• Citation: Masihay-Akbar H, Razmjouei S, Ainy E, Cheraghi L, Azizi F and Amiri P. Cigarette smoking trajectories from adolescence to young adulthood: first report from the Middle East. (who.int)
  • Antecedents of transition patterns of depressive symptom trajectories from adolescence to young adulthood. (research.com)
  • Design, setting, and participants: This population-based cohort study included data from waves IV (2008-2009) and V (2016-2018) of the US National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health. (unc.edu)
  • Conclusions and relevance: In this cohort study of US adults transitioning from young adulthood to adulthood, an increased incidence of hypertension and high-risk hsCRP, but not other cardiovascular risk factors, was observed among those exposed to parental incarceration during childhood. (unc.edu)
  • Using new data from the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS), a nationally representative study of teenagers born in 2000-02, this research also reveals stark inequalities in levels of psychological distress, with females, White teenagers, those from disadvantaged backgrounds and sexual minority teens all more likely to experience mental ill-health. (transitioninfonetwork.org.uk)
  • Between August 1992 and December 1998 we conducted a seven-wave cohort study of adolescent health in Victoria, Australia. (cambridge.org)
  • A retrospective observational cohort study was conducted utilizing a large national all-payer electronic health record database, finding that underlying mental health conditions and polysubstance use contribute toward making individuals experiencing homelessness more susceptible to adverse health outcomes associated with OUD. (hhs.gov)
  • Statin Use and Skin Cancer Risk: A Prospective Cohort Study. (who.int)
  • We track their psychosocial health and health risk behaviors across ten years, as they transition towards adulthood. (cincinnatichildrens.org)
  • Applying a socio-ecological developmental framework with a resiliency perspective, family, neighborhood environments, and past and current behaviors are being studied, along with the attitudes and experiences of parents and how they influence their parenting attitudes and behaviors over time. (wikipedia.org)
  • The specific aims are FAS Gen 2 are: To examine how individual and family factors measured across adolescence and young adulthood predict G1's parenting attitudes and behaviors. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, few studies have examined the health behaviors of young veterans, and, perhaps as a result, few programs, interventions, and policies are designed to promote healthful behaviors for recently returned veterans. (cdc.gov)
  • Compared with their nonveteran peers, young adult veterans may be more affected by stress, depression, substance and alcohol abuse, and sleep loss, all of which have been linked to weight-related behaviors and obesity (14). (cdc.gov)
  • To examine the associations of age at menarche with development and duration of depressive symptoms and antisocial behaviors, Mendle and colleagues collected and analyzed data on 7802 female participants taken from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health). (contemporarypediatrics.com)
  • Social networks, especially quality of interactions, may improve detecting adolescents and young adults at-risk for suicide behaviors. (cambridge.org)
  • The Berkeley study analyzed data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, which has tracked the influences and behaviors of U.S. teenagers since 1994. (berkeley.edu)
  • While some of these behaviors are normative at certain ages of child development, it is these behaviors, in concert and during adolescence, that serve as the strongest predictors of adjustment problems, including criminal behavior, during adulthood (Kohlberg, Ricks, & Snarey, 1984). (hhs.gov)
  • This paper describes the recruitment, data collection, and data analytic protocols for the SPARC (Social impact of Physical Activity and nutRition in College) study, a longitudinal examination of the mechanisms by which friends and friendship networks influence nutrition and physical activity behaviors and weight gain in the transition to college life. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Strong epidemiological data are needed on the changes (e.g., new friendships, activities/behaviors done together) that occur among friends to better understand the mechanisms impacting friends' health behaviors/outcomes. (biomedcentral.com)
  • This longitudinal study, SPARC (Social impact of Physical Activity and nutRition in College), aims to describe the mechanism(s) by which friends' and freshmen's eating/PA behaviors and weight are related and to examine contextual factors related to behaviors among friendship networks over time (see conceptual framework in Fig. 1 ). (biomedcentral.com)
  • This study examined eating behaviors among female adolescents. (scialert.net)
  • In conclusion, meal skipping, snacking and practicing various weight loss behaviors were some of the unhealthy eating behaviors depicted among adolescent girls. (scialert.net)
  • Previous studies found that the rapid changes in physical growth and psychosocial development have placed adolescents as a nutritionally vulnerable group with unhealthy eating behaviors that did not meet dietary recommendations (Savige et al . (scialert.net)
  • 2005). Additionally, the triadic problems of obesity, eating disorders and body image disturbances are associated with eating behaviors of adolescents, particularly females (Irving and Neumark-Sztainer, 2002). (scialert.net)
  • Healthy eating behaviors during adolescence are not only imperative for physical and psychosocial growth and development as well as for cognitive performance, but also important for the prevention of diet-related chronic diseases in adulthood (Quatromoni et al . (scialert.net)
  • 2002). It is noteworthy that unhealthy eating behaviors and their health compromising consequences are serious issues during adolecence and future adulthood and should be duly addressed. (scialert.net)
  • While dealing with the increased nutritional needs for rapid growth and development, adolescents are also exposed to a multitude of external factors that may affect their dietary choices and behaviors. (scialert.net)
  • Add Health combines longitudinal survey data on respondents' social, economic, psychological and physical well-being with contextual data on the family, neighborhood, community, school, friendships, peer groups, and romantic relationships, providing unique opportunities to study how social environments and behaviors in adolescence are linked to health and achievement outcomes in young adulthood. (thearda.com)
  • Add Health was developed in response to a mandate from the U.S. Congress to fund a study of adolescent health, and Waves I and II focus on the forces that may influence adolescents' health and risk behaviors, including personal traits, families, friendships, romantic relationships, peer groups, schools, neighborhoods, and communities. (thearda.com)
  • Wave III, conducted when respondents were between 18 and 26** years old, focuses on how adolescent experiences and behaviors are related to decisions, behavior, and health outcomes in the transition to adulthood. (thearda.com)
  • These teams deliver care with a risk-based approach, following a systemic plan for lifelong screening, surveillance, and prevention that incorporates risks based on the previous cancer, cancer therapy, genetic predispositions, lifestyle behaviors, and comorbid health conditions. (medscape.com)
  • Social stratification of general psychopathology trajectories and young adult social outcomes: A second-order growth mixture analysis over the early life course. (research.com)
  • Into this gap comes research from a new study that tracked the psychosocial effects of early puberty beyond adolescence and into adulthood to look at how long the psychosocial effects of early puberty may last. (contemporarypediatrics.com)
  • The sample consisted of 511 males and 647 females who were participants in the Australian Temperament Project, a population based longitudinal study that has followed young people's psychosocial adjustment from infancy to early adulthood. (springer.com)
  • The aims are to reduce the risk of morbidity and mortality due to noncommunicable diseases, lessen the negative psychosocial effects of obesity both in childhood and adulthood and reduce the risk of the next generation developing obesity. (who.int)
  • However, these 5-year age groups encompass multiple developmental stages and potentially mask trends associated with the rapid psychosocial changes during adolescence through young adulthood. (cdc.gov)
  • His research integrates issues of Psychosocial, Intervention and Psychological intervention in his study of Developmental psychology. (research.com)
  • Frederick O. Lorenz spends much of his time researching Developmental psychology, Depression, Anxiety, Psychosocial and Young adult. (research.com)
  • Its goal is to investigate adolescent health and is the largest and most comprehensive longitudinal survey of its kind. (str.org)
  • Initiated in 1994 and supported by three program project grants from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) with co-funding from 23 other federal agencies and foundations, Add Health is the largest, most comprehensive longitudinal survey of adolescents ever undertaken. (thearda.com)
  • Adolescence is a transitional period between childhood and adulthood, which begins from the earliest signs of secondary sexual characteristics development and ends when a person has achieved adult status (WHO, 1995). (scialert.net)
  • To accomplish this goal, SEED Follow-Up is surveying families of children who were previously in SEED 1, 2, and 3 (when they were 2-5 years of age) when they are 8-21 years of age to learn more about them through adolescence and young adulthood. (cdc.gov)
  • The SEED Follow-up Study will also provide information on how people with ASD differ from those with other developmental delays or disabilities and from the general population at key points in life-childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood. (cdc.gov)
  • Prevalence and Stability of Sexual Orientation Components during Adolescence and Young Adulthood," Archives of Sexual Behavior , 2007. (str.org)
  • Background: This study is the first effort in the Middle East to identify cigarette-smoking trajectories and their predictors, from adolescence to young adulthood. (who.int)
  • Nine Developmental Assets emerged as independent and significant predictors of Life Satisfaction: Overall Self-esteem made the largest contribution, with Family Support, Planning and decision Making, Sense of Purpose, Positive Family Communication, Positive Values of Caring, Youth as Resources, School Engagement and Other Adult Relationships also yield significant predictability. (frontiersin.org)
  • To understand the cigarette smoking trajectories and their predictors among adolescents and young adults in the Islamic Republic of Iran. (who.int)
  • The current study utilizes child- and caregiver-reported school climate and child-reported discrimination experiences as predictors of youths' racial/ethnic identity from 5th to 7th grade. (ncfr.org)
  • The current study examined child and adolescent precursors of positive functioning in emerging adulthood, including individual characteristics, relationship factors, and connections to the community, using a multidimensional positive development measure at 19-20 years. (springer.com)
  • Higher levels of positive development in emerging adulthood were associated with stronger family and peer relationships, better adjustment to the school setting, higher family socioeconomic status, and better emotional control. (springer.com)
  • Emerging adulthood: A theory of development from the late teens through the twenties. (springer.com)
  • Aims: This study examines college students' access to natural mentors during the contentious 2020 U.S. presidential election and considers the role of natural mentors as protective factors in relation to coping and sociopolitical stress. (gjcpp.org)
  • The current study explored college students' access to natural mentors during the fall of 2020, as well as whether mentors promoted coping or protected against sociopolitical stress during a divisive presidential election within the U.S. We aim to better understand how adults support young people's involvement with social and political systems. (gjcpp.org)
  • During the COVID-19 national lockdown in May 2020, when study members were aged 19, they were asked to answer the same series of questions on their experience of psychological distress as at age 17, to see how the pandemic was impacting them. (transitioninfonetwork.org.uk)
  • The majority of included studies were published between 2016 and 2020 and conducted in Europe and North America. (mdpi.com)
  • The Healthy People 2020 objectives (www.healthypeople.gov/2020/topics-objectives/topic/mental-health-and-mental-disorders) and National Prevention Strategy (www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/disease-prevention-wellness-report.pdf) offer examples of public health objectives that can improve mental health through prevention by ensuring access to appropriate, quality mental health services. (cdc.gov)
  • To test a social ecological model that incorporates the findings from Aims 1-2 into a comprehensive model testing both longitudinal influences and structural paths. (wikipedia.org)
  • These findings suggest possible transgenerational health consequences of mass incarceration. (unc.edu)
  • This chapter reviews how theorists and policymakers portray the state's capacity to alter the behavior and beliefs of low income parents and then highlights findings from a study of two women's experiences in their efforts to find jobs and supportive resources. (fatherhood.gov)
  • The findings provide possible targets for child and adolescent interventions to promote positive development in early adulthood. (springer.com)
  • These findings are in line with previous studies which show that sexual minority youths are particularly vulnerable to mental health difficulties. (transitioninfonetwork.org.uk)
  • These findings underline the urgent mental health support needed by this generation. (transitioninfonetwork.org.uk)
  • Adolescent precursors of cannabis dependence: findings. (cambridge.org)
  • Our findings underline the importance of addressing self-sufficiency, sickness absence, and depressive symptoms, preferably before the transition from adolescence to young adulthood has begun. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Findings from this study - the report on costs, individual site summary reports, and the literature review - are intended to help federal, state, and local policymakers and practitioners understand the nature of encampments, strategies for responding to encampments, and the costs associated with those approaches. (hhs.gov)
  • Findings from this study provide valuable insights for designing targeted interventions to reduce cigarette smoking among adults and adolescents in the Islamic Republic of Iran. (who.int)
  • Study findings provide directions for future research and implications for ethnic-racial socialization interventions to be incorporated into clinical care to improve coping with discrimination and sleep health. (ncfr.org)
  • Discussion Our findings add to the growing body of evidence that self-harm during adolescence predicts a range of poorer health outcomes, including motor vehicle crash risks that warrant further investigation and consideration in road safety interventions. (bmj.com)
  • The data supporting the findings of this study are not publicly available. (bmj.com)
  • [ 3 ] These long-term follow-up studies are augmented well by the findings of effect-specific investigations. (medscape.com)
  • [ 5 ] Studies in both adults and children have shown abnormal echocardiographic findings to be more frequent in patients monitored for more than 10 years than in those monitored for less than 10 years. (medscape.com)
  • however, most concentrate on employment and co-parenting to the exclusion of men's mental health needs. (fatherhood.gov)
  • What are the factors of parental incarceration that may increase risk of poor emotional and mental health in children of prisoners? (emerald.com)
  • This scoping review aims to adopt an international perspective to comprehensively examine the extent range and nature of literature both published and grey relating to parental incarceration and the potential impact on children's emotional and mental health. (emerald.com)
  • This scoping review has highlighted how the imprisonment of a parent negatively affects their children's emotional and mental health. (emerald.com)
  • Factors negatively impacting children's emotional and mental health are interrelated and complex. (emerald.com)
  • A complex array of factors that include sociocultural background, personality traits that may be more common to people who join the military, combat exposure, military culture, reintegration challenges, military career path, alcohol abuse, and emotional or mental health issues likely underlies this high prevalence of tobacco use, which has also been observed in prior conflicts (4,5). (cdc.gov)
  • Bullying and mental health amongst Australian children and young people with cystic fibrosis. (mcmaster.ca)
  • The research, which is being published in a briefing paper by the Centre for Longitudinal Studies (CLS) at the UCL Social Research Institute, working in partnership with the National Children's Bureau, provides evidence of widespread mental health difficulties among the UK's Generation Z before the COVID-19 pandemic struck. (transitioninfonetwork.org.uk)
  • In 2018-19 when study members were aged 17, they answered a series of questions about their mental health over the preceding month, whether they had self-harmed in the last year, and if they had ever self-harmed with suicidal intent. (transitioninfonetwork.org.uk)
  • Poor mental health and self-harm were more prevalent among White teenagers, compared to young people from other ethnic groups. (transitioninfonetwork.org.uk)
  • With the ending of support from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) around this critical age, many young people fall through the gaps between CAMHS and adult mental health services, potentially further worsening outcomes at the precise time when support is most required. (transitioninfonetwork.org.uk)
  • The COVID-19 pandemic has since occurred, and the additional pressure this brings to bear on a generation already facing major mental health issues is hugely concerning. (transitioninfonetwork.org.uk)
  • This research provides further evidence that people with autism and their family members need thorough evaluations for mental health issues. (autismsciencefoundation.org)
  • Unfortunately, people with autism have a higher rate of unmet mental health needs than other groups 10 . (autismsciencefoundation.org)
  • Previous research illustrated that, for instance, financial self-sufficiency can be improved by financial education to students [ 15 ], and effective mental health services in the school context can help with a successful transition to adulthood [ 16 ]. (biomedcentral.com)
  • U.S. DOJ, 2000), the children of incarcerated parents per se have not been considered the responsibility of any traditional governmental entity, such as child welfare, mental health, or the juvenile court. (hhs.gov)
  • If you, or someone in your family, has a mental health issue, you are not alone. (canchild.ca)
  • Mental health issues can disrupt sleep schedules, affect appetite, impact energy levels and disrupt cognitive processes and planning abilities. (canchild.ca)
  • For example, problems with access to transportation could increase social isolation or keep someone from accessing services or employment, and this could further aggravate mental health problems. (canchild.ca)
  • In people with CP, it is sometimes easy for doctors, caregivers, or the person themselves to overlook the importance of mental health, or assume that any symptoms experienced by a person with CP are caused by their CP. (canchild.ca)
  • Assessing a person's mental health should be a key component of routine health screenings, and an issue that physicians, caregivers, and patients themselves are aware of. (canchild.ca)
  • Learning to recognize when someone is at risk, or is displaying symptoms, of behavioral and emotional problems is a key part of improving mental health, as early intervention is critical to prevent short-term difficulties from becoming prolonged and debilitating mental health conditions. (canchild.ca)
  • Motor impairments such as CP, and any associated physical, cognitive or health complications, can intensify these challenges, and the stress they can put on a young person's mental health can quickly compound any mental health problems or vulnerabilities. (canchild.ca)
  • Another recent Canadian paper looking at changes in mental health over time found that youth with chronic health conditions, including CP, developed depressive symptoms more rapidly than their peers during early adolescence and didn't show the same decline in those symptoms in later adolescence. (canchild.ca)
  • and second, the need for adequate mental health treatment is often unmet among. (hrb.ie)
  • His Developmental psychology research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Social relation, Longitudinal study, Interpersonal relationship and Mental health. (research.com)
  • His Clinical psychology course of study focuses on Life course approach and Anxiety, Mental health, Partner effects and Middle age. (research.com)
  • His work carried out in the field of Anxiety brings together such families of science as Psychological intervention, Mental health, Socioeconomic status, Life course approach and Comorbidity. (research.com)
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) examines mental health indicators and trends, conducts surveillance of mental health concerns, and supports programs to address the mental health needs of men, women, and children (www.cdc.gov/mentalhealth/learn/index.htm). (cdc.gov)
  • Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health , 16 Doi:10.1186/s13034-022-00451-4. (eduhk.hk)
  • Fiscal Year 2016 The Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities program improves care and outcomes for children and adolescents with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and other developmental disabilities (DDs) through training, advancing best practices, and service. (federalgrantswire.com)
  • Methods: Using data from the Tehran Lipid and Glucose Study, 1169 adolescents (12-18 years old) were followed into their young adulthood (28-32 years old), from 2002 to 2016. (who.int)
  • She received her Master of Public Health in Epidemiology in 2005 and her Doctor of Philosophy in Epidemiological Science in 2016 both from the University of Michigan. (umich.edu)
  • Islamic Republic of Iran, the prevalence of smoking and experimentation with tobacco products and established daily cigarette smoking among adults in 2016 were 14.1 smoking behaviour that occurs during young adulthood and 9.7%, respectively. (who.int)
  • I was uniquely positioned as a clinical provider and researcher on the multi-disciplinary team that developed the first comprehensive bariatric surgery program in the U.S. for adolescents with severe obesity. (cincinnatichildrens.org)
  • This ongoing work compares adolescents with severe obesity who underwent bariatric surgery to a control group who did not undergo bariatric surgery. (cincinnatichildrens.org)
  • The goals are to fill research gaps, highlight health risks, understand treatment barriers and address new opportunities for treating obesity in youth. (cincinnatichildrens.org)
  • New-onset pain was most likely among female respondents, respondents with some college education, and respondents with poor self-rated health or obesity at baseline. (bvsalud.org)
  • The transition from the home to college is a phase in which emerging adults shift toward more unhealthy eating and physical activity patterns, higher body mass indices, thus increasing risk of overweight/obesity. (biomedcentral.com)
  • The Director-General has the honour to transmit to the Sixty-ninth World Health Assembly the report of the Commission on Ending Childhood Obesity (see Annex). (who.int)
  • The overarching goals of the Commission on Ending Childhood Obesity are to provide policy recommendations to governments to prevent infants, children and adolescents from developing obesity, and to identify and treat pre-existing obesity in children and adolescents. (who.int)
  • The new curves are closely aligned with the WHO Child Growth Standards at 5 years, and the recommended adult cut-offs for overweight and obesity at 19 years. (who.int)
  • Among the noncommunicable disease risk factors, obesity is particularly concerning and has the potential to negate many of the health benefits that have contributed to increased life expectancy. (who.int)
  • The prevalence of infant, childhood and adolescent obesity is rising around the world. (who.int)
  • Obesity can affect a child's immediate health, educational attainment and quality of life. (who.int)
  • Children with obesity are very likely to remain obese as adults and are at risk of chronic illness. (who.int)
  • 180 online comments (see Appendix 1), the Commission has developed a set of recommendations to successfully tackle childhood and adolescent obesity in different contexts around the world. (who.int)
  • She is Contact PI for the U-M Children's Environmental Health and Disease Protection Center on the theme: "Lifecourse exposures and diet: Epigenetics, maturation, and metabolic syndrome," and serves as Associate Director of the Michigan Nutrition and Obesity Research Center (MNORC). (umich.edu)
  • Prior to joining the Center, Laura worked as a research assistant on a project examining long-term effects of preventing iron deficiency anemia, early determinants of cardiovascular risk/obesity and genetic factors related to both outcomes in a longitudinal cohort in Chile: The Santiago Longitudinal Study. (umich.edu)
  • A new study finds that adipocyte SLC7A10 impairments may impact lipid accumulation during insulin resistance in patients with obesity. (medscape.com)
  • Is metabolic and bariatric surgery a safe and effective therapeutic option for adolescents with severe obesity? (medscape.com)
  • Biological data was gathered in an attempt to acquire a greater understanding of pre-disease pathways, with a specific focus on obesity, stress, and health risk behavior. (thearda.com)
  • Conducted between 1994 and 2008, Add Health is a national survey study that assessed adolescent health and risk behavior in a large socioeconomically, ethnically, and racially diverse cohort. (contemporarypediatrics.com)
  • For example, the study found that compared with a girl with an onset of menarche at age 12 years, girls with early menarche at age 10 years had a 5% greater chance of displaying antisocial behavior in adolescence that persisted into their 20s (although only marginally significant). (contemporarypediatrics.com)
  • Adolescent cigarette smoking: health-related behavior or normative transgression? (colorado.edu)
  • By virtue of their developmental stage, it is these forgotten adolescents who have the potential to have the greatest impact on society at large, and in this chapter, we focus on the most powerful problem that they can exhibit, antisocial behavior. (hhs.gov)
  • We overview the relationship between parental criminality and incarceration and adolescent antisocial behavior, discuss how these factors might be linked through parenting, place this link within the context of the life course development of antisocial behavior, and then discuss interventions that might make a difference in improving outcomes for the children of incarcerated parents. (hhs.gov)
  • Parenting practices and adolescent sexual behavior: A longitudinal study. (adicciones.es)
  • Practicing healthy eating behavior is one of the important factors to meet the nutritional needs of adolescents. (scialert.net)
  • Predicting juvenile delinquency and criminal behavior in adulthood using machine learning. (uni-kassel.de)
  • In his study, Child rearing and Prosocial behavior is strongly linked to Family income, which falls under the umbrella field of Socioeconomic status. (research.com)
  • The researchers then conducted analyses of these data to find patterns and subgroups among study participants, which helped them identify distinct pathways or commonalities among subgroups. (ncsu.edu)
  • These groups are based on various longitudinal patterns that we observe across the life course," says Jane Bo-Hyeong Lee, co-author of the paper and a research associate in Duke University's Center for Health Policy & Inequalities Research. (ncsu.edu)
  • While this association does not appear to be explained by the family context, the current study argues there are several reasons to anticipate heterogeneity in coresidence patterns based on the childhood family context. (emerald.com)
  • Typical eating patterns among adolescents are meal skipping, snacking, eating away from home, fast food consumption for meal and snack consumption and unconventional dietary patterns such as adopting vegetarian diet, specific weight loss diet and an overall reduction of food intake (Savige et al . (scialert.net)
  • Cincinnati Children's strives to accept a wide variety of health plans. (cincinnatichildrens.org)
  • The "Flint Adolescent Study - Generation 2" expands on the scope of the original study to explore how parenting factors are associated with children's alcohol and drug use and other risk factors. (wikipedia.org)
  • The role of emotionality and regulation in children's social functioning: A longitudinal study. (springer.com)
  • Children's Health, The Nation's Wealth: Assessing and Improving Child Health. (nih.gov)
  • Yet communities vary considerably in their commitment to the collective health of children and in the resources that they make available to meet children's needs. (nih.gov)
  • Do available surveillance and monitoring approaches provide the information necessary to ensure that common priorities and shared resources are aligned with children's needs and deployed to optimize their health? (nih.gov)
  • But the country should not be blinded by these facts-several indicators of children's health point to the need for further improvement, children in the United States do not fare as well as their European counterparts on many aspects of health, and there are marked disparities in health among children in the United States. (nih.gov)
  • Recent improvements in children's health need to be sustained and further efforts are needed to optimize it. (nih.gov)
  • To accomplish this, the nation must have an improved understanding of the factors that affect health and effective strategies for measuring and using information on children's health. (nih.gov)
  • It then moves to a discussion of why measuring children's health is important. (nih.gov)
  • The chapter concludes with an examination of why critical differences between children and adults establish the need for children's health to be held to a standard different from that used for adults. (nih.gov)
  • She is the director of pediatric endocrine research at the University of Michigan, and is the co-PI for the University of Michigan Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Center on the theme, Lifecourse exposures & diet: Epigenetics, maturation & metabolic syndrome. (umich.edu)
  • Timberlake (2007) uses period life tables to predict transitions into neighborhood poverty during childhood, showing important change over time in Black and white children's predicted exposure to neighborhood poverty (or affluence) at different stages of childhood and between periods [57] . (researchgate.net)
  • Further, it examines how caregivers' strategies for how to respond to a school-based racial dilemma in 5th grade may lessen or intensify these influences on pre-adolescent children's identity development. (ncfr.org)
  • This study examines adolescent social networks predicting suicide ideation and attempt trajectories transitioning to adulthood, while revealing differences across racial/ethnic, sex, sexual identity, and socioeconomic status. (cambridge.org)
  • Overall, this study provides a thorough illustration of the diversity of pathways that women experience, particularly highlighting important differences within broader categories of life course events such as early parenthood, and distinguishing between different types of higher education. (thesocietypages.org)
  • The study is led by Marc A. Zimmerman, director of the Prevention Research Center and the Michigan Youth Violence Prevention Center at the University of Michigan School of Public Health (UMSPH). (wikipedia.org)
  • A sample of predominantly African American youth was followed for four years in high school (1994-1998), four years after high school as they experienced the transition to young adulthood (1999-2003), and another four years during their late twenties as they experienced middle adult transition (2008-2012). (wikipedia.org)
  • For the study, researchers examined data from 8,101 women who participated in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, which is a nationally representative panel study that followed people in the United States from youth through adulthood. (ncsu.edu)
  • METHODS: Using panel data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth-1997, we examined the presence of pain interference at age 29 and chronic pain at ages 35 to 39. (bvsalud.org)
  • By applying multichannel sequence analysis and cluster analysis to the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979, we identify a typology of life course trajectories of work and family and test for the interactive associations of race and ethnicity with college education for different trajectory types. (bvsalud.org)
  • We used data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth-1997 cohort to analyze how pain interference in early adulthood was associated with subsequent exit from the labor force in a longitudinal survey. (bvsalud.org)
  • Drawing on data from the 1997 cohort of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, I find that criminal justice contact is associated with coresidence with parents during young adulthood in a fairly consistent manner across different dimensions of family context (although parental education may play a role). (emerald.com)
  • State Systems grants: The Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities program supports state systems grants to improve access to comprehensive, coordinated health care and related services for children and youth with ASD and other DDs. (federalgrantswire.com)
  • Mentored youth are more civically engaged during adulthood, suggesting that the positive impacts of NMRs are longstanding and cascade into broader social systems (Hagler & Rhodes, 2018). (gjcpp.org)
  • Moreover, a transition occurs from dependence on parents to more autonomy and financial independence and from youth health care to adult health care. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Methods: We used the American National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 Child/Young Adult (n = 6,315) and the Canadian National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (n = 3,666). (rug.nl)
  • Exit from the labor force, return to employment, and development of new health-related work limitations after age 29 were analyzed using survival analysis methods. (bvsalud.org)
  • Methods We followed 20 806 newly licensed adolescent and young adult drivers in the DRIVE prospective cohort for 13 years to examine whether self-harm was a risk factor for vehicle crashes. (bmj.com)
  • due to the complex interactions of societal, social, and individual factors, interventions to prevent or reduce adolescents' substance consumption are difficult to design, implement and evaluate [ 19 , 20 ]. (springer.com)
  • 22 ] that included 12 randomized controlled trials not assessed in Foxcroft and Tsertsvadze's study, 7 of these 12 additional reviewed interventions were more effective than control groups. (springer.com)
  • The negative health consequences of cigarette smoking interventions for many years. (who.int)
  • ENGLISH SUMMARY : Objective: To examine the acceptability and feasibility of mobile health (mHealth)/short message service (SMS) and community-based directly observed antiretroviral therapy (cDOT) as interventions to improve antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence for preventing mother-to-child human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission (PMTCT). (sun.ac.za)
  • Complex interventions addressing self-harm in adolescence, as well as road safety and substance use, are critical for preventing health harming behaviours across the life course. (bmj.com)
  • The original goal of the study was to explore the promotive factors associated with school dropout and alcohol, tobacco, and other drug (ATOD) use across their four high school years. (wikipedia.org)
  • meanwhile, just under 20% of the adult US population were reported to be current smokers (7), and approximately 3% of the US population older than aged 12 years reportedly used smokeless tobacco (8). (cdc.gov)
  • The study found that the onset of menarche was about 12 years for most of the girls (31%) followed by age 13 (24%) and age 11 (19%), but ranged from 7 to 24 years. (contemporarypediatrics.com)
  • This chapter draws upon 14 years of related ethnographic studies to uncover the principal features that characterize family life among the poor. (fatherhood.gov)
  • PCPs) provide guidance and support to ensure a planned transi- ents and guardians, is funded and directed by the Health Resources tion from pediatric to adult health care for adolescents, beginning and Services Administration's Maternal and Child Health Bureau at age 12 years ( 1 ). (cdc.gov)
  • NSCH), comparing adolescents, aged 12-17 years, with and depression), and "developmental disorders" (ASD, learning dis- without MBDDs on a composite measure and specific indica- ability, intellectual disability, developmental delay, or speech or tors of recommended health care transition planning by PCPs. (cdc.gov)
  • Because sexual orientation is fixed at birth (so the theory goes), these desires will endure through their teenage years and into adulthood. (str.org)
  • One study* followed approximately 10,800 adolescents between the ages of 16 and 22 years old. (str.org)
  • Dr. Neil Whitehead, a research scientist who worked for the New Zealand government for 24 years and the United Nations for another four years, analyzed this study. (str.org)
  • Focusing on three time periods - the onset of puberty, the college-age years and young adulthood - researchers compared the bedtimes and BMI of teenagers from 1994 to 2009. (berkeley.edu)
  • 2. Adolescent - is a person aged 10 to19 years. (who.int)
  • The studied population was 18.6 years on average (SD 2.04), and 73.6% were female. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Accordingly, the number of prison inmates has increased dramatically in recent years, from 292 per 100,000 adults in 1990 to over 475 per 100,000 adults in 1999 (U.S. Department of Justice [DOJ], 2000). (hhs.gov)
  • In recent years, there has been an increased focus on issues that affect children and on improving their health. (nih.gov)
  • I use the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, or Add Health, as an example of an integrative approach to health and of the importance of adolescence and the transition to adulthood years for setting health trajectories into adulthood. (dukeupress.edu)
  • The World Health Organization (WHO) defines adolescents as those between 10 and 19 years of age. (who.int)
  • The majority of adolescents are, therefore, included in the age-based definition of "child", adopted by the Convention on the Rights of the Child, as a person under the age of 18 years. (who.int)
  • To better understand HIV infection among adolescents aged 13-17 years and young adults aged 18-29 years in the United States and identify ideal ages to target primary HIV prevention efforts, CDC analyzed data from the National HIV Surveillance System (NHSS)* using narrow age groups. (cdc.gov)
  • Results Adolescents who reported self-harm at baseline were at increased risk of crashes 13 years later than those reporting no self-harm (relative risk (RR) 1.29: 95% CI 1.14 to 1.47). (bmj.com)
  • Long-term studies of this population have brought to light specific adverse effects of treatment, which are often present years after treatment and thus are termed late effects. (medscape.com)
  • This difficulties gay and bisexual adolescents face due to their se- process might be the most difficult time for the population xual identity, their social vulnerability associated to their parti- between 17 and 24 years old. (bvsalud.org)
  • This was a cross-sectional, monocentric and descriptive study, lasting 12 months, including patients aged at least 18 years admitted to ICU for sepsis or septic shock. (bvsalud.org)
  • Longitudinal associations of plasma metabolites with persistent fatigue among colorectal cancer survivors up to 2 years after treatment. (who.int)
  • This study extended work on the consequences of incarceration for families by linking parents' incarcerations to their material support of children entering adulthood. (fatherhood.gov)
  • It examined two categories of support, parental transfers of cash and shared housing, that are known deficits among young children of incarcerated parents and that play important roles in young adult attainment and well-being. (fatherhood.gov)
  • The study is also examining how these factors may influence substance use in their children (G2). (wikipedia.org)
  • The seventh pathway was Independents with Continuing Education (20.17%), which is largely made up of women who pursue education at community colleges and vocational schools into adulthood and are unlikely to marry or have children until they are in their 30s and 40s. (ncsu.edu)
  • Effects on Children as Parents Transition from Welfare to Employment (Chapter 4 in Good Parents or Good Workers? (fatherhood.gov)
  • Research: To improve the health and well-being of children with ASD, HRSA supports five research networks and investigator-initiated autism intervention research projects. (federalgrantswire.com)
  • The goal of SEED Follow-Up is to better understand ASD as children become adolescents and young adults. (cdc.gov)
  • Beyond the "villiage" rhetoric: Creating healthy communities for children and adolescents. (springer.com)
  • A Cochrane review [ 21 ] of the effectiveness of universal alcohol abuse prevention programs for children and adolescents found that less than half of the included studies (43.4%) reported significant beneficial results. (springer.com)
  • The guiding principle of this policy is that optimum health and nutritional status of children is a determining factor for effective learning. (who.int)
  • 1 This year's research has given the community a deeper understanding of the biological connections between these conditions, shared genetics, and why ASD may be part of a larger spectrum of psychiatric issues affecting children and adults. (autismsciencefoundation.org)
  • This is reflected in the ways in which communities address their collective commitment to children, specifically to their health. (nih.gov)
  • Mounting evidence that health during childhood sets the stage for adult health not only reinforces this perspective, but also creates an important ethical, social, and economic imperative to ensure that all children are as healthy as they can be. (nih.gov)
  • Healthy children are more likely to become healthy adults. (nih.gov)
  • Within this context, it is reasonable to ask what it means for children to be healthy and whether the United States is adequately assessing and monitoring the health of its children. (nih.gov)
  • Children are generally viewed as healthy when they are assessed by adult standards, and there has been a great deal of progress in reducing childhood death and diseases. (nih.gov)
  • This chapter starts with what is known about the health of children. (nih.gov)
  • Despite much scholarly attention to 'neighborhood effects' on children, no study to date has measured the cumulative exposure of children to neighborhood poverty and affluence. (researchgate.net)
  • We address these issues by examining group-based trajectory models of residential neighborhood disadvantage among white, Black, and Latino individuals in a multi-cohort longitudinal research design of over 1,000 children from Chicago as they transitioned to adulthood over the last quarter century. (researchgate.net)
  • In a review of 6493 children on Pediatric Oncology Group studies, the risk of developing CHF was 5 times higher with cumulative doses higher than 550 mg/m 2 than with lower doses. (medscape.com)
  • they are not children but not yet adults. (bvsalud.org)
  • These guidelines were developed by the Working Group on Antiretroviral Therapy and Medical Management of HIV-Infected Children convened by the National Pediatric and Family HIV Resource Center (NPHRC), the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). (cdc.gov)
  • Using both animal models and human pregnancy cohort Dr. Padmanabhan's research focuses on understanding the fetal origin of pubertal and adult reproductive and metabolic disorders. (umich.edu)
  • Specifically, her laboratory focuses on the impact of maternal exposure to native steroids (testosterone, estradiol), and environmental pollutants such as bisphenol-A in altering developmental trajectory of fetus and programming adult reproductive and metabolic diseases. (umich.edu)
  • She was instrumental in developing the sheep model of polycystic ovarian syndrome phenotype and is also the principal investigator of a program grant from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, directed toward identifying prevention and treatment strategies for overcoming reproductive and metabolic dysfunctions. (umich.edu)
  • To examine adolescent precursors of young-adult cannabis dependence. (cambridge.org)
  • Long-term adult outcomes of peer victimization in childhood and adolescence: Pathways to adjustment and maladjustment. (mcmaster.ca)
  • A family process model of economic hardship and adjustment of early adolescent boys. (research.com)
  • In a longitudinal study of more than 8,100 women, the researchers found seven "pathways" that illustrate the way major life events can have long-term ripple effects. (ncsu.edu)
  • The researchers also assessed the extent to which these pathways related to the race and socioeconomic class of the study participants. (ncsu.edu)
  • The paper, " Women's Configurations of Family, Work, and Education: Mapping Diverse Pathways throughout Adulthood ," is published in the journal Social Currents . (ncsu.edu)
  • We investigate how women's family, work, and education statuses are configured over the life course, defining different pathways throughout adulthood. (ncsu.edu)
  • Les patients qui ont accepté de participer après apptéléphonique ont été inclus de janvier à mai 2021.Les variables d'étudeétaient: âge, sexe, acuité visuelle (AV), caractéristiques de la LCET selon Diallo, pronostic fonctionnel et anatomique en post puberté (plus de 15 ans). (bvsalud.org)
  • The study was approved by the Ethical Committee of Research Institute for Endocrine Sciences and the National Research Council of the Islamic Republic of Iran (EC 121). (who.int)
  • 1Research Center for Social Determinants of Health, Research Institute for Endocrine Sciences, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran. (who.int)
  • Citation: Masihay-Akbar H, Razmjouei S, Ainy E, Cheraghi L, Azizi F, Amiri P. Cigarette smoking trajectories among adolescents and young adults in the Islamic Republic of Iran. (who.int)
  • In the general population, the transition from adolescence to young adulthood is a time of increased risk for behavioral chronic disease risk factors such as excess weight gain and tobacco use escalation. (cdc.gov)
  • timely health care transition planning might mitigate adverse categorized as "behavioral disorders" (attention-deficit/hyper- outcomes ( 5 , 6 ). (cdc.gov)
  • An integrative approach bridges biomedical sciences with social and behavioral sciences by understanding the linkages between social, behavioral, psychological, and biological factors in health. (dukeupress.edu)
  • The Behavioral Health Improvements Over Time among Adults in Families Experiencing Homelessness brief explores parents' behavioral health at the time the family was in emergency shelter and at 20 and 37 months after experiencing homelessness. (hhs.gov)
  • The fourth wave of interviews expanded the collection of biological data in Add Health to understand the social, behavioral, and biological linkages in health trajectories as the Add Health cohort ages through adulthood. (thearda.com)
  • Follow up at Wave IV has enabled researchers to study developmental and health trajectories across the life course of adolescence into adulthood using an integrative approach that combines the social, behavioral, and biomedical sciences in its research objectives, design, data collection, and analysis. (thearda.com)
  • and for understanding health disparities among the young as both causes and consequences of social stratification. (dukeupress.edu)
  • 54.58% females, baseline) from Waves I-IV of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, 1994-2008. (cambridge.org)
  • Provided more than 3,000 continuing education events on early screening, diagnosis, and intervention that reached over 214,000 pediatricians and other health professionals. (federalgrantswire.com)
  • The aim of the study was to address the lack of evaluations of school-based substance use prevention programs and to conduct a quasi-experimental evaluation of the alcohol use part of the Triad intervention. (springer.com)
  • Despite increased concerns for adolescent health worldwide, adolescence has not been considered to be a high priority life stage for nutritional needs and intervention, except for adolescent pregnancy (WHO, 2005). (scialert.net)
  • The study incorporates disciplines such as Socioeconomic status and Comorbidity in addition to Psychological intervention. (research.com)
  • Conclusion: Iranian adolescents follow three trajectories - non-smokers, experimenters and escalators - into young adulthood. (who.int)
  • Flint [Michigan] Adolescent Study (FAS): A Longitudinal Follow-Up Study of Substance Use on Adult Transitional Events, 2000-2003. (wikipedia.org)
  • An understanding of the adolescent antecedents of dependence can inform the extent to which substance exposures increase risks for dependence as opposed to other factors such as intercurrent emotional or behavioural disorders ( Reference Fergusson and Horwood Fergusson & Horwood, 2000 ). (cambridge.org)
  • Berkeley researchers analyzed longitudinal data from a nationally representative cohort of more than 3,300 youths and adults, and found that for every hour of sleep they lost, they gained 2.1 points on the BMI index. (berkeley.edu)
  • Data is collected by the Michigan Public Health Institute. (wikipedia.org)
  • ABSTRACT: Chronic pain is associated with reduced work participation, but longitudinal data on the work impact of chronic pain are limited. (bvsalud.org)
  • In this scoping review, the five stages identified by Arksey and O'Malley (2005) were used including identifying the research question, identifying relevant studies, study selection, charting data, collating, summarising and reporting results. (emerald.com)
  • CDC serves as an intramural study site - collecting data from participants in Georgia and California. (cdc.gov)
  • The data sets used and/or analysed during the study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request. (who.int)
  • But the data is from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, a project by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and mandated by the United States Congress. (str.org)
  • To answer these questions, we drew upon data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent and Adult Health , in which we examined the life experiences of women between the ages 18-43 (N=8101). (thesocietypages.org)
  • 16% of teenagers report high levels of psychological distress by age 17, finds a new study led by UCL researchers based on data collected in 2018-19. (transitioninfonetwork.org.uk)
  • The SPARC study aims to follow 1450 university freshmen from a large university over an academic year, collecting data on multiple aspects of friends and friendship networks. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Miatta's research uses data from two Mexico City-based birth cohorts, namely: i) Early Live Exposure in Mexico to Environmental Toxicants (ELEMENT) study and ii) the Environmental Pollution and Birth Outcomes in Mexico study. (umich.edu)
  • This paper uses a proprietary data set with electronic health records of more than 54,000 individuals with ICD-10 code of homelessness between 2015 and 2019. (hhs.gov)
  • This study relies on data prior to 1997, however, after which broader sociodemographic change has occurred, and it focuses on the individual's predicted duration of time in neighborhood poverty rather than focusing on identifying the trajectories of neighborhood poverty themselves. (researchgate.net)
  • Using weekly diary data from a sample of 140 African American and Latinx college students, the current study examined associations between reports of racial microaggressions across 4 weeks and reports of sleep health (i.e., sleep onset latency, sleep quality, total sleep time). (ncfr.org)
  • Data from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). (medscape.com)
  • Emerging adults attending intermediate vocational education (upper secondary education with specialized job-oriented programs, ISCED 3 [ 17 ]) are expected to struggle more with becoming self-sufficient than their peers from other school levels. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Young adults find themselves facing many new challenges, including making the transition to adult health care, post-secondary education or vocational training, employment, independent living all while navigating adult social and romantic relationships. (canchild.ca)
  • DISCUSSION: Development of chronic pain by the mid-late 30s was common among young adults experiencing pain interference at age 29. (bvsalud.org)
  • While chronic health conditions such as Cerebral Palsy (CP) can increase the risk of developing anxiety or depression, untreated anxiety or depression can also contribute to poor physical health. (canchild.ca)
  • However, people with disabilities or chronic health conditions may be as much as 3-4 times more likely to develop depression and anxiety disorders [2] , [3] . (canchild.ca)
  • The researchers also found another increase in depressive symptoms in those with chronic health conditions in their mid-twenties. (canchild.ca)
  • This paper is a descriptive analysis of the prevalence rates of some chronic health conditions that are associated with a higher risk of severe illness from COVID-19 among people with a history of homelessness. (hhs.gov)
  • MBDDs were identified based on parents' affirmative responses larly concerning for adolescents with diagnosed mental, behav- to the question "Has a doctor or other health care provider ever ioral, and developmental disorders (MBDDs) ( 3 ), who account told you that this child has (specified disorder)? (cdc.gov)
  • His primary areas of study are Developmental psychology, Social relation, Social psychology, Socioeconomic status and Juvenile delinquency. (research.com)
  • His Developmental psychology research integrates issues from Longitudinal study and Life events. (research.com)
  • Wave IV was designed to study the developmental and health trajectories across the life course of adolescence into young adulthood. (thearda.com)
  • It is important to contextualize the difficulties gay adolescents face due to their sexual identity, their social vulnerability associated to their particular developmental process, and their ethnicity. (bvsalud.org)
  • Drawing on life course and intersectional approaches, this study examines how education shapes the intertwined domains of work and family across race and ethnicity. (bvsalud.org)
  • The various areas that Frederick O. Lorenz examines in his Social psychology study include Structural equation modeling and Conger. (research.com)
  • Not only do I describe the causes of same-sex attraction in the piece, but I highlight some of the evidence that change is possible among adult homosexuals. (str.org)
  • Evidence is also presented on the linkages between health trajectories during adolescence and the transition to adulthood and social stratification in adulthood. (dukeupress.edu)
  • Do Recent Experiences of Sexual Violence and Co-Occurring Depression and Anxiety Symptoms Predict Poorer Functioning One Year Later During the Transition to Young Adulthood? (rand.org)
  • To assess depressive symptoms, participants completed the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) during the first and last time periods of the study. (contemporarypediatrics.com)
  • This implies that adolescents with same-sex attraction (SSA) or homoerotic dreams are manifesting symptoms of an underlying reality: They are homosexual. (str.org)
  • Certain factors, such as depressive symptoms and binge drinking, may be linked to young adults' ability to attain an acceptable level of functioning on specific life-domains (i.e. self-sufficiency). (biomedcentral.com)
  • Depressive symptoms were measured using five items from the Center for Epidemiological Studies on Depression scale. (rug.nl)
  • Conclusions: Depressive symptoms may take a similar course in the transition to adulthood within these two countries. (rug.nl)
  • His Depressive symptoms study combines topics in areas such as Structural equation modeling and Social psychology. (research.com)
  • The Flint Adolescent Study (FAS) is a longitudinal interview study of risk and promotive factors associated with alcohol, tobacco and other drug use across a lifetime. (wikipedia.org)
  • Participants represented US adults transitioning from young adulthood to adulthood. (unc.edu)
  • Results: This study included 9629 participants representing 16 077 108 US adults. (unc.edu)
  • Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the study. (who.int)
  • Receiving a university education decreased the odds of being in the escalator trajectory for 18% (OR = 0.82, 95% CI: -0.04-0.96, P = 0.002) of the study participants. (who.int)
  • The objective of this study was to assess CVH among non-Hispanic Asian Americans (NHAAs) and to compare these estimates to those of non-Hispanic white (NHW) participants. (cdc.gov)
  • As participants have aged into adulthood, however, the scientific goals of the study have expanded and evolved. (thearda.com)
  • Parental Incarceration and Intergenerational Transfers to Young Adults. (fatherhood.gov)
  • Importance: Parental incarceration is an adverse childhood experience that disproportionately affects racially minoritized individuals and has been associated with long-term health risks. (unc.edu)
  • Objective: To examine the association between parental incarceration during childhood and incident cardiovascular risk in adulthood. (unc.edu)
  • Recent research on residential transitions out of and back into the parental home shows that residential independence is still common, meaning that many young adults coreside with parents after first leaving the nest. (emerald.com)
  • Age 17 marks an important age before many key life transitions, including the ending of compulsory education and moving away from the parental home. (transitioninfonetwork.org.uk)
  • A major reason is the transition from parental oversight (i.e., living at home) to relative independence, and one in which both social and physical food and exercise environments change. (biomedcentral.com)
  • The lack of positive effects highlights the need for policy-makers and public health officials need to carefully consider and evaluate prevention programs in order to ensure that they are worthwhile from school, health, and societal perspectives. (springer.com)
  • Dramatic improvements have occurred over the past several decades in such areas as reducing infant mortality, reducing mortality and morbidity from many infectious diseases and accidental causes, increasing access to health care, and reducing environmental contaminants, such as lead ( Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1999b , 2000a ). (nih.gov)
  • After completing a literature review, the study team selected nine cities currently responding to encampments to participate in telephone interviews in early 2019. (hhs.gov)
  • It uses a proprietary dataset with electronic health records of 61,180 individuals with an ICD-10 code of homelessness between 2015 and 2019. (hhs.gov)
  • Experiences dealing with multiple agencies are discussed, as well as experiences dealing with health problems in the context of the U.S. medical care system, and the aftermaths of household emergencies. (fatherhood.gov)
  • Bullying and school transition: Context or development? (mcmaster.ca)
  • In this article which all adolescents undergo in the same way independently we explore some of these implications for Puerto Rican gay of ethnicity, geography or historical context. (bvsalud.org)
  • Pediatricians need a better understanding of the effects of early puberty for girls beyond adolescence into adulthood. (contemporarypediatrics.com)
  • The Early Mothers with HS Interrupted and Early Mothers with Limited Education both consist of women likely to become mothers at an earlier age, but only those in the former group are likely to return to school as adults to complete their associate's degree. (thesocietypages.org)
  • Risk Stratification for Early-Onset Colorectal Cancer Using a Combination of Genetic and Environmental Risk Scores: An International Multi-Center Study. (who.int)
  • Prior research has established the greater exposure of African Americans from all income groups to disadvantaged environments compared to whites, but the traditional focus in studies of neighborhood stratification obscures heterogeneity within racial/ethnic groups in residential attainment over time. (researchgate.net)
  • Asarnow is a researcher on UC Berkeley's Teen Sleep Study, a treatment program designed to reset the biological clocks of adolescents who have trouble going to sleep and waking up. (berkeley.edu)
  • However, our work suggested the tracking of adolescent weight and physical health outcomes alone may not sufficiently capture its relevance for public health issues of this patient age group, nor their potential long-term risks and medical needs as they age out of pediatrics and into adult primary care. (cincinnatichildrens.org)
  • In light of this, preventing adolescents from starting to use alcohol or other substances, or delaying the onset of use, is a fundamental task for public health work. (springer.com)
  • Dr. Peterson is Chair of the Department of Nutritional Sciences in the School of Public Health, Research Professor for the Center for Human Growth and Development, and Director of the Momentum Center, all at the University of Michigan. (umich.edu)
  • She is also an Adjunct Professor of Nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health. (umich.edu)
  • She earned her ScD in Nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health. (umich.edu)
  • Laura has extensive experience in developing, implementing, and coordinating public health research. (umich.edu)
  • Laura received her MPH in Epidemiology with a focus on Global Health from UM School of Public Health and earned her BA in Biology from Colgate University. (umich.edu)
  • Alejandra Cantoral is a nutritionist, and she obtained a Sc.D. in Epidemiology from the National Institute of Public Health (NIPH) in Mexico (2013). (umich.edu)
  • What are the implications for public health practice? (cdc.gov)
  • International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health , 18(24) Doi:10.3390/ijerph182413363. (eduhk.hk)
  • International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health , 18 , 1-19. (eduhk.hk)