Sentences with phrase «reported symptoms consistent»

«Despite having low levels of circulating testosterone, very few subjects reported symptoms consistent with testosterone deficiency or excess,» Page said.

Not exact matches

With consistent messaging and constant reinforcement of the value of immediate concussion reporting in achieving your team's performance goals, and by making athletes feel comfortable in reporting, we believe that, not only will attitudes and beliefs about concussion reporting begin to change, but the concussion reporting behavior of your athletes will start to change as well, and that, over time, the culture of resistance to concussion symptom reporting will be replaced by a sports culture of concussion safety.
Concussion and Sports Related Head Injury: Code 280.13 C requires the Iowa high school athletic association and the Iowa girls high school athletic union to work together to distribute the CDC guidelines and other information to inform and educate coaches, students, and parents and guardians of students of the risks, signs, symptoms, and behaviors consistent with a concussion or brain injury, including the danger of continuing to play after suffering a concussion or brain injury and their responsibility to report such signs, symptoms, and behaviors if they occur.
Concussion and Sports - Related Head Injury: Code 21-4-703 (2011) prohibits an athletic coach or trainer from allowing a student athlete to participate in a school athletic event on the same day that the athlete (1) exhibits signs, symptoms or behaviors consistent with a concussion or head injury after a coach, trainer, school official or student reports, observers or suspects that they have sustained a concussion or other head injury, or (2) has been diagnosed with a concussion or other head injury.
«What's frightening about this emerging street drug is that users themselves may not be aware that they are ingesting it,» said lead study author John Stogner, Ph.D. of the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, N.C. «A patient may report heroin use and have symptoms consistent with heroin overdose, but an emergency physician may find that the standard dose of antidote (naloxone) doesn't work.
The authors noted that they did not identify any consistent patterns in the two groups when it came to reported symptoms such as bad taste, diarrhea, headache, nausea, rash, and stomach upset.
No symptoms consistent with a diagnosis of peripheral neuropathy were reported
One marketing survey found that 17 % of all dog owners reported that their dogs had symptoms consistent with separation anxiety [3].
Next, the provider must evaluate whether the timing of patient's reported symptoms is consistent with when the motor vehicle accident occurred.
A study showed that the strongest benefit from mentoring, and most consistent across risk groups, was a reduction in depressive symptoms — particularly noteworthy given that almost one in four youth reported worrisome levels of these symptoms at baseline.
Past studies have reported that maternal prepartum depressive symptoms are a consistent predictor of their children exhibiting aggression and other behavioral problems (Hay, Mundy et al., 2011; Hay, Pawlby, Waters, Perra, & Sharp, 2010), even after controlling for maternal PDS (Waters, Hay, Simmonds, & van Goozen, 2014).
Older adults living alone showed a higher likelihood of reporting at least one depressive symptom compared with those living with family members or others, which was consistent with earlier studies.24 25 Living alone and loneliness are established risk factors for depression and depressive symptoms in older adults.
Specifically, participants in marginalized relationships reported lower self - esteem, more symptoms of poor health (e.g., headaches, nausea, loss of sexual interest), and a greater frequency of risky health behaviors, including more cigarette smoking and less consistent condom use.
We found little evidence of differences between CBCT and a wait list in partner - reported relationship satisfaction, and partners» ratings of PTSD symptom improvements were not as consistent with the clinicians» ratings.
This pattern of change in means over the decade between the 2005 study and ours appears consistent with the small, but significant, increases observed between 2007 and 2012 in the self - report subscale means for Total Difficulties, Emotional Symptoms, Peer Relationship Problems and Hyperactivity - Inattention (but a decrease in Conduct Problems) in nationally representative New Zealand samples of children aged 12 — 15 years, 28 and with a similar increase in Emotional Symptoms and decrease in Conduct Problems between 2009 and 2014 in English community samples of children aged 11 — 13 years.29 The mean PLE score in the MCS sample aligned closely with that reported previously for a relatively deprived inner - city London, UK, community sample aged 9 — 12 years19 using these same nine items, although the overall prevalence of a «Certainly True» to at least one of the nine items in the MCS (52.2 %) was lower than that obtained in the London sample (66.0 %).8
These findings are consistent with the report of Aneshensel, Frerichs, and Huba (1984) that illness has a large, contemporaneous effect, increasing depressive symptomatology over previous levels, and that depressive symptoms have a smaller, lagged effect on health.
Additionally, since the control group received no intervention to help mitigate depressive symptoms, this result is consistent with reports that caregiver depression is linked with heightened risk of developmental problems in young children, either through disrupted parenting practices, or in response to a child's developmental delay (E. Cheng et al. 2015; Rose - Jacobs et al. 2008).
Our findings in a relatively severe clinical sample of children with ADHD, free of conduct disorders, are consistent with several population studies33 - 37 that have reported that ADHD or ADHD symptoms do not predict SUDs when controlling for conduct disorder or problems.
Consistent with the developmental literature, main effects revealed that older adolescents and females reported more symptoms of depression than did younger adolescents and males.
Parent training studies show consistent behavioral improvements reported by teachers and observers as well as parents, with evidence of clinically significant improvement in ADHD symptoms for up to 2 years.
Consistent with the literature on youth depression (Marcotte, Fortin, Potvin, & Papillon, 2002), reports of stress and depressive symptoms were more common among girls than boys, and alcohol and marijuana use was more common among those who reported depressive symptoms, relative to those who did not report depressive symptoms.
These findings are consistent with those of Natvig et al20 who reported that increasing support from fellow students was associated with decreased risk for somatic symptoms.
Our findings are consistent with those of a cross-sectional study by Tucker and colleagues7 that reported evidence of an increased risk of symptoms of depression, anxiety, and anger among adolescents exposed to sibling aggression.
This finding is consistent with reports that the development of anxiety and depressive disorder symptoms of adolescents from the general community, though parallel, occurs as two distinct disorders (Hale et al. 2009), and may have implications for our understanding of depression versus anxiety disorder.
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