Although the Institute for
Family Studies reports that more husbands than wives admit to being unfaithful, according to The Cut, psychoanalyst and writer Esther Perel cites an increase of 40 % in unfaithful women since 1990, while men's statistics have stayed about the same.
Not exact matches
Jon Levs, author of All in: How Our Work - First Culture Fails Dads,
Families, and Businesses — And How We Can Fix It Together,
studied the effect of paid leave in California and New Jersey, which have paid
family leave programs, and found that the majority of businesses
reported that their state's paid leave programs had either no effect or a positive effect on their business.
A 2012 Credit Suisse
report and a 2014
study from Spain's Banca March found similar outperformance for
family firms compared with widely held issuers in Germany and Europe, respectively.
Just 27 % of
families saving for college use a 529,
reports the recent Sallie Mae
study.
They range from our Multifamily Office and Single -
Family Office
studies, to our External CIO and Client
Reporting studies, to our Security and Fees & Pricing
studies.
Alliance Research has
reported on the private
family office side of this space with the release of five Single - Family Office study re
family office side of this space with the release of five Single -
Family Office study re
Family Office
study reports.
When compiling this
report, EY worked extensively with Credit Suisse, the University of St. Gallen and
family offices themselves, a few of which have provided illuminating case
studies throughout the
report.
A 1985
study reported that according to the Federal Reserve Board only two percent of all U.S.
families Own «20 percent of all residential property, 30 percent of all liquid assets, 33 percent of all business property, 39 percent of all bonds, 20 percent of all stocks, and 71 percent of all tax - free financial holdings».3 It can be argued that the ownership of such vast portions of our capital by so few threatens our democratic system.
The document was the final
report of a theological commission established in 1966 by the archbishop of Cracow, Karol Wojtyla, to help him in his work on the Papal Commission for the
Study of Problems of the
Family, Population, and Birth Rate, inevitably dubbed the «Birth Control Commission» by the world media.
The
report features six case
studies of young fathers» journeys through different aspects of
family services, from maternity services onwards.
A
study from 2010 acknowledged, yes, «in the short - term, kids go through a one - to two - year crisis period when their parents divorce,» but the idea of staying together for the kids is problematic, especially if it's a high - conflict
family, and that previous research indicating people should stay together «has been plagued by many data problems — reliance on small samples derived from one therapy clinic, retrospective
reports, and cross sectional data.»
A new
report from the Institute for
Family Studies suggests that adoptive
families in the United States have undergone «dramatic» change over the last decade, becoming far more diverse than would have been conceivable even fifty years ago.
Furthermore, for those
families in the
study who practiced «stretching diapers» (i.e. using a soiled diaper multiple times), more doctors visits and emergency room visits per year were
reported for cases of diaper dermatitis and UTI's in young children.
A 2017
study (building on the 2010
study mentioned above) conducted by the NDBN and Huggies uncovers that diaper need is on the rise — with 36 % of U.S.
families struggling with it, versus the 34 %
reported in the 2010
study.
While these
reported interventions target the infant, other interventions target the mother - infant interaction48 or the whole
family (rather just the mother) 49,50 to improve parental skills by providing practical parental care techniques (such as sleeping habits and feeding) in combination with psychoeducation about the postpartum period and mindfulness techniques.48 This set of
studies have shown positive results such that maternal depression, anxiety scores48 and baby crying times, 48,50 were reduced.
There were 20 participants in five
families who were
studied and they were self
reported... [Read more...]
According to a
study done at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, more than 25 % of
families in poverty
reported watering down formula or reducing feedings.
Although there are
studies of home visiting that
report effects of child maltreatment on child and
family outcomes, relatively few of them use rigorous methods that support drawing causal inferences about effectiveness.
Of the 26
studies reporting family structure more than 30 % of index children were in single parent households.
Numerous
studies have
reported that the costs for cloth diapers — including laundry detergent and energy — are significantly lower for
families than choosing to use disposable diapers.
This particular meta -
study reported that breastfeeding provides up to a 28 % decrease in risk of developing breast cancer at any age (pre - or post-menopausal) for women without a
family history of the disease, who breastfed for 12 months or longer (World Cancer Research Fund and American Institute for Cancer Research, 2007).
The results of
studies such as the one
reported here can guide
family programming efforts.
A home
study is a written
report about you and your
family that is required by law and must be initiated and completed prior to adoption placement.
A positive attitude and
family environment increases the effectiveness of the interventions, Dr. Barnes
reported in one of three
studies presented at the American Psychosomatic Society Annual Meeting in Portland, Ore..
About 32 % of
families report reusing diapers (from «In Short Supply,» a
study commissioned by Feeding America, 2013).
Families living at high altitudes should be aware of a 2x higher risk of SIDS says a new
study reported by the New York Times.
Some barriers include the negative attitudes of women and their partners and
family members, as well as health care professionals, toward breastfeeding, whereas the main reasons that women do not start or give up breastfeeding are
reported to be poor
family and social support, perceived milk insufficiency, breast problems, maternal or infant illness, and return to outside employment.2 Several strategies have been used to promote breastfeeding, such as setting standards for maternity services3, 4 (eg, the joint World Health Organization — United Nations Children's Fund [WHO - UNICEF] Baby Friendly Initiative), public education through media campaigns, and health professionals and peer - led initiatives to support individual mothers.5 — 9 Support from the infant's father through active participation in the breastfeeding decision, together with a positive attitude and knowledge about the benefits of breastfeeding, has been shown to have a strong influence on the initiation and duration of breastfeeding in observational
studies, 2,10 but scientific evidence is not available as to whether training fathers to manage the most common lactation difficulties can enhance breastfeeding rates.
Plus, the Feeding America
study «In Short Supply» found that 32 percent of low - income
families surveyed
reported reusing disposable diapers, while 48 percent
reported delaying changing a diaper to make their supply last longer.
In a recent
study, approximately 8 % of
families reported stretching their diaper supply due to a shortage.
American
Family Association hate group mouthpiece Bryan Fischer said that gays should not be allowed to parent children because children in same - sex homes are at a higher risk for sexual molestation, citing the deeply flawed Mark Regnerus
study and the Jerry Sandusky Penn State abuse case, Right Wing Watch
reports.
Today's
report, which will be followed up by a full
study published next summer, acknowledges the role poverty, bad housing, unemployment, debt and drug and alcohol addiction play in social breakdown, but argues
families are also vital.
While the media has
reported on the air quality
studies, the trial and community concerns, the stories of individuals and their
families have, for the most part, remained in the background.
[BOX 5] RSA Affiliate Responses to Follow up Discussions with VR Directors: Pacinelli, Mimi Duncan, 1979 Correspondence, 1981 Final
Report to NSF, 1981 Followup Questionnaires, 1981 - 1982 Itineraries for Site Visits, 1981 Letter Letters to Student Applicants, 1981 Little Rock Museum, 1981 Mailing Labels Notes and Drafts of «Within Reach» Newspaper Clippings Correspondence to Virginia Stern NSF - SST Announcement, 198 Press Releases and Publicity Programs, Summer 1982 NSF Proposal, 1979 Releases From Students and
Families, 1981 Requests for Information Student Questionnaires, 1982
Study of Coping Strategies Questionnaires and Letters [2 folders] Coping Strategies
Study Lists and Summary Coping Strategies
Study Data Sheets [2 folders] Coping Strategies
Study Event Verification, 1978 Coping Strategies
Study Demographic Info.
«Six in 10 food ads during
family TV shows push junk food, UK
study reveals:
Report highlights major «loophole» in the regulation of junk food advertising to children.»
The Long Life
Family Study (LLFS)
reported that the odds of living up to the top fifth percentile were two times higher for women who had their last child past the age of 33 years than for those who had their last child before the age of 29.
Researchers from Emory University in Atlanta
report in the online journal PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases that they used phylogenetics — the
study of the evolutionary link between organisms — to
study 26 geographically scattered strains of a
family of bacteria known as Treponemes, which are behind the sexually transmitted disease syphilis as well as related nonvenereal infections such as yaws.
Murderers who kill intimate partners and
family members have a significantly different psychological and forensic profile from murderers who kill people they don't know,
reports a new Northwestern Medicine
study that examined the demographics, psychiatric history and neuropsychology of these individuals.
In
families who carry certain inherited mutations that increase the risk for melanoma, members who do not carry the mutation also have an increased risk of melanoma, a
study from Karolinska Institutet published in Genetics in Medicine
reports.
An associate professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School, Talkowski adds, «Individuals in 10 countries — clinicians, investigators, patients and
family members — helped us assemble the largest group of arhinia patients every
studied, encompassing 24 percent of the previously
reported 80 individuals and 21 newly identified patients.
For the new
study,
reported in the 20 April issue of Science, animal communication researcher Karen McComb of the University of Sussex in Brighton, United Kingdom, and Sarah Durant of the Institute of Zoology in London
studied 20 small
family groups of elephants, each typically containing several females and their calves, in Kenya.
An April 2013
report released by the U.K. Higher Education Academy
reported lower rates of progression to Ph.D.
studies for undergraduates coming from a state high school, or from a
family with parents of low educational or professional attainment.
The
study, published in the journal, Community, Work, and
Family, examined the flexible work arrangements of 545 U.S. employers and found most arrangements center around allowing employees to move where they work and when they
report in, but didn't include reduction of work or temporary leaves from jobs.
Children from immigrant
families now account for 42 percent of uninsured children in the United States,
reports a
study in the March issue of Medical Care.
In 2000, a key
study reported that 36 percent of uninsured children live in immigrant
families.
His work involved gathering data for an epidemiological
study about congenital malformations by reading medical
reports and talking to
families and, Cordier says, his boss «felt that I had a good relationship with patients and that maybe I could do more» to help them.
Kenwrick assesses the likelihood of an inherited cause by
studying the
family's genetic tree and medical history, interpreting existing pathology or genetic
reports from cancer patients in the
family, and offering genetic tests if particular genes seem to be the likely culprits.
A new
study of national survey information gathered on more than 12,000 Hispanic children from immigrant and U.S. - native
families found that although they experience more poverty, those from immigrant
families reported fewer exposures to such adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) as parental divorce and scenes of violence.
Apparently as a result, the 13 people they
studied end up heavier and packed with a significantly higher percentage of body fat than
family members with two normal copies of the leptin gene, the team
reports in the 1 November issue of Nature.
In his
study, McGowan reviewed medical records and police
reports and interviewed
family members to determine whether a subject was abused early in life.
The
study team found a significantly higher risk of adverse events for broad - spectrum antibiotics compared to narrow - spectrum antibiotics (3.7 percent vs. 2.7 percent as documented by clinicians, and 35.6 percent vs. 25.1 percent, as
reported by patients and
families).