• Documents/Certificates Required in Domestic Transfer of a Dead Body in India

    https://medcab.in/blog-detail/documents-certificates-required-in-domestic-transfer-of-a-dead-body-in-india
    Documents/Certificates Required in Domestic Transfer of a Dead Body in India https://medcab.in/blog-detail/documents-certificates-required-in-domestic-transfer-of-a-dead-body-in-india
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  • Professional Attestation Services in India | Alankit Attestation


    Swipe Left to Discover When Attestation Becomes Essential

    Reach out to us to get Attestation services on all types of documents including Commercial, Educational, and Personal documents.

    Call us at 9355808139 or WhatsApp at https://wa.me/919999065899

    Website - https://www.alankitattestation.com/

    #attestation #attestationservices #attestationservicesinindia #documentverification #certificates #legaldocuments #CertificateAttestation #DocumentAttestation #AttestationServices #legalizationservices #chamberofcommerce #ministryofeducation #ministryofforeignaffairs #embassy #alankit #alankitattestation
    Professional Attestation Services in India | Alankit Attestation Swipe Left to Discover When Attestation Becomes Essential 🔒✈️🌍 Reach out to us to get Attestation services on all types of documents including Commercial, Educational, and Personal documents. Call us at 9355808139 or WhatsApp at https://wa.me/919999065899 Website - https://www.alankitattestation.com/ #attestation #attestationservices #attestationservicesinindia #documentverification #certificates #legaldocuments #CertificateAttestation #DocumentAttestation #AttestationServices #legalizationservices #chamberofcommerce #ministryofeducation #ministryofforeignaffairs #embassy #alankit #alankitattestation
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  • When it comes to document attestation, there are various types of services available to cater to different needs and requirements. Understanding these different types can help you navigate the attestation process more effectively.

    Call us at 9355808139 or WhatsApp at https://wa.me/919999065899

    Website - https://www.alankitattestation.com/

    #attestation #attestationservices #attestationservicesinindia #MOFAattestation #MEAattestation #HRDattestation #embassyattestation #apostilleattestation #documentverification #certificates #legaldocuments #CertificateAttestation #DocumentAttestation #AttestationServices #legalizationservices #alankit #alankitattestation
    When it comes to document attestation, there are various types of services available to cater to different needs and requirements. Understanding these different types can help you navigate the attestation process more effectively. Call us at 9355808139 or WhatsApp at https://wa.me/919999065899 Website - https://www.alankitattestation.com/ #attestation #attestationservices #attestationservicesinindia #MOFAattestation #MEAattestation #HRDattestation #embassyattestation #apostilleattestation #documentverification #certificates #legaldocuments #CertificateAttestation #DocumentAttestation #AttestationServices #legalizationservices #alankit #alankitattestation
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  • SELF-ESTEEM-
    Does Money Increase Self-Esteem and Happiness?
    Does a higher income increase self-esteem, or does self-esteem increase income?

    KEY POINTS-
    In Western society, money can have a profound psychological effect on people.
    Research addressed the question of the relationship between self-esteem and income.
    Increasing your earnings heightens one’s sense of self-esteem and your happiness, but there is a limit.
    What is the relationship between the income one earns and their self-esteem? A recent study (Bleidorn and colleagues, 2023) looked at this with the intent of answering the question of whether increased earnings increase self-esteem, or if people with high self-esteem are somehow able to earn more money.

    Money is a symbol of status in Western cultures, so it makes sense that an increase in salary might lead one to feel greater self-worth. Alternatively, people with higher self-esteem might, by virtue of their high levels of confidence, seek out higher-paying jobs.

    A longitudinal, four-year study looked at adults in the Netherlands, assessing their self-esteem each year as well as their self-reported income. Analysis of the data suggested that when people earn more money, it increases their self-esteem, presumably because it is associated with a sense of accomplishment, or improved social status. Furthermore, the relationship between income and self-esteem was the same regardless of the participant’s level of educational attainment, age, or sex.

    Other Ways That Money Matters
    Can money buy happiness? A series of studies (Matz and colleagues, 2016) suggest that the answer is “it depends.” It depends on the relationship between personality and how it is spent.

    In the first study, British bank customers completed a personality measure, a measure of life satisfaction, and then their spending habits were examined. Extraverted individuals spend more money on activities like going out to a pub. People high on the trait of conscientiousness spent more on health and fitness activities and products. In addition, if the participants bought products that matched their personalities, they reported higher life satisfaction.

    In a second study, participants were assessed on the personality trait of extraversion-introversion and were then offered one of two gift certificates:
    for a bookstore
    for a night at a bar
    In addition, participants completed measures of positive and negative affect. Extraverts who were given money for a night out at a bar were happier than if they were given money to buy a book. The opposite was the case for introverts, they were happier with the bookstore gift certificate.

    How Much Money Leads to Happiness?

    Finally, the result of several studies on the relationship between income and happiness suggests that more money does indeed make people happier, but only up to a point. As people’s income approaches six figures (about $100,000 annually), happiness tends to increase. Then, however, there is a sort of plateauing so that additional income doesn’t significantly increase happiness. This suggests that having enough money to take care of basic needs leads to happiness, but that being wealthy itself does not buy happiness.
    SELF-ESTEEM- Does Money Increase Self-Esteem and Happiness? Does a higher income increase self-esteem, or does self-esteem increase income? KEY POINTS- In Western society, money can have a profound psychological effect on people. Research addressed the question of the relationship between self-esteem and income. Increasing your earnings heightens one’s sense of self-esteem and your happiness, but there is a limit. What is the relationship between the income one earns and their self-esteem? A recent study (Bleidorn and colleagues, 2023) looked at this with the intent of answering the question of whether increased earnings increase self-esteem, or if people with high self-esteem are somehow able to earn more money. Money is a symbol of status in Western cultures, so it makes sense that an increase in salary might lead one to feel greater self-worth. Alternatively, people with higher self-esteem might, by virtue of their high levels of confidence, seek out higher-paying jobs. A longitudinal, four-year study looked at adults in the Netherlands, assessing their self-esteem each year as well as their self-reported income. Analysis of the data suggested that when people earn more money, it increases their self-esteem, presumably because it is associated with a sense of accomplishment, or improved social status. Furthermore, the relationship between income and self-esteem was the same regardless of the participant’s level of educational attainment, age, or sex. Other Ways That Money Matters Can money buy happiness? A series of studies (Matz and colleagues, 2016) suggest that the answer is “it depends.” It depends on the relationship between personality and how it is spent. In the first study, British bank customers completed a personality measure, a measure of life satisfaction, and then their spending habits were examined. Extraverted individuals spend more money on activities like going out to a pub. People high on the trait of conscientiousness spent more on health and fitness activities and products. In addition, if the participants bought products that matched their personalities, they reported higher life satisfaction. In a second study, participants were assessed on the personality trait of extraversion-introversion and were then offered one of two gift certificates: for a bookstore for a night at a bar In addition, participants completed measures of positive and negative affect. Extraverts who were given money for a night out at a bar were happier than if they were given money to buy a book. The opposite was the case for introverts, they were happier with the bookstore gift certificate. How Much Money Leads to Happiness? Finally, the result of several studies on the relationship between income and happiness suggests that more money does indeed make people happier, but only up to a point. As people’s income approaches six figures (about $100,000 annually), happiness tends to increase. Then, however, there is a sort of plateauing so that additional income doesn’t significantly increase happiness. This suggests that having enough money to take care of basic needs leads to happiness, but that being wealthy itself does not buy happiness.
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  • ADOLESCENCE-
    Why Proposed Social Media Bans Won't Keep Your Kids Safe.
    Social media bans ignore the need for digital literacy and self-regulation
    Reviewed by Lybi Ma

    KEY POINTS-
    Proposed legal bans on social media for kids are based on moral panics, not research.
    The preoccupation with social media use ignores the needed skills to safely navigate the digital world.
    Not only will the laws be difficult to enforce but verification proposals raise serious privacy issues for sensitive information.
    Lawmakers could help kids more by funding digital literacy programs.
    Politicians can't get their pens out fast enough to draft laws to regulate social media use by kids. Advertised as "child protection" laws, the proposed bans show how little politicians understand about social media, kids, and interpreting research. The proposals, however, are getting lots of media coverage as politicians make frightening, exaggerated, and often unsubstantiated claims about the negative effects of social media on mental health.

    There are legitimate concerns about kids' mental health, but recent reviews of multiple research studies find little direct evidence to support the laser beam focus on technology use (Ferguson et al., 2022) and or screen time (Orben & Przybylski, 2019) to the exclusion of other factors. If improving the mental health of kids is the goal, the proposed bans not only won't get the job done but can cause more harm than good by taking our eyes off what really matters: teaching our kids to be media literate, responsible digital citizens.

    Politicians have always used moral panics to generate votes. However well-intentioned, these laws will do nothing to help a child more successfully navigate in a digital world. No amount of restrictions will help kids develop the skills and critical thinking to be safe and productive in the digital space, such as self-regulation, dealing with bullying, ethical behavior, identifying misinformation, recognizing manipulation, understanding social influence, and protecting their privacy. If they want to do some good, why not fund media literacy programs in the schools to teach them what they need to know to have healthy and safe relationships with technology?

    Restricting minor kids' unsupervised use of social media makes intuitive sense if you're a parent, especially when they are under the age of 13. These are critical years for cognitive and emotional development. The bans miss the mark by overlooking some fundamental factors and open the door to a host of unintended consequences.

    Simply put, the bans will:
    Make access more attractive to kids
    Give parents a false sense of security
    Do nothing to help kids make better decisions
    Phones Aren't Phones, They Are Portals to a Social World
    Online devices are a portal to the kids' social world. Social media is social currency—it's how kids keep up with pop culture, trends, and their friends. It's how they know what's going on in their world. Pew Research found that the three main uses of mobile devices by teens were: passing the time (90 percent), connecting with others (84 percent), and learning new things (83 percent). Being successful on social media has also become a desired career path, glamourized by the celebrated financial and social success of young Influencers (Kidfluencers) on YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram, many of whom are under 13, whose popularity brings earns big money from sponsors. In a 2019 survey, 86 percent of young Americans wanted to be social media influencers (Morning Consult, 2019).

    You Need a Lot of Personal Data to Verify Age and Consent
    To enforce the proposed laws, age and identity have to be verified. This raises serious privacy issues around the collection and use of personal information. Utah's laws could require kids, their parents, and other users to upload birth certificates and government IDs, use facial recognition technology, or provide biometric data so that social media platforms can verify age and identity. Talk about a hacker's and marketer's dream database.

    Utah's bills are infantilizing to kids and disrespectful to parents. In addition to limiting access to social media between the hours of 10:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. by anyone under 18, they require a parent's express consent for minors to sign up for apps like Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok (Evans, 2023, April 4). The bill also would give parents administrative access rights to their kids' direct messages and interactions. If the politicians had read the research, they would see how this would undermine the trust and open communication necessary for providing kids with appropriate guidance (Wisniewski et al., 2022).

    User-Centered Approaches: What's Best for the Kids?
    Kids' needs for personal space change as they age. Autonomy is an important part of the developmental process as kids transition from a child to an adult and learn how to navigate their world. Like it or not, these kids live in a digital world. Risk-taking is part of the maturational process. Monitoring teens online and imposing authoritarian restrictions and privacy-invasive monitoring negate the developmental needs of teens. Parents are an important source of guidance, but the ultimate goal is helping kids make smarter and safer decisions, not turning parents into police.

    Kang et al. (2022) found that parental restriction and lack of privacy boundaries resulted in backlash behavior, with teens making decisions without considering the risks to themselves and without exercising critical thinking. Yardi and Bruckman (2011) also found that teens are more seek out workarounds and are likely to engage in riskier behaviors to avoid parental observation, rules, and technology constraints.

    If safety and well-being are the primary concerns of parents, empirical evidence shows that a more open and trust-based approach works best. Considering the needs and desires of the kids, rewarding positive behaviors, raising risk awareness, and negotiating age-appropriate online boundaries are the most effective at preparing kids to use technology well and become good digital citizens (Wisniewski et al., 2022). Teaching media literacy and digital citizenship is, admittedly, a lot more work than hoping the government can regulate the problem away.

    Parents Are Important Role Models
    Don't underestimate the importance of parental guidance. A study of nearly 4,000 teens found that 65 percent of the kids had positive parental communication, and these kids were more likely to have a healthy relationship with technology, greater well-being, and a better positive body image. Parental involvement included communication, parental attention to their own technology and social media use, and rules focused on content and activity rather than screen time. The 37 percent of remaining kids deemed 'at-risk' had screentime-based rules or no rules at all and, more importantly, no parental involvement.

    Whether or not these laws can be enforced, or if the number of exclusions by powerful lobbyists makes them meaningless, there is no evidence that the proposed bans will achieve the intended goals. Instead of focusing exclusively on social media platforms, we need to teach kids age-appropriate, essential skills to be safe online without risking privacy or undermining their autonomy. The answer lies in creating user-centered approaches, such as teaching media literacy, negotiating age-appropriate boundaries, and rewarding positive behaviors, to effectively prepare children to become good digital citizens.
    ADOLESCENCE- Why Proposed Social Media Bans Won't Keep Your Kids Safe. Social media bans ignore the need for digital literacy and self-regulation Reviewed by Lybi Ma KEY POINTS- Proposed legal bans on social media for kids are based on moral panics, not research. The preoccupation with social media use ignores the needed skills to safely navigate the digital world. Not only will the laws be difficult to enforce but verification proposals raise serious privacy issues for sensitive information. Lawmakers could help kids more by funding digital literacy programs. Politicians can't get their pens out fast enough to draft laws to regulate social media use by kids. Advertised as "child protection" laws, the proposed bans show how little politicians understand about social media, kids, and interpreting research. The proposals, however, are getting lots of media coverage as politicians make frightening, exaggerated, and often unsubstantiated claims about the negative effects of social media on mental health. There are legitimate concerns about kids' mental health, but recent reviews of multiple research studies find little direct evidence to support the laser beam focus on technology use (Ferguson et al., 2022) and or screen time (Orben & Przybylski, 2019) to the exclusion of other factors. If improving the mental health of kids is the goal, the proposed bans not only won't get the job done but can cause more harm than good by taking our eyes off what really matters: teaching our kids to be media literate, responsible digital citizens. Politicians have always used moral panics to generate votes. However well-intentioned, these laws will do nothing to help a child more successfully navigate in a digital world. No amount of restrictions will help kids develop the skills and critical thinking to be safe and productive in the digital space, such as self-regulation, dealing with bullying, ethical behavior, identifying misinformation, recognizing manipulation, understanding social influence, and protecting their privacy. If they want to do some good, why not fund media literacy programs in the schools to teach them what they need to know to have healthy and safe relationships with technology? Restricting minor kids' unsupervised use of social media makes intuitive sense if you're a parent, especially when they are under the age of 13. These are critical years for cognitive and emotional development. The bans miss the mark by overlooking some fundamental factors and open the door to a host of unintended consequences. Simply put, the bans will: Make access more attractive to kids Give parents a false sense of security Do nothing to help kids make better decisions Phones Aren't Phones, They Are Portals to a Social World Online devices are a portal to the kids' social world. Social media is social currency—it's how kids keep up with pop culture, trends, and their friends. It's how they know what's going on in their world. Pew Research found that the three main uses of mobile devices by teens were: passing the time (90 percent), connecting with others (84 percent), and learning new things (83 percent). Being successful on social media has also become a desired career path, glamourized by the celebrated financial and social success of young Influencers (Kidfluencers) on YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram, many of whom are under 13, whose popularity brings earns big money from sponsors. In a 2019 survey, 86 percent of young Americans wanted to be social media influencers (Morning Consult, 2019). You Need a Lot of Personal Data to Verify Age and Consent To enforce the proposed laws, age and identity have to be verified. This raises serious privacy issues around the collection and use of personal information. Utah's laws could require kids, their parents, and other users to upload birth certificates and government IDs, use facial recognition technology, or provide biometric data so that social media platforms can verify age and identity. Talk about a hacker's and marketer's dream database. Utah's bills are infantilizing to kids and disrespectful to parents. In addition to limiting access to social media between the hours of 10:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. by anyone under 18, they require a parent's express consent for minors to sign up for apps like Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok (Evans, 2023, April 4). The bill also would give parents administrative access rights to their kids' direct messages and interactions. If the politicians had read the research, they would see how this would undermine the trust and open communication necessary for providing kids with appropriate guidance (Wisniewski et al., 2022). User-Centered Approaches: What's Best for the Kids? Kids' needs for personal space change as they age. Autonomy is an important part of the developmental process as kids transition from a child to an adult and learn how to navigate their world. Like it or not, these kids live in a digital world. Risk-taking is part of the maturational process. Monitoring teens online and imposing authoritarian restrictions and privacy-invasive monitoring negate the developmental needs of teens. Parents are an important source of guidance, but the ultimate goal is helping kids make smarter and safer decisions, not turning parents into police. Kang et al. (2022) found that parental restriction and lack of privacy boundaries resulted in backlash behavior, with teens making decisions without considering the risks to themselves and without exercising critical thinking. Yardi and Bruckman (2011) also found that teens are more seek out workarounds and are likely to engage in riskier behaviors to avoid parental observation, rules, and technology constraints. If safety and well-being are the primary concerns of parents, empirical evidence shows that a more open and trust-based approach works best. Considering the needs and desires of the kids, rewarding positive behaviors, raising risk awareness, and negotiating age-appropriate online boundaries are the most effective at preparing kids to use technology well and become good digital citizens (Wisniewski et al., 2022). Teaching media literacy and digital citizenship is, admittedly, a lot more work than hoping the government can regulate the problem away. Parents Are Important Role Models Don't underestimate the importance of parental guidance. A study of nearly 4,000 teens found that 65 percent of the kids had positive parental communication, and these kids were more likely to have a healthy relationship with technology, greater well-being, and a better positive body image. Parental involvement included communication, parental attention to their own technology and social media use, and rules focused on content and activity rather than screen time. The 37 percent of remaining kids deemed 'at-risk' had screentime-based rules or no rules at all and, more importantly, no parental involvement. Whether or not these laws can be enforced, or if the number of exclusions by powerful lobbyists makes them meaningless, there is no evidence that the proposed bans will achieve the intended goals. Instead of focusing exclusively on social media platforms, we need to teach kids age-appropriate, essential skills to be safe online without risking privacy or undermining their autonomy. The answer lies in creating user-centered approaches, such as teaching media literacy, negotiating age-appropriate boundaries, and rewarding positive behaviors, to effectively prepare children to become good digital citizens.
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