Sentences with phrase «early adult psychosocial»

Maternal and paternal parenting during adolescence: Forecasting early adult psychosocial adjustment
Parental divorce during early adolescence in Caucasian families: The role of family process variables in predicting the long - term consequences for early adult psychosocial adjustment.

Not exact matches

Long - Term Effects of Prenatal and Early Postnatal Nutrition on Adult Psychosocial Outcomes.
In 2010, more than 1 in 5 children were reported to be living in poverty.6, 10 Economic disadvantage is among the most potent risks for behavioral and emotional problems due to increased exposure to environmental, familial, and psychosocial risks.11 — 13 In families in which parents are in military service, parental deployment and return has been determined to be a risk factor for behavioral and emotional problems in children.14 Data from the 2003 National Survey of Children's Health demonstrated a strong linear relationship between increasing number of psychosocial risks and many poor health outcomes, including social - emotional health.15 The Adverse Childhood Experience Study surveyed 17000 adults about early traumatic and stressful experiences.
Interventions targeting modifiable risk factors (eg, smoking, inactivity, and poor diet) in adult life have only limited efficacy in preventing age - related disease.3, 4 Because of the increasing recognition that preventable risk exposures in early life may contribute to pathophysiological processes leading to age - related disease, 5,6 the science of aging has turned to a life - course perspective.7, 8 Capitalizing on this perspective, this study tested the contribution of adverse psychosocial experiences in childhood to 3 adult conditions that are known to predict age - related diseases: depression, inflammation, and the clustering of metabolic risk markers, hereinafter referred to as age - related - disease risks.
The findings differentiating juvenile - and adult - onset MDD are consistent with results from family studies, suggesting that juvenile - onset MDD may be a distinct subtype associated with both genetic and early childhood psychosocial risk factors.
Roustit, C., Renahy, E., Guernec, G., Lesieur, S., Parizot, I. and Chauvin, P. (2009) Exposure to interparental violence and psychosocial maladjustment in the adult life course: Advocacy for early prevention.
However, depressed children and adolescents may also experience unique psychosocial risks, such as poor parenting or family discord, especially if these risks are genetically mediated.10, 11 Additional support for the hypothesis that juvenile - and adult - onset MDD are distinct subtypes would be demonstrated if early childhood psychosocial risks were differentially associated with juvenile vs adult - onset MDD.
Conduct Disorder and Psychosocial Outcomes at Age 30: Early Adult Psychopathology as a Potential Mediator.
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