All posts tagged: Children

Good Dog! More Children’s Hospitals Turn to Furry Caregivers to Help Kids Heal

Good Dog! More Children’s Hospitals Turn to Furry Caregivers to Help Kids Heal

CINCINNATI (AP) — The first time 5-year-old Calvin Owens went outside in more than a month, he met up with his canine friend Hadley on a hospital patio. Despite being tethered to equipment with wires and tubes, the little boy managed to stand up near his wheelchair long enough to toss her a ball. He smiled as she ran to fetch it. Caregivers cheered. “Look how good you’re doing!” said Hadley’s handler, Schellie Scott. Such small victories and moments of joy are common whenever Hadley or one of the other three facility dogs at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital show up. These furry caregivers aren’t the typical therapy dogs volunteers bring to hospitals to comfort patients. They are specially trained, full-time working dogs that provide emotional support during stressful procedures, motivate kids to move around and make hospitals seem less scary. And experts say their ranks are growing at children’s hospitals across the nation. A mounting body of research shows that even short interactions with facility dogs can improve children’s overall well-being, decrease the pain they feel …

Creepy man at Solihull school gates spotted ‘staring inappropriately and asking to hug the children’

Creepy man at Solihull school gates spotted ‘staring inappropriately and asking to hug the children’

A creepy man at a Solihull school’s gates has sparked a warning from the headteacher after reports he has been staring and approaching pupils ‘asking for a hug’. Valley Primary School has two sites in Old Lode Lane (juniors) and Fallowfield Road (infants), near to the Birmingham border. It said it received an alert from police of a man waiting for children at the gates of the Fallowfield Road site at the end of the school day, ‘staring inappropriately and asking to hug the children’. Read more: BHX queues branded ‘disgrace’ after ‘unexpectedly high level of staff absence’ He is said to have been ‘targeting’ children walking home between the Fallowfield Road site and Old Lode Lane. The school’s headteacher, Susan Milewski, said the school had received a warning from police on Thursday (May 21) morning. The head urged parents to be ‘extra vigilant’ when collecting their children. She said the suspicious man was said to be Asian, around 50 years old and wearing a dark blue jacket and trousers. Get breaking news on BirminghamLive …

All my children might die before they’re 35, says mum after missed test results reveal rare genetic condition

All my children might die before they’re 35, says mum after missed test results reveal rare genetic condition

Get the Well Enough newsletter with Harry Bullmore for tips on living a healthier, happier and longer life Get the Well Enough email with Harry Bullmore Get the Well Enough email with Harry Bullmore A mother said her 14-year-old son was diagnosed with a rare progressive condition which means he could die before 35, years after missed genetic results, and now fears her other three children may face the same fate. Sarah Bingham, 39, from Weston-super-Mare, said her son Caleb nearly died at eight months old after having blood poisoning and bacterial meningitis. After waking from a month-long coma, he “completely regressed” and acted like a newborn. He remained non-verbal until age five, struggling with walking and socialising, and was diagnosed with autism at age 10 – as part of the diagnosis process, he had a genetic test, but Sarah said she never heard back about the results so assumed everything was fine. It was not until 2025, when Sarah requested all of her son’s medical records, that it was revealed the genetic test showed …

Parents Told To Send Letters To Schools To Get Kids’ Images Removed Online

Parents Told To Send Letters To Schools To Get Kids’ Images Removed Online

An online harms expert and therapist has urged parents to contact their children’s schools to get any images of them removed online. Catherine Knibbs shared earlier in the week that cyber criminals are taking photos of children from school websites and social media, and then manipulating them with AI to make child sexual abuse material (CSAM). Schools are then being blackmailed to send money to stop the images from being shared. “I’ve personally worked on cases like this as a child trauma and online harms expert – and the cases are sickening,” said Knibbs at the time. And she warned it’s not just photos uploaded to school websites that are at risk of being taken and manipulated, it’s family photos shared on social media, too. Her warning came after the National Crime Agency issued an alert in late April to hundreds of thouss of teachers over a “considerable increase” in financially motivated sexual extortion (sextortion). After her first video was viewed over six million times, Knibbs shared an update urging parents not to wait for …

5 Ways To Give Your Kids A Sprinkler-Running, Screen-Free 90s Summer | Ellen Kamaras

5 Ways To Give Your Kids A Sprinkler-Running, Screen-Free 90s Summer | Ellen Kamaras

If you grew up in the 80s and 90s, before screens lived in everyone’s pocket, you remember the kind of summer that no longer exists for our own kids. The summer of riding bikes until the streetlights came on, of sprinklers (often malfunctioning) in the front yard, of grass-stained knees, bug bites, and fireflies, and lazy afternoons waiting for the sing-songy notes of the ice cream truck to pull up.  Recently, the craving for a 90s summer is something Millennial parents want to bring back for their own kids, and good news if you’re part of that nostalgic crew: You don’t need an insane amount of money or elaborate creativity to do it — you just need your memories. Here are 5 ways to give your kids a sprinkler-running, screen-free 90s summer: 1. Recreate fun ‘throwback’ summer activities from your childhood  My parents couldn’t afford to send us to day camp, and my mother took a leave from her job to spend the summers with us. At the time, I admit I was peeved about …

‘All children deserve hope, choice, and opportunity.’ – Humanists UK

‘All children deserve hope, choice, and opportunity.’ – Humanists UK

Broadcaster, writer, and President of Humanists UK Janet Ellis joined parliamentarians at a meeting of the All-Party Parliamentary Humanist Group in Westminster yesterday, and called on them to act across our campaigns on humanist marriages, inclusive education, and compassionate assisted dying reform. In a conversation chaired by Lizzi Collinge MP, attending MPs and peers were introduced to Humanists UK’s President Janet Ellis. During the wide-ranging conversation, Janet reflected on her own journey to humanism, discussing how her non-religious beliefs have shaped her career. Janet spoke passionately about Humanists UK campaigns. This included the need for inclusive education in schools, and an education that gives all children hope, choice and opportunity. The discussion also touched on assisted dying reform, where Janet spoke about the need for parliamentarians to bring back the Assisted Dying Bill after it was talked out in the House of Lords without a vote. Janet also raised the pressing need to grant humanist couples in England and Wales the same right to marry in line with their beliefs as their religious counterparts, and …

Guam bingo operators sentenced over multimillion-dollar charity gambling fraud targeting children

Guam bingo operators sentenced over multimillion-dollar charity gambling fraud targeting children

Three Guam residents tied to a charitable bingo operation were sentenced in federal court after prosecutors said they siphoned more than $10 million away from children needing medical treatment and used the money for themselves. The convictions stem from the Guam Shrine Club’s Hafa Adai Bingo parlor in Tamuning, which authorities said operated for years while falsely presenting itself as a fundraiser supporting travel for children seeking care at Shriners Hospital for Children in Hawaii. NEWS ALERT: Guam Bingo Operators Receive Federal Prison Sentences for $34 Million Fraud Scheme Hagåtña, Guam – Jose Arthur D. Chan, (Art Chan) Jr., his spouse, Christine C. Chan, and Michael L. Marasigan were sentenced for their roles in an illegal gambling operation involving… pic.twitter.com/qWOA0YNIPJ — FBI Honolulu (@FBIHonolulu) May 20, 2026 Jose Arthur “Art” Chan Jr., 77, received a 60-month prison sentence on May 12. His wife, Christine Chan, 64, was sentenced the same day to 70 months behind bars. Michael Marasigan, 54, was sentenced in absentia on May 18 to 262 months in prison after authorities said he …

France ponders failure to protect children as school abuse scandal rocks Paris

France ponders failure to protect children as school abuse scandal rocks Paris

French police carried out a wave of arrests over suspicions of child abuse at schools in central Paris on Wednesday, dramatically accelerating the authorities’ response to a scandal that has shaken the French capital and undermined faith in its schools. Officers from the Brigade de protection des mineurs, a child protection unit, detained 16 people with links to a nursery school in the 7th arrondissement (district) of Paris, one of several establishments rocked by allegations of child abuse in the capital’s after-school care system, known as périscolaire. The suspects were held on an array of charges including “rape of minors”, “sexual assault of minors” and “violence against minors”, according to the public prosecutor’s office. Several had already been suspended from their jobs following multiple reports of abuse and the airing of a documentary that contained scenes of violence filmed using a hidden camera. To display this content from YouTube, you must enable advertisement tracking and audience measurement. Accept Manage my choices One of your browser extensions seems to be blocking the video player from loading. …

TikTok and YouTube ‘not safe enough’ for children, says Ofcom | Science, Climate & Tech News

TikTok and YouTube ‘not safe enough’ for children, says Ofcom | Science, Climate & Tech News

TikTok and YouTube have been criticised by the communications watchdog for “failing” to take steps to protect children “despite overwhelming evidence of harm”. Ofcom had given Facebook, Instagram, Roblox, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube until the end of April to explain what actions they were taking on age checks, preventing online grooming and tackling harmful algorithms. The regulator said social media site TikTok and video clip website YouTube had not “committed to any significant changes in response to our specific demands”, instead maintaining their feeds were “already safe for children”. Ofcom said its evidence suggested their feeds “are still not safe enough”. It said its research, published on Thursday, showed “personalised feeds are the primary route through which children encounter harmful content” online. Seven in 10 children aged 11 to 17 who took part in Ofcom’s survey in November and December last year said they had experienced harmful content online, with just 15% telling an adult about what they had seen. More than half (51%) of children said they had been asked to prove their age …

Hope in Exile: Afghan Refugee Children Struggle for Education in Pakistan

Hope in Exile: Afghan Refugee Children Struggle for Education in Pakistan

Exile doesn’t talk, yet even the dreams of Afghan children don’t stay quiet. The noise of factories in Pakistan can supplant the ringing of school bells in refugee settlements. Empty notebooks are sitting around waiting to be used in what is becoming a more distant future. To thousands of Afghan children, education is now a luxury, something they may wish for but won’t have. In August 2021, my family left Kabul when the Taliban came back to power. We had to leave our home and all that was familiar to us. I was then a high school student, and I wanted to follow my dream of becoming a doctor because I thought education would protect me against the world of confusion. However, the act of going across the border into Pakistan froze this goal. We didn’t find any waiting classes, any teachers, any assurance of the future—only the raw situations of displacement and uncertainty. This isn’t only my case, but also the case of thousands of Afghan refugee children in Pakistan. The National Commission on …