Because multiple studies of behavioral adjustment in chronically
ill children suggest that the inclusion of such items inappropriately inflates rates of internalizing symptoms in this population (La Greca et al., 1995; Liss et al., 1998; Lloyd, Dyer, & Barnett, 2000), the depression and anxiety subscales were used instead.
Not exact matches
Only a fucking mentally
ill delusional believer azzhole would stretch «another person's body» to
suggest it applies to 1 or 2 year old
children.
To advocate self - help, to argue that affirmative action can not be a long - run solution to the problem of racial inequality, to
suggest that some of what is transpiring in black communities reflects a spiritual malaise, to note that fundamental change will require that individual lives be transformed in ways that governments are
ill - suited to do, to urge that we must look to how black men and women are relating to each other, how parents are bringing up their
children, that we have to ask ourselves what values inform the behavior of our youth» to do these things is not to take a partisan position, or vent some neoconservative ideological screed.
Some sociological studies of how the doctrine of karma is actually used in daily life
suggest, however, that it does not inhibit a parent seeking a cure for a
child who is
ill.
Prior studies have
suggested a continued rise between 2005 and 2009 in the number of
children who became
ill after ingesting hand sanitizers.
When asked what causes stress around 98 per cent of people cite (in no particular order)
children, parents, death of a loved one,
ill health, traffic, traffic offences, finances, work, targets, distressing news bulletins etc and around two per cent
suggest it could be themselves.
Others, like Moonlit Wankers (2001) or We've Found the Body of Your
Child (2000), evoke his teenage experiences or
suggest social
ills.
Couples with a DAS of 110 or below were considered «distressed» because it has been
suggested that this is an appropriate cutoff for parents with chronically
ill children (p. 393).
Our findings
suggest that chronically
ill children are at risk for peer relationship difficulties, but that self - esteem may serve as a protective factor against poor peer relationships for some chronically
ill children.