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Smoking while pregnant linked to behavioural problems in children - The Guardian 3rd November 2009
"Developing structure and function of the foetal brain at risk, research suggests"
Quick step to 'better behaviour' - BBC Health News 23rd June 2009
Ballroom and Latin dancing classes can improve pupils' behaviour as well as their fitness, research suggests.
Dancing the cha-cha-cha, quick step or waltz in PE also helps shy children gain self-esteem and less sporty pupils get involved, the report said.
Conceivable: 'Gourmet sex' the key to increased fertility, says new research - Daily Mail 23rd March 2009
Couples trying for a baby should have sex as wild and exciting as when they first met for the best chance of success, according to scientists.
'Gourmet sex' - where both partners make the effort to ensure their partner has a satisfying experience - greatly boosts the chance of having a baby.
Better sex boosts the quality and quantity of the sperm while stronger orgasms in a woman makes the sperm more likely to fertilise the egg, scientists said.
Children do less well with granny than in a nursery, study finds - The Times 10th February 2009
Children looked after by grandparents while their mothers are at work would be better off in nurseries or with childminders, according to a new study.
It discovered that children in the care of grandparents struggled to socialise with their peers by the age of 3, had significantly more behavioural problems and were behind at key developmental stages compared with those in nurseries, with nannies, childminders or even other family members. The only clear benefit was their good vocabulary.
Toddlers are more badly behaved 'if looked after by grandparents' - The Telegraph 10th February 2009
Children's behaviour and educational development suffer if they are looked after by grandparents rather than in a nursery when young, according to an academic report.
Children 'behave worse if cared for by grandparents' - Daily Mail 10th February 2009
Young children looked after by grandparents are more likely to be badly behaved than those sent to nursery, a study claims today.
They tended to have wider vocabularies, but were also more likely to show 'problem behaviour' and find it harder to get on with other children, said researchers.
Tearaway teenagers prone to depression and divorce as adults - The Guardian 9th January 2009
Study shows bad behaviour at school is predictor of range of problems later
Behaviour link to lifelong health - BBC Health News 9th January 2008
People who behaved badly at school are more likely to suffer mental health and social difficulties as adults, a 40-year-study of Britons suggests.
Canadian researchers writing in the British Medical Journal examined data from 3,500 people from the age of 13 until they reached their 40s or 50s.
Can nutrients improve behaviour? - BBC Health News 16th September 2008
One thousand young offenders from three prisons in England and Scotland are being recruited for a major trial to see if nutritional supplements can improve behaviour.
The study is being organised by neuroscientist Professor John Stein, of the University of Oxford, whose brother is the chef Rick Stein.
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