new-study
Dads’ Depression Linked to Kids’ Behavior Problems
Depression in fathers is strongly linked to behavioral problems in their children, a new study suggests…….click here to continue reading
Depression in fathers is strongly linked to behavioral problems in their children, a new study suggests…….click here to continue reading
A new study using MRI scans has found that depression frequently seems to uncouple the brain’s ‘hate circuit’…….click here to continue reading
Drinking coffee may lower women’s risk of depression, a new study says…….click here to continue reading
MONDAY, Sept. 26 (HealthDay News) — Coffee lovers, take heart: Women who drink four or more cups of caffeinated coffee daily seem to have a lower risk of depression than those who don’t drink java or stop at one cup a day, a new study suggests…….click here to continue reading
People suffering from depression are slightly at a greater risk of stroke or death due to the condition, a new study says…….click here to continue reading
TUESDAY, Sept. 13 (HealthDay News) — For a nation that seems ready to pop a pill for any ill, a new study suggests that the opposite seems true for some people with symptoms of depression, whose concerns about the side effects of antidepressants were the top reason they wouldn’t disclose warning signs to their doctors…….click here to continue reading
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Some people with depression symptoms may not tell their family doctor about it — often out of worry they will be placed on an antidepressant, a new study suggests…….click here to continue reading
What if you could treat depression, anxiety and other mood disorders without drugs or invasive procedures but simply by eating probiotic yogurt, or drinking a probiotic broth? A new study in mice suggests this may be possible someday…….click here to continue reading
The brains of people who relapse into depression differ from those of people who maintain a recovery, a new study shows…….click here to continue reading
SATURDAY, Aug. 20 (HealthDay News) — Working moms are less likely to show symptoms of depression than stay-at-home moms, a new study finds…….click here to continue reading