Researchers discovered that children who went back to school during COVID experienced far fewer mental health diagnoses than those who stayed remote. Anxiety, depression, and ADHD all declined as in-person learning resumed. Healthcare spending tied to these conditions also dropped. Girls showed the largest improvements, highlighting the importance of school-based structure and support
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82 sats \ 0 replies \ @winteryeti 14 Dec
I think the jury is still out on what the impact has been to that generation. Both my kids were grade-school during covid, and it's shaped them noticeably. I think we won't see the full effect until they get to their thirties and the related time-studies. Should be some interesting insights either way.
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @SHA256man 14 Dec
perhaps this shows how dependent the kids are on the school programming, experiencing anxiety wen their parents are incapable of providing the necessary structure and education in life; scheduled lunch breaks with friends are part of the programming;
now let's see the report on those who managed to stay out of school and start participating in club sports and other extra-curricular activities;
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2 sats \ 0 replies \ @CliffBadger 23h
Who would have thought martial law might have a negative impact on children's mental health?
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100 sats \ 2 replies \ @SHA256man 14 Dec
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @CruncherDefi 23h
That's supposed to be surprising/eye-opening or what?
What is exactly surprising/eye-opening in the fact that managing large numbers of people in small areas are converging to similar solution?
It's not surprising/eye-opening. Its just closer-to-optimal.
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10 sats \ 0 replies \ @SHA256man 23h
"as we live a life of ease
every one of us has all we need
sky of blue and sea of green
in our yellow submarine"
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