Sentences with phrase «more systemic health»

That some people and cats and dogs have more systemic health problems associated with food sensitivity / intolerance and allergy than others eating similar foods points to genetic, epigenetic, home environment and lifestyle differences.

Not exact matches

This categorisation strictly depends on the operating environment of the banks, and within each category there can be more or less risky institutions, depending on the health of the bank's balance sheet and the systemic support that this institution may or may not get from government.
The Offspring of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus mothers Registry (OSLER) is a large, Canadian, population - based cohort which includes all women who have had one or more hospitalizations for childbirth after lupus diagnosis as identified through health care databases between the years of 1989 and 2009.
Systemic inflammation, regardless of obesity, is at the root of many chronic health disorders, including Hashimoto's hypothyroidism, heart disease, cancer, and more.
D.O.s in private practice may be an exception to the rule, but the consolidation and corporatization of our health care system means more and more doctors are employees for systemic corporations instead of partners or sole proprietorships.
Systemic inflammation, regardless of obesity, is at the root of many chronic health disorders, including autoimmunity, heart disease, cancer, and more.
To make educational equity systemic and enduring, we must do more than engage our schools; we must redesign, align, and integrate all the community services that support children and families — our health departments, our recreation departments, our social services agencies.
Because eye diseases can be linked with systemic health issues, and because many of our patients have more than just ocular disease, our Ophthalmology service integrates the expertise of other specialty departments at CUVS as needed for the care of your pet.
It is recognised that the opportunities for prevention and public health interventions will be enhanced the more we understand the early pathways to poorer health and development1 and that to have an impact on health inequalities will require us to address the social determinants of early child health, development and well - being.2 However, appropriate service and systemic improvements for reducing developmental inequalities requires an understanding of the patterns of child health and development across population groups and geographies in order to underpin a progressive universal portfolio of services.3
For example, there is evidence of local systemic stigma based on population data analysis, in that children registered in tertiary mental health services receive less emergency and inpatient treatment for their physical disorders after psychiatric diagnosis than do children with no mental disorder, even though they have more physical and biomedical diagnoses at the levels of ambulatory and provincial physician billing.28
At a more systemic level, she currently works as the National Project Manager for KidsMatter at the Australian Psychological Society and has focussed in previous years on the mental health and wellbeing of primary school children.
Due to systemic barriers — like discrimination and harassment in accessing health care, which 28 percent of transgender people say they have experienced — LGBTQ people are more likely than non-LGBTQ people to be living in poverty and to be uninsured.
What's more, blocking patients from care at health centers has a disproportionate impact on communities of color — who already face systemic barriers in accessing quality health care.
Suitable for counsellors, family therapists, psychologists, social workers and other health professionals wishing to learn more about this experiential - systemic therapy, the Fundamentals workshop provides a comprehensive overview of the theoretical underpinnings of EFCT.
Key barriers identified to this were the technical issues involved with measuring a more complex form of accountability and systemic racism throughout government and the health system.
There is a tendency for those of us mental health providers to (not always, but often) be more directive, especially among LCSW's, more so than Marriage and Family Therapists — especially since LCSW's tend (again, not always) to lean more towards a systemic, cognitive - behavioral and / or «case management» school of thought.
Although greater early local production of proinflammatory cytokines at wound sites is beneficial because it is associated with enhanced healing, greater systemic production of proinflammatory cytokines can represent a maladaptive response.24 Both physical and psychological stressors can provoke transient increases in plasma levels of proinflammatory cytokines, particularly IL - 6,25 as can negative emotions like depression and anxiety.26 - 28 More frequent or persistent stress - related changes have broad implications for physical and mental health; sustained elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines have been linked to a variety of age - related diseases, including cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, arthritis, type 2 diabetes mellitus, certain cancers, and frailty and functional decline.29 - 31
Thus, a series of studies have shown that marital conflict alters physiological functioning, and hostile behavior, particularly during conflict, markedly enhances adverse physiological changes; moreover, women appear to be more adversely affected than men.5 In this study, we extended this line of research to assess how hostile marital behavior modulated an important health outcome, wound healing, as well as local and systemic proinflammatory cytokine production.
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