The article, Parenting as Primary Prevention, is the latest in a string of
recommendations calling for evidence - based parenting interventions to be integrated into services provided by US medical services.
Not exact matches
The other day I received an email from a neuropsychologist at a well - known New England medical center (I'll
call him «Dr.. A»
for short) wondering whether there was any
evidence to support the
recommendation made in a number of articles in our concussion center, as well as videos, that, as part of the cognitive rest a concussed student - athlete needs during concussion recovery, he or she should not play video games:
He
called the Committee's attention to three important developments in the past decade: the emerging consensus that
evidenced - based medicine should direct policy; the emerging consensus that
evidence - based medicine should focus on health outcomes; and the Data Quality Act, which requires that data, used as the basis
for recommendations, should be replicable, and should meet certain quality standards.
In response to a
call for evidence from the Women and Equalities Committee the BHA has said that the government's decision not to make PSHE compulsory «flies in the face» of the
recommendations made by a huge number of education, health, and children's rights experts, including the Chief Medical Officer, the Children's Commissioner
for England, and the NSPCC.
In this ground - breaking article you will find out: Why you don't become a professional just by
calling yourself one; why the professional does not serve the interests of their clients simply by doing what they are told; why learning professionals should aim to do no harm to their learners; why it is absurd
for a learning professional to be technophobic; why being a professional means basing your
recommendations on hard
evidence, not romanticism.
This
call for evidence and survey will help inform our research into Inheritance Tax and the
recommendations we make in our final report.
The report makes seven key
recommendations for improvements in the quality of SI reports and training of staff, building on
evidence provided by a number of other high profile reviews and
calling for changes to improve the current system and resources available
for SI investigation.