May fear long - term relationships with others, and
show adjustment difficulties such as running away, truancy, and delinquency
Not exact matches
However, long - term SWM player use of this server is not advisable due to repeated documented bugs, including documented instances of moderator - approved anti-SWM instakills, an unmoderated and easily exploited kick system, kernel instruction corruption, privilege escalation exploits, and most worrisome, statistics
showing gaps in achievement between players on different
difficulty settings in spite of
adjustments.
Children of depressed mothers also are more likely to have insecure attachment with their mothers, experience high social withdrawal, have poor communication and language skills, perform poorly on cognitive tasks, and
show more disruptive behaviors across developmental periods.2 Particularly among low - income families, financial
difficulties and related resource scarcity increase the detrimental impacts of maternal depression on the children's
adjustment, the mother's health status, and the family's functioning as a whole.3
Because not all children with depressed mothers
show later problems, research must also examine risk and protective factors that are associated with different patterns of early child development and
adjustment.4, 5 For example, are children whose mothers have a family history of depression or who were depressed before or during pregnancy at especially high risk for
adjustment difficulties?
Earlier research has
shown that children with hyperactivity and conduct
difficulties in particular, may find it difficult to adapt to the educational and social constraints of the classroom impacting on their
adjustment, further behaviour and later attainment.
The results do not
show higher average risk levels for psychosocial
adjustment problems, even though a minority of the cases is at risk for social impairments (7.7 %), internalizing (23.1 %), externalizing (3.8 %) and total
difficulties (11.5 %) and for distress in the parent — child system (15 %).