Psychosocial factors also impact development and progression of diabetes and coping in a gender - dimorphic way.
Not exact matches
Training should
also provide guidance on balancing conversations about family - identified needs with discussions pertaining to maternal depression and other
psychosocial risk
factors that impair effective parenting.
Although some research is establishing a relationship between breastfeeding and improved
psychosocial functioning, a large number of parent and family
factors have
also been shown to predict child
psychosocial maladjustment.
Studies from several high - income countries have shown that early menarche is
also associated with various
psychosocial factors including delinquency, substance use, and depression — all of which have sexual and reproductive health implications.
Other
psychosocial factors, including a nonsupportive school environment, marital crises or psychological problems arising between parents, and poor parent - child attachment can
also transform a latent tendency into a full - blown disorder.
Lastly, obesity could be a mediating
factor between a sugar - dense diet and depression26, 27 not only via inflammatory but
also psychosocial factors like weight discrimination28.
Psychosocial factors, however, might
also contribute and moreover might be independently predictive of a child's success or failure in weight reduction.
Depression and attachment insecurity of the primary caregiver and more distal family adversity
factors (such as incomplete schooling or vocational training of parents, high person - to - room ratio, early parenthood, and broken - home history of parents) were found to best predict inadequate parenting13, 14 and precede the development of a child's low compliance with parents, low effortful control, and behavior problems.13, 15, — , 17 These
psychosocial familial characteristics might
also constrain the transfer of program contents into everyday family life and the maintenance of modified behaviors after the conclusion of the programs.
In line with other literature findings, this study
also identified family dimension as a significant
factor for
psychosocial dysfunction among adolescents (23).
In summary, the literature on the effectiveness of
psychosocial assessment in office settings indicates that the accuracy of identifying
psychosocial risk
factors can be improved by using questionnaires and that there is
also some evidence supporting the validity of home environment and parent - child assessments.
The literature
also outlined physical, individual and
psychosocial factors associated with WRUEDs that will help identify potential risk
factors within military occupations.
Increased volume in this brain region is associated with more optimal development of a number of
psychosocial factors (e.g., stress reactivity).15 Links between early responsive parenting and increased volume in the hippocampal region
also suggest that the early developmental period is an important time to facilitate responsive parenting practices, especially in high risk families, in order to enhance the parent - child relationship.
Conclusions: Well - being improves as women enter the later stages of the menopausal transition and is
also influenced significantly by
psychosocial factors.
They
also only reviewed
psychosocial risk
factors, e.g. those associated with increased (di) stress levels, and did not include any positive emotional outcome measures of emotional adjustment such as well - being, positive affect, happiness or life satisfaction, which are just as significant to health and for quality of life as the prevalence of negative emotions (Folkman and Moskowitz, 2000; Steptoe and Wardle, 2005; Rutten et al., 2013).