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Search resuls for: "pediatricians —"


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Gen Z is nervous they're going to raise a generation of iPad kids. "I need everybody else from my generation to promise that we are not going to raise iPad children," one person said. Specifically, they're worried about raising a generation of iPad kids. "Not trying to start a culture war but much of online gen z culture seems to be about gen z exceptionalism & villainizing all other generations," one person wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, in response to the viral TikTok videos. Advertisement"iPad kids, video games kids, TV kids, same hysteria.
Persons: , they're, @gabesco, iPads, Gen Z, @hopeyoufindyourdad, she's, It's, Alpha, Sophie Puchulu, Puchulu, there's, Z's, We've Organizations: Service, Alpha, American Academy of Pediatrics, Academy Locations: Minnesota
The American Academy of Pediatrics backed gender-related treatments for children on Thursday, reaffirming its position from 2018 on a medical approach that has since been banned in 19 states. But the influential group of doctors also took an extra step of commissioning a systematic review of medical research on the treatments, following similar efforts in Europe that found uncertain evidence for their effectiveness in adolescents. Critics across the political spectrum — including a small but vocal group of pediatricians — have been calling for a closer look at the evidence in recent years, particularly as the number of adolescents who identify as transgender has rapidly increased. The treatments are relatively new, and few studies have tracked their long-term effects. Health bodies in England and Sweden have limited access to the treatments after carrying out systematic reviews, the gold standard for evaluating medical research.
Organizations: American Academy of Pediatrics Locations: Europe, England, Sweden
For more than a year, civilian doctors in Ukraine have been swapping their white coats for military fatigues, joining thousands of combat medics — from nurses to anesthesiologists to pediatricians — who are putting their lives on the line to treat an endless stream of casualties. In this exclusive video, New York Times journalists spent a week inside a military field hospital in eastern Ukraine, filming a team of combat medics as they raced to save the lives of wounded soldiers. “We’re working on two front lines,” said Oleksiy Nazarishin, a Ukrainian surgeon and the chief medical officer. For the medics, it’s a grueling cycle of trauma, death and exhaustion. And when an injured enemy Russian soldier arrives at the field hospital, the medics must set aside their anger and uphold their medical oath to treat him like any other patient.
Persons: pediatricians —, , , Oleksiy Nazarishin, it’s Organizations: New York Times Locations: Ukraine, Ukrainian, Russian
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