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  • NEWS
  • Appeal for public help in double murder probe

    A double murder investigation involving more than 50 gardaí got under way in Killorglin, Co Kerry, after autopsies confirmed a Lithuanian woman and her young daughter had died violently.

  • Ronan kicks off portraits initiative

    He's kicked a record number of penalty kicks, drop kicks and conversions over the bar. But Irish rugby legend Ronan O'Gara, 36, hit the side of a bar yesterday as a very special photographic exhibition was unveiled across Cork City.

  • WORLD
  • Brand divorced me by text, says Perry

    Pop star Katy Perry has revealed that Russell Brand told her he was divorcing her in a text message.

  • Ex-hitman: Bulger’s FBI dealings ‘broke my heart’

    A former criminal associate of James "Whitey" Bulger told jurors at the accused mob boss's trial that he agreed to testify against his old friend after learning that his former gang pals had begun co-operating with law enforcement.

  • BUSINESS
  • Aircraft leasing firm buys 10 Boeing jets

    Shannon-based aircraft leasing firm GE Capital Aviation Services have bought 10 new Boeing 787-10 Dreamliners for an estimated $3bn (€2.24bn) at list price.

  • 20% of rich see value of assets halved

    Nearly 20% of Ireland's wealthy people have seen the value of their assets halved as a result of their over-reliance on property.

  • SPORT
  • GPA may get involved over Friday night championship dictat

    The GPA could yet act on the behalf of the Carlow and Laois football panels as they have confirmed neither they nor the players were consulted about Friday week's All-Ireland round one qualifier.

  • Kearney keeps eyes on main prize

    Rob Kearney might not have felt like putting his best foot forward today as the Lions continued to prepare for Saturday's all-important first Test against Australia but he is experienced enough to know that after this midweek defeat by the Brumbies, it is essential for the main mission of the tour.

  • LIFESTYLE
  • Bradley bares his soul

    Soul singer Charles Bradley found fame late in life, but is haunted by his past, writes Ed Power

  • Body of evidence: do we fear nudity or nakedness?

    Do it together and it's harmless, do it alone and it's criminal, says Suzanne Harrington






Child’s first 3 years can determine adult aggression

THE odds of a toddler maturing into an aggressive adult or violent criminal is determined largely before he or she reaches the age of three, according to experts speaking at the country’s first infant mental health forum.

This is borne out by the findings of a 20-year study carried out in New Zealand — details of which were the presented at the forum in Dublin yesterday by George Hosking, chief executive of Wave Trust UK, an agency dedicated to reducing the root causes of violence.

For the study, nurses observed the behaviour of 1,000 children aged three, over a 90-minute period. They were asked to classify children as “at risk” or “normal” in terms of their behaviour.

The study showed that boy toddlers who were observed to be “at risk” by their restless, aggressive or negative behaviour, were nearly five times more likely at age 21 to have abused their partners and two-and-a-half times more likely to have a criminal conviction.

While fewer of the “at risk” girls were involved in antisocial behaviour, of those who were, 30% had teenage pregnancies and 43% were in violent or abusive relationships by the time they were 21.

Mr Hosking, an expert in the prevention of crime and violence, said the study showed the importance of investment by policy makers in the early years of life.

He said: “95% of the development of the human brain occurs between the age of 0-3. At age three, the brain makes twice as many connections as the adult brain. There are a million new connections every second, so the impact of how we interact with a child in its first three years is phenomenal.”

He said many parents “parent the way they were parented themselves, because that’s the natural thing to do”, but the danger is if their own experience was poor, they will repeat the same mistakes themselves.

He said there were some excellent school programmes geared at improved parenting, such as Roots of Empathy, where a mother and baby come into the classroom and, over a nine-month period, the children are exposed to positive parenting.

This meant that even if their own experience was negative, they could see the rewards of positive nurturing and could learn to break the cycle.

Catherine Maguire, a senior clinical psychologist and infant mental health specialist involved in an infant mental health programme in north Cork, said they would love to see Roots of Empathy introduced to Irish classrooms.

Ms Maguire said the signs of poor emotional and social development were “subtle�� in infants.

“A baby may have an averted gaze or very flat facial expressions and have poor eating and sleeping patterns.”

The most important thing for an infant’s social and emotional development was positive interaction between child and parent she said.

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