The effects of child neglect


Kids who are neglected, growing up without normal emotional and social interaction, have measurably different brain structure from other kids, according to a new study from researchers at Boston Children’s Hospital.

The study compares kids raised in Romania’s infamous state-run orphanages with kids raised in normal Romanian family homes at the same time. MRI brain scans show that children raised in run-down institutions — typically with just one adult supervisor per 12 young kids — developed measurably lower grey matter volume and white matter volume in the cortex of the brain than children who grew up among their families.

However, children who spent their infancy in the orphanages but were then delivered to high-quality foster care as small children fared somewhat better than those left behind in the institutions. Those kids’ cortical white matter was no different from that among children who had always lived with families, the study shows. But the foster kids still had lower grey matter volume than normal.

The findings do show “the potential for developmental ‘catch-up’ in white matter growth, even following extreme environmental deprivation,” the study authors write. And that’s cause for optimism: it shows that some of the damage due to early childhood neglect can be undone.

White matter is important because it’s responsible for much of the connectivity between different regions of the brain; it’s the brain’s “information superhighway,” as one of the researchers puts it. But growth of grey matter — the part of the brain thought to control sensory perception and muscle control — tends to happen during concentrated periods of childhood, not all throughout childhood like white matter growth does. 

Cake Decorating Workshop - LPN Event May

Where: Emma's Lunch Boutique Bakery 
When: Wednesday 21st May 
Time: 8:00pm  - 9:30pm 



Emma’s Lunch Boutique Bakery will be showing us how to cover cakes with fondant, create  simple sugar roses and a fondant dog. You will be decorating your styrofoam Cake as you please with the designs you’ve created. You will learn basic cake decorating techniques. Bring your own rolling pin! Cost of materials: 15 euro (including styrofoam cakes and fondant) Length of class: 1.5-2 hours

Places are limited Please call Vanja to reserve : 99382652

Soulla's Saturday Morning Library - Family Fun Day


Pathways Connect - Cyprus



The purpose of Pathways Connect is to learn and build solid relationships with other families concerned about conscious choice and family wellness.

Pathways Connect offers us a community to support each other in our conscious choices for family wellness. Using Pathways magazine as a springboard for topics, we will discuss each new quarterly issue’s articles at our Gathering Groups.

Our Pathways Connect Gathering Groups Offer:

• Trustworthy and current information from the conscious choice magazine, Pathways to Family    Wellness.
• Outstanding resources provided through Pathways Connect’s monthly Dialogue and Resource Guide.
• Continuous support for your individual family wellness choices from
• A community of like-minded parents to connect with.

Our meetings will be run monthly in Larnaca, Nicosia and Kyrenia. You are welcome to come to any of the meetings.

Larnaca meeting will always be on the 1st Friday of the month at 8pm . 


We hope to see you then and encourage you to bring a friend or two.

Please Contact : Veronika for further information Tel: 

Passive smoking and children's health


Passive smoking causes lasting damage to children's arteries, prematurely ageing their blood vessels by more than three years, say researchers.The damage - thickening of blood vessel walls - increases the risk of heart attacks and strokes in later life, they say in the European Heart Journal.

In their study of more than 2,000 children aged three to 18, the harm occurred if both parents smoked.
Experts say there is no "safe" level of exposure to second-hand smoke.This study goes a step further and shows it [passive smoking] can cause potentially irreversible damage to children's arteries increasing their risk of heart problems in later life”Doireann MaddockBritish Heart Foundation

The research, carried out in Finland and Australia, appears to reveal the physical effects of growing up in a smoke-filled home - although it is impossible to rule out other potentially contributory factors entirely.

Hidden damage

Ultrasound scans showed how children whose parents both smoked developed changes in the wall of a main artery that runs up the neck to the head.While the differences in carotid intima-media thickness were modest, they were significant and detectable some 20 years later when children had reached adulthood, say the investigators.

Study author Dr Seana Gall, from the University of Tasmania, said: "Our study shows that exposure to passive smoke in childhood causes a direct and irreversible damage to the structure of the arteries. "Parents, or even those thinking about becoming parents, should quit smoking. This will not only restore their own health but also protect the health of their children into the future."

Thank you for visiting us

The Larnaca Parents Network was designed to generate awareness of local events, activities and facilities for families within the local community.

We openly encourage your original content, events and links for all relevant facilities and services.

Please send all information to: info@larnacaparentsnetwork.com.

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The information and materials contained on this blog have been compiled from a variety of sources, are subject to change without notice, may not be current and up-to-date, and should not be considered official public records.