Sentences with phrase «report less parenting»

If this is the case, these mothers may view their infants as more difficult and report less parenting satisfaction.
However, at T2, the clinical group still differed from the controls even though they improved in bonding and reported less parenting stress.

Not exact matches

But the C. D. Howe report speculates that the rising number of sick days women are taking off — an average 2.9 more days a year than men — has less to do with illness than the fact that women are often saddled with taking care of both children and elderly parents.
When the authors reviewed reports of respondents» parental disciplinary styles, they found: 1) Significantly fewer rescuers recalled any controls imposed upon them; 2) Parents of rescuers depended significantly less on physical punishment and significantly more on reasoning.
Older members of my parish reported their sense that the standards by which they had struggled to live their lives had been betrayed, and parents were less than grateful.
Parents of large families in which older children have already moved on to adult life report a «squash and a squeeze» effect where each child's birth makes the house a little less bearable until breaking point is almost reached... then older children spend the day at school, then they're off to university and adult life, and slowly the house becomes almost unbearably large.
Don't be disappointed if it does not work out at first, as new parents report the scheduled date strategy works less than half the time.
Parents and coaches will benefit from reduced reliance on honest self - reporting of concussion symptoms by athletes and of the less - than - perfect observational skills of sideline management in spotting signs of concussion;
Youth who report that their parents disapprove of excessive drinking are less likely to drink excessively.
Parent's Functioning: Sleep deprived parents have reported trouble concentrating at work, feeling drowsy and exhausted during the day, being less efficient in completing tasks, losing things, and being forgetful.
Parents of anxiously attached children report that their children become less anxious by being able to sleep with their pParents of anxiously attached children report that their children become less anxious by being able to sleep with their parentsparents.
For example, parents who say it is hard for them to strike the right balance between work and family are far less likely than parents who don't to report that being a parent is enjoyable all of the time (36 % vs. 50 %).
Even with infants, many families report more sleep and less crying — without sacrificing a parent's sense of satisfaction — with breastfeeding, babywearing, and cosleeping.
Psychologist Robert Bauserman's study showed that couples who have joint custody reported less conflict than those where one parent had sole custody, possibly because both parents could participate in their children's lives equally.
• Workplace goals have a nice finality to them (presentation, done; annual report, done; proposal, submitted) compared to the less concrete daily goals of the stay at home parent (laundry, done for now; meals, never ending; grocery shopping, aborted due to cranky toddler);
«My initial investment was $ 800, although many parents report they spent less.
* Again, in England Heron (1994) found that it was the solitary sleeping children who were harder to handle (as reported by their parents) and who dealt less well with stress, and who were rated as being more (not less) dependent on their parents than were the cosleepers!
Assessing these risk factors using administrative and observational data collection techniques can be costly, and, although less costly, parent reports may not be as reliable.
Dr. Meredith F. Small, author of «Our Babies, Ourselves: How Biology and Culture Shape the Way We Parentreports that in a survey of 186 societies, researchers found that «infants are carried most of the time in nonindustrial societies, 56 percent of the time in less traditional societies, and 25 percent of the time in the United States.»
Recently, as I searched for some long term evidence of the benefits of parent - infant co-sleeping, I came across a study of college age subjects which found that males who had co-slept with their parents between birth and five years not only had significantly higher self esteem, they experienced less guilt and anxiety and reported greater frequency of sex.
And interestingly, parents who don't expect their children to fall asleep by themselves are less likely to report that their children have sleep problems (Morelli et al 1992).
Although the Australian work of McIntosh (2010) found that infants under two who spent one night or more a week and toddlers who spend 10 days a month of overnight time in their non-primary caregiver's care are more irritable, more severely distressed and insecure in their relationships with their primary parent, less persistent at tasks, and more physically and emotionally stressed, this study has been largely discredited by a recently published consensus report endorsed by 110 child development experts (Warshak, 2013), which found that McIntosh drew unwarranted conclusions from her unrepresentative and flawed data.
Parents who massage their baby report feeling less stressed and more confident reading their baby's cues.
The results of the study were compelling: parents who did intervention reported fewer sleep problems at age 10 months, and the mothers were less likely to have suffered depression at 2 years.
«If parents use 24 nappies and follow manufacturers» instructions to wash at 60 degrees C [140 degrees Fahrenheit] using an A-rated washing machine, they will have approximately 24 percent less impact on global warming than the report says,» said WEN's Ann Link.
Mothers who wear their babies have been shown to have less incidence of postpartum depression and report being more confident in their parenting skills.
Black parents were less likely than white parents to report concerns about two ASD symptoms — social deficits and restricted and repetitive behaviors.
«Children who had their pet dog with them reported feeling less stressed compared to having a parent for social support or having no social support.»
Racial / ethnic minorities and those whose parents had little formal education said they were less likely to regularly get seven or more hours of sleep, yet they were more likely to report getting adequate sleep, suggesting a mismatch between actual sleep and perceptions of adequate sleep.
«Another striking finding was that giving money to parents in child allowances or monthly payments had less effect on parental happiness that giving them the tools — such as flexible work time — to combine employment with parenting,» the report said.
Fifty - nine percent of parents whose child did not receive the flu vaccine this season say it is less important than other childhood vaccines — compared to only 14 percent of parents whose child got a flu shot, according to today's report from the C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health.
Parents also reported on their child's diet, revealing to the researchers that almost nine out of ten children in the sample ate fish less than twice a week, and nearly one in ten never ate fish at all.
Overall, 2.6 percent of parents reported switching their child to a cheaper asthma medicine and 9.3 percent used less medicine than prescribed because of the costs.
Parents also reported their very preterm born children to be less accepted by their peers.
However, the team says Asian - American students reported lower self - esteem, more conflict with their parents, and less time spent with friends compared with their white peers.
A new report from the University of Michigan says that today's teens are smoking and drinking less than their parents» generation — and that the use of alcohol and drugs reached its lowest point since the survey began in 1975.
... When parents and youth have good communication, along with appropriate firmness, studies have shown youth report less depression and anxiety and more self - reliance and self - esteem.»
In fact, some studies show that children of controlling and overprotective parents report increased rates of depression and anxiety, and feel less prepared to manage stress and life dissatisfaction.
In a double - blind study of infants, supplementation of a standard milk - based formula with probiotic organisms (Bifidobacterium lactis and Streptococcus thermophilus) significantly reduced the frequency of colic, compared with the same formula minus the probiotics.13 Similarly, another study found that after a month of administering probiotic oil drops with Reuteri bacteria, parents reported significantly less screaming in their children.14 Support of intestinal microflora is a core concept in the Wise Traditions diet.
Parents and teachers report that kids read much less in middle and high school than they did in elementary school.
CPE's report investigates the 12 percent of high school graduates who didn't enroll in college, and it reveals some interesting, though not necessarily surprising, trends: They are more likely to be male, two out of three come from the lower end of the socioeconomic scale, and about half have parents whose highest level of education is a high school diploma or less.
We find that parents report less social disruption at charter schools than at district schools.
Risks Seen for Children of Illegal Immigrants The New York Times, September 20, 2011 «The Harvard study reports that «fear and vigilance» guide the home lives of young children whose parents are illegal immigrants, making the parents significantly less likely to engage with teachers or be active in schools.»
PISA results show that, even after accounting for differences in performance and socio - economic status, girls who perceive that their parents encourage them to be confident in their abilities were 21 per cent less likely to report that they feel tense when they study, on average across OECD countries.
According to the Daily Mail, Ms Konarzewski's stance on term time trips has angered parents, some of whom claimed the new rule was less about children's learning and more focused on a good attendance report for Ofsted.
* Researchers found preliminary evidence that children who arrived to the U.S. as a family unit with no separations from their parents were less likely to report depressive symptoms than children who had experienced a parental separation during the migratory process.
PISA results show that, even after accounting for differences in performance and socio - economic status, girls who perceive that their parents encourage them to be confident in their abilities were 21 % less likely to report that they feel tense when they study, on average across OECD countries.
The findings also showed that children who arrived to the United States as a family unit involving no separations from their parents were less likely to report depressive symptoms than children whose families had separated during the migratory process.
As the event page explains, eighty - five percent of instructors report that parents misunderstand the new methods and are less likely to reinforce math learning at home.
Choice parents were also less likely to report the existence of a counselor, a nurse, a music program, an art program, or prepared lunches at their schools.
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