SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 24, 2012
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is this normal adolescent developmental behavior? or is this a real problem that we need to address? justin, what are the consequences of all that we talked about? of the issues that are facing youth and young adults? what are the potential consequences to society? i would have to say to begin with the consequences -they could be fatal. it isn't just "i got in trouble" or "i got kicked off the tennis team" or something of that nature. to tie it back to what jonathan had mentioned, i was a captain of the tennis team. i was on the rotary. i had scholarships for leadership. i was in student council. and not only were those going to be consequences of my behavior but also the loss of family. i mean, i had been to seven programs by the time i was 19 years old and was homeless, living in downtown denver. well, when we come back we'll take a look further into the issues of youth and young adults. we'll be right back. [music playing] the prevention field has really changed in the last 20 years since samhsa has been in existence. we understan
is this normal adolescent developmental behavior? or is this a real problem that we need to address? justin, what are the consequences of all that we talked about? of the issues that are facing youth and young adults? what are the potential consequences to society? i would have to say to begin with the consequences -they could be fatal. it isn't just "i got in trouble" or "i got kicked off the tennis team" or something of that nature. to tie it back to what jonathan had...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 26, 2012
07/12
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as a beginning of a buffer for that adolescent. talk to us a little bit about that. sure. well, i think in just about every setting, a child exists in there are caring adults available, or there can be caring adults available who can be a protective factor to a child and help that child access their own inner resilience. so including things like helping children realize that they can use humor, that they can develop close relationships with safe adults. teaching children ways that they can be safe. okay, if you can't bring friends home because crazy things are happening there and you can't study there how can we put something in place so that you have a safe place to go after school? if you're concerned about your siblings then how can we make sure that their needs get met? so really, i think we just need to encourage adults to not ignore signs that a child is struggling and reach out to children and to kids to say if you have one caring adult in your life who is in your corner that can make all the difference for you. absolutely.
as a beginning of a buffer for that adolescent. talk to us a little bit about that. sure. well, i think in just about every setting, a child exists in there are caring adults available, or there can be caring adults available who can be a protective factor to a child and help that child access their own inner resilience. so including things like helping children realize that they can use humor, that they can develop close relationships with safe adults. teaching children ways that they can be...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 17, 2012
07/12
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for the first time, the supreme court sided adolescents -- cited adolescent neuroscience. a 12-year-old brain develops. you will watch its start to mature until you hit about 24 or 25. for those of you who are parents, you do not need a scan. for those of us who went to adolescence, we know it was a time of poor decision making. the supreme court used the picture of the brain in order to make the decision. there is this nice development over time that is associated with changes in composition and changes in how you process the world and make decisions. ok. now you have another client named george. he is a 55-year-old white male offender. he has a history of being in and out of jail. his iq is very low. george has a very low iq, they might have to refer to him as being retarded. he has arrested for murder and the prosecution is seeking the death penalty. the supreme court said you are not allowed for individuals with low iqs. prosecution says the iq is 72, high enough to execute. is there anything that neuroscience can do about george? i am just kidding, this is george. [la
for the first time, the supreme court sided adolescents -- cited adolescent neuroscience. a 12-year-old brain develops. you will watch its start to mature until you hit about 24 or 25. for those of you who are parents, you do not need a scan. for those of us who went to adolescence, we know it was a time of poor decision making. the supreme court used the picture of the brain in order to make the decision. there is this nice development over time that is associated with changes in composition...
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Jul 7, 2012
07/12
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quote dearry record of typical family bickering, petty annoyances and adolescent emotions. sales would be small because the main characters were neither familiar to americans nor appealing. if the work had come to work five years ago and the subject timely i don't see there would have been a chance for it. while recognizing that, quote, so few contemporary books or documents as genuine or spontaneous as think once, he decided it was a moment for the dire troy appear. quote if times were normal i would do an edition and translation but times are not normal. great britain the reaction was similar. it was fell that, quote, the english reading public would avert eyes from painful a story which would bring back to them all evil events that occurred during the war. in one of her letters from paris, it appeared in the new yorker, janet flanner referred to the popularity of a book by quote a precocious, talented frankfurt jewess. despite the book's reception in france, anne's diary in the reject pile in the office of frank price, the director of double day's foreign bureau when the
quote dearry record of typical family bickering, petty annoyances and adolescent emotions. sales would be small because the main characters were neither familiar to americans nor appealing. if the work had come to work five years ago and the subject timely i don't see there would have been a chance for it. while recognizing that, quote, so few contemporary books or documents as genuine or spontaneous as think once, he decided it was a moment for the dire troy appear. quote if times were normal...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Jul 25, 2012
07/12
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show how the early -- how the lives in the early sixties became lives in the late sixties, how adolescents who went from 12 to 18 in exactly that decade, how that worked, and then i was also interested in looking back at it from the future, so it skips back and forth from the present to the past, to have some, a long view of what was that all about. >> rose: vitaly churkin and kurt andersen when we continue. >> funding for charlie rose was provided by the following. >> as chef, we are always committed to our suppliers. >> rose: additional funding provided by these funders. and by bloomberg, a provider of multimedia news and information services worldwide. captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. >> vitaly churkin is here, he is russia's ambassador to the united nations, last week russia and china vetoed a security council resolution to sanction sir, i can't it was the third time russia has blocked u.n. action against the assad regime since the conflict began 16 months ago. russia indicated the it could be used as a precursor so mi
show how the early -- how the lives in the early sixties became lives in the late sixties, how adolescents who went from 12 to 18 in exactly that decade, how that worked, and then i was also interested in looking back at it from the future, so it skips back and forth from the present to the past, to have some, a long view of what was that all about. >> rose: vitaly churkin and kurt andersen when we continue. >> funding for charlie rose was provided by the following. >> as...
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Jul 27, 2012
07/12
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FOXNEWSW
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adolescence, the patients can't be monitoring you 24/7.ds in my neighborhood who watching the exorcist i mean 10, 11, they have this little computer on their laptop and they are watching the exer cyst. >> why do we have pgg and every other rating. >> walk into the theater. >> at home they can get it and that's the point. >> in the study they say some g-rated movies have sexual content which i'm very confused about. g-rated does that mean snow white. >> bill: didn't alvin go study? >> the prince did kiss snow white to wake her up does that mean sexual content. >> let's go back. all i can say is that when i saw dirty harry, i didn't want to go out and shoot somebody, all right? >> didn't titillate you. these kids have sexual interest. >> bill: dirty harry was exciting to boys and this and that when i saw the graduate mrs. robinson and dustin hoffman i wasn't hanging around 35-year-olds. know wasn't. i am trying to thinking back was there ever a movie that i saw that made me want to or that i actually did something based upon what i saw on th
adolescence, the patients can't be monitoring you 24/7.ds in my neighborhood who watching the exorcist i mean 10, 11, they have this little computer on their laptop and they are watching the exer cyst. >> why do we have pgg and every other rating. >> walk into the theater. >> at home they can get it and that's the point. >> in the study they say some g-rated movies have sexual content which i'm very confused about. g-rated does that mean snow white. >> bill: didn't...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 31, 2012
07/12
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it can be very challenging because, you know, as i think bridget and justin mentioned, adolescence is a time of experimentation. it's a time of risk taking. so, you know, one doesn't want to smother your kid or be what is referred to nowadays as a "helicopter parent," which my daughter accused me-but at the same time, one needs to have that conversation and begin to address the issues and point out what your concerns are and maybe set some parameters for what you are looking at and follow up. and see if things are not getting better, if you are seeing the same things that concern you, it's important to seek help, seek some kind of assessment. you know, what i am really troubled about is really the level of-among the 18- to 26-year-olds, that college age, the binge drinking that is taking place. we hear on the news time in and time out what it is doing, the number of accidents that occur, the number, quite frankly, of violent, violent date issues that we are seeing at least in this area. and so, really what-tami, what does a parent say to a child that wants to have fun because college
it can be very challenging because, you know, as i think bridget and justin mentioned, adolescence is a time of experimentation. it's a time of risk taking. so, you know, one doesn't want to smother your kid or be what is referred to nowadays as a "helicopter parent," which my daughter accused me-but at the same time, one needs to have that conversation and begin to address the issues and point out what your concerns are and maybe set some parameters for what you are looking at and...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 3, 2012
07/12
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so, this will provide a mechanism both for adults and for children and adolescents. but i would like to point out that children and adolescents are often eligible for care now through other insurance programs. but the key issue is, if we're not willing to get beyond the secret, having access to reimbursement is irrelevant because nobody's going to show up at the door and, no matter how skilled the clinician is, they can't treat an empty chair. if i could talk for just a minute about domestic violence. i think that this is really a horror that affects somewhere around 30, 35 percent of women. and, while i absolutely agree with miss cain that it is critical for women to get to safety, no one deserves to be punched or emotionally abused. very, very few women leave the first time. and i think sometimes professionals don't understand that. and they are judgmental and start to think, "what's wrong with her?" maybe she likes that treatment. i just want to be clear: nobody likes it but, as with a lot of terrible dynamics, they're hard to break right away. if they were easy,
so, this will provide a mechanism both for adults and for children and adolescents. but i would like to point out that children and adolescents are often eligible for care now through other insurance programs. but the key issue is, if we're not willing to get beyond the secret, having access to reimbursement is irrelevant because nobody's going to show up at the door and, no matter how skilled the clinician is, they can't treat an empty chair. if i could talk for just a minute about domestic...
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Jul 8, 2012
07/12
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WBAL
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she could be given estrogen to make her body develop like an adolescent girl's. >> they're talk aboutu hormones and doing blockers and all that kind of stuff. is that something that you want to do? >> yes. >> could you tell me why? >> it's going to make knee not have big hands and big feet and get bobs. >> y-- boobs. >> you want boobs? >> yeah. >> you do? >> dr. margaret moon is a pediatrician and bioethics professor at johns hopkins university. she says drugs that delay puberty, blockers, may be helpful in some extreme cases. but that second step, giving opposite sex hormones, is alarming at josie's age. the changes are irreversible and include rend, the child sterile as an adult. >> any change you make that's irreversible is harder to justify when the child is young. >> reporter: even among the doctors who specialize in treating transgender kids, there is debate about when and whether opposite sex hormone therapy is okay. >> we have lots of very well-informed, very well-intentioned people looking at the same data and coming away with very different ideas. >> is this an overdiagnosis
she could be given estrogen to make her body develop like an adolescent girl's. >> they're talk aboutu hormones and doing blockers and all that kind of stuff. is that something that you want to do? >> yes. >> could you tell me why? >> it's going to make knee not have big hands and big feet and get bobs. >> y-- boobs. >> you want boobs? >> yeah. >> you do? >> dr. margaret moon is a pediatrician and bioethics professor at johns hopkins...