Teen Mental Health Blog - Our Mission

Posted on 22/10/2008 | 0 Comments

Teen Mental Health Blog is alive!

Our mission is to become the world’s premiere blog for child and youth mental health. Most of the entries will be written by me - Dr. Stan Kutcher. The blog be a place where people can come to get the latest news on youth mental health issues (policy, mental disorders, medications, school mental health, etc.)

This blog is part of teenmentalhealth.org a website dedicated to helping improve the mental health of youth by the effective translation and transfer of scientific knowledge. The website is a place where youth, parents, patients, educators, and health professionals can go to download resources and get information on youth mental health based on the best scientific evidence available.

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This is a great set of comments and rings very true. 

I totally agree that scientists (just like everyone else) have their biases and foibles.  After all, scientists are human beings too!  But science is different than scientists. 

The scientific method is the most objective frame that we have by which to evaluate and predict.  Science is not about finding truth.  It is only about being less wrong most of the time.  The scientific method (experimental design and mathematics) gives us the ability to test what we believe.  The scientific method is not used to prove something is correct, on the contrary, the scientific method is designed to prove that something is not correct!  It is designed to test what is called the “null hypothesis”.  It takes ideas that come out of left field (or wherever else they come from) and puts those ideas to an independent test.

t does not drive our beliefs.  It does however challenge our beliefs.  In that way it is self-correcting. Of course scientific inquiry and understanding lives within a wider social context.  That is one of the great features of science. 

But gravity is gravity, social context notwithstanding.  And thus it is nasty, brutish and long.  As Brecht said, (something like this) - the purpose of science is to save us from everlasting error.

By Christina Carew on May 11th

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Without their help this initiative would not be possible. Thanks for you help.

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