Children's Health
General Principles of Discipline

Most children need to be given consistent, clear rules and expectations about behavior. Discipline needs to begin as soon as the child is mobile—pulling up and crawling.

Time-Out

Time-out is a type of discipline used to stop a child from performing a bad behavior by "isolating" the child for a period of time. Time-outs are useful for aggressive and harmful behaviors in toddlers and preschoolers.

Temper Tantrums

These fits of rage—the stomping, screaming, and falling on the floor—are a normal part of childhood development. Temper tantrums often occur only with a parent. They are a way for the child to communicate his or her feelings.

Lying and Stealing

Lying and stealing are common, but inappropriate, behaviors in school-aged children. Although some severe forms of these behaviors can indicate a more serious psychological problem, most of the time children will outgrow these behaviors.

Relationship Development

Adolescent attention often shifts to a more intense focus on social interactions and friendships expanding from same sex friends to same sex groups of friends to heterosexual groups of friends.

Help Your Children Chill Out

Kids must cope with all the issues, such as violence or global warming, that stress out adults. But they must also handle stresses added by their parents and the media.

The Trouble With Bullies

Bullying comes in different forms. It is commonly thought of as an actual or threatened act of physical violence. But name calling, spreading rumors, unrelenting teasing, and deliberately excluding a child from an activity can be other forms of bullying. Racial slurs, mocking cultural traditions, and unwanted physical contact are bullying.

Mood Disorders
Parents may miss the signs of depression in a teen. Or, they may believe their child will “snap out of it” eventually. But if left untreated, depression can worsen.
Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety about school is a normal part of childhood development, but sometimes the symptoms of anxiety are more severe.
Eating Disorders
Anorexia and bulimia are much more common in girls than in boys, but both genders are at higher risk in certain sports that emphasize thinness or that have weight restrictions.
Developmental Disorders
ADHD is one type of behavior disorder, affecting about 2 million children in the United States.
Mental Health Evaluation
A child, who has sleep disturbances, is hyperactive, or refuses to go to school may need to be evaluated for an emotional, behavioral, or developmental problem.