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Search resuls for: "Cornell Research"


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Self-harm: Why it happens and how to treat it
  + stars: | 2024-10-30 | by ( Kristen Rogers | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +13 min
Editor’s Note: This story contains details of self-harm that some readers may find upsetting or triggering. She had just recently learned about self-harm after asking a friend about her many bandages and long sleeves. In 2019 there were 363,000 emergency department visits for self-harm, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Self-harm can also be a form of self-punishment among those feeling guilt or shame and thus like they deserve physical pain. You should of course use common sense and not let someone have their self-harm toolkit in their bedroom, for example, Whitlock added.
Persons: Megan, ” Megan —, , , ” Megan, , Megan’s, Janis Whitlock, Whitlock, Jeremy Jamieson, There’s, Vibh Forsythe Cox, Marsha M, Linehan, Cox, ” Whitlock, DBT, suicidality, don’t, , ’ ” Whitlock, Whitlock doesn’t, Michele Berk, Benjamin Veness, Berk, ” “, Matt Villano Organizations: International Association for Suicide Prevention, Befrienders, CNN, Houston, Cornell Research, Cornell University, US Centers for Disease Control, University of Rochester, University of Washington, JED, Parents, Stanford University in Locations: New York, Seattle, Boston, Norway, Stanford University in California, Las Vegas, California
Skynesher | E+ | Getty ImagesWhat successful couples do differentlyCouples who say they feel their financial problems are perpetual are more likely to assume they have no solution, according to Cornell's research. Unfortunately, most couples by default tend to view their financial problems as perpetual, and therefore avoid talking about financial issues, Garbinsky said. watch nowCommunication avoidance may also contribute to financial infidelity, where a partner will withhold or hide financial information from their partner. "If you're not talking and if you're hiding things from your partner, it is having negative effects on your relationship quality over time," Garbinsky said. To start to unravel financial conflict, it helps to backtrack and talk about the money memories each partner has and how that shapes their feelings about money now, he said.
Persons: Garbinsky, Jude Boudreaux, Boudreaux Organizations: Partners, CNBC FA Locations: New Orleans
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