Sentences with phrase «risk mothers for child»

Effects of an evidence - based parenting program on biobehavioral stress among at - risk mothers for child maltreatment: A pilot study.

Not exact matches

I've always been under the impression that the «conservative» view of abortion is that it should NOT be allowed EXCEPT in cases of rape, incest, or when competent medical authorities determine that the health and safety of the mother and / or child is at serious risk (but not justifying the abortion of a child simply for having a mental or physical disability).
As a result, you'll see improvements in risk assessment, a reduced burden on mothers, reduced risk of domestic violence, enhanced resources for the care of children and better risk management — leading ultimately to the reduction of harm.
More generally, the child welfare rationale for treating fathers and mothers who are a risk to their children differently in terms of registration and PR is not clearcut.
This was a turning point in my life, and although a difficult decision, I left my work again, to risk, and to start a magazine that filled the need of mothers like me, who love crafting, but could not easily find sources for natural materials and patterns that fit a natural lifestyle and conscious parenting, for mothers who not just enjoyed doing crafts with their children, but wanted to sit down at the end of a hard day's work and read, and create, within a community they belong to.
However, research has found that mothers who breastfeed their children can lower that risk for up to two years after childbirth.
The cancer experts at AICR noted that because carrying excess body fat is linked to increased risk for seven different cancers, breastfeeding affords protection to both mother and child.
After the traumatic hospital births, which were physically damaging to my mother and life risking to my brothers, and after the cold way the hospitals handled her miscarriages, it was a beautiful relief for her to experience such an easy birth at home without complication, with less pain and more beauty for mother and child, and for their family, too.
• Better engagement with fathers and father - figures in families where children are at risk is likely to result in better risk assessment, reduced burden on mothers, enhanced resources for the care of children and better risk management, leading to reduction of harm (Zanoni et al, 2013).
But many of them were teenagers, unemployed or in low - paid jobs, and often living apart from their prospective child's mother (see box 1 below)-- the latter being a significant risk factor for disengagement from active fatherhood.
Especially for women who have sensitive skin, or mothers with children of the same who may be a little too curious for their own good, it's easier to keep some products off the vanity altogether than risk damaging skin further.
Research shows that sleeping with or near children increases the quality of sleep for mothers and reduces risk of SIDS for babies.
The Code Training / Workshop will cover a range of topics, including: infant and young child feeding trends; the importance of breastfeeding for health, sustainability; understanding marketing; managing conflicts of interest; the Code and the BFI; the Code in emergencies; how formula feeding is a health risk for mothers and babies; and many others.
In experiments with families at high risk for poor child outcomes, researchers randomly assigned some mothers to receive training in responsive parenting techniques.
Children who are exposed to secondhand smoke are at much greater risk for upper respiratory illnesses, and babies of mothers who smoke but don't breastfeed are at an even greater risk.
For example, having a young mother or a mother with little or delayed prenatal care puts a child at increased risk.
Mothers who breastfeed their children lower their risk for diabetes and, as is often seen in breastfeeding research, the protection is dose - dependent.
Yet time and time again I have read and written about homebirth loss mothers praising deadly midwives, praising the «experience» of a vaginal birth of a dead child, refusing to cooperate in disciplining the midwife responsible, advocating for more «freedom» for homebirth midwives, and, most grotesque of all, choosing to risk their next child's life by having a homebirth.
The positive benefits of oxytocin last long after the nursing relationship ends: both mother and child are at a decreased risk for heart disease, and oxytocin «reduces the severity of the child's lifelong reactions to stress.»
A recent interview with Dr. Greer in Medscape Pediatrics notes that «Now we can tell mothers: If you have exclusively breastfed for 4 months and your child is not at risk for allergy, you can introduce any food at 6 or 8 months or whatever.»
This is especially important if the baby has any risk factors for later developing cavities, such as having a mother with cavities, since the bacteria that cause cavities, Streptococcus mutans, is often passed from a mother to her infant sometime in the child's first two years of life.
The American Academy of Family Physicians states in its breastfeeding position paper «because breastfeeding is the physiologic norm, we will refer to the risks of not breastfeeding for infants, children, and mothers
If a woman is only having 1 - 2 children, scheduled c - section and planned vaginal birth are approximately equal in risk for both mother and child.
Mothers who experience significant prenatal stress may have to deal with a lot more stress in years to come, as they might unintentionally be increasing their child's future risk for behavioral issues.
Water births are associated with low risks for both mother and child when obstetrical guidelines are followed.
Attachment - based intervention for enhancing sensitive discipline in mothers of 1 - to 3 - year - old children at risk for externalizing behavior problems: a randomized controlled trial.
A breast - milk substitute is infant nutrition of acceptable quality, but entails health risks for both mother and child, such as an increased risk of infectious diseases, obesity and some cancers.
We all have to answer for what we do on this earth so you may want to consider the mother's who have accidentally smothered their child in a bed, like my friend who did not fit into any of your risk factor groups... because her daughter is dead and will always be dead and she will never be whole or truly happy again.
We don't know for certain, but the best evidence we have indicates that a child who is at risk for celiac disease being breastfed by a mother who eats a normal diet would not be harmed by this, and in fact, might be helped.»
Children and mothers who do not breastfeed are at greater risk for many conditions including acute and chronic illness for children, and breast and ovarian cancer for Children and mothers who do not breastfeed are at greater risk for many conditions including acute and chronic illness for children, and breast and ovarian cancer for children, and breast and ovarian cancer for mothers.
Even when the child is at higher than usual risk for food allergies, he said, there is no evidence that dietary modifications by the mother make a difference.
For the infant, breastfeeding is associated with a reduction in infectious illness (Cunningham et al., 1991), allergic manifestations in infants at risk (Saarinen and Kajosarri, 1995), diabetes (Mayer et al., 1988), Crohns disease (Rigas et al., 1993), coeliac disease (Challacombe et al., 1997) and ulcerative colitis (Koletzko et al., 1991), and may encourage motherchild attachment and bonding (Fergusson and Woodward, 1999).
To the extent that depressed mothers have persistent mood problems during participation in home visiting, they may benefit less from services and their children will continue to be at risk for poor outcomes.
Depressed mothers are often overwhelmed in the parenting role, have difficulty reading infant cues, struggle to meet the social and emotional needs of their children, and are less tolerant of child misbehaviour.7 Offspring of depressed mothers, particularly if they are exposed to depression in the first year of life, are more likely to be poorly attached to their caregivers, experience emotional and behavioural dysregulation, have difficulty with attention and memory, and are at greater risk for psychiatric disorders throughout childhood.8 Home visiting focuses on fostering healthy child development by improving parenting and maternal functioning.
Identifying depressed mothers or those at risk for depression who are participating in home visiting, and treating or preventing the condition and its deleterious consequences, can improve program outcomes and foster healthy child development.
Research has demonstrated that a large proportion of mothers served in home visiting suffer from mental health problems, with up to 50 percent experiencing clinically elevated levels of depression during the critical first years of their child's development.5 There is evidence that many depressed mothers fail to fully benefit from home visiting.6 Identifying depressed mothers or those at risk for depression who are participating in home visiting, and treating or preventing the condition and its deleterious consequences, can improve program outcomes and foster healthy child development.
Many new mothers are making choices about infant feeding without knowing breastfeeding can help reduce cancer risks for both themselves and their children.
C - sections not only increase the mother's risk of death, they also have long term health implications for the child.
For example, a mother who has two children and breastfeeds each for two years can realize a 17.2 % reduction in her risk of developing breast cancer later in her life (Collaborative Group on Hormonal Factors in Breast Cancer, 200For example, a mother who has two children and breastfeeds each for two years can realize a 17.2 % reduction in her risk of developing breast cancer later in her life (Collaborative Group on Hormonal Factors in Breast Cancer, 200for two years can realize a 17.2 % reduction in her risk of developing breast cancer later in her life (Collaborative Group on Hormonal Factors in Breast Cancer, 2002).
Excess pounds before pregnancy can mean increased health risks for both expectant mother and developing child.
But when we overemphasize the things that mothers may do or feel for their children, we run the risk of devaluing the other roles that mothers as women fulfill — wives, sisters, friends, daughters, colleagues, neighbors — and we diminish the role that fathers play in the lives of their children.
Who provides care: lay health workers for caring for people with hypertension, lay health workers to deliver care for mothers and children or infectious diseases, lay health workers to deliver community - based neonatal care packages, midlevel health professionals for abortion care, social support to pregnant women at risk, midwife - led care for childbearing women, non-specialist providers in mental health and neurology, and physician - nurse substitution.
A mother (and father) need to know the risks in order to make the best decision for their children.
Studies undertaken in, for example, the U.K. and Netherlands all come up with similar findings, that home birth is safest for both mother and child in low risk pregnancies
Benefits / risks to both mother and baby USA studies: Less sudden Infant Death syndrome in exclusively breastfed babies, less Childhood Lymphoma / Leukemia in children who were breastfed 6 or more months, better bone remineralizaton for mother after weaning in mothers who breastfed than those who didn't.
Although vaginal birth with a big baby carries risks, Cesarean surgery also carries potential harms for the mother, infant, and children born in future pregnancies.
Important health benefits of breastfeeding and lactation are also described for mothers.83 The benefits include decreased postpartum bleeding and more rapid uterine involution attributable to increased concentrations of oxytocin, 84 decreased menstrual blood loss and increased child spacing attributable to lactational amenorrhea, 85 earlier return to prepregnancy weight, 86 decreased risk of breast cancer, 87 — 92 decreased risk of ovarian cancer, 93 and possibly decreased risk of hip fractures and osteoporosis in the postmenopausal period.94 — 96
Other studies have reported similar results, even after controlling for additional risk factors, like child neglect, abuse, or having a mother with mental health problems (Lansford et al 2009; Coley et al 2014; Taylor et al 2010; MacKenzie et al 2015).
One recent study even found that breastfeeding may reduce a mother's risk of heart disease for up to 10 years after she's stopped nursing her child.
In the age of equality, breastfeeding is at risk of being seen as a tie, rather than a bond, a hindrance rather than a womanly art of value for mother and child.
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