Your child's health and safety is our top priority. Please search our resource library for information on health, nutrition, fitness, injury prevention and other important topics.
Kids can recover after trauma with help from therapy and extra support and comfort from parents.
Feeling nervous, worried, or uneasy at times is a normal part of growing up. Here’s how to help your child feel more in control and deal with stress.
When a parent is sent away for military service (deployment), family life changes. Here’s how parents and caregivers can help kids cope.
Social connection helps kids feel less lonely. Learn more.
Abuse is never OK, and if it happens during your pregnancy, you need to get out of the relationship for your sake and your baby’s.
During a baby’s first few days of life, it’s normal for moms to feel emotional highs and lows, often called the “baby blues.”
How can you tell the difference between everyday moodiness and depression? Learn the signs of depression and discover ways to help your child feel better.
Using social media has benefits and risks for kids. Here’s how to help them be more mindful about it, spend less time on it, and preserve their mental health.
It’s important for new mothers – and those who love them – to understand the symptoms of postpartum depression and reach out to family, friends, and medical professionals for help.
Kids and teens who live through a traumatic event can develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Learn about PTSD.