Is Pornography Destroying Your Marriage?
More Than A Third of Teenage Girls Experience Depression
Depression strikes far too often during adolescence, especially in teenage girls, a new study shows. More than a third of all teen girls in the United States wrestle with depression by the time they turn 17, according to new data regarding the state of children’s’ mental health. The study, which involved researchers from Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC, examined reports of depression that began as early as 11 years of age through as late as 17 years of age. By the time they exited adolescence, the data showed 36 percent of girls and 13.6 percent of boys endured some form of depression.
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GUEST: Lisa Haisha
Lisa Haisha, M.A., is showing women, men, and couples how to “show up” in their own lives personally, professionally, and passionately with her fearless expression in all media as a globally sought-after life counselor.
Lisa answers:
How does ography and ographic viewing affect the sexual intimacy in male adults?
If a person becomes addicted to ography, what can that addiction be compared to and at what point should a person seek professional counseling for it?
Do you think that excessive over stimulation in the forms of cell phone and computer use is having an impact on people’s capability to connect with each other in real life?
Can a marriage be successful if one partner is a progressively learning and exploring themselves while the other is content with their current intellectual status?
Analytical psychology, anxiety, clinical forensic psychologist, depression, Dr. John Huber, Forensic Psychology, Kristin Sunanta Walker, life change, mental health, mental health perspectives, mental illness, positive change, psychology, psychology headlines, Ryan McCormick, social issues, substance abuse, Substance Use Disorder