Sentences with phrase «more immediate consequences»

Accidents at coal mines etc occur more often and have more immediate consequences — but then they are over.
There are plenty of more immediate consequences as well, including systemic inflammation, impaired cognitive function and drained energy levels.
The more immediate consequence may be the loss of benefits on your loans, like interest rate discounts.

Not exact matches

We don't know whether the current instance will have consequences similar to the 1929, 1972, 1987, 2000 and 2007 ones, but suffice it to say that these conditions were more notable for their outcomes over the completion of the full market cycle than they were for their immediate outcomes.
In consequence, the immediate need of our business life is not more extended activity but more fundamental morality.
When they enter our school most of our students are more concerned with what is immediate â $» rewards and consequences.
These kids need more immediate positive consequences to motivate them.
Another strength is that our results provide a more complete assessment of socioeconomic inequalities in breastfeeding rates, by estimating both relative and absolute inequalities, than common practice in inequality assessments.23 Finally, our study analysed effects of the intervention not only on an immediate, direct outcome (breastfeeding) but also on a long - term consequence of breastfeeding (child cognitive ability) that is associated with important health and behavioural outcomes in later life.27
Those who score high on the trait scale tend to be very worried about the future impacts of their actions, while those with lower scores are more concerned with immediate consequences.
And which is more important depends on whether one focuses on short - term or long - term consequences — the immediate impact of an automobile accident or reduced future job opportunities because of lost educational engagement.»
«It seems like changes in insurance or being without insurance have more immediate mental health consequences than they do physical health consequences,» Kail said.
One of the consequences of the extraordinary decline (nearly 90 percent) in federal support for education research over the past 25 years, as reported by Richard C. Atkinson and Gregg B. Jackson in their 1992 report for the National Academy of Sciences, has been the profound loss of rigorous inquiry into how schooling can be improved academically for all and how youth culture can become more attuned to the deferred gratification of academic achievement and less oriented to the immediate imperatives of money, clothes, and other amusements.
When students make more of their own decisions during the adolescent and teen years, their brains are still programmed for immediate gratification, pushing limits, and exploring rather than thoughtfully considering consequences.
The immediate consequences of such decisions - higher taxes, more homework, lower grade point averages (GPAs), a greater risk of being denied a diploma - were negative.
Pain stimuli and its consequences are more immediate than pleasure stimuli.
The almost immediate consequences would include the loss of reliable water resources for millions of people, and the start of a process leading to ultimate sea level rise of 4 - 10 metres or more.
And they certainly aren't restricted to conditions where there are immediate and horrific personal consequences (although they are probably more prevalent in such circumstances).
The consequences for breach of parole are both more severe and more immediate.
An FPN for driving without a valid licence, if the licence is alleged to be invalid on account of being foreign, brings far more immediate and onerous consequences.
Sackett et al. found that monkeys raised by abusive mother cling to them more than average: The immediate consequence of maternal rejection is the accentuation of proximity seeking on the part of the infant.
The rider took effect beginning with the 2006 funding cycle, and the consequences were immediate: That year alone, more than 41,000 fewer women were provided with reproductive health care funded by three main pots of federal money — Title V (the Maternal & Child Health Block Grant), Title XX (the Social Services Block Grant), and Title X; together, the three provide services for women not eligible for Medicaid.
If we don't see an immediate consequence, we do it more.
They pursued a realization of positive future consequence for their immediate action strategy that indicates a more thoughtful personality type than the others possessed.
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