Many drive without a financial backup plan for accidents — which puts you at financial and
emotional risk whether you like it or not.
Not exact matches
Subsequent prospective studies yielded similar results,
whether they controlled for parental age, child age, race and family structure; 12 poverty, child age,
emotional support, cognitive stimulation, sex, race and the interactions among these variables; 13 or other factors.14 — 17 These studies provide the strongest evidence available that physical punishment is a
risk factor for child aggression and antisocial behaviour.
Researchers say there are many proven physical and
emotional benefits of breastfeeding, but it has been unclear
whether breastfeeding specifically lowers the
risk of SIDS.
Assessing social and relationship support at birth (both
emotional and practical) could provide an indication of
whether the mom is going to be at
risk from postpartum depression.
Using a sample of more than 6,000 adults from the National Survey of Midlife Development in the United States, the researchers examined
whether adult self - reported social support decreased mortality
risk associated with self - reported exposure to three types of childhood abuse: severe physical abuse, modest physical abuse and
emotional abuse.
I firmly believe that the amount of money you
risk on a trade dictates
whether or not you become
emotional, and
emotional attachment to a trade is the fastest way to lose your money.
It's wise to use this brief episode as a catalyst to think carefully about the level of
emotional risk you're equipped to handle successfully, and
whether your current portfolio is tuned to that level of
risk.
Re B (Transfer of Foster Placement)[2013] 1 FLR 633: Care proceedings — Children of same family placed in three different foster homes outside the area of the local authority concerned — Local authority sought to move the children within the area —
Whether the children's guardians should be granted an injunction preventing the move —
Whether the children were at
risk of
emotional harm.
While
risk factors often indicate circumstances that may severely challenge children's mental and
emotional wellbeing, predicting
whether or not an individual child develops a mental health diffi culty is not straightforward.
Child Well - Being Spotlight: Children Placed Outside the Home and Children Who Remain In - Home After a Maltreatment Investigation Have Similar and Extensive Service Needs (PDF - 211 KB) U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation (2012) Summarizes recent research from the National Survey of Child and Adolescent Well - Being (NSCAW) that indicates children reported for maltreatment have a high
risk of experiencing developmental problems, cognitive problems, behavioral /
emotional problems, or substance use disorders, regardless of
whether they were placed in out - of - home care or remained in - home with or without receiving services.
Longitudinal analyses allows researchers to identify pathways of
risk, and to ascertain
whether emotional responsiveness informs feeding responsiveness, or vice versa.
We looked at five indicators of child disadvantage, including being overweight, concerns over language development, and social,
emotional and behavioural problems - and explored
whether persistently poor children were at greater
risk.
We looked at five indicators of child disadvantage, measured at sweep 4 of GUS, including being overweight, concerns over language development, and social,
emotional and behavioural problems - and explored
whether persistently poor children were at greater
risk of these.
The development of
emotional regulation capacities in children at high versus low
risk for externalizing disorder was examined in a longitudinal study investigating: (a)
whether disturbances in emotion regulation precede and predict the emergence of externalizing symptoms and (b)
whether sensitive maternal behavior is a significant influence on the development of child emotion regulation.
Specifically, we assess
whether early maturation is associated with perceived popularity, but possibly also with increased
risk for rumors and gossip and
whether such reputational factors help account for some of the
emotional distress experienced by earlier maturing girls.
To our knowledge, current study examines for first time the
risk of maternal nutritionnal programming with HFD during pregnancy and lactation on
emotional and cognitive behaviors of the offspring (both sexes of 2 months old), and
whether methyl donors supplementation diet may reverse to that.
The objectives of the present study were (a) to investigate
whether clique isolation from age 11 to 13 years is a social
risk factor for subsequent depressive symptoms in early adolescence; (b) to test the potential role of loneliness and perceived social acceptance as cognitive and
emotional constructs underlying the link between clique isolation and depressive symptoms; and (c) to explore possible sex differences in the association between clique isolation and depressive symptoms.