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The state launched a program to train farmers how to recognize when someone is under stress, and how to connect them with resources.
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As the Latino immigrant population in New Hampshire ages, it's hard for many to find senior programs that provide outreach in Spanish.
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Pizza Quest volume 3 hits the Berkshires with Betty's Pizza Shack, local poet Lauren Singer talks about working with grief, and we meet some of the folx you can hear at CISA's upcoming Field Notes event: Jacob Nelson and Trouble Erin Anne Gouch Mendeson.
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The women's lacrosse team at American International College in Springfield has teamed up with Morgan's Message, a nonprofit focusing on improving the mental health of student athletes.
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Jim Jordan, a retired Boston Police Department strategic planner, says officers need to change what is a very deeply embedded and fundamental part of their identity — how they use time and take command.
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Friends and family of Miguel Estrella gathered Sunday in Persip Park in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, to remember 22-year-old Miguel Estrella, who was fatally shot by a city police officer a year ago.
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The mother of a Stamford, Connecticut, teenager says she’s not safe at home. A hospital says she can’t stay there forever. And alternate schools say she’s too aggressive to be enrolled. A family struggles with the question: Where does she go?
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Citizens for Juvenile Justice compiled data showing foster children fare much worse academically than their peers.
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Massachusetts Medical Society said its survey of more than 500 members found a majority "experienced symptoms that reach the threshold for burnout."
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In 2019, more than a third of eighth-grade students reported sustained sadness or hopelessness that impacted their usual activities.