Results 261 to 270 of about 1,064,760 (292)
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Italian Families and Family Interventions
Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 2014In Italy, as in many countries, relatives are closely involved in caring for persons with physical and mental disorders. The Italian scenario lends itself to routine involvement of family members in psychiatric treatment because, despite becoming smaller and smaller, Italian families keep close ties, and men and women do not leave the parental home ...
Casacchia, Massimo, RONCONE, RITA
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Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism, 2000
Brachyolmia is characterized clinically by short stature and radiographically by generalized platyspondyly without significant long bone abnormalities. A healthy 13-(8/12) year-old girl was referred for evaluation of short stature. The parents were first cousins. She had two older brothers and a younger brother and sister.
Darcan, S +4 more
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Brachyolmia is characterized clinically by short stature and radiographically by generalized platyspondyly without significant long bone abnormalities. A healthy 13-(8/12) year-old girl was referred for evaluation of short stature. The parents were first cousins. She had two older brothers and a younger brother and sister.
Darcan, S +4 more
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FAMILY HEALTH VERSUS FAMILY PLANNING
The Lancet, 1973Abstract The Ministries of Health for countries throughout the world are struggling for effective programmes to alleviate the mounting population crush with its staggering health needs. The family-planning efforts as well as nutrition supplementation programmes have seen little success in areas where total family health needs are not met in their ...
L J, Casazza, C D, Williams
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[Present-day families--anti-family families?].
Praxis der Kinderpsychologie und Kinderpsychiatrie, 1989Alternative forms of living had their origin in the 1968-movement, which opposed directly the family. Meanwhile, this critical impulse has born many divergent forms of alternative living. Some of them have a family-analogue character together with a critical intention towards families. Thus, they are called here "Anti-Family-Families".
M B, Buchholz, U, Kolle
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Family functioning in neglectful families
Child Abuse & Neglect, 1996Family functioning in 103 neglectful and 102 non-neglectful low-income families is examined using self-report and observational measures. Neglectful mothers reported their families as having more family conflict and less expression of feelings, but not less cohesive. Ratings of observed and videotaped family interactions indicated neglect families were
J M, Gaudin +3 more
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Clinical and Experimental Dermatology, 1992
The presence of large numbers of moles, atypical in appearance and distribution typifies the atypical mole syndrome. The syndrome may occur in one individual alone or in an autosomal-dominant fashion in his/her family. The presence of this phenotype indicates an increased risk of melanoma, although the risk varies according to the presence or absence ...
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The presence of large numbers of moles, atypical in appearance and distribution typifies the atypical mole syndrome. The syndrome may occur in one individual alone or in an autosomal-dominant fashion in his/her family. The presence of this phenotype indicates an increased risk of melanoma, although the risk varies according to the presence or absence ...
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Family rules: Family life styles.
American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1974Book reviewed in this article: The authors view the family as a rule-governed system, and present material from family assessments to indicate that family rules can be inferred from a family's repetitive behavior. Five family rules are found to be of such magnitude that they are designated as “family life styles.” It is suggested that the ...
F R, Ford, J, Herrick
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Current Paediatrics, 1997
Abstract Familial dysautonomia (FD, Riley-Day syndrome, hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy type III) can be considered a genetic model for understanding how perturbations in the autonomic nervous system and the sensory system can compromise cognition and alter behavior.
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Abstract Familial dysautonomia (FD, Riley-Day syndrome, hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy type III) can be considered a genetic model for understanding how perturbations in the autonomic nervous system and the sensory system can compromise cognition and alter behavior.
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Family therapy with ‘invisible families’
British Journal of Medical Psychology, 1995This paper describes a therapeutic model for working with children in the care system who have severe behavioural problems. The model is an extension of consultation work and was developed from clinical material. It links some of the theories about the internal conflicts of children to their family history and ways of consulting with the professional ...
J, Hay, R, Leheup, M, Almudevar
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Familial and non-familial mania
Journal of Affective Disorders, 1980We compared 34 manics with a positive family history of affective disorder (familial mania) and 84 manics with a negative family history of affective disorder (non-familial mania) for clinical, demographic and historical variables related to abnormal brain function and for cortical functioning measured by neuropsychological and electroencephalographic ...
M A, Taylor, R, Abrams
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