• 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)
  • This exploratory questionnaire study compared parenting behaviors among mothers of children and adolescents with ASD ( n = 552) and without ASD ( n = 437) and examined associations between child behavior problems and parenting behavior. (springer.com)
  • Adolescents may overestimate or over-report their abilities or behaviors in relation to the TRAQ. (etsu.edu)
  • Few studies, particularly in developing countries, have explored the relationship between adolescents and parental values with adolescent problem behaviors. (biomedcentral.com)
  • The objectives of the study are to (1) describe adolescents' personal values, their problem behaviors, and the relationships thereof according to gender and (2) examine the relationship between parental values, adolescent values, and adolescents' problem behaviors among sixth-grade students and one of their parents. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Parental-reported values documented limited association on adolescents' reported values and behaviors. (biomedcentral.com)
  • In designing interventions for reducing adolescents' problem behaviors, it may be important to understand the values associated with specific problem behaviors. (biomedcentral.com)
  • As a result, value-motivated behaviors may differ between adolescents and adults. (biomedcentral.com)
  • The influences of adolescents' perceptions of parental behaviors and authority on the development of their self-esteem and sense of familism were examined among 534 youth living in Mexico. (uncg.edu)
  • Social media can also serve as a tool for adolescents to mitigate stress, particularly for marginalized youth, such as racial, ethnic, sexual, and gender minorities. (center4research.org)
  • Additionally, there is evidence that utilizing social media and other digital platforms for mental health interventions can encourage help-seeking behaviors and act as a gateway to initiating mental health care for children and adolescents. (center4research.org)
  • The main aim of my research is to better understand what causes and maintains psychopathology in children and adolescents. (lu.se)
  • I am also involved in a large RCT where we will study which service delivery format is best for children and adolescents with anxiety disorders. (lu.se)
  • Today, we are releasing CDC's Youth Risk Behavior Survey, or YRBS Data Summary and Trends Report, which provides data on key behaviors and experiences among adolescents related to sexual behavior, substance use, experience of violence, mental health, and suicidality. (cdc.gov)
  • Multilevel modeling for binary data was performed to estimate the associations between adolescent and parental values and adolescent problem behaviors. (biomedcentral.com)
  • The results of multilevel modeling indicates that boys with a higher level of self-enhancement and girls with a higher level of openness to change and a lower level of conservation were more likely to report engagement in problem behaviors. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Further exploration regarding lack of association between adolescent and parental values and problem behaviors is needed. (biomedcentral.com)
  • It has been suggested that problem behaviors result in part from a deviant or oppositional self-image, which may reflect the values adopted as guiding principles [ 11 ]. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Likewise, in a sample of 544 high school students, Goff and Goddard reported students most prone to problem behaviors were those with dominant values of fun/enjoyment and security [ 9 ]. (biomedcentral.com)
  • 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)
  • Dr. Gengoux serves as Associate Editor for the Journal of Positive Behavior Interventions. (stanford.edu)
  • For treatment of young children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), we have developed effective group-based programs for treatment of core communication and social deficits in the preschool years using naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions such as Pivotal Response Treatment (PRT) and we have investigated the delivery of these treatments in home and community settings in several randomized controlled trials. (stanford.edu)
  • We are at a point where families who bring in a child ought to get a Chinese menu of treatments that are backed by some evidence, including not only medication but psychosocial or family interventions, said Dr. John March, a child psychiatrist at Duke University. (newsmine.org)
  • Interventions to promote positive parenting are often reported to offer good outcomes for children but they can consume substantial resources and they require rigorous appraisal. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Given the substantial cost implications, commissioners should apply to parenting programs the standards used in assessing pharmaceutical interventions. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Today, we will share findings from CDC's most recent Youth Risk Behavior Survey. (cdc.gov)
  • Does the Minimum Wage Affect Child Maltreatment and Parenting Behaviors? (aeaweb.org)
  • Research consistently shows that children living in low-income families, especially children living in poverty, are at a greater risk of child maltreatment. (aeaweb.org)
  • In previous work (Raissian and Bullinger, 2017), we found that increasing the state-level minimum wage leads to fewer reports of child maltreatment. (aeaweb.org)
  • Aggregate measures of child maltreatment reports from the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System: Child File allow us to study how minimum wage laws affect various types of maltreatment (e.g., neglect, physical abuse, sexual abuse, etc.), the outcome of the report (e.g., substantiated or unsubstantiated), and the age of the child victim. (aeaweb.org)
  • To more comprehensively study minimum wage laws' effects on child maltreatment, we complement these data with individual-level measures of child well-being and parenting behaviors from the Fragile Families and Child Well-Being Study. (aeaweb.org)
  • For example, does child maltreatment decrease because of a reduction in adverse behaviors, an increase in positive behaviors, or both? (aeaweb.org)
  • This document describes a five-year vision for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) work in child maltreatment (CM) prevention. (cdc.gov)
  • Children with ADD or ADHD or any learning or behavioral disability often have the perception that they don't see the world the same way other people do. (empoweringparents.com)
  • The behavior of 13 children enrolled in the Psychology Department Nursery School was observed and recorded on a behavioral checklist in terms of social isolation, parallel play, cooperation, aggression, social contact with children, and social contact with adults. (umaine.edu)
  • Dr. Gengoux is also a licensed clinical psychologist with expertise in training parents to promote the healthy development of social skills in their children and manage challenging behavior using positive behavioral approaches. (stanford.edu)
  • Males tended to have higher self-esteem when they perceived their parents as monitoring their behavior, granting behavioral autonomy, and having the right to exercise influence over them. (uncg.edu)
  • Data were analyzed from the Growing Up in Ireland longitudinal child cohort study including 7,208 caregiver-child dyads at wave 1 (child's age 9 months), who were followed at child's age three (wave 2), five (wave 3), and 9 years (wave 5). (frontiersin.org)
  • Therefore, we conclude that parenting stress and child internalizing as well as parenting stress and child externalizing behaviors have transactional associations from child's age 5 to 9 years. (frontiersin.org)
  • Peer nominations provided each child's reputation for defending behaviors. (byu.edu)
  • At the same time, I worked part time as a fee-for-service, in-home therapist in a social service agency through which I partnered with parents uprooted by their child's mental illness/substance use disorder and facilitated parenting education, psychoeducation, and resource allocation. (ncfr.org)
  • Parents also benefit from their child's participation in sport. (ussailing.org)
  • On the negative side, parents who lose accountability for their lofty expectations and put too many demands on their young athletes before, during, and after competition can create stress that can destroy their child's enjoyment of sport. (ussailing.org)
  • 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)
  • Reciprocal relationships between parenting behavior and disruptive psychopathology from childhood through adolescence. (springer.com)
  • Parent-child relationships in the transition to adolescence: Continuity and change in interaction, affect, and cognition. (springer.com)
  • Prior research has found that children who exhibit difficulties with self-regulation (EF, EC) or who lack social skills are more likely to develop externalizing problems in early childhood and beyond. (umd.edu)
  • Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 7 , 529-552. (springer.com)
  • Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 36 , 679-692. (springer.com)
  • Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 35 , 34-45. (springer.com)
  • Dr. Gengoux received her Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from the University of California Santa Barbara and completed her clinical internship and postdoctoral fellowship at the Yale Child Study Center, before joining the Stanford University School of Medicine clinical faculty in 2010. (stanford.edu)
  • Laura is a graduate student in the Child Track of the Clinical Psychology Program at Simon Fraser University and at the Institute for the Reduction of Youth Violence, studying under the supervision of Dr. Robert McMahon. (sfu.ca)
  • This blog reports new ideas and work on mind, brain, behavior, psychology, and politics - as well as random curious stuff. (dericbownds.net)
  • Mediators, moderators, and predictors of 1-year outcomes among children treated for early-onset conduct problems: A latent growth curve analysis. (springer.com)
  • For girls, significant predictors of familism and self-esteem varied in relation to mothers and fathers. (uncg.edu)
  • I hold certifications in elementary education, substance abuse counseling, administering the Myers-Briggs Type Inventory, and teaching/mentoring in the Becoming a Love and Logic Parent Program. (ncfr.org)
  • In previous PRAMS studies, associating substance use with pregnancy tended to elicit negative responses from mothers who felt judged about such behaviors. (cdc.gov)
  • When socioeconomic differences between two-biological-parent and two-adoptive-parent households are controlled for, the two types of families tend to invest a similar amount of resources. (wikipedia.org)
  • Aim: This prospective cohort study was to evaluate the independent and mutual effects of socioeconomic, oral health behaviors and individual clinical factors, including enamel hypomineralization, as possible risk factors for increase in caries experience in second primary molar (SPM) over a period of 2-years. (bvsalud.org)
  • This demonstrates the need to evaluate the influence of other variables, such as socioeconomic status and oral health behavior of children on posteruptive behavior of these enamel hypomineralizations and their influence on the development of dental caries in the affected teeth. (bvsalud.org)
  • Another study from Guivernau and Duda showed how athletes' perceptions of their parents' approval regarding cheating and aggression shape their own views about appropriate sport behavior. (ussailing.org)
  • The Parental Attitude Research Instrument was administered to their parents which studied three factors: maternal/paternal control, maternal/paternal hostility, democratic attitudes toward child-rearing. (umaine.edu)
  • Most papers only reported maternal assessments of child behavior. (biomedcentral.com)
  • The Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) is a surveillance system which collects data on current public health guidelines and topical issues concerning maternal and child health.1 Although PRAMS is primarily a paper-and-pencil self-administered survey, a subset of call-back telephone-administered questions is also planned for use. (cdc.gov)
  • The first aim of this study was to examine the transactional within-person associations of parenting stress and child internalizing and externalizing behavior problems across childhood from age 9 months to 9 years. (frontiersin.org)
  • Health-risk behaviour is a leading contributor to morbidity and mortality among children, which are established during childhood and extend into adulthood [10] . (researchgate.net)
  • References at "Childhood 'Innocence' is Not Ideal: Virtue Ethics and Child-Adult Sex" by Tom O'Carroll. (ipce.info)
  • In a comprehensive review, the American Psychological Association urged in August that for childhood mental disorders, in most cases, nondrug treatment be considered first, including techniques that focus on parents skills, as well as enlisting teachers help. (newsmine.org)
  • Transdisciplinary healthcare researcher and dietitian with expertise in implementation science, childhood nutrition, eating/ingestive behavior, innovations in clinical and community health care, and obesity prevention and treatment. (stanford.edu)
  • 27.9% of children were exclusively breastfed until six months, and, at 24 months, 93.3% had already had some prevalent childhood disease. (bvs.br)
  • The Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) strategy, developed by the World Health Organization (WHO), the Pan American Health Organization and the United Nations Children's Fund, aims to reduce morbidity and mortality in children between two months and five years of age ( 1 ) , by improving the quality of care offered by Primary Care ( 2 ) . (bvs.br)
  • Parents (N = 263) completed a self-admin- istered questionnaire with scale items based on 4 constructs nerable to RWI because of their developing immune sys- of the Protection Motivation Theory: perceived vulnerability, tems and high exposure to recreational water. (cdc.gov)
  • The caregivers filled out a semi-structured questionnaire about their socio-demographic and oral health-related behaviors. (bvsalud.org)
  • As a second aim, we examined parenting as a possible underlying mechanism of the transactional associations by testing whether parental warmth and hostility mediate within-person associations of parenting stress and child behavior across time. (frontiersin.org)
  • Our results did not indicate mediating effects of parental warmth or parental hostility in the associations between parenting stress and child behavior problems. (frontiersin.org)
  • This count represents an increase in the number of children affected by parental incarceration by over 500,000 children since 1990. (hhs.gov)
  • Parenting related to child and parental psychopathology: A descriptive review of the literature. (springer.com)
  • Adoptive Parents, Adaptive Parents: Evaluating the Importance of Biological Ties for Parental Investment" (PDF). (wikipedia.org)
  • Only two parental values (self-transcendence and conservation) were low or modestly correlated with youth' values (openness to change and self-enhancement). (biomedcentral.com)
  • Conversely, lower parental pressure has been found to be associated with children enjoying their sport more. (ussailing.org)
  • The parental role, in contemporary times, may be exercised with little consistency and coherence, due to socio-cultural aspects that have provoked in the parents feelings of insecurity and doubts concerning the task of educating. (bvsalud.org)
  • This article has as its purpose to present a research designed to understand the relationship between the weakening of parental role and the frequency of aggressive, stubbornness and/or agitation behaviors of two to four years old children in a school environment. (bvsalud.org)
  • Indicadores de desarrollo psicosocial en adolescentes Costarricenses : un análisis del proceso de autonomía en el adolescente y de la percepción parental / Carlos Garita Arce, Ramon Gonzalez Magdalena. (who.int)
  • The psychotherapy techniques intended for the improvement of interactions between parents and children have been used mostly for children who suffer from attention disorders or who exhibit aggressive or defiant behavior. (newsmine.org)
  • Parenting behavior dimensions and child psychopathology: Specificity, task dependency, and interactive relations. (springer.com)
  • Multiple regression results showed that a few of the parenting dimensions significantly predicted girls' defending behavior above and beyond peer social preference. (byu.edu)
  • Additionally, many performance measures of EF, including the NEPSY-II scales and the TAT, significantly predicted teacher-reported externalizing behaviors, but not parent-reported externalizing behaviors. (umd.edu)
  • Parents of a child with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) face specific challenges in parenting, but concrete parenting behavior has never been properly investigated in these families. (springer.com)
  • Evidence for broader autism phenotype characteristics in parents from multiple-incidence autism families. (springer.com)
  • Sweden) distribute more books and learning resources to children in poverty than to children in affluent families. (shankerinstitute.org)
  • I went on to work as the child development specialist and parenting education facilitator in a homeless shelter for families. (ncfr.org)
  • But recently, mental health professionals have been studying their use for families whose children suffer from depression or other mood problems. (newsmine.org)
  • Birth Order and Health - Birth Order and Health research papers examine health differences in first born, middle or last born children in families. (papermasters.com)
  • As a public health leader, I am driven to act and prevent these issues and the impact it has on our youth and their families. (cdc.gov)
  • When youth are consistently performing the skills measured in the four domains of the TRAQ (scoring on average a 4.0 across the questions in each domain), it is a sign they are ready to move on to adult healthcare. (etsu.edu)
  • It should be noted, though, that only the first volume considers the harm that is intrinsic, or is allegedly so, to every adult-child sexual contact, no matter how loving and non-coercive it might be. (ipce.info)
  • The Freyds were rapidly joined by a group of professionals with expertise in the area of suggestion, and by thousands of parents who had been accused of child abuse by adult children who had no memory of abuse before entering some form of therapy. (solarnavigator.net)
  • First, middle or last children exhibit particular behaviors in relation to health, intelligence, personality and even crime. (papermasters.com)
  • Although we have seen worsening trends in mental health for young people over the last 10 years, the levels of poor mental health and suicidal thoughts and behaviors reported by teenage girls are now higher than we have ever seen. (cdc.gov)
  • However, these constructs have largely been studied separately, and no studies to date have measured EF, EC, and social skills in relation to children's externalizing behaviors across different methods of measurement and across parent and teacher informants. (umd.edu)
  • Methods: Children (n=216) aged 4-6 years were examined for hypomineralized second primary molar (HSPM) and dental caries in school settings and were recalled every 6 months. (bvsalud.org)
  • Children with greater motivation to read than others, spend more time learning to read and do more reading, so they typically have stronger reading skills. (shankerinstitute.org)
  • Parents who provide positive encouragement instill a greater sense of enjoyment, ability, and motivation in their child. (ussailing.org)
  • dren to be at risk for RWI, they have little motivation to adopt behavior modifications that can reduce the risk of R their children contracting RWI and contaminating recre- ecreational water illnesses (RWI), or illnesses result- ational water. (cdc.gov)
  • Parenting stress and psychological functioning among mothers of preschool children with autism and developmental delay. (springer.com)
  • We evaluated the effects of teaching preschool children to respond effectively to their name (i.e., stopping their activity, looking up towards the teacher, and saying "yes"), on their compliance with a variety of typical instructions provided by classroom teachers. (abainternational.org)
  • And now, some researchers and doctors are looking again at how inconsistent, overly permissive or uncertain child-rearing styles might worsen children s problems, and how certain therapies might help resolve those problems, in combination with drug therapy or without drugs. (newsmine.org)
  • And in its just-completed guidelines, even the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, an organization whose members strongly favor drug treatment, recommends that children receive some form of talk therapy before being given drugs for moderate depression, a very common complaint. (newsmine.org)
  • A child paralyzed by feelings of severe despair or anxiety, for example, often cannot begin to engage in any type of therapy without a period on medication to break the disabling mood. (newsmine.org)
  • Bullying intervention research points to the important role of children standing up for victims (defending behavior). (byu.edu)
  • Mindfulness-based skills training group for parents of obsessive-compulsive disorder-affected children: A caregiver-focused intervention. (sfu.ca)
  • Parent-reported treatment preferences and procedural fidelity for caregiver implementation of intervention procedures will also be reported. (abainternational.org)
  • The data used in these analyses were from the baseline assessment of a school-based HIV risk reduction intervention being conducted and evaluated among sixth grade students and one of their parents across 9 elementary schools in The Bahamas. (biomedcentral.com)
  • No studies involved children younger than two-years old and comparisons of intervention and control groups beyond the duration of the intervention were only possible in five studies. (biomedcentral.com)
  • UK National Institute for Clinical Excellence guidelines suggest Triple P is an effective educational intervention for parents of children with conduct disorder, a recommendation which carries considerable weight in policy and purchasing decisions in England [ 8 ]. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Based on a nationally representative survey of 2-17 year-olds, about 1 in 8 children were estimated to have been maltreated by physical, sexual, or psychological abuse or neglect from 2002 to 2003.8 Surveys of adults reveal that self-reported histories of CM is relatively common. (cdc.gov)
  • Besides these needs, parents often have to adapt to the changing social role in the family system. (frontiersin.org)
  • The majority of these children live in situations where it is highly likely that their parent's incarceration has a direct impact on family functioning: almost 50% of incarcerated parents lived with their children prior to their prison admission, and over 80% report that their children currently live with the other parent or with a relative (U.S. DOJ, 2000). (hhs.gov)
  • Family Relations. (wikipedia.org)
  • National Council on Family Relations. (wikipedia.org)
  • Our treatment philosophy embodies an emphasis on improving parent empowerment and providing parent training to make meaningful improvements in family quality of life. (stanford.edu)
  • Review individual, family, and environmental factors that predict health-risk behavior among children and to propose parent-child communication processes as a mechanism to mediate them. (researchgate.net)
  • Two hundred children participated in the UCLA Family Lifestyles Project (FLS), beginning at birth to the current wave of data collection at ages 17-18. (ipce.info)
  • It also compensates for family differences in learning opportunities, reduces differences in rich vs. poor children's learning, and yields children with whose reading skills differ less. (shankerinstitute.org)
  • The bulk of my work involved meeting with parents, explaining child and family development, and behavior management. (ncfr.org)
  • At least one parent within each family answered the scale. (sdsu.edu)
  • Birth Order and Intelligence - Birth Order and Intelligence in research papers argue that birth order affects the intellectual development of the children in a family, proved through specific studies and custom written. (papermasters.com)
  • We can't presume to tell [pedophiles] specific behaviors, but in terms of goals, certainly the goal is that the experience be positive, at the very least not negative, for their partner and partner's family. (solarnavigator.net)
  • Whether you're badly injured, divorcing, redundant, widowed, having your home repossessed, facing a court case, have a desperately ill child, have a problem with drugs or alcohol, or whatever might come along in your life, it's family who will stick by you even if they don't really approve. (familyeducation.com)
  • Girls experienced higher levels of self-esteem when they perceived their mothers and fathers as facilitating connection, monitoring their behaviors, and as having the right to influence their behaviors and feelings. (uncg.edu)
  • Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D): A 20-item instrument that allows patients to evaluate their feelings, behavior, and outlook from the previous week. (medscape.com)
  • To relate exposure to televised youth smoking prevention advertising to youths' smoking beliefs, intentions, and behaviors. (nih.gov)
  • We obtained commercial television ratings data from 75 US media markets to determine the average youth exposure to tobacco company youth-targeted and parent-targeted smoking prevention advertising. (nih.gov)
  • Exposure to tobacco company youth-targeted smoking prevention advertising generally had no beneficial outcomes for youths. (nih.gov)
  • Secondly, to design a health risk behaviour prevention program which adequately equips senior primary school children with the necessary life skills to alter risk behaviour engagement. (researchgate.net)
  • There are a lot of different books out there that teach kids about sex, from picture books for young children that go over the basics of human reproduction, to longer works for teens that have information on everything from masturbation to STD and pregnancy prevention. (bustle.com)
  • DVP's public health approach to violence prevention complements other approaches such as those of the criminal justice, mental health, and child welfare systems. (cdc.gov)
  • The argument over which is better, medication or psychotherapy intended to change the behavior of parents and children, is irrelevant in many cases. (newsmine.org)
  • Assessment strategies to identify youth at risk for health-risk behavior are recommended and community-based strategies to improve communication among parents and children need development. (researchgate.net)
  • Educators and caregivers have an ongoing need for assessment and treatment strategies appropriate to the task of increasing compliance of young children. (abainternational.org)
  • Studies done by the University of Minnesota's Diane Wiese-Bjornstal found that the way girls perceive their parents' assessment of their abilities predict their likelihood of playing and staying in sport. (ussailing.org)
  • Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) is a form of measurement where participants several times each day provide in-the-moment descriptions of mood, emotions, thoughts and behaviors. (lu.se)
  • Dr. Gengoux oversees the PRT group parent training program at Stanford, supervises postdoctoral fellows providing PRT clinical treatment, and has completed multiple clinical trials evaluating the effects of PRT on the social-communication competence of young children with autism. (stanford.edu)
  • Following the success of the PRT program, several additional parent training program models have been developed at Stanford, including a clinical trial of a Developmental Reciprocity Treatment program (PI: Hardan) and a pilot program evaluating telehealth delivery of PRT. (stanford.edu)
  • I work as a senior clinical psychologist within the child and adolescent mental health services in Skåne. (lu.se)
  • This project aims to improve knowledge about mental health in youth, especially in relation to symptoms of stress, anxiety and depression. (lu.se)
  • Self-esteem, self-worth, and self-respect are interchangeable phrases we use to identify our kids' confidence in their ability to handle life's problems. (empoweringparents.com)
  • Each time a child faces a new problem, their self-esteem-their confidence in solving this new problem-is put to the test. (empoweringparents.com)
  • If your child can deal with these problems, their sense of self-esteem grows. (empoweringparents.com)
  • The best way for children to develop self-esteem is to persevere outside of their comfort zone. (empoweringparents.com)
  • Parents need to be concerned about self-esteem, but in a way that empowers them to teach their kids the skills they need. (empoweringparents.com)
  • In my experience, kids develop self-esteem by doing things that are hard, worthy of esteem, and challenging for them. (empoweringparents.com)
  • In other words, when your child solves a challenging and relevant problem, they feel good about themselves, and their self-esteem improves. (empoweringparents.com)
  • It may be a nice thing to do, but know that praising your child for menial tasks will not build their self-esteem. (empoweringparents.com)
  • Results of hierarchical regression analyses suggest that boys' perceptions of their mothers and fathers were similar in relation to their development of self-esteem and familism. (uncg.edu)
  • Greater informant-reported global EF deficits, low ratings of global social skills, and low effortful control were predictive of more externalizing behaviors across parent and teacher informants. (umd.edu)
  • challenge the view that religiosity facilitates prosocial behavior. (dericbownds.net)
  • While it is generally accepted that religion contours people's moral judgments and prosocial behavior, the relation between religiosity and morality is a contentious one. (dericbownds.net)
  • Together these results reveal the similarity across countries in how religion negatively influences children's altruism, challenging the view that religiosity facilitates prosocial behavior. (dericbownds.net)
  • Previous studies have shown that parenting stress is related to child behavior problems, but few studies have investigated the transactional relations across time between parenting stress and child internalizing and externalizing outcomes separately, examining within-person changes. (frontiersin.org)
  • Furthermore, distinctive correlation patterns between parenting behavior and externalizing or internalizing behavior problems were found for both groups. (springer.com)
  • For children, their lack of experience means they are confronted with new problems and opportunities every day. (empoweringparents.com)
  • Instead, you need to provide your child with the tools they need and support them as they learn how to solve problems on their own . (empoweringparents.com)
  • Your child might feel good about themselves and come home and tell you, "Look, Mom, I got an A." But after that, they don't feel any more confident in their ability to manage life or deal with their problems. (empoweringparents.com)
  • The use of alcohol among young children and young people could lead to alcohol-related injuries, academic, behavioural, and relationship problems, as well as the development of lifestyle diseases [4]. (researchgate.net)
  • Externalizing problems encompass the most prevalent mental health disorders for children at the kindergarten age. (umd.edu)
  • Results indicated that there was low agreement between parents and teachers, but that agreement was higher for children rated in the top 15% of externalizing problems. (umd.edu)
  • However, differences were observed at the subscale level for the specific EF deficits and social skills that predicted parent-reported versus teacher-reported externalizing problems. (umd.edu)
  • and problems associated with sexual relations. (ipce.info)
  • This consensus helped discredit theories from the 1960s that blamed the parents usually the mother for problems like neurosis, schizophrenia and autism. (newsmine.org)
  • Problems in effective parenting are increasingly seen as a significant public health issue [ 1 ] and public policy has come to reflect this. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Depending on parenthood, the age of the youngest child in the household, and the regional context, either normative, or economic exchanges between partners seem to drive the association between relative education, and relative labor supply of women. (gesis.org)
  • Results showed that mothers of children with ASD reported significantly lower scores on Rules and Discipline and higher scores on Positive Parenting, Stimulating the Development, and Adapting the Environment. (springer.com)
  • Research into relative outcomes of parenting by biological and adoptive parents has produced a variety of results. (wikipedia.org)
  • When reviewing the results of the TRAQ, the staff person, transition coordinator, provider, or nurse may want to review some of the responses to confirm that they do represent the actual skill level as performed by the youth. (etsu.edu)
  • Results of a mindfulness-based skills training for parents of youth with obsessive-compulsive disorder. (sfu.ca)
  • Results showed that compliance increased as a function of teaching precursors for all children. (abainternational.org)
  • Results: At final examination, 33.3% of the children had developed new caries lesions in SPM. (bvsalud.org)
  • However, the results of studies among children with enamel hypomineralizations may be controversial. (bvsalud.org)
  • 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)
  • This research seeks to probe our earlier study by focusing on more localized minimum wage laws, augmenting the study with individual-level data, and incorporating parenting behaviors that often precede reports to child welfare agencies. (aeaweb.org)
  • Parents' involvement in ASD treatment: What is their role? (springer.com)
  • and facilitate discussion about factors that lead to involvement in health-risk behaviors. (researchgate.net)
  • Children's perceptions of their parents' interest in their playing sport also predict their lasting involvement in sport. (ussailing.org)
  • thus, the study concluded that "environmental transmission from parent to offspring has little effect on later cognitive ability. (wikipedia.org)
  • A study found that although parents did rate their adoptive children higher in negative traits and behaviors like arrogance and stealing, they scored both adopted and biological children similarly when it came to positive traits like conscientiousness and persistence. (wikipedia.org)
  • A 2004 study found that after gaining a child (whether through birth or adoption), respondents reported less depressed affect, more disagreements with their spouse, and more support from their own parents, but it appeared the experience of becoming an adoptive parent or a stepparent was less stressful than the adjustment to biological parenthood. (wikipedia.org)
  • This cross‐sectional study employs a sample of 219 (101 boys) fourth‐grade children living in the Western United States. (byu.edu)
  • The current study contributed to the literature on externalizing behaviors in young children by testing the unique contributions of EF, EC, and social skills to externalizing behaviors for parents and teachers separately. (umd.edu)
  • Given the large number of people who smoke waterpipe and the fact that waterpipe smoking has become a fashionable trend in the Middle East and the Western world among the youth, it is essential to study the health effects of waterpipe smoking with renewed emphasis. (who.int)
  • Provision of consent for self and child to participate in the study. (who.int)
  • a retrospective cross-sectional study that analyzed electronic medical records of 401 children. (bvs.br)
  • With regard to prevalent diseases, a cohort study conducted in Sweden, with the objective of assessing the association between breastfeeding and hospitalizations for infectious diseases in children up to four years of age, revealed that the risk of hospitalizations for infectious diseases decreased with EBF duration. (bvs.br)
  • A population-based study was conducted, in which all children from 4 - 6 years (n=230) of age, resident in the rural and urban zones of Botelhos, Minas Gerais, Brazil, were invited to participate. (bvsalud.org)
  • This is a longitudinal study and a long-term randomized controlled trial (RCT) with children where both biological parents suffer from mental illness. (lu.se)
  • Throughout the history of women's institutions, the parenting role of incarcerated women simply could not be ignored because of inmate pregnancy (Jeffries et al. (hhs.gov)
  • Future research examining transactional associations of parenting stress and child behaviors should investigate possible other mediations taking a within-person approach by utilizing the RI-CLPM. (frontiersin.org)
  • Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 70 , 1-137. (springer.com)
  • In partnership with the community agency AbilityPath (formerly Gatepath/Abilities United), Dr. Gengoux also led an innovative inclusive social skills research program focused on improving peer initiations made by children with ASD (Social SUCCESS). (stanford.edu)
  • Broadly, Laura is interested in research that helps to foster healthy child development. (sfu.ca)
  • The Association for Behavior Analysis International® (ABAI) is a nonprofit membership organization with the mission to contribute to the well-being of society by developing, enhancing, and supporting the growth and vitality of the science of behavior analysis through research, education, and practice. (abainternational.org)
  • Research done by Windee M. Weiss, Ph.D. of the University of Northern Iowa emphasizes the importance of parents staying accountable for and modeling good behavior, and helping their children interpret their sport experiences. (ussailing.org)
  • Research from Wiersma and Fifer found that their positive experiences include watching their child learn new skills and having the opportunity to interact with other parents. (ussailing.org)
  • LaVoi and Stellino research found that the children of parents who create anxiety about failing and emphasize winning are more likely to engage in poor sport behaviors than children whose parents encourage enjoyment and self-mastery. (ussailing.org)
  • Birth Order and Crime - Birth Order and Crime research papers report that later-born children are more likely than first-borns to engage in civil disobedience or otherwise disobey the law. (papermasters.com)
  • Children of Divorce - Children of Divorce research papers look at the statistics of how children are affected by divorce. (papermasters.com)
  • Divorce and The Effects On Children - Divorce and the Effects on Children Research Papers delve into the emotional and psychological effects on children. (papermasters.com)
  • Research papers on the effects of divorce on children can be written to examine the sociological, psychological or cultural effects of divorce on children. (papermasters.com)