Live Breaking News & Updates on Singapore Counselling Centre|Page 5
Stay updated with breaking news from Singapore counselling centre. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Mental Wellness during COVID-19 eventbrite.sg - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from eventbrite.sg Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SINGAPORE: There may be more benefits to allowing no-fault divorces despite some concerns that it could encourage couples to split up instead of . ....
Aware (for women only) Aware is a gender-equality advocacy group that helps women fight discrimination and other issues. The counselling fees are charged at 1 per cent of your monthly income (capped at $150). For example, if you earn $3,000 monthly, you will pay $30 per session. For those who are not working, it will be $20. For sexual assault and harassment cases through the Sexual Assault Care Centre, the first three sessions are free. Shan You Shan You is a non-profit organisation with Buddhist roots, but is not religious - they just follow the generic guiding values of compassion, mindfulness, morality and wisdom. It charges $80 per session (50 to 60 mins) for an individual, and $100 per session (65 to 75 mins) for a couple or a family. The fees are already subsidised, but if it s still too expensive for you, ask if you are eligible for additional fee subsidy, based on a financial assessment. ....
The New Paper TNP PHOTO ILLUSTRATION Suicide prevention agency Samaritans of Singapore (SOS) received 39,492 suicide and crisis-related calls last year. This was up from 33,387 in 2019 - an increase of 18 per cent - as more people sought help for mental distress amid the pandemic. Between April and June last year, which coincided with the circuit breaker and phase one of reopening, the agency received 10,671 calls, up from 7,844 in the same period in 2019. Mr Gasper Tan, chief executive of SOS, said last year was a year of uncertainties, and many experienced more anxiety as the pandemic placed a strain on relationships and finances. ....
Share this content Bookmark Let’s face it, this is not how we want the year to end: Travel is basically non-existent (maybe next time, ski slopes?), you’re still working from home (bye bye patience and sanity), and financial stability for some could be as firm as a soggy log cake (let s hold that phone upgrade). While we do have a silver lining to look forward to in the form of Singapore’s post-Christmas Phase 3 and its promise of eight-people gatherings, this is truly an unusual December where the typical holiday blues that makes its way around this time of the year is compounded by a pandemic. ....