• The world's mothers are the same, always can not rest assured of their children, in the growth of each stage there are always stages of worry, mothers in the child-rearing road, especially for the child's nutritional health, character building and safety concerns, special attention. (motherread.net)
  • Although part of a child's personality is affected by genetic factors, acquired training can also have a subtle change in personality, especially the impact of family on children can not be ignored. (motherread.net)
  • In addition, the child's mind is not yet mature, and is particularly vulnerable to the temptation of ill-intentioned people, so it is inevitable that mothers are always worried. (motherread.net)
  • REMEMBER KORRYN Ronda Dormeus is raising her 9-year-old granddaughter after the child's mother was shot and killed by police over an unresolved traffic violation. (eastbayexpress.com)
  • Dormeus is raising her 9-year-old granddaughter in the absence of her daughter, the child's mother, Korryn Gaines, who was shot and killed by police over an unresolved traffic violation seven years ago. (eastbayexpress.com)
  • In the second year, when children begin walking and exploring on their own, it is important for parents to set limits for the child's safety and provide guidelines for acceptable behavior. (athealth.com)
  • At this point of the process, even though her baby was not too happy about sitting in her car seat, the mother was still adjusting her child's fit in the seat, ensuring both the baby's safety and comfort. (cdc.gov)
  • In addition to physical examination, clinicians should evaluate the child's motor, cognitive, and social development and parent-child interactions. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Fathers' and mothers' attachment styles, couple conflict, parenting quality, and children's behavior problems: an intervention test of mediation. (fpcej.ir)
  • Mainly, I thought all fathers were the drop-dead funniest guys on earth, who could make his three pajama-wearing urchin children capsize their glasses of milk with convulsive giggling. (chicagotribune.com)
  • Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated to assess the relation between family functioning and parental reaction to CO. The paired sample t test was used to compare mothers and fathers' scores on the PPRS. (springer.com)
  • No differences were found between mothers and fathers in their reaction to the disclosure. (springer.com)
  • Founder of Fathers with Voices , an organization that protects the rights of fathers and provides much-needed resources and emotional support to fathers threatened with losing visitation rights or custody of their children, Legette is just the man for the job. (regalmag.com)
  • Fathers with Voices fights for the rights of fathers, in part, by empowering fathers with the resources needed to [often] conduct their own legwork and provide other necessary information and support that neither the legal system nor most child agencies provide. (regalmag.com)
  • We have much the same - if not more - information on the topic of fathers' [child custody] rights than do costly attorneys. (regalmag.com)
  • Yet, fathers have much more to offer than only helping their children learn self- control and social rules, and their role involves much more than punishment. (athealth.com)
  • Indeed, prior to the 1900s in western culture, it was assumed that fathers more than mothers were responsible for the development of their children's moral behavior and self control. (athealth.com)
  • How can today's fathers provide discipline, in the sense of teaching and training their children? (athealth.com)
  • Both research studies and parents themselves report that the hard-to-manage children are more compliant and agreeable with their fathers than with their mothers. (athealth.com)
  • In one of the essays in Mothers, Fathers, and Others, Siri Hustvedt recalls a harrowing incident in which her unbelted toddler daughter Sophie nearly fell out of her stroller as they were descending on an escalator. (kaxe.org)
  • Mothers, Fathers, and Others sifts a wide range of memory, experience and disciplinary perspectives into essays that bring into focus the profound contradictions of motherhood. (kaxe.org)
  • The frequency of diarrhoea was significantly higher among children in rural areas, those aged 6-24 months and of higher birth order, in the summer, when mothers were younger, had lower education or were not working, and when fathers had lower education or were farmers or manual labourers. (who.int)
  • We need to provide evidence-based answers to all these questions," adds Rebay-Salisbury, who is also the principal investigator of the project VAMOS (The value of mothers to society: responses to motherhood and child rearing practices in prehistoric Europe), funded by a grant from the European Research Council. (europa.eu)
  • Many writers have noted that specific parenting practices are less important in predicting child well-being than is the broad pattern of parenting. (athealth.com)
  • The association between child-rearing practices and children's development of self-control has been well documented in research. (athealth.com)
  • Four decades of research in long-term controlled studies of the NFP home visiting program show remarkable outcomes, including family economic self-sufficiency and positive parenting practices leading to healthy child development and school readiness. (minnpost.com)
  • The role of parenting beliefs and mothers' attitudes to creative thinking on children's creativity. (fpcej.ir)
  • This puts Dormeus in the company of as many as a third of American grandparents, who are raising their children's children. (eastbayexpress.com)
  • They analysed peptides in children's teeth enamel to determine the sex of buried babies and children and could thereby determine whether there was a societal preference between boys and girls. (europa.eu)
  • Knowing who her children's friends are and keeping her children safe, what they like and what they do in their free time, and the children's hopes and dreams are all things that a mother needs to know. (homeformothers.com)
  • Identifying the most important factors that contribute to child malnutrition and their associations with economic growth can inform decision-making about targeted investments to improve children's health. (bvsalud.org)
  • Breakfast in bed and a day off from housework or child-rearing was only a surface scratch. (portlandmercury.com)
  • I struggle with juggling a job, housework and the kids. (homeformothers.com)
  • Women supported one another through childbirth, child-rearing and running a household. (teara.govt.nz)
  • we are all conditioned to see women as the folks primarily responsible for kids, from conception through pregnancy, childbirth, and child-rearing. (prospect.org)
  • Plaintiffs, gay couples and their kids, used these two clauses to attack Iowa's refusal to issue them marriage licenses and the 2006 marriage law. (mu.nu)
  • Does marriage or social support at home protect working mothers? (healthy.net)
  • Wife and mother of seven Heidi St. John talks about the importance of nurturing your marriage through the child-rearing years. (familylife.com)
  • Breathe oxygen into your marriage before you go to nurture your children because, if your marriage fails, your children are going to suffer by default! (familylife.com)
  • The goal of this research is to standardize the questionnaire for mothers' attitudes toward child-rearing. (fpcej.ir)
  • Found data demonstrate that the questionnaire for mothers' attitudes toward children rearing has structural validity, convergent validity, internal consistency, and content validity, and using Cronbach's Alpha, questionnaire reliability is higher than 0.84. (fpcej.ir)
  • Results: Results show that the questionnaire for mothers' attitudes toward children rearing has appropriate validity, reliability, and norms. (fpcej.ir)
  • Mothers completed the Edinburgh postnatal depression scale, and a general questionnaire. (scirp.org)
  • Mothers of preterm infants also completed the parental stress scale and parental bonding questionnaire. (scirp.org)
  • A screening questionnaire for mother-infant bonding disorders. (scirp.org)
  • I think that all moms struggle and become stressed out with the responsibilities of being a mother. (homeformothers.com)
  • The increased strain in working mothers comes from the reality that women still carry most of the child-rearing and household responsibilities. (healthy.net)
  • women are more likely to leave their jobs, reduce their hours, or take on more flexible or less-intensive (and thus lower paid) positions in response to having a child. (brookings.edu)
  • One question that many young women may ask, for example, is: what is the optimal age for becoming a new mother, if you want to minimize the impact of having a child on your earnings? (brookings.edu)
  • One recent Census Bureau paper made headlines for its finding that women who have their first child either before 25 or after 35 are much more likely to eventually close the pay gap with their spouse. (brookings.edu)
  • Married women often stayed home caring for children, and did not have their own transport. (teara.govt.nz)
  • Through the analysis of these influences, it was found that the whole society, including urban parenting groups, paid attention to self-expression and self-worth and further hoped to arouse society's recognition, face up to the identity of "mother" and "female," and give more attention and support to women. (frontiersin.org)
  • These women need to create a whole new knowledge system around child-rearing, from pregnancy, birth to parenting, and education. (frontiersin.org)
  • Over 6 years, she painted more than 20 works exploring the lives of women and their close relationships with children. (cdc.gov)
  • When did women first become mothers and how many children did they have on average? (europa.eu)
  • 5. With the cultural focus on mothering recommended by the feminine mystique, did women learn to become better mothers than their predecessors? (enotes.com)
  • 2. Functionalism promoted the idea that women should fulfill their current and past "function" in society and marry, then raise and rear children and protect the home front. (enotes.com)
  • Margaret Mead's initial anthropological research suggested that "functions" in society were interchangeable-men could nurture, women could kill-but her later work bowed to functionalism and glorified women's sexual role as mothers and wives. (enotes.com)
  • Friedan writes that educators urged women to fulfill only their sexual destiny by finding a mate and bearing children, but did not encourage them to think analytically or creatively, or to entertain multiple possibilities in life. (enotes.com)
  • Women who were urged in high school and college to spend their educational years training only for their sexual destiny (as wives and mothers) appeared, later in life, to suffer from a lack of identity. (enotes.com)
  • Even today, while women are increasing in the workplace, the primary responsibility of child-rearing generally falls on the mother. (regalmag.com)
  • This approach limits women to the stereotypical role of mothers, giving birth and staying at home to rear children. (coe.int)
  • Luecken LJ et al: Stress in Employed Women: Impact of Marital Status and Children at Home on Neurohormonal Output and Home Strain. (healthy.net)
  • Young women know they are facing menopause down the road, and have often been warned by mothers and other older women about the difficulties of conception. (prospect.org)
  • As a consequence, it isn't uncommon to talk to women in their twenties who are aware of the latest trends on prenatal testing or fertility, but whose male partners have never bothered to inform themselves on such issues, even though they fully intend on having children "someday. (prospect.org)
  • The lineage is traced along female lines and consists of all the descendants of the oldest female-all the women and their children in the line. (micsem.org)
  • One of the early intervention programs with the strongest evidence for social impact is the Nurse Family Partnership, a voluntary home visiting program that serves low-income women pregnant with their first child. (minnpost.com)
  • Feed the Future aims to assist millions of vulnerable women, children, and family members to escape hunger and poverty, while also reaching significant numbers of children with highly effective nutrition interventions to prevent stunting and child mortality. (who.int)
  • Over the next five years in Kenya, Feed the Future aims to help an estimated 502,000 vulnerable Kenyan women, children and family members-mostly smallholder farmers-escape hunger and poverty. (who.int)
  • We are the dedicated mother bird, the story tells us, guided by a maternal instinct perfected through the ages into something solid and certain, like a smooth red marble hidden beneath a feathered breast. (macmillan.com)
  • To reduce child malnutrition, economic growth may need to be accompanied by more targeted investments to improve contributing factors that are strongly associated with child malnutrition, such as maternal health and education. (bvsalud.org)
  • Child age and sex, followed by maternal education level, economic status, child nutritional status, reading chil- dren's books, and maternal functional difficulties had the greatest effect on ECDI. (who.int)
  • Developmental trajectories of attachment and depressive symptoms in children and adolescents. (fpcej.ir)
  • The Bright Futures/AAP recommendations for preventive pediatric health care (2022), also called the periodicity schedule, are a schedule of screenings and assessments recommended at each well-child visit for newborns through adolescents 21 years of age. (msdmanuals.com)
  • More details regarding health promotion interventions at these specific developmental stages can be found in the Bright Futures: Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children, and Adolescents, 4th Edition (2017). (msdmanuals.com)
  • These appear in child-rearing as a set of mature experience system constraints from preparation for pregnancy to child-rearing. (frontiersin.org)
  • Parenting style and youth outcomes in the UK. (fpcej.ir)
  • Parenting is a complex activity that includes many specific behaviors that work individually and together to influence child outcomes. (athealth.com)
  • There is strong evidence that these programs not only improve outcomes, but also prevent costly social problems such as school failure, poverty, unemployment, crime, child abuse, and health disparities. (minnpost.com)
  • That's why we support increased funding for family home visiting programs as a successful strategy to reduce risks and improve outcomes for families and their children - and ultimately save taxpayers money. (minnpost.com)
  • Experience of parenthood, couple relationship, social support, and child-rearing goals in planned lesbian mother families. (springer.com)
  • These target areas also encompass the highest concentrations of malnourished children, female-headed households, and rural poor. (who.int)
  • Plunket's Mothers' Clubs allowed mothers to meet - as did New Mothers' Support Groups from the 1970s. (teara.govt.nz)
  • Significantly more depressed mothers of preterm infants did not receive some level of support from their husbands ( p = .014), and had some level of difficulty feeding ( p = .03) or identifying the amount to feed their infant ( p = .02). (scirp.org)
  • A large proportion of mothers reported no support from friends in rearing children. (scirp.org)
  • There is a considerable amount of political debate in Europe on how to best support working mothers in their careers while providing optimal substitute care for babies and small children. (europa.eu)
  • The father's role in these family interactions involves both the support of the mother and direct interactions with the child. (athealth.com)
  • Nicole initially supported Cecelia financially entirely from her own income, but this was eventually supplemented with modest child support payments from Cecelia's father, who had never been married to Mother and had played no role in Cecelia's life. (narf.org)
  • Mother provided no financial support for Cecelia. (narf.org)
  • Mothers receive support for their own life course development as well as parenting education to provide the care and nurturance her child needs. (minnpost.com)
  • They support the mother without judgment and are particularly successful in getting mothers to stop smoking and using alcohol and drugs, and to eat properly. (minnpost.com)
  • More than 230,000 children will be reached with services to improve their nutrition and prevent stunting and child mortality. (who.int)
  • Mother has five children, two older than Cecelia and two younger. (narf.org)
  • They'll say, "If the oxygen mask falls from the ceiling, secure it on your face before assisting a younger child. (familylife.com)
  • Because she also helped her mother raise her younger brother, she went to hear Adler's lectures in Vienna when she was 16. (jweekly.com)
  • Screening for abdominal injury is recommended in children younger than 5 years in whom abuse is suspected, even in the absence of clear external evidence of abdominal injury or symptoms such as pain or vomiting. (medscape.com)
  • On Mother's Day, we celebrate all that mothers do for their children. (brookings.edu)
  • The impact on a mother's wages at a single point in time, relative to a similar woman who did not have a child. (brookings.edu)
  • People who don't have kids really underestimate the issues that come with parenting, while folks who've already experienced it or possess a specific understanding of it are much more sympathetic. (insurances.net)
  • The study involved round-the-clock filming of female mice interacting in a community of mothers, newborns and virgin females. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • Here the adults mate, and females give birth and rear their young in a network of tranquil lagoons. (nationalgeographic.com)
  • Young children were given chores to suit their strength and ability, not just out of need and to teach discipline, but to keep them from underfoot. (pennsburymanor.org)
  • Nonetheless, it is also fair to note that the trust placed in young children early on would likely horrify modern parents. (pennsburymanor.org)
  • As a mother of two young boys, Katharina Rebay-Salisbury, an archaeologist specialised in the European Bronze and Iron Ages working at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna, knows it all too well. (europa.eu)
  • The temperament of each young child affects each parent's approach to discipline. (athealth.com)
  • At eight years old, my kid is young enough to still be unaware of most of what goes on in the world but old enough to realize something is wrong. (yourtango.com)
  • As the mother of a young child in this country, I have a heightened awareness about how we socialize the genders. (sightline.org)
  • Early child development : investing in the future / Mary Eming Young. (who.int)
  • Costa Rica has become a global leader in ECD by velopment, care and preprimary education so that they making it mandatory for all young children to enrol are ready for primary education ( 5 ). (who.int)
  • Mother can not always look at the child, to explore interest to encourage and nurture, the baby can develop all aspects of talent. (motherread.net)
  • In November 2002, Mother moved away, initially within California and then to an Indian reservation in Montana. (narf.org)
  • ABSTRACT Using multistage cluster sampling, we conducted a household survey of diarrhoea among 4458 children under age 5 years in Dakahlia governorate from June 2002 to May 2003 to determine the preva- lence and determinants of diarrhoeal diseases. (who.int)
  • 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)
  • Everything from waking with the child at night for diaper changes and feedings, teaching them how to take care of themselves as they get older, helping with homework, carpooling to sports, attending school meetings, and helping them cope with the changes through life is a job a mother often takes on herself. (homeformothers.com)
  • 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)
  • He had no role model for child rearing. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • Although parents may differ in how they try to control or socialize their children and the extent to which they do so, it is assumed that the primary role of all parents is to influence, teach, and control their children. (athealth.com)
  • Let's remember what God says about being a mom and the role a mother should play, and everything else will fall into place. (homeformothers.com)
  • My role was to be-was to be there for [Cecelia] and [Mother] and to not try to cause any problem or anything. (narf.org)
  • Medical Center in North Carolina provides the first solid evidence of the physical impact of "role overload" among working mothers- evidence that the increased demands on working moms often result in physiological changes associated with ill health. (healthy.net)
  • Emotional responses of mothers of late-preterm and term infants. (scirp.org)
  • Parental responses to youths' coming out (CO) are crucial to the subsequent adjustment of children and family. (springer.com)
  • To get there, we tried to find out whether becoming a mother was in any way archeologically traceable, either through female skeletons or through societal responses, and indeed it is. (europa.eu)
  • Not a traditional self-help book outlining "steps" to reconcile or forgive one's mother, The Girl in the Red Boots is a poignant memoir filled with hard-won life lessons, including the fact that it's never too late to let go of hurts and disappointments and develop compassion for yourself-and even for your mother. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • Nevertheless, before the children left the house, they were instilled with fundamental morals and an understanding of one's actions. (pennsburymanor.org)
  • Behavioural problems, nutrition, toilet training, discipline, prizes, picking the right school, setting up playdates and ensuring your home is safe are just several of the child-rearing guide themes that would greatly help mums and dads bring up their girls and boys. (insurances.net)
  • Many mothers are always worried that their children are too introverted, isolated, not social, or too naughty, disobedient, become headache bear children, not conducive to future growth and development. (motherread.net)
  • This new research builds on our growing knowledge about this fascinating social facilitator, and shows that learning mothering skills through observation among mice (and potentially, among humans) is not just a practical process, but guided by the bonding hormone. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • Was social status already impacting the number of surviving children? (europa.eu)
  • She is a popular conference speaker, radio personality, author and blogger whose message of returning to God's Word and embracing our ministry as mothers has resonated with several hundred thousand followers in social media, through books, and radio appearances. (familylife.com)
  • Therefore, as parents to transmit some positive energy to children, so that children feel the atmosphere of family happiness, they can become more confident and happy, naturally more lively obedient. (motherread.net)
  • Parents usually pay more attention to interaction with their children, reading books, taking their children out to play, outdoor activities, more communication with their children, more understanding of listening and encouragement. (motherread.net)
  • Many child-rearing books are published by other parents, but for delicate themes, it is recommended to buy a child-rearing book written by an expert. (insurances.net)
  • Attitude toward child-rearing is one of the factors that is very effective on the mental, emotional, and behavioral efforts of parents especially mothers in adapting strategies for children-rearing. (fpcej.ir)
  • Validation and revision of the Parents' Attitude Scale for Children with Special Needs, Exceptional People Quarterly, 11 (3): 147-163. (fpcej.ir)
  • However when I have kids i want to be more involved with their lives then i my parents were with me. (answerbag.com)
  • Parents were conscientious to lead by example, especially to be "…careful of actions in the presence of children, for they have very quick eyes and ears. (pennsburymanor.org)
  • Still, we must remember that these factors do not lessen the affection colonial parents had for their children. (pennsburymanor.org)
  • Frustrated, they became overprotective or obsessive parents with identities too bound up in child rearing. (enotes.com)
  • The construct of parenting style is used to capture normal variations in parents' attempts to control and socialize their children (Baumrind, 1991). (athealth.com)
  • Parental demandingness (also referred to as behavioral control) refers to "the claims parents make on children to become integrated into the family whole, by their maturity demands, supervision, disciplinary efforts and willingness to confront the child who disobeys" (Baumrind, 1991, pp. 61-62). (athealth.com)
  • Indulgent parents may be further divided into two types: democratic parents, who, though lenient, are more conscientious, engaged, and committed to the child, and nondirective parents. (athealth.com)
  • Thus, poorly modulated behavior in a toddler or preschool child can overwhelm the mother or father, as well as split the parents into disagreement as they argue on how to manage the child. (athealth.com)
  • When parents disagree on behavior management, there is little improvement in the child. (athealth.com)
  • Today, my daughter and her parents (all of us) were talking about kids' clothing. (yourtango.com)
  • As parents, we owe it to our kids to help them get clothes that they feel comfortable and confident wearing. (yourtango.com)
  • Team up with other parents to share the load - child care, dinner clubs, or shuttling. (healthy.net)
  • Healthy children need healthy, well functioning parents. (minnpost.com)
  • General reference Well-child visits aim to do the following: Promote health Prevent disease through routine vaccinations and education Detect and treat disease early Guide parents and caregivers to optimize the. (msdmanuals.com)
  • There's always something unexpected to cope with- spilled milk, lost homework, a sick child, the search for new child care. (healthy.net)
  • Results of search for 'su:{Child rearing. (who.int)
  • Cecelia also formed a strong bond with Nicole's mother, whom she treated as a grandmother. (narf.org)
  • Heidi St John is a mother, a grandmother, and a wife of over 25 years. (familylife.com)
  • The present study was conducted between May and August 2017 and screening of child household contacts and subsequent TPT initiation included 11 of the 13 clinics in the two subdistricts, excluding two in eligible children. (who.int)
  • In daily life, mothers need to create complete play and exploration environment for their babies. (motherread.net)
  • You'll hear either that mothers should never be separated from their babies, or that child-rearing used to be communal," she explains. (europa.eu)
  • Heidi reminds mothers not to neglect their marriages and to set aside time each day to reconnect with their spouses. (familylife.com)
  • Observations included 1â ¯138â ¯568 children aged 0 to 35 months with valid anthropometric measures and information on contributing factors of malnutrition from 58 LMICs. (bvsalud.org)
  • Perception of child vulnerability among mothers of former premature infants. (scirp.org)
  • Acknowledging that the Convention on the Rights of the Child contains a comprehensive set of international legal standards for the protection and well-being of children, and also that it is an important framework for addressing child and adolescent health and development, 1. (who.int)
  • The impact of very premature birth on the psychological health of mothers. (scirp.org)
  • The NFP nurses are trained to form a close relationship with the mother and advise her on prenatal health and child-rearing issues. (minnpost.com)
  • Health Survey reported that among children as none has proven practical and some are aged under 5 years, 13.4% had had diar- dangerous [ 5,6 ]. (who.int)
  • 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)
  • Early child development is a crucial factor for children that controls health and well-being in later life. (who.int)
  • The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has recommended preventive health care schedules for children who have no significant health problems and who are growing and developing normally. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Both physical examination and screening are important parts of preventive health care in infants and children. (msdmanuals.com)
  • S Afr J Child Health 2022;16(1):xx-xx. (who.int)
  • Children in colonial families were numerous and averaged between seven to ten in each household. (pennsburymanor.org)
  • The group consisted of a senior woman, all her married daughters with their spouses and children, and possibly even the married granddaughters with their families. (micsem.org)
  • [ 3 ] In addition, these children and their families often experience serious psychological problems. (medscape.com)
  • In fact, milk intake is also very important in the growth stage of children. (motherread.net)
  • In this engaging book, Rabinor reflects on the most complex, intense and important of all relationships, the one between mothers and daughters. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • Thus an inquiry into the circumstances under which the wife and mother plies her trade seems to me quite as necessary and justifiable as an inquiry into the conditions of other and less important industries - such as mining or cotton-spinning. (upenn.edu)
  • The results of this study can be important to identify the most important variables in the treatment of children with atopic dermatitis and to develop group or individual intervention programs. (bvsalud.org)
  • Tuberculosis preventive therapy (TPT) offered to children who come into contact with infectious adult pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) cases is an important childhood TB prevention strategy. (who.int)
  • These contradictions, Hustvedt asserts, are eclipsed by the cultural idealization of mothers as the model of self-sacrificing nurturance. (kaxe.org)
  • In every society, the mother is expected to raise the children while the father supports the household. (regalmag.com)
  • Another factor is that working mothers seldom have a chance to "unwind," so they have increased sympathetic nervous system arousal both during and after work. (healthy.net)
  • In time, he would file for - and gain - full custody of his child. (regalmag.com)
  • When both Cecelia and Nicole resisted, Mother filed a petition for child custody. (narf.org)
  • Mother contends that Nicole lacked standing to join as a party under the Family Code, that the court was precluded from awarding custody of Cecelia to a nonparent who had not been appointed Cecelia's guardian, and that the family court erred in finding the ICWA unconstitutional as applied to Cecelia. (narf.org)
  • The effect of postpartum depression on child cognitive development and behavior: A review and critical analysis of the literature. (scirp.org)
  • Early childhood development (ECD) comprises the phys- ical, cognitive, motor and socioemotional growth of Children must be provided with responsive care, children up to 8 years of age ( 1 , 2 ). (who.int)
  • Although specific parenting behaviors, such as spanking or reading aloud, may influence child development, looking at any specific behavior in isolation may be misleading. (athealth.com)
  • She has completed Early Childhood 1 & 2 classes, Infant Toddler classes, and completed the coursework for her Associates degree in Child Development. (homeformothers.com)
  • Children aged 36-47 months had lower odds of development than those aged 48-59 months, and boys had lower odds of development than girls in Bangladesh, Costa Rica and Ghana. (who.int)
  • Urban children had lower odds of development than rural children in Costa Rica but higher odds in Ghana. (who.int)
  • 5 years and/or HIV-infected) linked to infectious study, with clinic visits for patient recruitment done by the principal adult TB cases and documenting the proportion of these children investigator without any prior pre-arrangement with the clinic on the having successful y initiated TPT. (who.int)
  • In general, mothers have been the main performers of this child-rearing work. (frontiersin.org)
  • His theories suggest that men are the sexually and intellectually superior gender, and that any woman wishing to break out of traditional female roles of mother, wife, or housekeeper won't succeed, for she is only displaying a "penis envy"-as if her urge to think or work is an impossible wish to become male. (enotes.com)
  • Make frequent written lists of your own priorities, from the largest (spend time with my children, go to work) to the smallest (take out the recycle boxes). (healthy.net)
  • It's heartbreaking and incredibly powerful-a good reminder that we need to actively work against overlaying this expectation on our children, teach them that it's normal to have a full range of emotions, and help them find ways to express them. (sightline.org)
  • She shares the story of her journey from pain and anger to acceptance and gratitude and explores the journeys of other mothers and daughters too. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • The complex relationship between mothers and daughters is brought vividly to life as Rabinor, a psychologist who specializes in mother-daughter relationships, weaves together stories from her office and her life. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • The concept of discipline as teaching a set of behaviors to the child "not just punishment" becomes a reality only when there is consistency. (athealth.com)
  • In addition, as education is increased, a more favorable attitude toward child rearing is seen in the sample group but employment and age did not make any difference. (fpcej.ir)
  • It's been in the back of my mind since I gathered in Oakland with Wanda Johnson, the mother of Oscar Grant III, and moms of adult children from across the United States whose lives have been cut short by police violence, who in many cases are now raising or helping to raise the grandchildren left behind. (eastbayexpress.com)
  • How do Internet moms raise children? (frontiersin.org)
  • For the next few years, Helen applied herself as a volunteer to help Santa Clara Valley migrant camp adults and children. (wikipedia.org)
  • Calm, consistent behavior by adults is the model for teaching self-control in the child. (athealth.com)
  • Adults jointly cared for the children in a kibbutz-like arrangement. (micsem.org)
  • The presence of a spouse or significant other at home did not buffer the physiological and psychological consequences of stress in working mothers. (healthy.net)
  • who does not rise in my estimation by reason of a purely physical capacity for bearing children, or sink in my estimation through a lack of that capacity. (upenn.edu)
  • Physical child abuse (ie, nonaccidental injury that a child sustains at the hands of his or her caregiver) can result in skeletal injury, burns, bruising (see the first image below), and central nervous system injury from head trauma (see the second image below). (medscape.com)
  • Usually also consciously cultivate the baby's safety awareness, such as teaching children to remember their parents'names and phone numbers, family address, do not easily accept the gift of strangers, do not easily leave with strangers, if there is a problem to ask for help in time wearing uniform aunts and uncles, safety drips, should be accumulated from the day-to-day oh. (motherread.net)
  • You'll find that apart from adding to the suggestions that you receive from your family, friends and colleagues, child parenting books will offer you varied points of view that you haven't given some thought to! (insurances.net)
  • Raising children has long been the focus of family activities. (frontiersin.org)
  • Journal of Child and Family Studies, 22 , 962-970. (springer.com)
  • If you watch the nightly family sitcoms on television or if you ever go on the popular website Pinterest, you will see all sorts of unspoken rules or standards that mothers today are set against. (homeformothers.com)
  • This is a good time to draw attention to the importance of early childhood intervention programs and their positive impact on child and family well-being. (minnpost.com)
  • Hustvedt, traveling with her family through an airport, was exhausted - a situation all too familiar to harried mothers of toddlers. (kaxe.org)
  • The most memorable entries in this collection are Hustvedt's reminiscences of mothers in her extended family. (kaxe.org)
  • What did your mother or father forget to tell you about life? (answerbag.com)
  • Parent-child relations throughout life (pp. 59-92). (springer.com)
  • Most school kids can describe in detail the life cycle of butterflies: eggs hatch into caterpillars, caterpillars turn into cocoons and cocoons hatch. (dailygood.org)
  • And the obvious light of her life are her two children Daniel, age 7, and Catherine, age 4. (cdc.gov)
  • This will make certain that the child-rearing guide you select appropriately looks at the issues that you want to know more about. (insurances.net)
  • The sexist phrases we've seen on kids' clothing also make me feel like they're trying to tell kids their roles in a really unhealthy way. (yourtango.com)
  • I usually don't make plans," said Rich, who was one of five children. (jweekly.com)
  • Initially, Cecelia resided with Nicole during the week and with Mother on weekends, but Cecelia's weekend visits declined in frequency after Mother lost her home a few months later. (narf.org)
  • Children who have developmental delay, psychosocial problems, or chronic disease may require more frequent counseling and treatment visits that are separate from preventive care visits. (msdmanuals.com)
  • is recommended during regular well-child visits at 18 and 24 months of age. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Literally a garment used to restrain psychiatric patients, the metaphor captures the punitive rules for how a mother should feel or act. (kaxe.org)
  • Solo parenting, rivalry between siblings and the ways to raise differently abled children are some of the themes that child-rearing books are known to address thoroughly. (insurances.net)
  • I tend to agree with the court that regulating gays is not a good way to get straight people to have kids and raise them in two parent homes or to conserve private and public resources. (mu.nu)
  • M y mother forgot to tell me that she's a raving psychotic who resented having to raise myself and my brother and sister. (answerbag.com)
  • Expectations and philosophies on how to raise a colonial child from our views today. (pennsburymanor.org)
  • In 2001, just before Cecelia entered the second grade, financial difficulties caused Mother, then a single mother, to send Cecelia to live with Nicole, whom Mother characterized as Cecelia's godmother. (narf.org)
  • They want their children to be assertive as well as socially responsible, and self-regulated as well as cooperative" (Baumrind, 1991, p. 62). (athealth.com)
  • A high quality milk will help children grow healthily. (motherread.net)
  • Cecelia often stayed with Nicole's mother on weekends. (narf.org)