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         Contraception:     more books (114)
  1. Entering Adulthood: Understanding Reproduction, Birth and Contraception (Contemporary Health Series) by Betty M. Hubbard, 1989-01
  2. Modern contraception: Updates from the contraception report by David A. And Melinda Wallach Grimes, 1997
  3. Sexual Health for Life: Contraception (Sexual Health for Life): Contraception (Sexual Health for Life) by Ian McAllister, Gail Boag, 2006-04-01
  4. Contraception vs. tradition;: A Catholic critique by G Egner, 1967
  5. New considerations in oral contraception: Proceedings of an international symposium, Catholic University-Leuven, Leuven, Belgium, September 24-25, 1981
  6. Contraception by Selig Neubardt, 1970-02-05
  7. Hormonal Contraception (Positive Health Guide) by Anne Szarewski, 1991-02-14

81. Birth Control - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
(Redirected from contraception). Employing techniques to avoid pregnancy resulting from intercourse is called contraception (literally, against conception).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contraception
Birth control
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from Contraception
Birth control is the practice of preventing or reducing the probability of pregnancy without abstaining from sexual intercourse ; sometimes it also includes abortion , the ending of an unwanted pregnancy . The term family planning is sometimes used as well, especially for thoughtful and premeditated selection of a birth control technique or set of techniques. Employing techniques to avoid pregnancy resulting from intercourse is called contraception (literally, against conception Birth control is a controversial political and ethical issue in many countries and religions. Opponents promote abstinence from sexual intercourse as an alternative, but supporters consider this an inadequate replacement for the full array of birth control techniques. Table of contents 1 History of birth control 2 Traditional birth control methods: 3 Modern birth control methods: 4 Religious and cultural attitudes to birth control ... edit
History of birth control
Probably the oldest methods of contraception are coitus interruptus , barrier methods, and herbal abortifacients. While it seems like the "rhythm method" would have been a good choice, scientists did not figure out the details of the human menstrual cycle until the early 20th century.

82. Page Has Moved
Les Consultations Juridiques(Droit Familial et des Jeunes), M©dicales(contraception, Ivg,Grossesse) , Sexologique, Psychologique, et Sociale.
http://www.ping.be/planning-familial
Deze pagina is verhuisd naar http://home2.scarlet.be/pin31929

83. FISHER: Ancient Contraception
CLASSICS IRELAND. 1996 Volume 3 University College Dublin, Ireland. LaserQuests Unnoticed allusions to contraception in a poet and a princeps? Nick Fisher1.
http://www.ucd.ie/classics/96/Fisher96.html
CLASSICS IRELAND
1996 Volume 3
University College Dublin, Ireland
Laser- Quests
Unnoticed allusions to contraception in a poet and a princeps?
Nick Fisher
University of Wales
Cardiff
Lesbia's Laser
Quaeris, quot mihi basiationes
tuae, Lesbia, sint satis superque.
quam magnus numerus Libyssae harenae
lasarpiciferis iacet Cyrenis
oraclum Iovis inter aestuosi
et Batti veteris sacrum sepulcrum;
aut quam sidera multa, cum tacet nox,
furtivos hominum uident amores: tam te basia basiare vesano satis et super Catullo est, quae nec pernumerare curiosi possint nec mala fascinare lingua. You ask, how many kisses of yours are enough, Lesbia, for me and to spare. As great a number as of Libyan sands which lie at lasar- bearing Cyrene between the oracle of sweltering Jove and the sacred sepulchre of ancient Battus; or as many as the stars, when night is silent, which watch the secret loves of humans: to kiss you so many kisses is enough and to spare for insane Catullus, which the envious busybodies cannot count up nor the evil tongue weave spells on. (Catullus 7) Scholars in the last forty years or so, rightly seeking the influence and style of the great Alexandrian poet Callimachus in this poem, have plausibly identified a large number of allusions and witticisms in these apparently simple lines. A prime reason for the choice of these particular Libyan sands as an image of innumerability no doubt connects Cyrene, the sixth-century foundation as a Greek colony by Battus from Thera

84. Molecular Human Reproduction
The journal publishes articles on the molecular aspects of human reproductive physiology and pathology, endocrinology, andrology,gonadal function, gametogenesis, fertilization, embryo development, implantation, pregnancy and contraception.
http://molehr.oupjournals.org/
ESHRE 2004: 27 - 30 June, Berlin, Germany View Current Issue
June 2004
The next issue is scheduled for online publication in: June Search for Articles Browse the Archive Email notification of TOCs Mol. Hum. Reprod. ... RELATED LINKS Other related journals that may be of interest:
ESHRE Monographs
Human Molecular Genetics Human Reproduction Human Reproduction Update ... Nucleic Acids Research
Molecular Human Reproduction is published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology and assisted by Stanford University's HighWire Press
Online ISSN: 1460-2407

85. Le Guide De La Contraception
Translate this page Le guide de la contraception. La contraception est l’ensemble des méthodes visant à éviter de façon réversible et temporaire la grossesse.
http://www.affection.org/sante/contraception/
Le guide de la contraception
La contraception est l’ensemble des méthodes visant à éviter de façon réversible et temporaire la grossesse. Elle concerne tant les garçons que les filles. De façon générale, les méthodes de contraception visent à empêcher :
  • soit l’ovulation, c’est le cas de la pilule,
  • soit la fécondation, c’est le cas du préservatif,
  • soit l’implantation de l’œuf fécondé, c’est le cas du stérilet.
  • La grossesse
    La femme, dès qu’elle est féconde et qu’elle a ses premières règles, peut être enceinte.
  • Les préservatifs
    Le préservatif est à ce jour le seul moyen efficace de lutte contre le SIDA et les autres maladies sexuellement transmissibles, et constitue un des contraceptifs les plus fiables.
  • La pilule
    La pilule est la méthode contraceptive la plus répandue en France. Elle est utilisée par plus de 40% des femmes. Quand il n'y a aucune contre-indication, la pilule est un des moyens de contraception à privilégier car c'est celui qui offre la meilleure sécurité.
  • Le Stérilet
    Le stérilet a pour effet d'empêcher la nidation de l'œuf. À peine inférieure à celle de la pilule, la fiabilité du stérilet est considérée comme excellente.
  • Le diaphragme
    une coupelle en latex placée avant chaque rapport sexuel au fond du vagin, afin de recouvrir le col de l'utérus et d'empêcher les spermatozoïdes de passer.

86. Contraception-computer Lady-Comp And Baby-Comp For Contraception Resp. Family Pl
Features an electronic device for tracking body temperature to assist with contraception and fertility.
http://www.contraception-computer.com/
Easy - Safe -
Health -
without chemicals !

Natural Contraception:
Contraception -Computer
Lady-Comp
  • GREEN for contraception no side effects no risk due to the 6 fertility days a method of contraception made especially to suit women that has also been greatly acclaimed by the specialists extremely high certainty of 99,3%
Lady-Comp

Natural familiy planning:
Plannings-Computer
Baby-Comp
  • RED for planning or unfulfilled desire of pregnancy (conception difficulties) indication of the best possible date for a pregnancy incl. sex prognosis and pregnancy test announcement of the date of delivery later applicable for contraception
Baby-Comp
  • 5 years guarantee personal support and user tip singular, no costs follow up 14 days to give back payment by instalments also possible experience more about 12 years declared as the most certain computer on the market sent costs for free virtually maintenancefree clinically testet by Prof. Dr. med. Habil. Guenter Freundl (Gynaecological clinic Duesseldorf / Germany)

87. Contraception
contraception. A Look at the Words Abortion, contraception Words alone often say a lot. The words abortion and contraception are no exception.
http://www.catholic-forum.com/luxveritatis/donumsanctum/contraception.htm
"Every action which, whether in anticipation of the conjugal act, or in its accomplishment, or in the development of its natural consequences, proposes, whether as an end or as a means, to render procreation impossible is intrinsically evil."
Catechism
(Quoting Humanae Vitae , an encyclical by Pope Paul VI) Contraception Contraception is considered a sin because it denies both the unitive and procreative aspects of sexual union. Contraception adds an artificial element to a natural, loving act, and in doing so, it removes God from the act of procreation. At the same time, the Catholic Church does NOT say you must have sex only to have children. The Church advocates the use of Natural Family Planning to regulate pregnancies: Periodic continence [abstinence], that is, the methods of birth regulation based on self-observation and the use of infertile periods, is in conformity with the objective criteria of morality. These methods respect the bodies of the spouses, encourage tenderness between them, and favor the education of an authentic freedom. ( Catechism Humanae Vitae: A Challenge to Love
by Janet E. Smith

88. MCIP: Male Contraception Information Project
Boston Women s Health Book Collective Male contraception Information Project (MCIP). Copyright © Elaine Lissner and the Male contraception Information Project.
http://www.gumption.org/mcip/
Boston Women's Health Book Collective
Male Contraception Information Project (MCIP)
Elaine Lissner, MCIP Director We speak of a "contraceptive supermarket" for women - the concept that since no one method is right for everybody, a variety of methods should be available (Djerassi 1981). We argue that the pill's unsuitability for older women doesn't mean it should be kept from younger women; that the diaphragm is right for some women despite its messiness and restriction of spontaneity; that the sponge's relatively low effectiveness rate doesn't mean it should be taken off the shelf. But when we think about contraceptive availability this way and what contraceptive supermarket is available to men, the answer is that only three purely male methods exist - withdrawal, the condom, and vasectomy (male sterilization). This contrasts with the list for women- the diaphragm, the sponge, IUDs, the pill, cervical caps, "morning after" pills, Norplant, Depo Provera, natural methods, ovulation detectors, the female condom, foams, jellies, suppositories, sterilization, and more (Hatcher et al. 1990, Chap. 8). And when we consider that of the three male methods withdrawal has low effectiveness, the condom faces psychological resistance and a 3-15% failure rate, and vasectomy is not reliably reversible (Engelmann et al. 1990, Hargreave 1992), the selection for men seems paltry indeed. But there ARE more methods for men. They are just not widely known or widely available. Each has a clear advantage over current contraceptives (male and female) in one or more areas of safety, effectiveness, convenience, reversibility, and avoidance of surgery.

89. Provider Attitudes Toward Dispensing Emergency Contraception In Michigan's Title
Article in Family Planning Perspectives (Joseph Winchester Brown and Matthew L. Boulton) describes results of a survey of family planning coordinators from Title X grantees.
http://www.agi-usa.org/pubs/journals/3103999.html

Volume 31, No. 1, January/February 1999
Provider Attitudes Toward Dispensing Emergency
Contraception in Michigan's Title X Programs
By Joseph Winchester Brown and Matthew L. Boulton T he efficacy and potential side effects of emergency contraceptive pills have been documented. Until recently, however, the method was relatively obscure. Largely because opponents of the method equate it with abortion, pharmaceutical companies were reluctant to apply to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for a license to package and market birth control pills specifically for emergency contraception; thus, the method consisted of off-label use of birth control pills, the number depending on the formulation used. Although some physicians have prescribed the method in this way since the 1970s, few studies have addressed the method's availability and dispensation, or providers' attitudes about it. But overall use of this method has been low, and for years, its characterization as the "nation's best-kept secret" seemed appropriate. Despite the lack of any licensing applications, the FDA's Reproductive Health Drug and Urologic Product Advisory Committee initiated action in June 1996 by unanimously declaring emergency contraceptive pills a safe and effective way to prevent pregnancy if taken in recommended dosages up to 72 hours after unprotected intercourse. In February 1997, the FDA published dosage information for six pill brands; although the agency stopped short of requiring pill manufacturers to relabel their products with instructions for emergency use, the notice was "intended to encourage manufacturers to make this additional contraceptive option available."

90. FRONTIERS IN NONHORMONAL MALE CONTRACEPTION: A CALL FOR RESEARCH
FRONTIERS IN NONHORMONAL MALE contraception A CALL FOR RESEARCH. Elaine A. Lissner, Director Male contraception Information Project (MCIP)
http://www.gumption.org/mcip/paper.html
FRONTIERS IN NONHORMONAL MALE CONTRACEPTION: A CALL FOR RESEARCH
Elaine A. Lissner, Director
Male Contraception Information Project (MCIP)
MCIP is a project of the Boston Women's Health Book Collective
Abstract
Introduction Vas-based Methods Heat Methods ... References Abstract This paper describes the current state of research in two little-known but promising areas of nonhormonal male contraception: vas-based methods (no-scalpel vasectomy, chemical injection, injectable plugs, the Shug, and SMA) and heat methods (simple wet heat, artificial cryptorchidism, polyester suspensories, and ultrasound). Each has a clear advantage over current contraceptives (male and female) in one or more areas of safety, effectiveness, convenience, reversibility, and avoidance of surgery. These promising methods merit more research attention and allocation of resources. Introduction We speak of a "contraceptive supermarket" for women - the concept that since no one method is right for everybody, a variety of methods should be available (Djerassi 1981). We argue that the pill's unsuitability for older women doesn't mean it should be kept from younger women; that the diaphragm is right for some women despite its messiness and restriction of spontaneity; that the sponge's relatively low effectiveness rate doesn't mean it should be taken off the shelf. But when we think about contraceptive availability this way and what contraceptive supermarket is available to men, the answer is that only three purely male methods exist - withdrawal, the condom, and vasectomy (male sterilization). This contrasts with the list for women- the diaphragm, the sponge, IUDs, the pill, cervical caps, "morning after" pills, Norplant, Depo Provera, natural methods, ovulation detectors, the female condom, foams, jellies, suppositories, sterilization, and more (Hatcher et al. 1990, Chap. 8). And when we consider that of the three male methods withdrawal has low effectiveness, the condom faces psychological resistance and a 3-15% failure rate, and vasectomy is not reliably reversible (Engelmann et al. 1990, Hargreave 1992), the selection for men seems paltry indeed.

91. Contraception: Why Not?
contraception Why Not? JANET SMITH. Why prophet. My topic for tonight is the Church s teaching on contraception and various sexual issues.
http://www.catholiceducation.org/articles/sexuality/se0002.html

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Contraception: Why Not? JANET SMITH Why does the Catholic Church keep insisting, in the face of the opposite position held by most of the rest of the modern world, that contraception is one of the worst inventions of our time? Thirty years ago the case in favor of contraception seemed eminently reasonable. But the widespread use of contraception has had so many devastating effects on marriage, the family, and society as a whole, that the Pope's predictions about it make him now look, it retrospect, like a modern day prophet.
My topic for tonight is the Church's teaching on contraception and various sexual issues. As you know, we live in a culture that thinks that contraception is one of the greatest inventions in the history of mankind. If you were to ask people if they wanted to give up their car or their computer or their contraceptive, it would be a hard choice to make. It's really considered to be something that has really put us, greatly, into the modern age and one of the greatest advances of modern medicine and modern times. Yet, there's this archaic church that tells us that, really, this is one of the worst inventions of mankind. According to the Church, contraception is one of the things that's plunging us into a kind of a disaster. So we have this great polarization: a world that thinks contraception is one of the greatest inventions of our time and the Catholic Church that says it's one of the worst. I am going to try to help people see tonight why the Church's teaching certainly deserves serious consideration.

92. Emergency Contraception ("Morning After Pill")
MENU EMERGENCY contraception (EC) aka the Morning After Pill . Click Here to Visit our Sponsors.
http://www.religioustolerance.org/abo_emer.htm
MENU:
EMERGENCY CONTRACEPTION (EC)
a.k.a. the "Morning After Pill"
Click Here to Visit our Sponsors.
Alert:
Emergency contraception, if taken within 72 hours of unprotected sexual intercourse will prevent a pregnancy from starting in about 90% of cases. However, some pharmacies refuse to stock this medication. Wal-Mart in the U.S. and Canada is probably the largest chain which have taken this stand. Also, some individual pharmacists refuse to dispense it on moral or religious grounds. Women who feel that they might need to obtain this medication in the future because of rape or contraceptive failure might wish to determine, in advance of need, the nearest pharmacy which will supply them with the medication. They might also wish to obtain a prescription from their physician, and perhaps even purchase the medication to have it on hand in case they need it. " The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has urged its members to offer prescriptions for emergency contraception during patients' regular checkups ."

93. Marie Stopes South Africa
Registered NGO which specializes in reproductive healthcare, including safe abortions, vasectomy, and contraception, at 14 clinics nationwide. Includes information about procedures and prices.
http://www.mariestopessouthafrica.co.za
Safe abortions, Vasectomies (Male sterilization) Counseling Pap Smear Ante-natal check-up Gynaecological check-ups Medical Abortions (pills) Immunisations Female Sterilization Pregnancy tests Contraceptives: Pills
Condoms
Injections
Emergency contraception HIV tests Impotence Treatment Blood Pressure Testing
The goal of Marie Stopes South Africa is the prevention of unwanted births, and our mission is to afford women the right to have children by choice not by chance.
On the right you will see some of the services we offer. You are vistor to our website.

94. OBGYN.net - Women's Health: Contraception
JAMA Women s Health contraception Information Center A collection of highquality, peer-reviewed resources for physicians, other health care professionals, and
http://www.obgyn.net/women/contraception/contraception.htm
JAMA Women's Health Contraception Information Center
A collection of high-quality, peer-reviewed resources for physicians, other health care professionals, and the general public. The site is produced and maintained by JAMA editors and staff under the direction of an editorial review board of leading Contraception authorities. SPONSORED BY: Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceutical and Advanced Care Products
About Condoms
How to use a condom, and other mysteries. More about condoms than you ever thought there was to know.
Ann Rose's Ultimate Birth Control Links Page
The goal of this page is to provide extensive links to as much information as possible for individuals of all ages to make informed decisions about sexual activity and potential childbearing.
Birth Control
Contraception
By the California Pro-Choice Education Fund
Contraceptive Method Effectiveness
This site includes basic information on some of the factors you and your partner should consider in choosing a contraceptive method.
While most available methods are effective, the true test of a method’s effectiveness for a couple is whether they can accommodate its potential side effects and if consistent and correct use of the method is compatible with their lifestyle.

95. Responsible Sexual Choices And You
Discussion of responsibilities surrounding the choice to become sexually active. Includes a guide to contraception and sexuality.
http://www.epigee.org/guide/sexuality.html
from the author of the Epigee Birth Control Guide More...
Source: "Sex: A Woman's Perspective," The Repair Shop, 1993. I frequently receive e-mail and questions about birth control and sexuality, and I am glad to answer these questions whenever possible. However, I have noticed that a number of people are participating in what I would term "reckless sexuality" situations or patterns of behavior that will lead to unfortunate consequences. I attempt to respond to what I have noticed are the most common problems facing couples. SEX AND TEENS Whenever I become aware of teens having sex , I am deeply concerned. Sex is a wonderful and powerful expression of love. Like a fire or a gun, it should not be used by someone unprepared for the consequences of its use. I have counseled with many, many teens, and I have yet to find one who was even partially prepared to deal with the consequences of sexual behavior. Pregnancy is the natural result of having sex. Even if you are extremely careful and consistent in your birth control and few teens are you can wind up pregnant and scared.

96. Why Not Contraception
Why Not contraception. George Sim Johnston. Now we’re ready for the hard part of the evening why does the Church forbid contraception?
http://www.catholic.net/RCC/Issues/Contraception/contraception.html
home about Catholic.net Ask an Expert Daily Meditations ...
Lifelong Faith Development
Why Not Contraception George Sim Johnston Humanae vitae than Calcutta or Shanghai. The challenge is to put the cultural coordinates back to where they were seventy years ago. Until 1930, not only did every Christian denomination teach that contraception is wrong, but even the mainstream of media and politics did not approve of it. The ubiquitous state laws against selling birth control devices were the work of Protestant, not Catholic, legislatures. When, at the Lambeth Conference in 1930, the Anglican Church became the first Christian body to change its mind about contraception, the Washington Post was as indignant as Pope Pius XI. It seemed self-evident to at least a plurality of Christians that the deliberate obstruction of the life-making potential of sex is gravely disordered. Sex, the most imperious of instincts, is always looking for opportunities to exploit, and this was provided by the Anglican bishops at Lambeth, who had previously condemned artificial birth control in 1908 and 1920. Commenting on their guarded endorsement of contraception, T. S. Eliot wrote presciently about subsequent pastoral experience: "… to allow that ‘each couple’ should take counsel only if perplexed in mind is almost to surrender the whole citadel of the Church. It is ten to one, considering the extreme disengenuity of humanity, which ought to be patent after so many thousand years, that only a very small minority will be "perplexed"; and in view of the words of the bishops it is ten to one that the honest minority which takes ‘competent advice’ (and I observe that the order of words is ‘

97. Contraception:
contraception Fatal to the Faith and to Eternal Life. First we shall see how the practice of contraception inevitably leads to the loss of the true faith.
http://www.catholic.net/rcc/Periodicals/Faith/11-12-98/Morality6.html
home about Catholic.net Ask an Expert Daily Meditations ...
Lifelong Faith Development
Contraception:
Fatal to the Faith and to Eternal Life by John A. Hardon, S.J.
On the thirtieth anniversary of Humanae Vitae, it seems only proper to identify what contraception really is. It is at once fatal to the true faith and to the eternal life which our faith promises. You might say this piece will be two articles in one. First we shall see how the practice of contraception inevitably leads to the loss of the true faith. Then we shall look at how contraception leads to eternal death.
Contraception Fatal to the Faith
What do we mean by the title and what is the thesis of this presentation? We mean that professed Catholics who practice contraception either give up the practice of contraception or they give up their Catholic faith.
Those who sincerely believe that contraception is morally permissible may not be told they are doing wrong; they may not be barred from receiving Holy Communion; in fact, they need not even have to confess the practice of contraception when they go to confession.
We return to where we began, to make clear what we are saying. We affirm in this article that the deliberate practice of contraception between husband and wife is objectively a mortal sin. Those who persist in its practice are acting contrary to the explicit teaching of the Roman Catholic Church. They may protest that they are Catholic. They may profess to be Catholics. But their conduct belies their profession.

98. The Alan Guttmacher Institute: Home Page
Affiliate of prochoice Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Researches issues related to sexuality, reproduction, contraception, and abortion. Publishes a journal called Family Planning Perspectives.
http://www.agi-usa.org/

FDA Ignores Its Scientific Advisors, Rejects Over-the-Counter Status for Emergency Contraception
National Day to Prevent Teen Pregnancy March for Women's Lives Teens Don't Keep Virginity Pledges, Study Shows ...
And Reproductive Health

formerly Family
Planning Perspectives International Family
Planning Perspectives
The Guttmacher Report
enter your e-mail address above to subscribe to the AGI Update electronic newsletter see all AGI e-lists
How do modern contraceptives reduce the need for abortion worldwide? [answer]
Parents Lack the Information They Need to Educate Their Children About Safe Sex [ view Shanghai Parents Need Better Contraceptives [ view By Improving Family Planning Access, States Save Money [ view
Medicaid: A Critical Source of Support for Family Planning in the United States [ view In The Know: Questions About Pregnancy,
Contraception and Abortion [ view Adding It Up: The Benefits of Investing In Sexual and Reproductive Health Care [ view In Their Own Right: Addressing the Sexual and Reproductive Health Needs of Men Worldwide [ report slide presentation Women in Need of Contraceptive Services and Supplies, 2000 [

99. : The AMEDEO Literature Guide
GoldenLinks4Doctors.com The Best Medical Websites. contraception and Contraceptive Drugs. Cancer Res (59) 14. contraception (314) 15. Endocrinology (222) 17.
http://www.amedeo.com/medicine/ctc.htm
Home HIV Medicine FAQ Unsubscribe ...
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100. FilSanteJeunes
Des forums, de la documentation, des questions r©ponses personnalis©es avec des m©decins et des psychologues autour de la sexualit©, de la contraception, de la toxicomanie, du suicide et des maladies chroniques. France.
http://www.filsantejeune.com

Le cannabis en hausse
Un récent rapport rédigé par l'Observatoire français des drogues et des toxicomanies révèle que la consommation de cannabis a très fortement augmenté ces dix dernières années chez les 12-18 ans. Si on avait tendance à penser que ce phénomène s'était stabilisé après l'explosion des années 70, si on avait mis un peu de côté le problème en comparaison au tabac, force est de constater aujourd'hui qu'il faut changer de position et commencer à réagir... Le cannabis n'est pas une "drogue dure", mais est "drogue" quand même. Quels en sont les effets? Pourquoi s'inquiéter?... [Suite...]
Amour et Sexualité
... Porter plainte Prise de risque chez les ados Sujet très à la mode...Les « conduites à risques » sont des comportements qui mettent en danger : dépassement de vitesse, ivresse, consommation de drogues, sports à risques... Dans notre société qui tente à tout prix d'augmenter la sécurité (assurances, programmes de prévention...), il n'est pas si étonnant que les adolescents cherchent à se confronter au danger. On retrouve dans d'autres cultures des rites de passage qui marquent la transition de l'enfance à l'âge adulte. Ils comportent une part de prise de risque où le jeune peut se prouver qu'il est capable de surmonter ses peurs et dépasser ses limites, ce qui participe à la construction de leur personnalité. Alors le risque est-il néfaste ou profitable ? Avons-nous tous le même goût du risque ? [Suite...] La nuit porte conseil
Vous arrive-t-il de trouver la solution d'un problème en vous réveillant, comme par magie? Le sommeil nous rendrait-il plus perspicace?! Grâce à l'utilisation d'un test d'intelligence auprès de volontaires, des chercheurs allemands ont montré que dormir nous aide à consolider nos souvenirs et à les structurer mentalement, leur apportant ainsi un sens nouveau!

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