Other research in China suggests that authoritarian parenting puts children
at higher risk for depression if they have trouble with self - control (Muhtadie et al 2013).
Not exact matches
When I finally had a chance to speak, we were already running over the 2 1/2 hours allotted
for the roundtable, so I was only able to briefly touch on two of my many message points: one, that the game can be and is being made safer, and two, that, based on my experience following a
high school football team in Oklahoma this past season - which will be the subject of a MomsTEAM documentary to be released in early 2013 called The Smartest Team - I saw the use of hit sensors in football helmets as offering an exciting technological «end around» the problem of chronic under - reporting of concussions that continues to plague the sport and remains a major impediment, in my view, to keeping kids safe (the reasons:
if an athlete is allowed to keep playing with a concussion, studies show that their recovery is likely to take longer, and they are
at increased
risk of long - term problems (e.g. early dementia,
depression, more rapid aging of the brain, and in rare cases, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, and in extremely rare instances, catastrophic injury or death.)
I do want to say that
if your family members continue to respond to you and your daughter in this negative way then it places her
at higher risk for low self - esteem,
depression, and
high -
risk behaviors.
New treatments
for depression and experiments which might help explain human consciousness will be put
at risk if the bill banning legal
highs is passed, researchers have warned.
This study showed, we are told, that «
if you are on welfare and looking
for work, you are
at significantly
higher risk of
depression» than people who are employed.
«While we don't know which comes first —
depression or cardiovascular disease — the consensus is that
depression is a
risk marker
for cardiovascular disease, meaning
if you have cardiovascular disease, there is a
higher likelihood that you could also have
depression, when compared with the
risk in the general population,» said Victor Okunrintemi, M.D., M.P.H., a research fellow
at Baptist Health South Florida in Coral Gables, Florida, and lead author of a pair of studies that looked into different aspects of
depression and cardiovascular disease.
You are
at a
higher risk for PPD
if you have previous experience with
depression, have a traumatic birth experience (also be on the lookout
for symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder, or PTSD), your child has special medical needs, and / or you feel a lack of help or emotional support.
However,
if they did not have such support they were
at a
high risk for depression (Kaufman et al., 2004).
A covariate was included in the multivariate analyses
if theoretical or empirical evidence supported its role as a
risk factor
for obesity,
if it was a significant predictor of obesity in univariate regression models, or
if including it in the full multivariate model led to a 5 % or greater change in the OR.48 Model 1 includes maternal IPV exposure, race / ethnicity (black, white, Hispanic, other / unknown), child sex (male, female), maternal age (20 - 25, 26 - 28, 29 - 33, 34 - 50 years), maternal education (less than
high school,
high school graduation, beyond
high school), maternal nativity (US born, yes or no), child age in months, relationship with father (yes or no), maternal smoking during pregnancy (yes or no), maternal
depression (as measured by a CIDI - SF cutoff score ≥ 0.5), maternal BMI (normal / underweight, overweight, obese), low birth weight (< 2500 g, ≥ 2500 g), whether the child takes a bottle to bed
at age 3 years (yes or no), and average hours of child television viewing per day
at age 3 years (< 2 h / d, ≥ 2 h / d).
If a client presents with family precedents of
depression, we know that he or she is
at a
higher risk for developing the condition.