Sentences with phrase «early risk factors»

One approach is to promote overall mental health among school - aged children by reducing early risk factors for depression, substance abuse and aggressive behaviors.
Professor Maughan's research uses epidemiological methods to explore early risk factors for psychiatric disorders; to examine developmental continuities in mental health across the life course; and to identify mechanisms that make for continuity and change.
Rearing experiences and stress - induced plasma cortisol as early risk factors for excessive alcohol consumption in nonhuman primates
Disorganized attachment is an important early risk factor for socioemotional problems throughout childhood and into adulthood.
Poor father - child and mother - child relationships share common early risk factors (low family socio - economic status, poor partner relationship) and later risk factors (adverse family events, low levels of positive parenting)
Heterogeneity in growth and desistance of alcohol use for men in their 20s: Prediction from early risk factors and association with treatment.
Rather, the same early risk factors have been found to be associated with childhood - onset CP in both genders (Barker and Maughan 2009; Côté et al. 2006; Lahey et al. 2006).
In this study, we fill this knowledge gap by examining whether early risk factors shown to characterise childhood - onset CP discriminate among gender - specific CP trajectories from ages 3 to 11.
David P. Farrington and Brandon C. Welsh, Saving Children from a Life of Crime: Early Risk Factors and Effective Interventions (Oxford University Press, 2007).
Early risk factors are often longstanding and drive a trajectory of cumulative risk, potentially leading to severe psychopathology and social exclusion.
Thus it is important to nip in the bud the earliest risk factors.
Shaw, D.S., Owens, E.B., Vondra, J.I., Keenan, K. and Winslow, E.B. (1996) «Early risk factors and pathways in the development of early disruptive behaviour problems», Development and Psychopathology, pp679 - 699
The identification of early risk factors is crucial to prevention and early intervention efforts that have the potential to attenuate the long term emotional, social, and academic problems associated with aggressive victim status.
This addresses potential biases inherent in cross-sectional studies and provides evidence that these early risk factors are associated with subsequent problems attaining nighttime bladder control.
Conclusions A large range of early risk factors, including prenatal, perinatal social, and parental psychopathology variables, act independently to heighten the likelihood of having persistently high levels of hyperactivity - impulsivity and inattention symptoms from infancy to middle childhood.
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