A Few Signs Your Teenager May Be Depressed
by Ed Yourdon
A Few Signs Your Teenager May Be Depressed
Filed under: teenage depression
Keep in mind that a lot of these symptoms are also indicative of normal teenage behavior. That's why teenage depression can only be diagnosed by a trained health or mental health professional — like a child psychologist or psychiatrist. Depression …
Read more on PsychCentral.com (blog)
Adolescent Depression Can Lower Later-Life Earning Power By 20 Percent
Filed under: teenage depression
It's never too early to get help for depression, especially since being depressed during your teen years may end up hurting you professionally later on. The Atlantic points to a recent study, published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, that …
Read more on Huffington Post
Dealing with depression: Teens share their struggles
Filed under: teenage depression
Depression wants its host to be and always feel alone. It sometimes requires more than half the day's worth in sleep. It makes its subject eat too little or too much. It creates sadness tears and bad moods. It does not stray from thoughts of death or …
Read more on PennLive.com
Survey cites troubling rise in teen depression Learning Curve
Filed under: teenage depression
Close to 100 percent of Santa Fe Public Schools' ninth-graders plan to graduate high school. About 95 percent of the district's seventh-graders feel the same way. And yet about 35 percent of those seventh-graders say they feel sad or hopeless every day …
Read more on Santa Fe New Mexican.com
~Teenage Depression~ – Infomation dealing with depression in teens.
If Theres Anything I Can Do: How To Help Someone Cope With Grief
Its Awful When Someone You Love Goes Through The Pain Of Bereavement But Theres No Need To Feel Helpless In The Face Of Grief. This Book Is Full Of Little Ways (and Big Ways) You Can Help Someone You Care About Cope With Grief That Little Bit Better.
If Theres Anything I Can Do: How To Help Someone Cope With Grief
Tags: mental health, national institute on drug abuse, santa fe public schools, drug abuse, huffington post, national bureau of economic research