Viewing all items in Resource Category: Editorial
- Are you an online dating addict? Are you a 40 or 50-something who uses dating apps? While you are not alone – recent studies on social trends show that more and more older people are dating via apps – beware becoming addicted to using the apps. For here is the problem: when you join a...Are you an online dating addict?
- Men, get a grip It seems that women prefer to marry men who have a strong grip. Recent research has found that men with a sturdier grip are more likely to be married than those with a weak grip. And there may be good logic to this, for manual strength is an established measure of...Men, get a grip
- Exercise chases the blues away If you exercise for even a mere 20 minutes a day, you will cut your risk of developing depression. King’s College London has found that meeting the recommended weekly guideline of 150 minutes of moderate aerobic activity, such as cycling or brisk walking, can have a huge impact on the...Exercise chases the blues away
- Burning calories as you garden The average British gardener burns 51,428 calories a year in their garden, and mowing the lawn is one of the highest ways of using energy – about 600 calories a month. Mowing the grass takes 5.7 calories per metre. Weeding takes 4.5 calories, as does potting plants. Digging burns 5...Burning calories as you garden
- Why so much stress in our schools? School closes this month. And maybe that’s not a moment too soon for many children and their teachers, who are suffering increasing levels of stress and anxiety in school. For children as young as four are showing signs of mental health problems, with increasing anxiety, panic attacks and...Why so much stress in our schools?
- Beware addictive games How will your children be spending their time this summer? Hopefully not in playing too many highly addictive video games such as Fortnight. Fortnight pits 100 players against each other and is free to play on mobile phones and consoles. Since its launch last July, it has been downloaded more than 40...Beware addictive games
- In praise of Emily Bronte Novelist Emily Brontë, author of Wuthering Heights, was born 200 years ago, on 30th July, 1818, in a small country town in Yorkshire, moving shortly afterwards with her family to nearby Haworth, where she remained until her death at the age of 30. Her mother and two oldest sisters died...In praise of Emily Bronte
- 70 years of the National Health Service The National Health Service began operating 70 years ago, on 5th July 1948, when Sylvia Beckingham, 13, was admitted to hospital in Manchester to be treated for a liver condition. It was the climax of a hugely ambitious plan by Labour Health Secretary Aneurin Bevan to bring good...70 years of the National Health Service
- Stop! Hedgehog! Hedgehog ‘warning signs’ are going up on our roads, at animal casualty black spots. The aim is to stop the drastic decline of their population – around 100,000 of them are killed on our roads every year, and it is feared that this level of mortality is unsustainable. The People’s Trust for Endangered...Stop! Hedgehog!
- 50 years on from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Britain, the USA, the Soviet Union and 58 other nations signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty 50 years ago, on 1st July 1968. It came into effect in March 1970, and some 190 nations have now signed. India and Pakistan have never signed the treaty but have admitted...50 years on from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
- No more spoonfuls of sugar to help the medicine go down The NHS may bring in a complete ban on sugary drinks in hospitals, after more than a third of its trusts have failed to sign up to a voluntary scheme to cut sales. It seems that so far 80 out of 232 trusts have...No more spoonfuls of sugar to help the medicine go down
- Is there poverty in our local school? Are there children in our local school who are living in poverty? There could well be. At least, teachers right across the country report that they are now having to wash children’s clothes and lend parents money, as they report increasing poverty among their pupils. A joint survey...Is there poverty in our local school?
