Sentences with phrase «few systematic studies»

However, few systematic studies have directly examined the effect of parental substance abuse treatment on their children.
However, observers also point out that there have been few systematic studies of the role of boards in school change.

Not exact matches

Fransen (2015) makes a few intriguing points: The Midwives Alliance of North American (MANA) identifies a systematic review written within the official «journal» of Lamaze International as one «best available studies on planned home birth and maternal fetal outcomes.»
With a few colleagues, Solms conducted a systematic study of the engineer's confabulations, finding that they were substantially positive or wishful.
In those few fleeting moments, he had a distinct feeling of déjà vu, a sensation that psychologists once considered too unpredictable and ephemeral to be studied in any systematic way.
It may persist for a few days when you take high doses (400 mg was used in the study above, equivalent to five cups of coffee daily), but it's not systematic destruction of the sort that high carbohydrate diets can cause.
A systematic review of neighbourhood characteristics and health outcomes only identified one study that considered mental disorders.12, 13 Recent studies have shown that neighbourhood social disorganisation is associated with depressive symptoms14 and that living in socioeconomically deprived areas is associated with depression, 15,16 with higher levels of child problem behaviour, 17 with a higher incidence of non-psychotic disorders.18 A randomised controlled trial that moved families from high poverty neighbourhoods to non-poor neighbourhoods showed that both parents and children who moved reported fewer psychological distress symptoms than did control families who did not move.19
A recent systematic review of emotion regulation in children with ASD found that research has largely relied on self - report (38 %) or informant report (44 %); fewer used naturalistic observation / behavior coding (31 %) or open - ended measures (13 %); and only two (6 %) of the studies explored correlates of emotion regulation (Weiss et al. 2014).
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