Three myths of balancing work and family life
Do you have a job, but also have a life? How can you have both? Research has shown interesting facts about balancing work and family life that you may not have considered before.
Do you have a job, but also have a life? How can you have both? Research has shown interesting facts about balancing work and family life that you may not have considered before.
While COVID-19 has had a devastating impact on many sectors of society, the leaders of a therapy center at Colorado State University say the move to serving clients remotely last year has had some benefits that will be long-lasting.
Why do some communities have better outcomes for citizens when faced with disasters and challenges such as the COVID-19 pandemic? CSU researchers have developed a way to measure and quantify a community’s democratic resources to respond called the Civic Capacity Index.
Many studies have been done on how to improve or maintain cognitive ability in aging adults, and now a Colorado State University researcher is exploring a novel way to accurately measure changes in cognition within that population.
Hannah Saunders Wurster (M.S., ’16; Ph.D. ’18) co-founded The Willow Collective, a network of private practitioners who support maternal, infant, and early childhood mental health services in Northern Colorado.
Experts on the latest installment of the CSU Prevention Extension Cast discussed how to engage with older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Departments of Human Development and Family Studies and Occupational Therapy are seeking participants in a new study that looks at how yoga and mindfulness improves the health of caregivers and individuals with chronic pain.
Read about the CHHS fall 2020 outstanding graduates and all of their accomplishments during their time at CSU.
Actively involved in the Center for Community Partnerships, Kendal Nolan has helped make a difference for many students across the CSU campus.
Kendal Nolan has continuously proven people wrong, showing that factors that many people would consider setbacks are actually her main motivators. She will be graduating this fall with a 3.89 GPA and is an outstanding graduate from the Department of Human Development and Family Studies.