Sentences with phrase «at risk children exposed»

Coordinated and evidenced based program» Too Good for Drugs» for at risk children exposed to mental health and substance abuse.

Not exact matches

The Dengvaxia scandal exposed the inadequacy of government regulation on health, which has put the lives of more than 800,000 school - age Filipino children at risk.
Most hospitals give hepatitis B vaccines to newborns.We YOU docs don't think it's necessary to expose your child to this vaccine at birth if you are in a low - risk group.
Children who are exposed to secondhand smoke are at much greater risk for upper respiratory illnesses, and babies of mothers who smoke but don't breastfeed are at an even greater risk.
However, the longer a child is exposed, the greater the risk, so there is some correlation between RAD and age at adoption.
Children are at risk for heat - related illnesses when exposed to heat and humidity without proper hydration.
Children exposed to second - hand smoke are at risk of developing respiratory diseases like bronchitis, asthma and even pneumonia.
Children who are exposed to second - hand smoke on a regular basis are at greater risk for developing respiratory illnesses, asthma and cancer.
Depressed mothers are often overwhelmed in the parenting role, have difficulty reading infant cues, struggle to meet the social and emotional needs of their children, and are less tolerant of child misbehaviour.7 Offspring of depressed mothers, particularly if they are exposed to depression in the first year of life, are more likely to be poorly attached to their caregivers, experience emotional and behavioural dysregulation, have difficulty with attention and memory, and are at greater risk for psychiatric disorders throughout childhood.8 Home visiting focuses on fostering healthy child development by improving parenting and maternal functioning.
For example, children at genetic risk for behavioural difficulties characterized by poor physiological regulation were shown to be less vulnerable to such difficulties when exposed to sensitive caregiving early in development.
In addition to being more highly exposed to As, children appear to be far more sensitive to the potential carcinogenic effects of As49, 50 and have a heightened risk for adverse growth, adverse immune response, and adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes,25,51 - 53 even at relatively low levels of exposure.24, 54 Our results indicate that consumption of rice and rice products increases infants» exposure to As and that regulation could reduce As exposure during this critical phase of development.
For example, in a retrospective analysis of medical records from 64,580 children, those exposed to antibiotics in their first 24 months were at higher risk of early childhood obesity.
Children who are exposed in utero to high levels of particulate air pollution during the second trimester of pregnancy may be at greater risk of developing asthma in early childhood, according to a new study presented at the 2014 American Thoracic Society International Conference.
Exposing infants and children to higher amounts of sugar during growth and development can produce problems with cognitive development and learning as well as create lifelong risk for obesity, diabetes, fatty liver disease and heart disease, said Goran, founding director of the Childhood Obesity Research Center at the Keck School of Medicine.
New York City children exposed in the womb to high levels of pollutants in vehicle exhaust had a five times higher risk of attention problems at age 9, according to new research
New York City children exposed in the womb to high levels of pollutants in vehicle exhaust had a five times higher risk of attention problems at age 9, according to research by Columbia University scientists published Wednesday.
In each cohort, older children were immunized at least one day before younger children so that vaccine responses could be observed first in older children before exposing younger children to potential risks of vaccination.
There was evidence that children treated with human growth hormone before 1985 — when it was made from hormone collected from cadavers — might have been exposed to prions and therefore at higher risk of CJD.
Children and teens who are exposed to the sun's harmful ultraviolet radiation are at greater risk for developing skin cancer in adulthood, the task force explained.
If you were exposed to a certain amount of radiation as a child, you are at increased risk for thyroid cancer.
«As a result, many children are dropping off the radar or ending up in illegal, unregistered schools for months or years, where they are at risk of being exposed to harm, exploitation, or the influence of extremist ideologies.»
Most scientists say children exposed to mercury from mother's milk or from certain types of fish are at risk of learning and developmental problems.
The smaller lung capacities of women and children put them at an increased risk of developing mesothelioma and other asbestos - related diseases later in life, even though they were exposed to relatively low concentrations of the material.
Three points, however, stand in the way of this tidy, if somewhat simplistic, analysis: (1) the child doesn't want to spend any time with the rejected parent and will certainly experience some degree of trauma at being taken from the home of the loved parent and forced into the home of the rejected parent, while (2) leaving the child in the home of the favoured parent risks exposing the child to continuing efforts to nurture rancour toward the rejected parent, and, making things worse, (3) many of the strategies commonly employed to regulate the favoured parent's behaviour or enforce contact between the child and the rejected parent — including fines, contempt proceedings and peace officer enforcement — can backfire and inadvertently entrench the child's attitudes toward the rejected parent.
In this case, where a father seeks the return of his son to his country of habitual residence (Bulgaria), the main issues for determination under Article 13 of the Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction 1980 are whether a return of the child (L) to Bulgaria would expose him to a grave risk of psychological or physical harm or otherwise place him in an intolerable situation and whether L objects to returning to Bulgaria, and has attained an age and degree of maturity at which his views should be taken into accChild Abduction 1980 are whether a return of the child (L) to Bulgaria would expose him to a grave risk of psychological or physical harm or otherwise place him in an intolerable situation and whether L objects to returning to Bulgaria, and has attained an age and degree of maturity at which his views should be taken into accchild (L) to Bulgaria would expose him to a grave risk of psychological or physical harm or otherwise place him in an intolerable situation and whether L objects to returning to Bulgaria, and has attained an age and degree of maturity at which his views should be taken into account.
The NPRM would have allowed covered entities to disclose protected health information without individual authorization to: (1) A public health authority authorized by law to collect or receive such information for the purpose of preventing or controlling disease, injury, or disability, including, but not limited to, the reporting of disease, injury, vital events such as birth or death, and the conduct of public health surveillance, public health investigations, and public health interventions; (2) a public health authority or other appropriate authority authorized by law to receive reports of child abuse or neglect; (3) a person or entity other than a governmental authority that could demonstrate or demonstrated that it was acting to comply with requirements or direction of a public health authority; or (4) a person who may have been exposed to a communicable disease or may otherwise be at risk of contracting or spreading a disease or condition and was authorized by law to be notified as necessary in the conduct of a public health intervention or investigation.
«I have been working with at - risk and trauma - exposed children, adolescents, and their families for nearly 15 years.
When children exposed to emotional abuse get older, they are at heightened risk of experiencing substance abuse problems.
Exposing children to conflict — both in marriage and after divorce — is the biggest variable in predicting which children will adjust and which children will be at risk.
In adjusted analysis, children of mothers experiencing IPV at any point, compared with those not exposed, were at increased risk of developing asthma (relative risk [RR], 1.3; 95 % confidence interval [CI], 1.0 - 1.7].
Similarly, children of mothers experiencing IPV chronically and with low levels of educational / recreational toys were at increased risk of developing asthma (RR, 2.5; 95 % CI, 1.5 - 4.1) compared with those not exposed with low levels of educational / recreational toys (Figure 2).
Children and adolescents exposed to traumatic events, such as sexual abuse and rape, are at risk of developing post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
In stratified analyses, children of mothers experiencing IPV chronically and who had a lower level of mother - child interactions were at increased risk of developing asthma (RR, 2.7; 95 % CI, 1.6 - 4.7) compared with thosenot exposed to IPV with low mother - child interactions (Figure 1).
Children of mothers experiencing IPV in only one period, that is, prior to 12 months or at 36 months only, did not have a significant increased risk for asthma compared with children never exposed (TChildren of mothers experiencing IPV in only one period, that is, prior to 12 months or at 36 months only, did not have a significant increased risk for asthma compared with children never exposed (Tchildren never exposed (Table 2).
/ School restorative conferencing / School restorative conferencing / School setting / Schools / School's contribution / Secure accommodation (1) / Secure accommodation (2) / Self / Self awareness for facilitators / Self in family work / Self - blame / Self - development / Self exposed / Self - expressions / Self formation / Self - injury (1) / Self - injury (2) / Self - injury (3) / Self - mutilation / Self - mutilation: an examination of a growing phenomenon / Self renewal / Self - supervision (1) / Self - supervision (2) / Selfishness / altruism / Separation and Loss / Separations / Service user involvement / Severe personality disorder / Sex education / Sexual abuse / Sexual abuse in an institutional setting / Sexual abuse recovery work / Shaping modifying environments / Sharing and bearing with a child / Showing that life can be enjoyable / Significant adults / Significant learning / Silence / Silent voices / Single cause / Size of residential settings / Sleep / Small group living / Small groups / Social brain (The) / Social care in Ireland / Social care — the field / Social change / Social competence (1) / Social competence (2) / Social Competencies: Affect / Social networks in restricted settings / Social Pedagogy / Social policy / Social skills training (1) / Social skills training (2) / Social skills training (3) / Social skills training (4) / Social skills training (5) / Socratic questioning / Solution - focused principles / Some unanswered questions / Space and place / Space under threat / Spaces / Spatial arrangements / Special considerations in the development process / Spiritual connection / Spiritual well - being / Spirituality / St. John Bosco / Staff and sexual orientation / Staff induction / Staff integrity / Staff meeting / Staff morale / Staff morale in children's homes / Staff retention / Staff selection / Staff support / Staff training groups in institutions / Staff turnover / Staff values and discipline / Staffing / Statement of Purpose / Status of care workers / Stealing / Steering a middle course / Stigma / Story, time, motion, place / Story unfolding / Storybook reading / Street children (1) / Street children (2) / Street children (3) / Street children (4) / Street children (5) / Street children (6) / Street children and self - determination / Street corner / Street kids / Street youth and prostitution / Streetsmart kids / Stress / Stress in child care work / Strengths (1) / Strengths (2) / Strengths (3) / Structure of activities / Structured storying / Structuring the relationship / Stuck clients / Students / Students, self and practice / Succeeding with at - risk youth / Successful careers / Suicidal behaviour in GLB youth / Suicide (1) / Suicide (2) / Suicide attempts / Suicide risk / Suitability for practice / Supervision (1) / Supervision (2) / Supervision (3) / Supervision (4) / Supervision (5) / Supervision (6) / Supervision (7) / Supervision (8) / Supervision (9) / Supervision and ethics / Supervision and practice / Supervision and teaching / Supervision formats / Supervision: Parallel process / Supervision wish list / Supervisor insecurity / Support for self - harm / Support for self - harm / Symbolic communication / Symptom tolerance guaranteed / Systemic thinking / Systems (1) / Systems (2) / Systems (3) / Systems and spheres of influence / Systems thinking / Systems vs developmental views /
Objective To understand why children exposed to adverse psychosocial experiences are at elevated risk for age - related disease, such as cardiovascular disease, by testing whether adverse childhood experiences predict enduring abnormalities in stress - sensitive biological systems, namely, the nervous, immune, and endocrine / metabolic systems.
At - risk and maltreated children exposed to intimate partner aggression / violence: what the conflict looks like and its relationship to child outcomes.
The domestic abuse shelter Community Overcoming Relationship Violence explains that children who are exposed to parents» abusive acts are at significant risk of experiencing social problems, particularly as teens.
For example, children at genetic risk for behavioural difficulties characterized by poor physiological regulation were shown to be less vulnerable to such difficulties when exposed to sensitive caregiving early in development.
Victims have been shown to experience more post-traumatic stress and dissociation symptoms than non-abused children, 8 as well as more depression and conduct problems.9 They engage more often in at - risk sexual behaviours.10 Victims are also more prone to abusing substances, 11 and to suicide attempts.12 These mental health problems are likely to continue into adulthood.13 CSA victims are also more at risk than non-CSA youth to experience violence in their early romantic relationships; 14 women exposed to CSA have a two to three-fold risk of being sexually revictimized in adulthood compared with women without a history of CSA exposure.15
a child has been exposed or subjected, or is at risk of being exposed or subjected, to psychological harm.
Whilst finding it is possible to diagnose PTSD during initial stages of assessment and one year later, these authors also found that one fifth of children directly exposed to organised violence and persecution (e.g., through assault on parents or bomb attacks within 50 metres) were at risk for developing chronic states of PTSD.
These activities generally include the following: • To prevent or control disease, injury or disability; • To report births and deaths; • To report child abuse or neglect; • To report reactions to medications or problems with products; • To notify people of recalls of products they may be using; • To notify a person who may have been exposed to a disease or may be at risk for contracting or spreading a disease or condition; • To notify the appropriate government authority if we believe a patient has been the victim of abuse, neglect, or domestic violence.
Research also indicates children exposed to domestic violence are at an increased risk of being abused or neglected, and that a majority of studies reveal there are adult and child victims in 30 to 60 percent of families who experience domestic violence.
Similar to findings from SASH, childhood sexual abuse emerged as a particularly robust risk factor for suicide attempts in younger participants in the WMHS cross-national analysis, with a 10.9 times higher OR of suicide attempts in children, a 6.1 times higher likelihood in adolescents and a 2.9-fold risk in young adults who were exposed.20 This is in keeping with the Enns hypothesis that sexual abuse results in suicidal behaviour at a younger age.21 Consistent with other studies, childhood physical and sexual abuse, in particular, emerged as risk factors for the emergence and persistence of suicidal behaviour, especially in adolescence.
Her research examines the development and mental health of young children at environmental risk, particularly those exposed to trauma.
For more than 35 years, Dr. Jones Harden has focused on the developmental and mental health needs of young children at environmental risk, specifically children who have been maltreated, are in the foster care system, or have been exposed to multiple family risks such as maternal depression, parent substance use, and poverty.
Because they are exposed to a wide range of psychosocial stressors, low - income children have been found to be at greater risk for developing emotional and behavioral difficulties than their middle - income peers.
In total, I have over 10 years» experience working with at - risk youth, exposing me to a wide range of challenges parents face with their children and teens.
The reason why children are often at risk as a result of divorce is because in many cases they are constantly being exposed to unnecessary conflict between their parents.
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