Not exact matches
Other benefits of this early breastfeeding
experience include helping the infant feel
more secure, reducing infant
mortality through the numerous immunological properties of human milk, and encouraging a longer period of breastfeeding.
• Assumptions about different cultural groups and how they impact breastfeeding support • Shoshone and Arapaho tribal breastfeeding traditions shared through oral folklore • Barriers to decreasing health disparities in infant
mortality for African Americans • Effects of inflammation and trauma on health disparities that result in higher rates of infant
mortality among minority populations • Barriers to breastfeeding
experienced by Black mothers and how lactation consultants can support them
more effectively • Social support and breastfeeding self - efficacy among Black mothers • Decreasing pregnancy, birth, and lactation health disparities in the urban core • Positive changes in breastfeeding rates within the African American community • Grassroots breastfeeding organizations serving African American mothers
Participants in a much - cited psychological study, for instance, were
more likely to positively evaluate charismatic leaders after
experiencing «
mortality salience» than they were when this stimulus was not present.
«If governments spent one cent
more on social services per dollar spent on health by rearranging money between the two portfolios, life expectancy could have
experienced an additional 5 % increase and potentially avoidable
mortality could have
experienced an additional 3 % decrease in one year.»
They also required
more transfusions,
experienced more infections requiring antibiotics (P =.03), and
experienced a higher rate of 60 - day postoperative
mortality (3.1 % vs 0.9 %; P =.049).
Dr. Margaret Chan, WHO Director - General, stated that «From past
experience, we also know that influenza may cause mild disease in affluent countries, but
more severe disease, with higher
mortality, in developing countries.»
People
experiencing sleep insufficiency are also
more likely to suffer from chronic diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, depression, and obesity, as well as from cancer, increased
mortality, and reduced quality of life and productivity.
I think this is much
more reasonable and fits the actual
mortality experience much better.
Although heat stress in 2004 was lower at Butaritari than at Abaiang and North Tarawa, massive Porites sp. corals at Butaritari
experienced more severe bleaching as indicated by skeletal extension rate reductions and the occurrence of partial
mortality scars.
According to the proposed rule, climate change is the most important threat to these key ocean species, with
more than 97 percent of reefs predicted to
experience severe thermal stress, which can cause massive bleaching and
mortality, by 2050.
Today with
more sophisticated detection and treatment the
mortality experience has changed on a lot of fronts, and none
more so than HIV positive.
Felitti and colleagues1 first described ACEs and defined it as exposure to psychological, physical or sexual abuse, and household dysfunction including substance abuse (problem drinking / alcoholic and / or street drugs), mental illness, a mother treated violently and criminal behaviour in the household.1 Along with the initial ACE study, other studies have characterised ACEs as neglect, parental separation, loss of family members or friends, long - term financial adversity and witness to violence.2 3 From the original cohort of 9508 American adults,
more than half of respondents (52 %) experienced at least one adverse childhood event.1 Since the original cohort, ACE exposures have been investigated globally revealing comparable prevalence to the original cohort.4 5 More recently in 2014, a survey of 4000 American children found that 60.8 % of children had at least one form of direct experience of violence, crime or abuse.6 The ACE study precipitated interest in the health conditions of adults maltreated as children as it revealed links to chronic diseases such as obesity, autoimmune diseases, heart, lung and liver diseases, and cancer in adulthood.1 Since then, further evidence has revealed relationships between ACEs and physical and mental health outcomes, such as increased risk of substance abuse, suicide and premature mortality
more than half of respondents (52 %)
experienced at least one adverse childhood event.1 Since the original cohort, ACE exposures have been investigated globally revealing comparable prevalence to the original cohort.4 5
More recently in 2014, a survey of 4000 American children found that 60.8 % of children had at least one form of direct experience of violence, crime or abuse.6 The ACE study precipitated interest in the health conditions of adults maltreated as children as it revealed links to chronic diseases such as obesity, autoimmune diseases, heart, lung and liver diseases, and cancer in adulthood.1 Since then, further evidence has revealed relationships between ACEs and physical and mental health outcomes, such as increased risk of substance abuse, suicide and premature mortality
More recently in 2014, a survey of 4000 American children found that 60.8 % of children had at least one form of direct
experience of violence, crime or abuse.6 The ACE study precipitated interest in the health conditions of adults maltreated as children as it revealed links to chronic diseases such as obesity, autoimmune diseases, heart, lung and liver diseases, and cancer in adulthood.1 Since then, further evidence has revealed relationships between ACEs and physical and mental health outcomes, such as increased risk of substance abuse, suicide and premature
mortality.4 7
Describing the many ways in which Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people
experience deep trauma, in a list «that would surely make the blood of any decent human being run cold,» Parker said Indigenous people continued to die
more than a decade earlier than their peers, suffer double the burden of ill health and infant
mortality, with unemployment four times higher and median incomes half, and disability for one in three.
Individuals with low self - esteem are
more apt to
experience the effects of
mortality salience, whereas individuals with high self - esteem are better able to cope with the idea that their death is uncontrollable.
Coupled with this research is the landmark Adverse Childhood
Experiences Study (ACE)(Felitti, et al., 1998) which reviewed the health of more than 17,000 mid-life adults and confirmed that early exposure to negative childhood experiences of abuse, neglect and witnessing violence leads to lifelong, debilitating mental and physical health problems, and ultimately, early
Experiences Study (ACE)(Felitti, et al., 1998) which reviewed the health of
more than 17,000 mid-life adults and confirmed that early exposure to negative childhood
experiences of abuse, neglect and witnessing violence leads to lifelong, debilitating mental and physical health problems, and ultimately, early
experiences of abuse, neglect and witnessing violence leads to lifelong, debilitating mental and physical health problems, and ultimately, early
mortality.
We would expect parents of sons to
experience more stress since morbidity and
mortality is higher in male infants than female infants [94].