«There is an urgent need for looking at perfectionism with a person - centred approach as an individual and
societal risk factor, when formulating clinical guidelines for suicide risk assessment and intervention, as well as public health approaches to suicide prevention,» says Flett.
Child abuse results from a complex interaction of individual, family and
societal risk factors.
Not exact matches
Gorsuch has said that if judges
factor in personal beliefs,
societal changes or calculations about maximizing social welfare, they
risk becoming «little more than politicians with robes.»
Better understanding of these
factors can help mitigate future
societal harm, for instance, by improving
risk communication campaigns that encourage preparation for hazardous weather events.
They suggest it may be more beneficial to take a lifespan - oriented approach that includes education about known biological, psychosocial and environmental
risk factors, investment in
societal programs and infrastructure that support brain health, and ensuring proper care for those affected and their caregivers.
Because of their increased dropout rate, as well as
societal stigma surrounding them and a number of other
factors, teenage parents and their children are at
risk of experiencing worse psychosocial and socioeconomic outcomes than their peers (Kiselica & Pfaller, 1993; Coren et al., 2003).
In order to slow this
societal deficit we must study both the causes of divorce and its potential
risk factors for children.
Credit
risk is inextricable from
societal factors of class and race, ultimately raising questions about debt as an instrument of structural injustice.
Firstly, mitigation practices may not be implemented for economic reasons (e.g., market failures, need for capital investment to realize recurrent savings), or a range of
factors including
risk ‐ related, political / bureaucratic, logistical, and educational /
societal barriers.
Societal assessment of environmental threats depends upon a variety of
factors including physical science - based estimates of the
risk of impacts and economic valuation of those impacts.
This approach recognizes that
factors external to the law can make the law inaccessible, and that problems that are framed as legal may really be caused by other
societal problems such as lack of economic resources, education, healthcare or employment: Patricia Hughes, Advancing Access to Justice through Generic Solutions: the
risk of perpetuating exclusion, 31 Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice 1 (2013)[Hughes, Access to Justice and Generic Solutions], online http://ojs.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/WYAJ/article/view/4308.
A combination of individual, relational, community, and
societal factors contribute to the
risk of becoming a perpetrator of SV.
Thus, most
risk factors identified at community and
societal levels are derived theoretically.
Risk factors may include: individual characteristics of the infant such as temperament, family
factors, community or
societal factors.
Taken together, these findings dovetail nicely as two examples of how cultural values serve adaptive functions by tuning
societal behaviour so that social and environmental
risk factors are reduced and physical and mental health of group members is maintained.
A focus on early nutrition is important, as diet is a targetable
risk factor; improving maternal and / or childhood diet may help lower the prevalence of early - onset conduct problems, thus lowering substantial
societal and economic costs associated with childhood CP and related adjustment problems (Hsia and Belfer 2008).