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Suicide can be ‘contagious’ among young people

Suicide can be 'contagious' among young people

Posed by model.

Suicide can be “contagious”, especially among young people, a new study has found.

Canadian researchers found teenagers who had a friend who had committed suicide were five times more likely to have suicidal thoughts themselves.

The effect — known as the “suicide contagion” — was most pronounced in 12 and 13-year-olds and the increased risk lasts for two or more years.

“We found that exposure to suicide predicts suicidality,” study leader Dr Ian Colman, Canada Research Chair in Mental Health Epidemiology and Assistant Professor of the University of Ottawa said.

“This was true for all age groups, although exposure to suicide increased the risk most dramatically in the youngest age group, when baseline suicidality was relatively low.”

Researchers studied data from 22,064 Canadian children aged 12 to 17.

They found that the suicide of a schoolmate dramatically increased the risk of suicide among remaining teens, regardless of whether they knew the deceased personally.

In the most at-risk group, 12 to 13-year-olds, 15 per cent had suicidal thoughts and 7.5 per cent actually attempted suicide after a schoolmate’s suicide. Of those with no exposure to suicide, 3 per cent had suicidal thoughts and 1.7 per cent attempted suicide.

The “suicide contagion” effect appeared to lessen as kids got older, but 14 to 15-year-olds exposed to suicide were still nearly three times more likely to have suicidal thoughts and 16 to 17-year-olds were twice as likely.

The researchers say the study suggests suicide prevention counselling should be offered to all students at schools where someone has committed suicide, and not just close friends of the victim.

“Perhaps any exposure to a peer’s suicide is relevant, regardless of the proximity to the decedent,” Dr Colman said.

“It may be best for postvention strategies to include all students rather than target close friends.”

The findings were published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

If you or someone you know is having suicidal thoughts, visit Lifeline Australia.

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SIDS risk greater for babies who share bed with parents

SIDS risk greater for babies who share bed with parents

Babies who sleep in their parents’ bed are five times more likely to die from Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), a new study has found.

Research published in the prestigious British Medical Journal suggests bacteria in the bed could be responsible for SIDS.

The study found that nearly 88 per cent of SIDS deaths that occurred when the baby was in the parents’ bed would not have happened if the baby was in its own bed.

The risk was far higher for babies less than three months old, even when neither parent smoked and the mother did not drink or take drugs (although smoking, drinking and drug-taking are known to dramatically increase risk of SIDS).

The researchers hope the findings will be used to launch a major awareness campaign to educate parents of the dangers of co-sleeping.

“Our findings suggest that professionals and the literature should take a more definite stand against bed sharing, especially for babies under three months,” the study authors wrote.

“If parents were made aware of the risks of sleeping with their baby, and room sharing were promoted, a substantial further reduction in SIDS rates could be achieved.”

According to this and other research, the safest place for babies to sleep is in their own bed in the same room as their parents.

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Jessica Chastain dazzles in Elizabeth Taylor’s jewelry

Jessica Chastain paid tribute to the inimitable Elizabeth Taylor on the red carpet yesterday, donning a dazzling diamond and sapphire necklace and matching ring that once belonged to the screen icon.
Jessica Chastain

Jessica Chastain paid tribute to the inimitable Elizabeth Taylor on the red carpet yesterday, donning a dazzling diamond and sapphire necklace and matching ring that once belonged to the screen icon.

Jessica, 36, wore the priceless jewels to a special 50th anniversary screening of Taylor’s classic film Cleopatra at the Cannes Film Festival.

She paired the statement pieces with a simple cream Versace gown.

Milla Jovovich, Aishwarya Rai and Dita Von Teese also attended the screening.

Jessica Chastain looking stunning in the priceless necklace.

Elizabeth Taylor wearing the necklace, given to her by Richard Burton, in 1988.

Bollywood babe Aishwarya Rai.

Burlesque dancer Dita Von Teese.

Rosario Dawson chose blue Bulgari jewels.

Milla Jovovich looked stunning in a jewel-encrusted gown.

Milla Jovovich.

Model Adriana Karembeu.

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Natalie Bassingthwaighte welcomes second child

Natalie Bassingthwaighte welcomes second child

Natalie Bassingthwaighte has welcomed her second child, a son named Hendrix John Hickson McGlinchey.

The 37-year-old singer gave birth in a Melbourne hospital late this morning.

Her husband and the proud father, musician Cam McGlinchey, told manager Mark Byrne the newborn and his wife were both happy and healthy.

“Mother and son are both doing well,” Byrne said. “It’s another addition to a perfect family.”

The pair are also parents to two-year-old Harper.

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Prince William worried about sleepless nights

Prince William worried about sleepless nights

Prince William has said he is “very much looking forward” to becoming a father, but admits he is worried about the sleepless nights that await him.

The 30-year-old royal was chatting with injured soldiers at the new Help for Heroes Tedworth House recovery centre in Wiltshire yesterday when he was questioned about the impending birth of his first child in July.

“Are you looking forward to it, sir?” asked triple amputee Corporal Josh Boggi.

“Very much so,” William replied. “But all the mothers have been looking at me like, ‘Just you wait, just you wait. Long sleepless nights.'”

William was joined on the visit by his younger brother Prince Harry, who has recently returned from a tour of the US including a visit to the Warrior Games, a Paralympic-style event for wounded servicemen.

Several servicemen who competed in the Warrior Games are patients of Tedworth House and were thrilled to welcome Harry to the state-of-the-art centre.

The royal brothers toured the facility before formally declaring it open.

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Bon Jovi says his daughter’s overdose was “horrible”

Bon Jovi says his daughter’s overdose was “horrible”

Rock star Jon Bon Jovi has opened up, revealing his “worst moment as a father” was the day his 19-year-old daughter overdosed on heroin in November last year.

The 51-year-old muso recalled the moment his daughter, Stephanie Bongiovi, rang him from a hospital in upstate New York, after she allegedly overdosed in her Hamilton College dorm room.

“It was horrible, a horrible moment. It was my worst moment as a father,” he told the UK’s Daily Mirror.

“The first thing she said, ‘I’m all right,’ but then she said this is what happened.”

“You wake up, you shake it off and put your shoes on and say, ‘OK, I am on the way home.'”

Despite his rock-star lifestyle, Jon claims he has never touched drugs, but says the incident was a wake-up call for him as a father.

“She was by no means sticking needles in her arms,” he says.

“But there’s a lot of synthetic stuff in the world and a lot of temptation and access and pressures that just a generation ago you and I didn’t know about.

“I know personally people whose sons and daughters, where it was a lot, lot worse. That could have been Stephanie.”

Initially, Stephanie and her fellow student Ian Grant were arrested and charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance. However, the charges were later dropped because New York state law prohibits prosecution of people who have overdosed, as well as those who help them seek medical attention.

Jon says his only daughter, who is the eldest of his four children with wife Dorothea Hurley, is making a great recovery.

“She’s doing great. I’m just blessed she’s healthy and whole and we’ll get through it,” he told Katie Couric on her talk show.

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Fashion magazine under fire for racist slave shoot

Fashion magazine under fire for racist slave shoot

An image from the 'be my slave' shoot in Pakistani fashion magazine Diva.

A fashion magazine has caused controversy with a photo shoot called “be my slave” that has been blasted for being insensitive and racist.

The racially charged backlash against Pakistan’s Diva magazine was sparked by an editorial shoot curated by fledgling designer Aamna Aqeel, who chose to showcase her creations in the magazine in a less than sensitive way.

The provocative shoot sees Ageel’s designs hanging from a model being pandered to by a dark-skinned child slave, seeing the designers labelled racist and naive.

Pakistan’s arm of the International Herald Tribune reports the designer denies accusations of any racist angle in the shoot, saying it was a coincidence that a dark-skinned child had been cast in the ‘slave boy’ role.

“He works in a garage and wanted some work,” she said.

The designer, who is herself involved with a children’s charity, said she didn’t mean any offence but wanted to spark debate on child labour.

“She says she is involved with a children’s charity and wanted to highlight how ‘society madams employ child labour in their homes,” Pakistani fashion writer Salima Feeresta wrote.

“She is educating and supporting the child used in the shoot — it seems the least she can do after exploiting him in this fashion.”

Ageel’s explanation of the shoot has been described as facetious and hypocritical, earning global criticism of the designer and the magazine that published the images.

The incident joins a list of racially insensitive fashion shoots including a ‘blackface’ shoot from the Netherlands edition of Vogue which followed the publication of a white model who was ‘heavily bronzed’ to appear in a shoot entitled ‘African Queen’ for a French fashion magazine.

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Marion Cotillard steals the show at Cannes Film Festival

It was her husband's film, but that didn't stop Marion Cotillard from stealing the show at the premiere of Blood Ties at the Cannes Film Festival yesterday.
Marion Cotillard

It was her husband’s film, but that didn’t stop Marion Cotillard from stealing the show at the premiere of Blood Ties at the Cannes Film Festival yesterday.

Marion – who stars in the crime thriller – walked the red carpet with her husband Guillaume Canet, who directed the film, and her co-stars Zoe Saldana, Clive Owen and Billy Crudup.

She looked breathtakingly beautiful in a multi-coloured Dior dress with diamond jewellery from Chopard’s new ethical collection and her hair in a 1960s beehive.

Marion Cotillard.

Marion, 37, chose a retro-inspired hair style.

Her dress is from the new Christian Dior resort collection.

Marion walked the red carpet with co-star Clive Owen.

It accentuated her famous curves perfectly.

She chose ethical earring from Chopard.

The film was directed by Marion’s husband Guillaume Canet.

Marion and Guillaume have a son, Marcel, who was born in May 2011.

Marion has frequently been voted sexiest woman in the world.

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What your kids are really up to online

What your kids are really up to online

It’s no shock that tweens — children between the ages of eight and 12 — spend an average of one and a half hours online each day, but what they spend their time doing on desktop computer, laptops, smartphones and tablets might surprise some parents.

A study released today revealed Australian tweens are adopting technology faster than expected and in most cases faster than adults allowing them to talk to strangers and exposing them to cyberbullying.

The tweens, teens and technology survey run by intel company McAfee and launched today by Senator Stephen Conroy as part of National Cyber Security Awareness week found that one in five tweens talked to strangers online — just one of the findings the communications minister described as “troubling”.

“This information is troubling for any parent or carer,” Senator Conroy said.

“It shows that we must remain vigilant to online threats.”

The report warned it was becoming increasingly difficult for parents to keep track of what their children are exposed to online with tweens have access to between three and four internet enabled devices on average, and 77 per cent use mobile devices like tablets and smartphones to access the internet.

Despite age restrictions implemented by social media outlets, 67 per cent tweens had established social media profiles, leaving them vulnerable to modern stranger danger.

Even though facebook requires its users to be over the age of 13, one in four tween currently use facebook, the study found, and one in five tweens had chatted to someone online that they didn’t know.

When it came to teenagers, six per cent of had met up with a total stranger they had met online.

The study found that kids as young as eight are increasingly susceptible to cyber bullying with 25 per cent of eight year olds surveyed saying they had witnessed nasty comments online directed at them or a friend, and by the time they hit their teens more than half of Aussie kids had been exposed to cyber bullying themselves.

Parenting expert Dr Justin Coulson, who also addressed media at the study’s Sydney launch raised the issue of internet addiction.

“Our tweens and our teens are becoming absolutely compulsively obsessed with checking and checking and checking,” he said.

“They start to question their self worth. They become narcissistically oriented and the world becomes ‘all about me and how many likes I can get’ — it’s not healthy.”

Although 92 per cent of tween facebook users were found to be ‘friends’ with their parents, Dr Coulson recognised parents’ discomfort with not being able to monitor their children’s online activities more closely, but recommended education and open discussion about online safety over all other strategies.

“We want to be watching and monitoring as much as we are able to,” he said.

“There are a number of strategies but the most important one is we just have to have great relationships with our kids.”

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Winter fashion essentials

Winter is fast approaching, so it’s time fill your winter wardrobe with bold prints, trendy colours and studs!

Wendy Mak from www.WendyMak.com talks us through winter wardrobe essentials and the best ways to wear them this season!

Winter fashion essentials

Winter is fast approaching, so it’s time to fill your winter wardrobe with bold prints, trendy colours and studs!

Wendy Mak from www.WendyMak.com talks us through winter wardrobe essentials and the best ways to wear them this season!

Leather is in!

With some mixing leather with cotton, and others designing straight out leather items, this style is a key trend this season!

“Opulence is key and to keep it modern retailers are mixing it up with rock’n’roll influences like leather and gold,” Wendy says.

CLICK TO FIND: Leather Spliced Leggings, Sportsgirl $169.95

Utility jackets

Khaki jackets are big this winter!

“The utility jacket is this season’s reincarnation of the traditional “military” jacket,” Wendy says.

“Throw it over a jumper and skinny jeans for a stylish, but uber-casual weekend look, or amp up the style factor with detailing like metal studs and exposed zips.”

CLICK TO FIND: Military Anorak, Witchery $149.95.

Utility jackets

These utility jackets can also come in different colours and fabrics.

CLICK TO FIND: Emu Australia Toffee Drummond Cove Jacket $799.95

Black and White

What’s trendy this season? According to Wendy, “anything black and white or wearing all white” is a winner!

CLICK TO FIND: Colour Block Rib Knit, Witchery $129.95

Block colours

Block colours are also in this season! Knits that are stylish with a mix of colours, yet simple and not OTT at the same time!

CLICK TO FIND: Colour Block Sweater Dress, Witchery $129.95

Boots and studs!

Both boots and studs are hot this season!

“Studs are everywhere – on heels, boots, bags, loafers, shoulders, jackets, even sunglasses,” Wendy says.

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CLICK TO FIND: DELVE SIREN, Wanted Shoes $189.95**

Black boots

If studs aren’t your thing, try these simple black boots that will go with everything.

CLICK TO FIND: Loulou Boots, Diana Ferrari RRP $159.95.

Bold Necklaces!

Make a statement this season with a simple blouse and a bold necklace!

“If you love big, bold statement necklaces then you probably need to invest in basic blouses which don’t detract from the necklace being the star of the show”

CLICK TO FIND: Enamel And Stone Necklace, Colette $14.95

Colour essentials

Khaki and greens are essential this winter!

“Muted khakis and neutrals will be big thanks to the new utility trend, and beautiful, sexy, emerald green is THE hero colour this season.”

CLICK TO FIND: Washed Silk Pocket Shirt, Country Road $149.00

Flats

Invest in a good pair of flat shoes that can be worn on more casual occasions, but still give your outfit some style.

CLICK TO FIND: Miss Panther, Peeptoe $199.00.

The peplum dress

The peplum dress is a great way to accentuate those curves and your figure!

“A nice, flat, peplum (bad peplums are too full and flouncy) that drops flatteringly from the waist can help hide a multitude of things like the chocolate I just ate!” Wendy says.

“I also recommend looking for structured, heavier fabrics like Ponte or a wool, as they will suck in lumps and bumps better than soft fabrics such as cotton or jersey.”

**CLICK TO FIND: Avery Peplum Dress, Forcast $79.95

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Bolero

A fur bolero can take any outfit from day to night. It’s a great piece to add to your winter wardrobe and will keep you warm too!

CLICK TO FIND: Elysia Bolero, Diana Ferrari $149.95.

The camel coat

Coats are always a winter must have for the season!

“The camel coat is one of the big must-have’s. It’s a great piece that works over all your dark winter clothes like blacks and greys and absolutely rocks over denim or whites. It’s got to be big, glam and oversized, but don’t over-invest because the big oversized style will fall out of trend in a few seasons.”

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**CLICK TO FIND: Lucille DB Coat, Forcast $109.95

military coat

Combine the coat and military trend with this full length jacket.

CLICK TO FIND: Long Military Coat, GAP $199.95.

Floral prints

Prints are big this season, but the most popular seems to be the floral print.

“From small florals to big prints, if it’s floral, it’s in,” Wendy says.

CLICK TO FIND: Faye Tea Dress, Forcast $69.95

Patterned pants

Floral patterns are also common in pants and other bottoms.

CLICK TO FIND: Floral print pant, Sussan $89.95

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