Not exact matches
Although I'm certain breastfeeding has some
protective factors against bedtime death, I think one thing that McKenna shows in his research is that breastfeeding mothers are more aware
of their infants at night (due to the bonding that comes with breastfeeding) and that the babies adjust their breathing
patterns to the mother, again due to the bonding.
In applying a predefined algorithm, we identified strong evidence
of a causal relationship for
protective factors, including intake
of vegetables, nuts, and monounsaturated fatty acids and Mediterranean, prudent, and high - quality dietary
patterns, and harmful
factors, including intake
of trans — fatty acids and foods with a high glycemic index or load and a western dietary
pattern.
We identified strong evidence
of a causal relationship for
protective factors, including intake
of vegetables, nuts and monounsaturated fatty acids and Mediterranean, prudent and high - quality dietary
patterns.
Results Strong evidence supports valid associations (4 criteria satisfied)
of protective factors, including intake
of vegetables, nuts, and «Mediterranean» and high - quality dietary
patterns with CHD, and associations
of harmful
factors, including intake
of trans — fatty acids and foods with a high glycemic index or load.
After controlling for other determining
factors and considering the interaction
of time and
patterns of exercise, the results indicated that only persistent
patterns (
pattern YY) reveal a significant
protective effect from higher levels
of depressive symptoms, regardless
of exercise type (OR = 0.58, 0.56, 0.67, 0.62, respectively, all p < 0.05).
Trajectories
of Offending Behavior Having reviewed trends in female offending
patterns, subsequent interactions with the justice system, and the ultimate outcomes
of such offending, I now turn my attention to what is known about how girls get into trouble in the first place, including typical trajectories
of offending (in this section) as well as risk and
protective factors (in the section that follows).
Because not all children with depressed mothers show later problems, research must also examine risk and
protective factors that are associated with different
patterns of early child development and adjustment.4, 5 For example, are children whose mothers have a family history
of depression or who were depressed before or during pregnancy at especially high risk for adjustment difficulties?
It contributes to improvements in health care and public health by providing information about disease trends, risk and
protective factors,
patterns of care and health care costs, developing new therapies and treatments, and assessing the effectiveness
of health interventions.
Our findings support a family systems risk model14 that explains children's cognitive, social and emotional development using information about five kinds
of family risk or
protective factors: (1) Each family member's level
of adaptation, self - perceptions, mental health and psychological distress; (2) The quality
of both mother - child and father - child relationships; (3) The quality
of the relationship between the parents, including communication styles, conflict resolution, problem - solving styles and emotion regulation; (4)
Patterns of both couple and parent - child relationships transmitted across the generations; and (5) The balance between life stressors and social supports outside the immediate family.
Guided by this approach, researchers examine the ways in which risk and
protective factors interact with one another across and within proximal social contexts and their reciprocal
patterns of the association with adolescent sexual risk behavior over time.