The percentage of children in poorer health increased with the number of
social risk factors across all health outcomes.
Not exact matches
Multiple
social risk factors have a cumulative effect on parent - reported child health status
across physical and socioemotional domains, demonstrating a very strong
risk gradient effect.
Important, too, is the recognition that violence exposure is associated with multiple
risk factors across the
social ecology.
From a public health perspective, early interventions in childhood might change or moderate the cycle of homelessness
across generations because early
risk factors are often longstanding and drive a trajectory of cumulative
risk, potentially leading to severe psychopathology and
social exclusion.
Our findings support a family systems
risk model14 that explains children's cognitive,
social and emotional development using information about five kinds of family
risk or protective
factors: (1) Each family member's level of adaptation, self - perceptions, mental health and psychological distress; (2) The quality of both mother - child and father - child relationships; (3) The quality of the relationship between the parents, including communication styles, conflict resolution, problem - solving styles and emotion regulation; (4) Patterns of both couple and parent - child relationships transmitted
across the generations; and (5) The balance between life stressors and
social supports outside the immediate family.
Guided by this approach, researchers examine the ways in which
risk and protective
factors interact with one another
across and within proximal
social contexts and their reciprocal patterns of the association with adolescent sexual
risk behavior over time.