longitudinal ...