Not exact matches
In fact, they are likely at greater
risk of damage — at least that's what we've learned from the standard childhood vaccinations, which negatively affect two to three times more boys
than girls.
Girls who physically matured earlier
than average, or boys who matured later
than average, were at greater
risk, just as they are today.
Given questions about how long the vaccine is effective for, she questioned the efficacy of giving shots to
girls as young as 11 years old in parts of the world (such as the U.S.) where women regularly undergo safety Pap screening repeatedly over their lifetimes, saying that the chances of their contracting cervical cancer may be less
than the «small»
risks associated with the vaccine.
Girls are no more delicate
than boys when it comes to the
risk of sports injury; it's important for all kids to play safely.
Girls tend to be more fearful of
risk than boys because they lack confidence and usually think more before they act (this is often a good thing!)
But the fact is something in the genetic make up and hormones of baby boys expose them to a higher
risk of autism
than girls (for those who can not sleep without knowing so those weird medical terms,
girls tend to have lower levels of vasopressin and higher levels of natural oxytocin).
Girls are at a greater
risk than boys of being abused by a family member.
He was going to highlight the particular plight of Syrian women and
girls, who make up more
than half of Syrian refugees, and who have been shown to be more at
risk of both sexual and physical violence during the conflict, as they are in all conflicts.
We must support and give a voice to the young
girls who stand the
risk of being married off or already married off to men far older
than them and yet are required to remain silent.
More
than 600 teenage
girls in the Buffalo will likely give birth this year, and not many of them will finish high school.Five years from now, their children will enter the Buffalo schools as some of the district's most at -
risk students.
«Cardiometabolic
risk factors may be more important correlates of academic achievement in
girls than in boys, but this warrants more research.»
«Because
girls are more likely to come to emergency departments with suicide - related behaviors
than boys, they may actually reduce their suicide
risk by interacting with the system more frequently,» said Dr. Rhodes.
Others have found that boys are more vulnerable
than girls to the long - term impact of maltreatment in childhood, and the
risk of such boys becoming antisocial in later life seems to be related to a gene on the X chromosome, although not one that is imprinted.
Seventeen per cent of all teens fell into the high -
risk group, but cortisol levels plus depressive symptoms were no more useful at pinpointing at -
risk girls than depressive symptoms alone (PNAS, DOI: 10.1073 / pnas.1318786111).
ASD are about four times more common in boys
than girls, but there were no observed differences in
risk between boys and
girls in the study.
Researchers noted that boys and
girls who were 2 to 3 inches shorter
than average for their age were at increased
risk of clot - related (ischemic) stroke in adult men and women and of bleeding stroke in men.
They also found that boys bully more
than girls but here's a significant point: Those who do poorly in school are at a higher
risk of becoming a bully.
So, if a boy and
girl are born with comparable gestational ages, the boy is more at
risk of becoming seriously ill
than the
girl.
Between 100 and 140 million
girls and women worldwide have undergone female genital mutilation (FGM), with more
than 3 million
girls at
risk of the practice every year in Africa alone.
However, despite these efforts, more
than 125 million
girls and women have been subjected to FGM and at least three million
girls are at
risk every year.
Girls who go through puberty and develop physically earlier
than their peers are at
risk of low self - esteem as well as emotional and behavioral problems.
«The phthalates in the plastic water bottles these
girls drink from, or the microwave containers they eat out of, may be far more likely to get into their system
than cosmetic use, and as of now, no one has banned these things,» says M. William Audeh, MD, an oncologist who works in cancer
risk assessment at the Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute at Cedars - Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.
The real
risk for Alzheimers is complex and weakly understood (and quite possibly changing) why thai
girls make better girlfriends
than western women last updated december 2nd, 2017 i know excoriate readers this weblog being stupid, ignorant, or lazy.
Cagney is the most extreme version of the Hawks hero, whose callous dismissal of his long - suffering
girl (poor, hopelessly obsessed Ann Dvorak) borders on abusive, but he's also more hotheaded and less disciplined
than the usual self - contained Hawks man: a hypocrite, a drinker, a
risk - taker whose impatience and anger kills his best friend.
Schools should be aware of the need to do this for
girls, in particular, who are statistically much more likely
than boys to
risk limiting their careers by dropping STEM subjects at an early age.
This isn't a deliberate ploy to make
girls more
risk - averse
than boys, but that doesn't mean it's not happening.
«Boys were 3.4 times more likely
than girls to be developmentally vulnerable on this domain and nearly twice as likely to be classified as developmentally at
risk.»
School - related problems such as academic failure, low educational aspirations, negative labeling, and trouble at school are key
risk factors for gang joining among
girls, and these may be more influential for them
than for boys (Peterson, 2012; Thornberry, et al., 2003).
«Beyond the Streets,» which opens May 6, will fill more
than 40,000 square feet of a warehouse on the edge of Chinatown with mostly new painting, sculpture, photography and installation works by artists such as Shepard Fairey, Takashi Murakami, Kenny Scharf,
RISK and Guerrilla
Girls.
Rather
than just being taught how to use a tampon, teenage
girls should be made aware of the
risks of exposure to dioxins, pesticides, bleach, and phthalate - laden chemical fragrances that cause itching, yeast infections, and inflammation.
We can conclude that obese children are more likely to experience psychological or psychiatric problems
than non-obese children, that
girls are at greater
risk than boys, and that
risk of psychological morbidity increases with age.
Girls who bully are more likely
than boys to be rejected by peers, putting them at even greater
risk for chronic offending.94
Two studies have identified groups of
girls exhibiting chronically high levels of antisocial behavior across childhood and early adolescence and having an increased
risk for continued antisocial behavior.60 In addition, Odgers and several colleagues found that 7.5 percent of all
girls between the ages of seven and fifteen displayed an early - onset of offending that persisted into adolescence and that this pattern was similar to boys of the same age.61 Other studies suggest that although strongly aggressive behavior in
girls before the age of seven is rare, continuity of offending for such
girls may be stronger
than that among comparable boys and that such early problem behavior in
girls should be considered a significant warning sign of potential future problems.62
Though there are numerous putative
risk factors, many of which overlap, certain of them are particularly salient or even unique to females.65 In addition, some analysts have noted an apparent «gender paradox»: despite the lower prevalence of exposure to
risk factors among females in general, those
girls who are clinically referred show more severe behavior problems
than boys.66
More
than previous generations, today's teen
girls face a daunting range of stressors that put them at
risk for a range of serious issues, including self - harming behaviors, substance abuse, eating disorders, anxiety, and depression.
More disruptive
girls tend to show less empathy
than girls without behavior problems, and this deficit is greater among females
than among males.95 It may be that lower levels of empathy pose a greater
risk for
girls than for boys because empathy strengthens the ability to foster the strong attachments and relationships that
girls value more highly
than boys do.96
Some observers have argued that female offenders can, in theory, be either adolescent - limited or life - course - persistent and that the relative scarcity of early - onset aggression in females indicates that they are generally less likely to follow the latter pathway.56 Others, however, have argued that the relative prevalence of adolescent - onset aggression in
girls (compared with childhood - onset) indicates that persistent delinquency simply manifests at a later age in
girls than it does in boys.57 In Persephanie Silverthorn and Paul Frick's model,
girls and boys are influenced by similar
risk factors during childhood, but the onset of delinquent behavior in
girls is delayed by the more stringent social controls imposed on them before adolescence.
Similarly regarding gender, it has been found that boys are more vulnerable
than girls (Elbedour et al., 1993; El Habir et al., 1994) and where under conditions of accumulative
risk factors such as injury through political violence and physical violence or maternal depression in the family unit, boys are particularly vulnerable to emotional and behavioural problems (Garbarino & Kostelny, 1996).
Girls are also less likely to be at
risk than boys.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, boys are at greater
risk for increases in criminal propensities
than girls.
To clarify this relationship, we tested the following hypotheses in a population - based study: (1) children with ADHD have a higher
risk of developing depression
than children without ADHD; (2) the pathway from ADHD to depression is mediated (partly) through anxiety and disruptive behavior disorders; and (3) mediation through anxiety is more prevalent in
girls, and mediation through disruptive behavior disorders is more prevalent in boys.
Also, even though CD is rarer in
girls than in boys, CD in
girls is associated with a higher
risk of these
girls developing personality disorder in adulthood (Cohen 1996).
Loeber and Keenan [13] found, for example, that
girls with conduct disorders appear to be at higher
risk for substance use problems
than boys who suffer from conduct disorder, whereas the
risk of (heavy) substance use is generally higher for boys.
Although
girls with CP appear at greater
risk than boys for presenting comorbid depression, empirical research on gender differences in these associations is even sparser.
Moffitt et al. (2001) extensively investigated potential sex - differences in the prevalence of
risk factors and the impact of family
risk factors on delinquency and concluded that, in general, boys seem to be more exposed to
risk factors of delinquency, rather
than that they are more vulnerable for
risk factors of delinquency compared to
girls.
In addition,
girls tend to have more internalizing comorbid disorders
than boys, whilst boys with ADHD are at higher
risk for externalizing psychiatric comorbidities
than girls [7].