Sentences with phrase «cumulative impact of research»

This high use of health resources suggests that, in the geographical area of the study at least, these young people receive a significant amount of ongoing help — a pattern that replicates the recent Australian findings and may also reflect the cumulative impact of research and service development around adolescent self harm in the trial area in recent years.
These two concerns testify to the risks of the cumulative impacts of research projects.

Not exact matches

Our research, to be published in Westminster next Tuesday, shows how the cumulative impact of the welfare reforms has been to push people into survival mode, squeezing them to focus on short - term, day - to - day getting by and preventing them from being able to make long - term positive changes to their lives.
That's why at Community Links we are finalising a piece of research looking at these cumulative impacts in Newham, which we will launch next month.
«The lack of comprehensive analysis regarding cumulative impact of small hydropower,» Kibler said, «is a significant research gap with important policy implications.»
More and more actual research is showing just how devastating is the impact of TFA — not because of any individual TFA corps member, but because of the cumulative effect of churn on districts.
This research highlights how a series of modest incremental changes to average LCOE assumptions can have a profound cumulative impact on the affordability of power generation technologies.
Ackerman et al. (2009, see note 8 above) review this and several other studies, including a recent report from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (Knopf, B., O. Edenhofer, H. Turton, T. Barker, S. Scrieciu, M. Leimbach, L. Baumstark and A. Kitous (2008), «Report on First Assessment of low stabilization scenarios») which reports modeled costs for stabilization at 400 ppm CO2 equivalent as remaining under 2.5 % cumulative GWP losses to 2100.
The government's avowed determination to eradicate myths about supposedly true victim behaviour, in spite of there being no UK research evidence of a negative impact by such myths on the conviction rate, makes a stark contrast with their apparent insouciance about the potentially negative impact on the conviction rate as a cumulative result of potential jurors reading lurid media accounts of the exposure of false rape claims.
These results are consistent with the conclusion that reckless driving in movies directly impacted adolescent future reckless driving practices, whereas frequent overall screen exposure may have stimulated reckless driving through exposure to a variety of other risk - taking behaviors such as excessive drinking, movie violence and their cumulative impact on sensation seeking tendencies [35], [62] Previous research indicates that adolescents who frequently watch R - rated movies, rated such for portraying higher levels of risk taking behavior and violence [35] show increases in sensation seeking over time [63].
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