Saving Lives, Saving Dollars: Mitigating the Impact of Child Maltreatment (PDF - 318 KB) Department of Extension Home Economics, New Mexico State University (2006) Focuses on the physical, psychoemotional, and behavioral impact of child maltreatment; estimated direct and indirect financial costs to society; the long -
term socioeconomic impact of abuse and neglect; and strategies for prevention and intervention.
Long -
Term Socioeconomic Impact of Child Abuse and Neglect: Implications for Public Policy (PDF - 146 KB) Zielinski Policy Matters (2005) Reports on how maltreatment affects the socioeconomic status of adults.
Not exact matches
Several studies have also attempted to understand the role of breastfeeding on IQ, and although some authors conclude that the observed advantage of breastfeeding on IQ is related only to genetic and socioenvironmental factors, a recent meta - analysis showed that after adjustment for appropriate key co-factors, breastfeeding was associated with significantly higher scores for cognitive development than formula feeding.6 Longer duration of breastfeeding has also been positively associated with intelligence in adulthood.22 We also observed the benefits of long -
term breastfeeding on mental indices, along with the indirect benefit of balancing the
impact of exposure to p, p ′ DDE after adjustment for some
socioeconomic variables.
Heatwaves are important climatic extremes in atmospheric and oceanic systems that can have devastating and long -
term impacts on ecosystems, with subsequent
socioeconomic consequences.
«Mounting evidence shows that schools and neighborhoods extremely segregated by race, ethnicity, and
socioeconomic status can have a negative
impact on children and families» long -
term development, well - being, and access to services and opportunities,» they write.
Factors such as
socioeconomic status (SES), preinjury family functioning, resources and stresses, and initial response to the injury appear to moderate the
impact of pediatric TBI on caregivers, placing some families at greater risk for long -
term difficulties (Rivara et al., 1996; Wade, Wolfe, Brown, & Pestian, 2005; Wade et al., 2002).