Not exact matches
The Millennium
Cohort Study found that 21 %
of non-resident fathers (many
of them
young) who had low contact with their 9 -10-month-old infants were in more frequent (and sometimes daily) contact when their
child was aged 3.
While most concussion research focuses on college and professional players or
young children, a team
of neuroscientists at the University
of Georgia is tackling an often overlooked
cohort of athletes.
Given the relatively
young ages
of children at follow - up assessment, longer term evaluations
of these
cohorts will be important to see if these findings remain as
children enter the more behaviourally challenging late middle childhood and adolescent years when emotional and behavioural problems often become more pronounced.
In each
cohort, older
children were immunized at least one day before
younger children so that vaccine responses could be observed first in older
children before exposing
younger children to potential risks
of vaccination.
Continue with the sixth year
of the Birth
Cohort Study, funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to the University
of New Mexico Community Environmental Health Program, SRIC, the Navajo Nation Department
of Health, and the Indian Health Service to work with
young Navajo women and newborn
children to identify uranium and other environmental sources
of health risks in northwestern New Mexico and northeastern Arizona.
But as the company gears up to test for signs
of efficacy, Basil Darras, Vivienne's doctor at Boston
Children's Hospital, expects to see the most pronounced effects in the
youngest cohorts.
This
cohort of undocumented
children and youth is fairly new, explains Roberto Gonzales, an assistant professor at the Ed School, who, as one
of the nation's leading experts on undocumented youth and
young adults, has been studying this group for 23 years.
We then see if, within districts predicted to experience larger reform - induced spending increases, «exposed»
cohorts (
children young enough to have been in school when or after the reforms were passed) have better outcomes than «unexposed»
cohorts (
children who were too old at the time
of passage to be affected by the reforms).
The problem with delaying pre-K expansion until social science research has reached some stage
of perfection is that this has a potential big cost: the loss
of human potential by NOT providing quality pre-K to a
cohort of young children.
Humanity is both
young and old right now, with a couple
of billion teens and
children and an explosively growing
cohort of elderly, as well.
All analyses were stratified by gender and
cohort («
younger cohort» refers to those transitioning from junior high / middle school to high school and «older
cohort» refers to those transitioning from high school to
young adulthood) to assess the differential impact
of mothers and fathers on
children of the same or opposite sex, and potential differences in the relationship between parental influence and behavioral outcomes for the
younger versus older
cohort.
A 6 - year follow - up
of a large European
cohort of children with attention - deficit / hyperactivity disorder - combined subtype: outcomes in late adolescence and
young adulthood.
This is in keeping with a cross-sectional study
of Aboriginal
children aged 14 or under living in Brisbane, which found more than half to have experienced a stressful life event in the last year.46 Living in a family that had experienced less than two stressful life events in the past year was associated with six times higher odds
of good mental health among adolescents but was not significant in the final models for the
cohort overall or among the
younger participants specifically.
And given that recent
cohorts of children born to single and cohabiting parents are relatively
young, an additional complication involves comparing outcomes across studies (that is, analysts can not yet estimate effects
of family structure on adolescent and adult outcomes for
cohorts such as FFCWS).
There is some evidence that
children younger than nine months have negative consequences when their mothers work full time.9 In addition, there is some evidence from a six - city retrospective
cohort study with cross-sectional surveys at urban medical centers, that terminating or reducing TANF benefits by sanctions, or decreasing benefits because
of changes in income or expenses is associated with a greater probability that
young children, under age three, will experience food insecurity and hospitalization.10
For the
younger cohort (those turning 4 years
of age or for
children with social and emotional learning challenges), each lesson may be divided into 2x20 minute sessions and taught 2 times per week over a 5 week period.
Mortality associated with attention - deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) drug treatment: a retrospective
cohort study
of children, adolescents and
young adults using the general practice research database
First, associations between depression and cortisol in pregnancy were not found in one large population based
cohort study20 and may only be significant in the presence
of antidepressant medication21 or co-morbid anxiety.22 Second, studies that tested either direct associations between antenatal maternal cortisol levels on infant or
child outcomes or the mediational role
of antenatal cortisol in associations between antenatal depression and outcomes yield mixed findings and typically have relied on small samples.23 Postpartum depression has been associated with a range
of problems in infants» and
young children's development.
This study will employ The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study - Birth
Cohort (ECLS - B) database to conduct rigorous scientific analyses regarding influence
of early care and education arrangements on
young children's outcomes and the aspects
of home environments that moderate the impact
of these early education settings.
However, research using the UK Millennium
Cohort Study did not find that the quality
of mothers» and fathers» relationships with
younger children (aged three) varied according to a score
of adverse family events (Malmberg et al., 2011).
Young children under age 6 are more likely than any other age group to be poor, with nearly one - quarter of children living in poverty and nearly half living in low - income families.2 Children are also the largest age cohort participating in public benefit programs such as SNAP, Medicaid, and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and research shows that these programs that help families meet their basic needs are effective at lifting families like Kelly's out of poverty and promoting child well - being.3 When benefit programs such as nutrition assistance, Medicaid, and tax credits are taken into consideration, the child poverty rate in the United States is reduced b
children under age 6 are more likely than any other age group to be poor, with nearly one - quarter
of children living in poverty and nearly half living in low - income families.2 Children are also the largest age cohort participating in public benefit programs such as SNAP, Medicaid, and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and research shows that these programs that help families meet their basic needs are effective at lifting families like Kelly's out of poverty and promoting child well - being.3 When benefit programs such as nutrition assistance, Medicaid, and tax credits are taken into consideration, the child poverty rate in the United States is reduced b
children living in poverty and nearly half living in low - income families.2
Children are also the largest age cohort participating in public benefit programs such as SNAP, Medicaid, and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and research shows that these programs that help families meet their basic needs are effective at lifting families like Kelly's out of poverty and promoting child well - being.3 When benefit programs such as nutrition assistance, Medicaid, and tax credits are taken into consideration, the child poverty rate in the United States is reduced b
Children are also the largest age
cohort participating in public benefit programs such as SNAP, Medicaid, and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and research shows that these programs that help families meet their basic needs are effective at lifting families like Kelly's out
of poverty and promoting
child well - being.3 When benefit programs such as nutrition assistance, Medicaid, and tax credits are taken into consideration, the
child poverty rate in the United States is reduced by half.4
This study uses data from the nationally representative Early Childhood Longitudinal Study — Birth
Cohort to examine the relationship between maternal depression, maternal sensitivity, and
child attachment, specifically among Hispanic and Asian American mothers and their
young children, and to explore the role
of cultural variation and nativity in the associations between these variables.
However, it is unclear whether differences in sample
cohorts may have contributed to study outcomes (e.g. mothers
of younger children were more likely to be married and receive higher incomes).