Sentences with phrase «health scare at»

H1N1 was the big health scare at the time, and I vividly remember sitting in front of the television bawling my eyes out because I was sure that my son was going to get H1N1 and die because I could not nurse him.
Since the initial health scare at the end of the Rocket series, bettors now know Thompson will be close to 100 % when Golden State attempts to bring its first title back to the Bay since 1975.

Not exact matches

More recently, it's been at the centre of health scares, embraced and subverted by punk, and the subject of much legislation around the world.
At the time, recalls Sue Carter, a social worker at the University of Toledo, «HIV had people scared to death» — including some health care providerAt the time, recalls Sue Carter, a social worker at the University of Toledo, «HIV had people scared to death» — including some health care providerat the University of Toledo, «HIV had people scared to death» — including some health care providers.
These books scared me so much that I threw out all the food in my kitchen and started to grocery shop at the only little health food store in West Los Angeles, The Coop Market.
I feared the big health scares that we're told could kill us at any moment if we aren't careful.
I was depressed and scared at the prospect of surgery, and mourning the loss of my health and my self - image of being a physically fit «tough guy.
And third, I've had some health scares and my father died of a heart attack at the age of 46.
There were some family health scares and accidents that, coupled with an insane workload throughout the whole month in my department at work, really left me feeling low on energy and not much in the mood to dress up some days.
At full health it's making the sassy smirk of a Dreamworks animated character, a concerned face when damaged, and a scared face when you're one hit away from death).
Steven Milloy is the publisher of JunkScience.com, an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute and the author of «Junk Science Judo: Self - Defense Against Health Scares and Scams» (Cato Institute, 2001).
Many of the scales demonstrated weak psychometrics in at least one of the following ways: (a) lack of psychometric data [i.e., reliability and / or validity; e.g., HFQ, MASC, PBS, Social Adjustment Scale - Self - Report (SAS - SR) and all perceived self - esteem and self - concept scales], (b) items that fall on more than one subscale (e.g., CBCL - 1991 version), (c) low alpha coefficients (e.g., below.60) for some subscales, which calls into question the utility of using these subscales in research and clinical work (e.g., HFQ, MMPI - A, CBCL - 1991 version, BASC, PSPCSAYC), (d) high correlations between subscales (e.g., PANAS - C), (e) lack of clarity regarding clinically - relevant cut - off scores, yielding high false positive and false negative rates (e.g., CES - D, CDI) and an inability to distinguish between minor (i.e., subclinical) and major (i.e., clinical) «cases» of a disorder (e.g., depression; CDI, BDI), (f) lack of correspondence between items and DSM criteria (e.g., CBCL - 1991 version, CDI, BDI, CES - D, (g) a factor structure that lacks clarity across studies (e.g., PSPCSAYC, CASI; although the factor structure is often difficult to assess in studies of pediatric populations, given the small sample sizes), (h) low inter-rater reliability for interview and observational methods (e.g., CGAS), (i) low correlations between respondents such as child, parent, teacher [e.g., BASC, PSPCSAYC, CSI, FSSC - R, SCARED, Connors Ratings Scales - Revised (CRS - R)-RSB-, (j) the inclusion of somatic or physical symptom items on mental health subscales (e.g., CBCL), which is a problem when conducting studies of children with pediatric physical conditions because physical symptoms may be a feature of the condition rather than an indicator of a mental health problem, (k) high correlations with measures of social desirability, which is particularly problematic for the self - related rating scales and for child - report scales more generally, and (l) content validity problems (e.g., the RCMAS is a measure of anxiety, but contains items that tap mood, attention, peer interactions, and impulsivity).
This bill could cause scared teens to put their safety at risk and do something desperate that would endanger their health.
Property: When built in 1959, this steel - and - concrete encased property was intended to be a safe house for its creator at a time when «atomic bomb scare,» not «health care» or «politics as usual,» was the buzzword.
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