The questionnaires
measured psychological factors, clinical and demographic characteristics and back - related disability.
Not exact matches
Mental health is sometimes an elusive idea for many because it involves
measuring the wellness of unseen
factors like our emotional,
psychological and social well - being.
Maybe it's less useful to consider them as akin to academic skills that can be taught and
measured and incentivized in predictable ways and more useful to think of them as being like
psychological conditions — the product of a complex matrix of personal and environmental
factors.
Published in the British Medical Journal Open, the longitudinal study of more than 60,000 Australians aged 45 years and above
measured participants fruit and vegetable consumption, lifestyle
factors and
psychological distress at two time points, 2006 - 08 and 2010.
Five
psychological factors are commonly used to
measure individual differences in personality:
A survey of 500 Iranian donors who received $ 1,200 and a year of medical insurance from the government found that their quality of life, as
measured by
factors like financial condition and
psychological health, remained poor three to six months after the donation.
The analysis of future flood options for New York City does not capture all the
psychological factors at play, such as concerns about huge floodgates being an eyesore or political
factors, but aims to do a straight cost - benefit analysis of which
measures can control flooding at an acceptable cost.
Published today in the British Medical Journal Open, the longitudinal study of more than 60,000 Australians aged over 45 participating in the Sax Institute's 45 and Up Study
measured fruit and vegetable consumption, lifestyle
factors and
psychological distress at two time points, 2006 - 08 and 2010.
Other important
factors that weren't
measured in the study include menopausal status and a history of physical or
psychological trauma, says Carol A. Landis, a professor at the University of Washington School of Nursing, in Seattle.
This proportion is approximately double that of children found to be at high risk in the general New South Wales population (15 %) 27 but similar to the proportion noted in other studies of Aboriginal children (24 %, 5 22.5 % 28 and among Aboriginal participants in the New South Wales Population Health Survey).27 There is only one other study to date that has
measured the
factors associated with Aboriginal child and adolescent mental health.5 SEARCH makes an important, new contribution to this emerging area of research by considering, for the first time, the impact of carer
psychological distress.
Correlations between the individual modes and
measures of general
psychological distress and well - being suggest a possible two category structure which subsequent exploratory
factor analysis tends to support.
A total of 301 people completed a self - report questionnaire, which
measured psychological distress, mental health lifetime risk
factors and socio - demographic data.
For example, longitudinal studies have concluded that social networks and social support are causal
factors in several
measures of health status, including
psychological distress, cardiovascular diseases, chronic diseases, mortality, and quality of life (Berkman & Syme, 1979; Eng, Rimm, Fitzmaurice, & Kawachi, 2002; House, Landis, & Umberson, 1988; Seeman, Kaplan, Knudsen, Cohen, & Guralnik, 1987).
The most apparent is that single
measures of absolute concentrations of salivary cortisol, for most health - related variables, seldom give significant findings; deviation
measures, in terms of diurnal deviations and / or laboratory stress tests seem to be more strongly and consistently associated with a number of
factors, such as Socioeconomic Status (SES),
psychological characteristics, biological variables in terms of overweight and abdominal fat accumulation, and mental and somatic disease.
For this symptomatological heterogeneity, the assessment of
psychological disturbances in the postpartum period depends on
factors such as time of assessment, definition of depression, instrument used to
measure depression, and the cultural characteristics of the population studied.8