Sentences with phrase «one's clinical implications»

Talk 2 will provide a discussion of why and how these two instruments came to be and the important clinical implications of the newly discovered constructs that define the scales of these inventories.
These results have important clinical implications for the treatment of girls with externalizing behaviour problems in closed treatment settings.
Ultimately, this may prove to have important clinical implications for the development of effective intervention and prevention programs as it provides greater insight into the development of depressive symptoms.
We conclude the review by identifying potential clinical implications of this research.
Regarding clinical implications, mental health professionals should be aware that some families may prefer and be able to learn specialized behavioral parent - training skills in a brief and intensive format.
The research questions and clinical implications arising from these contrasting cases study are discussed.
However, according to the authors, this new method has huge clinical implications.
The result could have far - reaching clinical implications for anesthesia and the treatment of acute and chronic pain.
Although they have yet to publish their results and much work remains to be done, the achievement could have big clinical implications.
The results may have clinical implications by, for instance, helping initiate studies to understand why women are more vulnerable to depression while men are more vulnerable to impulse control disorders.
Further clinical implications, limitations and future directions are discussed.
Clinical implications of thermal therapy in lifestyle - related diseases.
While most stem cell therapies aim for integration, these findings could have important clinical implications.
Finally, clinical implications for use with clients participating in therapy are discussed.
Clinical implications arising from this review include the importance of training staff to ask about early life experiences in mothers who are struggling and the need to offer interventions to address parenting stress.
2) Becker - Santos DD, Thu KL, Pikor LA, English JC, Vucic EA, MacAulay CE, Robinson WP, Jurisica I, Lockwood WW, Lam S, Lam WL (2016) The developmental transcription factor NFIB is a potential target of oncofetal miRNAs and has significant clinical implications in lung adenocarcinoma.
, Lam S, Lam WL (2016) The developmental transcription factor NFIB is a potential target of oncofetal miRNAs and has significant clinical implications in lung adenocarcinoma.
Together, we aim to connect empirical data on different schema therapy settings across disorders and discuss clinical implications of schema modes.
A brief yet intensive parent training intervention would have significant clinical implications as it would potentially alleviate the functional impairment that can result from early externalizing behavior problems (e.g., getting kicked out of preschool) in a more rapid fashion.
«One major clinical implication of this study is giving antibiotics to a child in early neonatal life is likely a disservice because this will limit the amount and type of bacteria that is seen by the adaptive immune system and this could be linked to the development of autoimmune, inflammatory skin diseases later in life,» said Rosenblum.
«The immediate clinical implication is that a group of patients with tumors previously categorized as lower grade should actually be treated as glioblastoma patients and receive that standard of care — temozolomide chemotherapy and irradiation,» said lead author Roel Verhaak, Ph.D. assistant professor of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
The discovery of this genes role also has clinical implications relating to the management of patients in hospital to minimise transmission: for example by isolating infected patients and by using «barrier nursing» (that is, the wearing gloves, gowns when treating the patients and employing heightened disinfection regimes).
«These findings are the result of years of NHLBI - funded studies of the molecular mechanisms of action of GPIHBP1 and are an excellent example of how basic science can lead to scientific advances with direct clinical implications
However, the protective efficacy of guanabenz and its ability to alleviate relapses, coupled with its established safety profile, makes for promising clinical implications.
The field of trauma therapy has developed rapidly in the last 25 years, altering our understanding of post-traumatic responses with profound clinical implications for how we can best serve our clients.
This attribute of stem - like cancer cells has significant clinical implications such as chemoresistance and radioresistance.
Other interests include cultural competency and AEDP, as well as clinical implications working with Asian Americans, with a special interest in the Filipino Culture.
She showed that tissue macrophages have unique functional attributes that may have critical clinical implications, including a unique ability to resist genotoxic stress, which contributes to graft - versus - host disease and impacts tumor resistance to radiotherapy.
This newly discovered role for Rh7 could have clinical implications down the road.
The findings published in the journal Mucosal Immunology have major clinical implications since allergies and asthma are lifelong conditions that often start in childhood and for which there is presently no cure.
«Possible clinical implications indicate the importance of adapting elements of enriched environments to humans, such as prolonged and intensive physical activity, possibly combined with intensive cognitive stimulation.
«While the pre-birth programming effect of PETN shows promise for future clinical implications, we must be careful about generalizing findings from animal studies to humans,» Li said.
«That has clear clinical implications and will help us understand the biology driving this cancer.»
This could be particularly important for men already on the borderline of infertility, and further research is required to determine the full clinical implications for the general population.»
«Although specific individual clinical implications of these findings can not be quantified, based on other studies, the observed cognitive delays at early ages could have significant long - term consequences such as increased risk of mental health disorders and low academic achievement, in particular due to the ubiquity of the exposure,» said Dr. Guxens.
If so, the VIPS device could have widespread clinical implications, helping emergency personnel decide whether to take a patient to a comprehensive stroke center or a primary stroke center for treatment.
Therefore, a genetic test that identifies one of these MTHFR gene variants has no real clinical implications.
«One of the main clinical implications of this research is that exercise is not just good, but amazing for bone health,» said lead author Maya Styner, MD, a physician and assistant professor of endocrinology and metabolism at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
As you can probably guess, this profound connection between gut microflora and optimal function of the HPA axis when stressful situations occur during early life can have massive clinical implications.
The widespread and common use of natural progesterone (hereafter referred to as progesterone) for hormone balance and menopausal symptoms, especially estrogen dominance, has potentially important negative clinical implications when used by those with a weak body — such as those with Adrenal Fatigue Syndrome (AFS).
The evolution of this concept gave rise to far reaching and diverse clinical implications in the differing branches of the psychoanalytic tradition.
The meta - analytic methodology is sound and provides summary conclusions over a broad range of studies with salient clinical implications.
Although the literature base on anxiety and coparenting is limited, there are a few clinical implications that we can draw at this point.
Working With the Young Child Clinical Implications of Contemporary Developmental Science Claudia M. Gold University of Massachusetts Boston Abstract The recognition that adverse childhood experiences have long - term negative effects parallels the explosion of evidence demonstrating how early experience gets into the body and brain.
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