Sentences with phrase «studies reported parent»

Two studies reported parent — child relationship outcomes at short - term follow - up (up to 6 months postintervention).
Three studies reported parent — child relationship outcomes at postintervention43, 44, 46 and two studies reported outcomes at short - term follow - up.40, 43 Significant positive results were found at both time points; however, the majority of outcomes showed no effects.
Six studies reported parent outcomes of using kangaroo care with their preterm infants, of which two were RCTs.
Because few studies reported parent — child relationship outcomes at follow - up, we could not conduct meta - analyses for any parent — child relationship follow - up outcomes.
She selected 88 studies that were reliable — however, only 44 % reported participant ethnicity, 27 % reported SES, and only 4 studies reported parenting style.
She selected 88 studies that were reliable — however, only 44 % reported participant ethnicity, 27 % reported SES, and only 4 studies reported parenting style.
Table 5 shows the individual results of the four studies reporting parent — child relationship outcomes.

Not exact matches

According to the study, millennial parents are most likely to report having made sacrifices to increase their savings, including cutting back in big spending areas such as dining out, vacations, and entertainment.
Just a few days ago, The Science Daily reported on a study conducted by the University of Michigan Health System, which concluded that «parents» use of mobile technology around young children may be causing internal tension, conflicts and negative interactions with their kids.»
«This is an incredibly sharp contrast with the outlook for their parents and grandparents, as none of those 55 years old and older reported plans to use either of these services,» the study finds.
I was hopeful that today's moms were experiencing more equal marriages when it comes to sharing chores and childcare; I was hopeful we'd moved past the disturbing study Parents magazine reported in 2011, Mad at Dad, with the subhead, «We love our husbands — so why are we so angry at them, so often.»
We are seeking lesbian or gay male parents for our television show, documentary, study, school report or project — can you refer me to individuals?
Because studies show that one - off concussion education isn't enough to change concussion symptom reporting behavior, Step Three in the SmartTeams Play SafeTM #TeamUp4 ConcussionSafetyTM game plan calls for coaches, athletes, athletic trainers, team doctors (and, at the youth and high school level, parents) to attend a mandatoryconcussion safety meeting before every sports season to learn in detail about the importance of immediate concussion symptom reporting, not just in minimizing the risks concussions pose to an athlete's short - and long - term health, but in increasing the chances for individual and team success.
But breastfeeding and parenting approach go way beyond spiffy reports and scientific studies.
«I think the biggest limitation with the study was that parents reported their child's concussion,» said Dr. Covassin.
In addition to calling for state laws mandating the use of helmets in alpine activities, the study also recommends such prevention strategies as securing and padding soccer goal posts, as well as enhanced education for coaches, trainers, parents, and the athletes themselves to promote increased reporting and proper management of sport - related concussion.
«Clinicians, parents, and coaches should make concussion education and awareness a priority, and address factors to provide a more optimal concussion - reporting environment,» says Johna Register - Mihalik, Ph.D, LAT, ATC, Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and lead author of the one of the recent studies on underreporting.
According to a number of recent studies [1,2,5,13,18], while the culture of sport (including influences from professional and other athletes), as well as the media and other outside sources play a role in the decision of student - athletes to report experiencing concussion symptoms, it is coaches and teammates, along with parents, who have the strongest influence on the decision to report a concussion during sport participation, with coaches being one of the primary barriers to increased self - reporting by athletes of concussive symptoms.
Although the study did not survey parents, the student - athletes surveyed «indicated that what their parents thought about reporting was an important social factor when deciding to report concussive symptoms»).
Media reports on the finding by Dr. McKee and her colleagues in a new study reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association that 110 of 111 deceased NFL players her group had autopsied had CTE will undoubtedly take the level of fear among sports parents and present and former athletes in all contact and collision sports alike to even more frenzied heights.
Katherine Dettwyler, an associate professor of anthropology and nutrition at Texas A&M University, conducted a study in the late 1990s on 1,280 children whose parents self - reported information about their breastfeeding practices.
This week's featured article is from Reuters, reporting on a study conducted at the University of Virginia that investigated the negative effects on future relationships of teenagers with controlling parents.
The study found that more than one in three children report experiencing headaches in the past month, but only 13 percent of parents think their children experience headaches as a result of stress.
A study from 2010 acknowledged, yes, «in the short - term, kids go through a one - to two - year crisis period when their parents divorce,» but the idea of staying together for the kids is problematic, especially if it's a high - conflict family, and that previous research indicating people should stay together «has been plagued by many data problems — reliance on small samples derived from one therapy clinic, retrospective reports, and cross sectional data.»
In the Dutch study reported by Smeets et al, parents used the potty chair as the cue.
Several parents in a Seattle study report that massaging helped them understand their infants better.
Karen, I don't think the people who conducted this study (or the people who reported it on the Today Show) were trying to make parents feel guilty.
According to the study, it was reported by 11 % of parents whose children attended a school with an incentive program, versus 4 % of those whose school did not offer such a program.
In this study, we found only one worrisome weight - related behavior to be associated with school - based nutrition interventions: where there were school - based interventions for physical activity, more parents reported their kids to be «too physically active»...
A longitudinal study by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development concluded in 2007 that «although parenting was a stronger and more consistent predictor of children's development than early child ‐ care experience, higher quality care predicted higher vocabulary scores and more exposure to center care predicted more teacher ‐ reported externalizing problems.
As reported by Anderson Cooper in a «360 Degrees» interview in 2005, Professor Constance Ahrons conducted a 20 - year longitudinal study, interviewing parents three times over five years, then interviewing their adult children 20 years later.
While all parents in the study wanted their child to perform to the best of their ability, 34 percent reported that they wanted their child to avoid doing worse than others and 43 percent were focused on their child outperforming others.
The above quote, taken from a news story in the Temple University website, suggests that Dr. Weinraub, author of a recent and widely reported study on infant and toddler sleep and night waking patterns, sees only one possible solution for parents who are stressed by their babies» nightwaking.
Psychologist Robert Bauserman's study showed that couples who have joint custody reported less conflict than those where one parent had sole custody, possibly because both parents could participate in their children's lives equally.
In part II (Journal of Perinatal Education, 8 (1), a study on the use of this curriculum with parents will be reported.
Some studies showed positive impacts of HFA on parent self - reports of reductions in the frequency of neglect, harsh parenting in the past week, and other types of abuse.8, 21,22,23,27
Studies of HFA showed mixed but mostly no effects on a parent - reported measure of a range of abusive parenting behaviours.
Existing reviews of parent training have methodological limitations such as inclusion of non-randomised studies, the absence of investigation for heterogeneity prior to meta - analysis or failure to report confidence intervals.
Of the 26 studies reporting family structure more than 30 % of index children were in single parent households.
Critics of cry - it - out methods argue that these studies are flawed — they don't have the right measures of harm, they fail to determine whether the parents actually used cry - it - out methods to sleep train their babies, and they rely on parents» reports instead of observation.
Mothers reported more symptoms of psychological distress24, 25 and low self - efficacy.26, 27 And, although mothers report more depressive symptoms at the time their infants are experiencing colic, 28,29 research on maternal depression 3 months after the remittance of infant colic is mixed.30, 31 The distress mothers of colic infants report may arise out of their difficulties in soothing their infants as well as within their everyday dyadic interactions.32 The few studies to date that have examined the long - term consequences of having a colicky child, however, indicate that there are no negative outcomes for parent behaviour and, importantly, for the parent - child relationship.
Independent observations of change were on the whole smaller than parent - report (SMD of 0.4 compared with 0.7), and very few (7/25) of the included studies had provided an independent assessment of outcome.
Recently, as I searched for some long term evidence of the benefits of parent - infant co-sleeping, I came across a study of college age subjects which found that males who had co-slept with their parents between birth and five years not only had significantly higher self esteem, they experienced less guilt and anxiety and reported greater frequency of sex.
Today's Parent reports on a study that noted many infant deaths related to crib bumpers.
One study reported that the parents of breastfed babies averaged 40 - 45 minutes more sleep time than did the parents of formula - fed babies (Doan et al 2007).
Studies of American adolescents have reported that teens with authoritarian parents were the least likely to feel socially accepted by their peers.
A study performed at the Department of Psychiatry in Taipei, Taiwan, polled the parents of 2643 first to ninth graders and discovered that dyssomnia (sleep - disordered breathing problems and daytime inadvertent napping) were related to ADHD symptoms as reported by mothers and teachers.
Studies of both Western and Chinese children report that kids are more likely to be rejected by their peers when their parents practice authoritarian parenting — an approach characterized by low levels of warmth and high levels of control.
Given the results of a a new study reported in the British medical journal, The Lancet4 that children and young adults scanned multiple times by CT have a small increased risk of leukemia and brain tumors in the decade following their first scan, parents should make sure a CT scan is really necessary in treatment of their child after head injury.
Although the Australian work of McIntosh (2010) found that infants under two who spent one night or more a week and toddlers who spend 10 days a month of overnight time in their non-primary caregiver's care are more irritable, more severely distressed and insecure in their relationships with their primary parent, less persistent at tasks, and more physically and emotionally stressed, this study has been largely discredited by a recently published consensus report endorsed by 110 child development experts (Warshak, 2013), which found that McIntosh drew unwarranted conclusions from her unrepresentative and flawed data.
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