Sentences with phrase «early adulthood predicts»

«Higher blood pressure in early adulthood predicts risk of heart disease.»
Change in physical achievement between ages 15 y and 18 y predicted cognitive performance at age 18 y. Moreover, cardiovascular fitness during early adulthood predicted socioeconomic status and educational attainment later in life.

Not exact matches

While we can not say that early attachment styles are identical to adult romantic attachment, research has shown that early attachment styles can help predict patterns of behavior in adulthood.
«Early sipping and tasting is predicting increased drinking behavior in young adulthood,» says Colder.
«We found that differences in language development in early childhood and school age predict alcohol use behaviors in adolescence and up to young adulthood,» said Latvala.
Fixed to the grid walls of the centerpiece is Data for Desire, a film presenting two circuits of young adulthood: a pseudo-scripted, confessional view of young partiers in a resort town, and a group of early - twenties mathematicians in France observing the party as a video document, mapping an algorithm to predict compatibility among its players.
As a result, they tend to spend more time onlooking (watching other children without joining) and hovering on the edge of social groups.8, 11 There is some evidence to suggest that young depressive children also experience social impairment.12 For example, children who display greater depressive symptoms are more likely to be rejected by peers.10 Moreover, deficits in social skills (e.g., social participation, leadership) and peer victimization predict depressive symptoms in childhood.13, 14 There is also substantial longitudinal evidence linking social withdrawal in childhood with the later development of more significant internalizing problems.15, 16,17 For example, Katz and colleagues18 followed over 700 children from early childhood to young adulthood and described a pathway linking social withdrawal at age 5 years — to social difficulties with peers at age 15 years — to diagnoses of depression at age 20 years.
The World Health Organisation predicts that by 2030 depression will be second only to HIV / AIDS in international burden of disease.1 Mental health problems that are first identified in adolescence and adulthood, including debilitating depression, anxiety disorders and drug misuse, can have their origins in pathways that begin much earlier in life with childhood mental health problems.2, 3,4
Childhood LD are over-represented among homeless adults with complex comorbidities and predict a range of poor health outcomes in adulthood, including mood and anxiety disorders, suicidal ideation, early and severe substance use and physical health problems.
Moderation hypotheses were tested by investigating whether the statistical interaction of maladaptive parenting or abuse during childhood or early adolescence and interpersonal difficulties during middle adolescence predicted suicide attempts during late adolescence or early adulthood.
Substance use disorders emerged in middle adolescence and increased in frequency through the middle 20s, becoming by far the most common psychiatric problems reported by the study participants.26, 27 We have already shown that early conduct problems predicted the onset of adolescent substance use disorders in this sample, 28,29 and it is not surprising that this is the aspect of behavioral problems that showed the intervention effect in young adulthood.
Age of Onset of Child Maltreatment Predicts Long - Term Mental Health Outcomes Kaplow & Widom Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 116 (1), 2007 View Abstract Shows results that indicate early onset of maltreatment predict anxiety and depression in adulthood; later onset of maltreatment predicts behavioral problems in adPredicts Long - Term Mental Health Outcomes Kaplow & Widom Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 116 (1), 2007 View Abstract Shows results that indicate early onset of maltreatment predict anxiety and depression in adulthood; later onset of maltreatment predicts behavioral problems in adpredicts behavioral problems in adulthood.
Educational television viewing among children in preschool has been shown to have long - term positive effects on children's academic success, 46 while early viewing of violence predicts aggression and violent crime in adulthood.47
For example, in a study of adults enrolled in Kaiser Permanente, a large California health maintenance organization, questionnaire responses to items assessing abuse and dysfunction in the early family environment predicted multiple health disorders in adulthood in dose — response fashion, including ischemic heart disease, any cancer, depression, and stroke (14).
Early separations from mother predicted elevations in BPD symptoms assessed repeatedly from early adolescence to middle adultEarly separations from mother predicted elevations in BPD symptoms assessed repeatedly from early adolescence to middle adultearly adolescence to middle adulthood.
ATTENTION - DEFICIT / HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER IN ADOLESCENCE PREDICTS ONSET OF MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER THROUGH EARLY ADULTHOOD.
We can conclude from this evidence that Bowlby was correct to emphasize the importance of the early years, but the effects of delay in the formation of attachments do not necessarily persist into adulthood and lead to affectionless psychopathy, as Bowlby predicted.
In this study we tested a theoretical model (Loeber et al. 2000) predicting APP in young adulthood from disruptive behavior problems and internalizing problems in early childhood and adolescence.
Hence, the primary aim of the present study was to examine how well the proposed theoretical model predicted APP in young adulthood, in a large, community - based sample assessed in early childhood, adolescence, and emerging adulthood.
In multivariate analyses, childhood CP predicted intimate partner violence perpetration in early adulthood, even after the effects of numerous contextual variables and concurrent protective factors were taken into account.
More specifically, we tested whether (1) self - esteem in early adolescence predicted depressive symptoms in late adolescence and early adulthood; (2) self - esteem predicted approach and avoidance motivation; (3) approach and avoidance motivation predicted social contact with peers, social problems, and social support from peers; and (4) the social factors served as mediators of the relation between approach and avoidance motivation and depressive symptoms.
In the current study, we extend this prior work by examining whether the interaction between internalizing and externalizing symptoms in early adolescence predict escalation of alcohol and marijuana use during adolescence into young adulthood.
To address these gaps in knowledge, we investigated whether self - esteem in early adolescence predicted depressive symptoms in late adolescence and early adulthood.
The objectives were (1) to document the prevalence of alcohol use disorders (AUD) and drug use disorders (DUD) in early adulthood; and (2) to identify family and individual factors measured in adolescence that predicted these disorders, after taking account of AUD and DUD in adolescence and treatment.
There is evidence that the co-occurrence of internalizing and externalizing problems may operate in a synergistic fashion in clinical samples (Riggs et al. 1995) and that internalizing problems more consistently predict SU later in adolescence (Sung et al. 2004) and in early adulthood (Hussong et al. 2011).
The purpose of this study was (a) to identify latent subgroups of Taiwanese adolescents who vary in their cultural value affiliations and (b) to examine how latent - subgroup membership in early adolescence predicted depressive symptoms for 6 years throughout adolescence into young adulthood.
In a birth cohort study, risk of psychosis in adulthood was raised by a factor of 4 if the mother, during pregnancy, reported that a baby was unwanted.49 Separation from parents in early life has been found to predict an increased risk of psychosis in genetically vulnerable children, 50,51 and the association between immigrant status and severe mental illness may be at least partially explained by the high rates of early separation in migrant populations.52 Adolescents at high genetic risk of psychosis have also been found to be at increased risk of psychosis in later life if they report adverse relationships with their parents.53
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z