Graphic videos of the violent attacks on political activist Charlie Kirk and Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska are spreading online — and many tweens and teens have either searched for them or watched them unwittingly.

When kids are seeing death in their social media feeds, what can parents do about it?

“How you handle the conversation is less about age and more about what you know of your child and how likely they are to be impacted by the events,” Deborah Gilboa , a family doctor and resilience expert, tells TODAY.com .

Of course, these discussions depend on whether or not parents know for certain that their child has been exposed to graphic content.

It will probably happen at some point — according to The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), “By the time children re

See Full Page