All Topics
All Topics
Technology
Technology
AI
AI
Business
Business
Entertainment
Entertainment
News
News
Programming
Programming
Security
Security
Science
Science
Design
Design
Environment
Environment
Finance
Finance
Crypto
Crypto
Politics
Politics
Sports
Sports
Education
Education
Gaming
Gaming
Art
Art
Music
Music
Health
Health
Books
Books
Food
Food
Travel
Travel
Personal
Personal
Bluesky
Twitter

Have You Seen Me Lately? – Revisiting Our Understanding of Youth Mental Health

By

Charlotte Bailey

2mo ago

Source

acamh.orgHave You Seen Me Lately? – Revisiting Our Understanding of Youth Mental Healthacamh.org
Snippet from the RSS feed
We are delighted to announce the release of the 2026 Journal of Child Psychology & Psychiatry (JCPP) Annual Research Review '“Have you seen me lately” ‐ Revisiting our understanding of significant mental health disorders for children and adolescents', edited by Daniel S. Shaw. The post Have You Seen Me Lately? – Revisiting Our Understanding of Youth Mental Health appeared first on ACAMH .

You might also wanna read

Dr. Ashley Liew on co-occurring conditions in children with intellectual disabilities: An ACAMH course preview

Dr. Ashley Liew, a Consultant Paediatric Neuropsychiatrist, discusses co-occurring conditions in children with intellectual disabilities ahe

bit.ly·1mo ago

Co-producing mental health research with young men: Insights from the Men Minds project

This article, written by Nina (a Senior Research Fellow at the Children and Young People's Centre for Justice), discusses the Men Minds proj

inspirethemind.org·22d ago

The Decline of Unsupervised Play Is Fueling the Youth Mental Health Crisis

This article argues that the decline of unsupervised, unstructured neighborhood play among children is a major contributor to the youth ment

thegrowtheq.com·7d ago

Global social media bans for kids gain popularity, but researcher questions evidence behind youth mental health crisis claims

The article discusses the growing global trend of social media bans for children, starting with Australia's ban on under-16s, followed by si

theglobeandmail.com·21d ago

Global social media bans for kids gain popularity, but researcher questions evidence behind youth mental health crisis claims

The article discusses the growing global trend of social media bans for children, starting with Australia's ban on under-16s, followed by si

theglobeandmail.com·21d ago

What science says about the mental health effects of excessive screen time

This article examines the scientific evidence behind the concept of "brain rot" from excessive digital device use. It references multiple re

sciencenews.org·7d ago

What science says about the mental health effects of excessive screen time

This article examines the scientific evidence behind the concept of "brain rot" from excessive digital device use. It references multiple re

sciencenews.org·7d ago

What science says about the mental health effects of excessive screen time

This article examines the scientific evidence behind the concept of "brain rot" from excessive digital device use. It references multiple re

sciencenews.org·7d ago

Global Teen Social Media Bans Lack Direct Evidence of Mental Health Benefits

This article critically examines the global trend of governments banning social media for teenagers (e.g., Australia's under-16 ban) as a so

scienceblog.com·8d ago

Comments

Sign in to join the conversation.

No comments yet. Be the first.