Sentences with phrase «huge society problem»

Homeless pets are a huge society problem... a problem we must address is creative and comprehensive ways.

Not exact matches

Untreated depression is a huge problem because of the burden to society,» said the leader of the study, Andrea Cipriani of the NIHR Oxford Health Biomedical Research Centre.
And while the decision to have a baby is indeed private, society pays a huge, huge cost for crappy parenting — everything from crime to abuse to addictions to obesity and related health problems to the poorly educated and unemployable.
I have taken mindful action to provide her with a diet I felt would help develop her palette a particular way (the food thing was mentioned by Candace) and sleep in a particular way (I used the eat, play, sleep method which helps prevent food from becoming a source of comfort, which is a huge problem in our society).
The situation has arisen because of society creating huge problems
The problem lies in how we, as a society, think that a toy such as this can have such a huge impact on a child, whether we think it's a negative or a positive one.
Hulme believes this is when the accountability deficit at the heart of the Big Society will become a huge problem.
Chronic inflammation is a huge problem in our society that contributes to many non-infectious diseases including heart disease, cancer, Alzheimer's, autoimmune disease, and more, according to the National Center for Biotechnology Information.
Sadly, insulin resistance is a huge problem many people deal with in our modern - day society.
As shallow as it can seem, clothes and style are a small pleasure in life that makes me forget (for a moment) about the huge, problems in our society.
In addition to the huge overpopulation problem that is just worsened by the presence of puppy mills, there are many more ways that these factories negatively impact society.
-- that the problems of society at large can be solved by channelling huge amounts of money not through the decision making processes of the individual whose problems you are trying to solve, but through a vast bureaucracy controlled by a de facto elite who are not necessarily acting in anyone's interests but their own, don't necessarily listen to the real problems of the individual, and even if they do, don't understand enough about the actual situation to make any difference at all?
, he already reproduces the most sticky frames: that unabated climate change is a huge (even catastrophic) problem; that political approaches to resolving the challenge have largely failed (and can not now be expected to work); and that novel technological responses are the most likely possibilities now — as ways to ameliorate climate impacts without deep changes in society.
Unlike the smaller biosphere concept, this would require huge problems to be solved in both technological and political realms (i.e., requires multiple natures, cultures, societies to cooperate).
Commonly referred to as «NEETs», this huge section of society aged 16 - 24 (the Scottish government limits its NEET classification to those aged 16 - 19) is a desperate social and economic problem.
And while the decision to have a baby is indeed private, society pays a huge, huge cost for crappy parenting — everything from crime to abuse to addictions to obesity and related health problems to the poorly educated and unemployable.
Estimates suggest that child maltreatment costs the United States $ 124 billion annually, with per - person lifetime costs higher than or comparable to those of diseases such as a stroke or type 2 diabetes mellitus.18 Childhood maltreatment has thus been referred to as «a human rights violation and a global public health problem [that] incurs huge costs for both individuals and society
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