PMTO is based on the Social Interaction Learning (SIL) model, which assumes that contextual factors, such as socio - economic disadvantage and parental psychopathology, have a negative impact on
child outcomes by undermining parenting quality (Snyder and Patterson 1995).
In a further stage, we explored whether access to social and other supports moderated the impacts of poor maternal mental health on
child outcomes by adding various social support factors into the model.
We anticipated the sustained effects regarding favorable parenting practices because of the fidelity to the intervention that was demonstrated across the study sites22 and the theoretical underpinnings of the intervention, which intended to improve
child outcomes by focusing on parent behaviors that support and nurture child development.3
An article by Andrew Garner in Pediatrics supports Bornstein's contention that a healthy and emotionally supportive parent - child relationship reduces the risk for toxic stress, and highlights the ways that policy interventions can improve
child outcomes by mitigating the toxic stress children experience.
We set out to drive better
child outcomes by conceptualizing and designing a Professional Development Intervention that cultivated instructional leadership and instilled cultures of collaboration that successfully impacted teaching and children's learning.
To that end, we developed a Professional Development Intervention (PDI) that drives better
child outcomes by strengthening the organizational conditions and leadership that surrounds teachers and teaching.
Legacy for Children ™ (Legacy) is CDC's evidence - based public health approach to improve
child outcomes by fostering positive parenting among low - income mothers of infants and young children.
It is an evidence - based program whose aim is to improve
child outcomes by promoting positive parenting among low - income mothers of infants and young children.
Results published in the American Journal of Public Health were based on evaluation data from Legacy for ChildrenTM, a public health intervention program designed to improve
child outcomes by promoting positive parenting among low - income mothers of infants and young children.
Not exact matches
The researchers also find that parental expectations, proxied
by information on whether parents have set aside savings for their
children's college expenses, have a large effect on future labor market
outcomes.
On the contrary, the scientific research that has directly compared
outcomes for
children with gay and lesbian parents with
outcomes for
children with heterose xual parents has consistently shown that the former are as fit and capable as the latter and that their
children are as psychologically healthy and well adjusted as
children reared
by heterose xual parents... mama k
On the contrary, the scientific research that has directly compared
outcomes for
children with gay and lesbian parents with
outcomes for
children with heterosexual parents has consistently shown that the former are as fit and capable as the latter and that their
children are as psychologically healthy and well adjusted as
children reared
by heterosexual parents.
«I am particularly pleased that our highest - performing schools, Hampden Gurney, has secured fantastic
outcomes with a significant number of disadvantaged pupils in Year 6 - demonstrating once again that a
child's success should never be limited
by their background.»
Jeff: This is what causes division as we go about doing even good things, out of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil to set up another sect out of our carnal nature; above is the
outcome; Jesus came to cause division among men that tries to become their own god and sets up camp, even for them that call themselves Christian, for them that have went from Him and His Words, even that are not of His Spirit: Jesus said; the Words that I speak are Spirit and Life, That means the Words of man can only bring forth death: Therefore; if we do not have His Spirit in us, then we too can only speak forth death: This is what it is to be a believer, we truly believe our Lord: I can see what the Catholic church and her daughters are doing to form a religious Babylonian city: Even as God caused a division in Babylon in the past because the peoples became great, so to is it now with all of the man made sects of religion: But when we are filled with the Spirit of God then we can not help but to live for God: It is written; those who are led
by His spirit are His
children: Thank - you Jeff: Those who are of His Spirit will know these truths, those who are not of His Spirit truly believe a believer is as they and can not know what we speak, because they live in unbelief: Thank - you again Jeff; In Jesus Name Alexandria: P.S..
On the contrary, the scientific research that has directly compared
outcomes for
children with gay and lesbian parents with
outcomes for
children with heterose xual parents has consistently shown that the former are as fit and capable as the latter and that their
children are as psychologically healthy and well adjusted as
children reared
by heterose xual parents.
Children raised by their married parents have substantially better life outcomes compared with similar children raised in single - paren
Children raised
by their married parents have substantially better life
outcomes compared with similar
children raised in single - paren
children raised in single - parent homes.
But there are other early - childhood experts who are testing out less intensive (and less expensive) interventions to see if it is possible to have an outsize effect on
children's
outcomes by altering certain critical elements in their daily environments in precisely targeted ways.
Follow - up studies
by Mischel and others have shown that
children who are able to resist temptation have significantly better social and emotional
outcomes throughout adolescence and mid-life.
Several reliable studies have shown that high levels of interest
by a father in his
child's schooling and education are associated with improved
outcomes, including:
ABC and FIND aim to improve
outcomes for infants and
children by altering their home environments in incremental but ultimately profound ways, slowly changing the basic tenor of their relationship with their parents.
Available for download here is a presentation
by Liz Trinder, Senior Lecturer and Director of Research Programmes, UEA, called «Messages from research about
children's needs,
outcomes and interventions in separated families».
• A «dose effect» is found: worse behaviour
by fathers tends to result in worse
outcomes for
children, as does more extensive contact with a father who is «behaving badly» (Jaffee et al, 2003).
The
outcome is simply more screaming and misbehaving
by the
child — and more frustration on the part of the parent!
He believes that the potential positive
outcomes of programs based on the belief that adult -
child play is crucial for
child development could be reduced
by suspicions of «racism or cultural imperialism».
However, recent practice suggests that if professionals systematically gather the young men's details
by, for instance, routinely asking the mothers for them early in the pregnancy, develop interagency working while making
child outcomes the focus of their work and mainstream engagement through the service (in this case, a teenage pregnancy service) while keeping good records and comprehensively assessing the young men's needs substantial numbers of young fathers can be reached with interventions that make a real difference.
A substantial body of research now indicates that high levels of involvement
by fathers in two parent families are associated with a range of desirable
outcomes in
children and young people, including: better peer relationships; fewer behaviour problems; lower criminality and substance abuse; higher educational / occupational mobility, relative to that of parents; capacity for empathy; non-traditional attitudes to earning and childcare; more satisfying adult sexual partnerships; and higher self - esteem and life - satisfaction (for reviews see Flouri 2005; Pleck and Masciadrelli 2004).
• The
Children's Centre Guidance (November 2006) specifies that all centres should improve outcomes for children by supporting fathers as parents, and publicise their services to fathers speci
Children's Centre Guidance (November 2006) specifies that all centres should improve
outcomes for
children by supporting fathers as parents, and publicise their services to fathers speci
children by supporting fathers as parents, and publicise their services to fathers specifically.
Over and above negative developmental
outcomes, is the pain and suffering experienced
by children whose fathers neglect or abuse them, or who neglect or abuse their mothers.
A review
by Goldman (2005) of five studies using multivariate analyses which isolate the independent impact of fathers» involvement in
children's learning on educational
outcomes, clearly shows that fathers» involvement (both in terms of level and frequency) in their
children's schools is a key factor that correlates with better educational
outcomes for
children.
In studies tracking
children over the long term, such babies have ended up with better
outcomes than their more laid - back peers — if they were raised
by sensitive, responsive parents (Stright et al 2008; Pluess and Belsky 2010).
Using the Social Genome Model, we estimate the different
outcomes of adult income for
children raised
by continuously married parents and those raised
by parents married for some or none of their childhood years.
There were no significant differences in
outcome of home or hospital births attended
by midwives for the other
child health measures.
Nine studies were included in the meta - analysis of
child health
outcome of births attended
by midwives in homes or in hospitals.
We analyzed 8
outcomes of
child health (neonatal deaths, prenatal deaths, Apgar...», or even «The findings suggest that homebirths attended
by midwives may be equally safe if not safer for women with low - risk pregnancies», which could mean «safer for women» who have «low - risk pregnancies» or equally «safer» for «women who have low - risk pregnancies».
Long term the memories will be happier, the final
outcome will likely remain unchanged, but the most important thing is that our relationship and attachment with our
children is undamaged
by our behaviour in the heat of the moment.
Therefore, prospective adoptive families would greatly benefit
by having extensive pre-adoption counseling and awareness of how an older
child has grown up in an institutional environment and that providing a «good and loving home» may not be enough as specialized and practical treatment strategies may bring about a more positive
outcome since so many families attempt to love and nurture the older
child when, in fact, a gradual treatment process involving «reintegration into the family» must occur first.
The lack of guidelines for the courts also creates inequality for families in that a decision made
by one judge could be completely different from the decision made
by another judge, so the
outcome becomes a lottery for the
child!
The long - term goal of Dr. Aleeca Bell's research program is to promote optimal birth & exemplary birth care
by understanding the biological underpinnings linking the birth experience with maternal -
child outcomes, such as postpartum mood and mother - infant interaction.
As
children have a right to be cared for
by both parents the state should be improving the overall chances of this happening, rather than stacking obstacles against this
outcome as the current tax system does.
But that declaration was lost in other reporting, such as on the Royal College of Paediatric and
Child Health website, which gives the
outcome of the discussion, without mentioning it was to Danone's brief and funded
by the company.
By contrast, authoritarian parenting was linked with at least one negative
child outcome (Pinquart and Kauser 2017).
Another strength is that our results provide a more complete assessment of socioeconomic inequalities in breastfeeding rates,
by estimating both relative and absolute inequalities, than common practice in inequality assessments.23 Finally, our study analysed effects of the intervention not only on an immediate, direct
outcome (breastfeeding) but also on a long - term consequence of breastfeeding (
child cognitive ability) that is associated with important health and behavioural
outcomes in later life.27
Pediatric Therapy Network (PTN) was founded in 1996
by a handful of therapists, parents and volunteers who envisioned an organization that would provide the community with high quality therapy, research and education as it relates to fostering the best possible
outcomes for
children with special needs.
In an effort to improve maternal, newborn and
child health (MNCH)
outcomes and advance HBS activities worldwide, we are happy to share key MNCH resources and information developed
by our partners and other global health organizations.
This evaluation, mandated
by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (P.L. 111 - 148), is designed to build knowledge for policymakers and practitioners about the effectiveness of the MIECHV program in improving
outcomes for at - risk
children and families.
They have also provided a service
by proposing policy options geared towards improving developmental
outcomes in
children by improving the economic status of low - income families.
In support of this model, multiple studies have shown the association between infant negative reactivity and later psychosocial
outcomes such as problem behaviour and self - regulation to be moderated
by parental behaviour, so that highly reactive
children fare better than others when they experience optimal parenting but worse than others when they experience negative parenting.41 - 46 Further support is found in studies indicating that interventions targeting parental attitudes and / or behaviours are particularly effective for
children with a history of negative reactive temperament.47, 49
Children's temperaments shape their outcomes, in part by forming the ways that children engage and evoke responses from their envir
Children's temperaments shape their
outcomes, in part
by forming the ways that
children engage and evoke responses from their envir
children engage and evoke responses from their environments.
Her argument is that because American women are being unduly pressured to breast - feed their babies, they are becoming «enslaved»
by the «little masters,» as Badinter describes nursing
children, which in turn undermines the status of American women in general, leading to many negative social and economic
outcomes.
Supportive parents had the best developmental
outcomes, as measured
by academic achievement, educational attainment, family obligation (considered positive
outcomes), academic pressure, depressive symptoms, and parent -
child alienation (considered negative).