Risk propensity and health
risk behaviors in U.S. army soldiers with and without psychological disturbances across the deployment cycle
Sexual
Risk Behaviors in the Adolescent Offspring of Parents with Bipolar Disorder: Prospective Associations with Parents» Personality and Externalizing Behavior in Childhood.
We have targeted preschool and primary grade children, ages 0 — 8 years, in this review because research suggests that the most effective interventions can nip in the bud
risk behaviors in the early years, before antisocial behaviors become crystallized.
Childhood neglect is associated with
risk behaviors in adolescence, including substance use.
To complete this initial assessment of adolescents» comparisons, we tested the impact of these adolescent comparisons to a «good parent» standard on factors associated with adolescent risk behavior including adolescent report of self - disclosure, amount of parental monitoring knowledge, and actual report of
risk behaviors in the past four months.
These interventions appear to be efficacious in decreasing some HIV
risk behaviors in their adolescent children.
Because most adolescents reported no sexual
risk behaviors in both waves and a very few reported multiple risks, sexual risk behavior was treated as a binary variable in the analyses (0, «no risks»; 1, «at least one risk»).
Adolescents» social status motivations thus play an important role in the association of popularity with antisocial and
risk behaviors in late adolescence.
Perceived parental relationships and health -
risk behaviors in college - attending emerging adults.
Matthew Jakupcak is a clinical psychologist and researcher who has studied and treated psychological trauma, posttraumatic stress, and high -
risk behaviors in military veterans, first - responders (i.e., firefighters, paramedics, police officers), and young male adults.
Meeting the Treatment Needs of Iraq and Afghanistan War Veterans: Promoting Treatment - Engagement, Delivering Evidenced - Based Care, and Addressing High
Risk Behaviors in Returning Veterans March 8, 2013 by Matthew Jakupcak, PhD View Event
Whether there are any risks for your children in sharing joint legal custody (for example, if your ex has demonstrated high -
risk behaviors in the past that may impair decision making)
Social influences in etiology and prevention of smoking and other health -
risk behaviors in adolescents
Although an abundance of literature supports the concept of a narrow intervention focus on specific risk behaviors, the nature of adolescent HIV / sexually transmitted disease risk reduction calls for a broader approach toward risk reduction.9 In keeping with this approach, most HIV prevention programs that address
risk behaviors in addition to these that directly place an individual at risk for transmission of infection have done so by relating them to these behaviors (ie, drug use increasing the likelihood of unsafe sexual practices4).
Given the small proportion of parents who restrict viewing of R - rated movies, it is likely that few parents are aware of the impact that
risk behaviors in movies may have on their children.
Late intervention in grades 5 and 6 only did not significantly affect health -
risk behaviors in adolescence.
The interventions were designed to increase bonding to school and academic success and to prevent a broad range of health -
risk behaviors in a multiethnic urban sample.
One of the most important findings of the original ACE study was that ACEs were significantly related to a host of health -
risk behaviors in adults, and that the relationships were dose - specific, such that as the number of reported ACEs rose, the number of health - risk behaviors rose incrementally.
The comorbidity of violence - related behaviors with health -
risk behaviors in a population of high school students.
Advances in prevention in public health2 provide a model for prevention of adolescent health - risk behaviors by focusing on risk and protective factors predictive of these behaviors.3, 4 Research on the predictors of school failure, delinquency, drug abuse, teen pregnancy, and violence indicates that many of the same factors predict these different outcomes.5, 6 Recent research has shown that bonding to school and family protects against a broad range of health -
risk behaviors in adoles cence.6 Yet, prevention studies typically have focused narrowly on a specific outcome, such as preventing substance abuse, and on attitudes and social influences that predict that outcome.7, 8 Previous studies on prevention have not sought to address the shared risk and protective factors for diverse health - risk behaviors that are the main threats to adolescent health.
While parents showed an awareness of some risk behaviors, when it came to recognizing significant
risk behaviors in their adolescents, they were «clueless.»
In this direction, some recent studies investigated that children and adolescents who attended educational programs focused on the promotion of self - efficacy in life skills reduced the onset of at - risk and maladaptive behaviors (Griffin et al., 2003; Botvin & Griffin, 2004; Yankah & Aggleton, 2008; Menrath et al., 2012; Jegannathan, Dahlblom, & Kullgren, 2014): it was possible to observe a significant and positive effect for the reduction of health -
risk behaviors in the intervention group, compared to control group (see Menrath et al., 2012), confirming the efficacy of school - based on life skills programs.
The research confirms that a father's emotional engagement — not the amount of time fathers spend with children, rather how they interact with them — leads to multiple positive outcomes, and serves as a significant protective factor against high
risk behaviors in both girls and boys.
This guidebook provides important information on effective parenting, beginning with a short description of childhood development and needs, later moving onto different approaches to parenting, how to identify and deal with
risk behavior in children, the underlying causes of behavior problems in children and teenagers, and finally, a number of ideas for improving parent - child relationships.
NIH is funding researchers to look at
risk behavior in many communities: Hispanic immigrant men who live thousands of miles from their wives, teens who cruise the Internet for pornography, Thai and Vietnamese women who work in San Francisco brothels.
The study found that social responsibility leads to more conservative
risk behavior in group decision - making.
As cigar smoking increases in popularity, however, you can expect more insurance companies to consider this a high -
risk behavior in the future.
Bullying, violence, and
risk behavior in South African school students.
Cognitive behavioral therapy group intervention for HIV transmission
risk behavior in perinatally infected adolescents
Sexual abuse history and associated multiple
risk behavior in adolescent runaways.
KACF Kootenai Alliance for Children and Families is a non-profit organization whose mission is to foster a safe, healthy, and drug - free community through strong partnerships and effective programs that reduce at -
risk behavior in our community's youth and create strong families.
Kootenai Alliance for Children and Families (KACF) is a non-profit organization whose mission is to foster a safe, healthy, and drug - free community through strong partnerships and effective programs that reduce at -
risk behavior in our community's youth and create strong families.
Findings revealed interactions within the family — peer mesosystem as well as transactional effects of sexual risk on levels of supportive relationships, suggesting that supportive relationships and sexual
risk behavior in adolescence are dynamically interwoven.
Although our findings underscore the importance of taking an ecological — transactional approach in studying supportive relationships and sexual
risk behavior in adolescence, they only begin to illuminate the full power of such an approach.
Efforts to explicate the processes associated with sexual
risk behavior in adolescence have the ability to affect youth social contexts, increase the visibility of adolescence susceptibility to HIV infection, and inform youth intervention and prevention efforts (e.g., Dittus, Miller, Kotchick, & Forehand, 2004).
Christopher C. Henrich, Kathryn A. Brookmeyer, Lydia A. Shrier, Golan Shahar; Supportive Relationships and Sexual
Risk Behavior in Adolescence: An Ecological — Transactional Approach, Journal of Pediatric Psychology, Volume 31, Issue 3, 1 April 2006, Pages 286 — 297, https://doi.org/10.1093/jpepsy/jsj024
Objective To examine the longitudinal associations between supportive relationships with friends and parents and sexual
risk behavior in adolescence based on an ecological — transactional perspective.
To our knowledge, no one has investigated transactional effects of sexual
risk behavior in adolescence.
Not exact matches
The
risk for a site like Breitbart is that declaring itself to be unequivocally
in favor of a candidate like Trump puts pressure on the organization to defend almost everything the candidate does, even when that alleged
behavior involves its own reporter.
With no plans to accept Apple Pay, and no set launch date for MCX, it appears Walmart could wait no longer without
risking missing out on a major shift
in customer
behavior: Forrester Research has forecast that mobile payments by U.S. consumers will go from $ 52 billion last year to $ 142 billion by the end of 2019.
Meanwhile, a 2017 study published
in the journal Frontiers
in Psychology found that listening to music increased
risk - taking
behavior in athletic performance, especially
in men.
«
In one of our studies we found that people rated masculine
risk - taking
behaviors as more risky than feminine
risk - taking
behaviors, even when they were matched for how risky they were,» she says.
However, these odds don't factor
in a person's individual
behaviors, age, sex, location, or other things that can affect
risks — they're averages of the entire US population.
With no current plans to accept Apple Pay (though down the line it, and other mobile wallets, could well be a payment option within Walmart Pay), and no set launch date for MCX (never mind that as the product of consortium, that mobile app will not be set up to meet Walmart's specific needs), Walmart could wait no longer without
risking missing out on a major shift
in customer
behavior.
The human tendency is to automatically assume the question refers to consuming illegal narcotics or engaging
in high -
risk behaviors with potentially life - threatening consequences.
Research shows that fearing or accepting
risk is a
behavior people learn, and people who've grown up
in households that are always one paycheck away from eviction are less likely to have learned to take
risks with their money.
Terry Kurzynski, senior partner at security firm Halock Security Labs, said that smart entities perform enterprise - wide
risk assessments to find where their systems are most vulnerable and to spot aberrations
in user
behavior.
By shifting the
risks away from banks and to asset managers, Gross argues that the
risk of herd
behavior that causes a liquidity event
in markets has been shifted away from the professional investing class and to a more amateur, less - informed, skittish class of investor: the public.
While vigilance is important, there are more reasonable
behavior changes and tricks that go further
in reducing your
risk.
In a culture that had utterly normalized this sort of
behavior, it had become just another straightforward
risk assessment.