Sentences with phrase «emotional difficulties like»

She will also have increased chances to develop child obesity and emotional difficulties like depression and anxiety.

Not exact matches

In other cases, kids may be wrestling with special difficultieslike stressful life events, emotional regulation problems, attention deficits, autistic symptoms, or hyperactivity.
But all sorts of things can lead to insomnia, including physical discomfort (the stuffy nose of a cold or the pain of a headache, for example), emotional troubles (like family problems or relationship difficulties), and even an uncomfortable sleeping environment (a room that's too hot, cold, bright, or noisy).
API looks at the intersection of parenting and shame, keeping in mind that shame is a normal emotional response to certain social situations, but like anger or disappointment, when unresolved, shame can lead to lifelong difficulties.
Pyroluria, like copper - zinc imbalance, was first researched at the Brain - Bio Center.36 Pyroluria patients display a range of symptoms connected with severe zinc deficiency that are familiar to me from my work with Chronic Fatigue Immune Deficiency Syndrome (CFIDS), including nausea, loss of appetite, abdominal pains and headache — all of which can be associated with food intolerance and digestive problems — as well as nervous exhaustion, emotional fragility, palpitations, depression and insomnia.37 Other complications include abnormal EEG findings38 and cognitive difficulties ranging from misperceptions and hallucinations39 to amnesia.40 Cognitive deficits such as memory, attention and concentration disturbance are widely recognized in CFIDS patients41 and can occasionally take on more serious manifestations.
The tone is light and fun, divided like baby food into easily digestible bits, while the topics cover every concern from teething to understanding the difficulties (both physical and emotional) that the new mother is facing.
Like anyone, lawyers who experience emotional or personal difficulties may be unable to resolve their problems on their own, and my find that their personal happiness, work performance or physical health is affected.
Clients who feel like they might be experiencing moderate to severe depression, emotional trauma, or other emotional / psychological difficulty should first consider an evaluation by a mental health professional.
Content of the session — your ability to discuss your emotional world (like fantasies, dreams, problems, difficulties, mistakes, past experiences and a lot more).
Whether it is anxiety, depression, low - self - esteem or other emotional difficulties, I can help you to learn to look at things from a different perspective, with the hope that you would arrive to a new meaning for what might seem like an old and nagging problem.»
It provides an in - depth view of one's issues and offers specific recommendations in regaining freedom from life's difficulties, overcoming emotional distress, and improving in a variety of environments like school, home, social, work, etc..
It is based on a non-pathological view of common difficulties, like sexual dysfunctions, sexual disinterest, emotional estrangement, and stalemated conflict.
So its sounds like what you saying is that by linking the terms mental health, the words mental health with social and emotional wellbeing upfront, it helped people to understand what mental health in early childhood looked like and also did it help them understand about mental health difficulties?
The remaining 108 items assessed a range of child mental health and well - being constructs, including: Social Integration, Prosocial Behaviour, Peer Relationship Problems, Supportive Relationships (at home, school and in the community), Empathy, Emotional Symptoms, Conduct Problems, Aggression, Attention, Inhibitory Control, Hyperactivity - Inattention, Total Difficulties (internalising and externalising psychopathology), Perceptual Sensitivity, Psychotic - Like Experiences, Personality, Self - esteem, Daytime Sleepiness and Connection to Nature (engagement with natural environment).
«After four nights of this... we were able to demonstrate that they actually had difficulties with things like memory, paying attention, emotional regulation; they actually changed how they viewed pictures — they tended to see things in a less positive light,» Corkum says.
During a study to demonstrate the negative effects of sleep deprivation in children, Corkum found that, ``... We were able to demonstrate that they actually had difficulties with things like memory, paying attention, emotional regulation; they actually changed how they viewed pictures — they tended to see things in a less positive light... We're really concerned because this is a period when their brains are developing and skills are developing, and the impact that might have on the developing child could potentially be even more problematic as an adult.»
In other cases, kids may be wrestling with special difficultieslike stressful life events, emotional regulation problems, attention deficits, autistic symptoms, or hyperactivity.
I find most clients benefit from an initial meeting to explore what therapy would be like and to ask some questions as well as tell me about themselves and their particular difficulties or emotional problems.
Items assessed psychotic - like experiences (child - and caregiver - report), internalising and externalising psychopathology (emotional symptoms, peer relationship problems, conduct problems, and hyperactivity — inattention; child - and caregiver - report using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire [11, 12]-RRB-, and delays or abnormalities in speech and / or motor milestone development (caregiver - report).
Like the woman, also the man lives the pregnancy and the childbirth such as a phase of psychological restructuration and he confronts himself with his personal and family history.56 But, unlike the woman, the man does not experience an emotional exchange with the child during the pregnancy or after the childbirth and he establish the relation in the two months after the childbirth.57, 58 They experience important changes and they have more difficulty to begin a good affective relationship with the child than the mothers that establish it after the childbirth.
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