Results 341 to 350 of about 10,136,889 (397)
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Family functioning in neglectful families

Child Abuse & Neglect, 1996
Family 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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Familial and non-familial mania

Journal of Affective Disorders, 1980
We 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
openaire   +2 more sources

Family and family therapy in the Netherlands

International Review of Psychiatry, 2012
This article describes how families are functioning in the Netherlands, and how family therapy is used in mental healthcare. In the open Dutch society, new ideas are easily incorporated, as exemplified by the rapid introduction and growth of family therapy in the 1980s.
Karin, Wagenaar, Jan, Baars
openaire   +2 more sources

MUSLIM FAMILIES AND FAMILY THERAPY

Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 1998
Muslim immigrant families living in the United States may well come to be attentiaon of mental health professionals. This article examines the applicability of the Anglo‐American models of family therapy to Muslim immigrant families. The most significant difference in value systems between the Muslim and Anglo‐American cultures is Muslim families ...
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Neurofibromatosis: A Familial and Family Disorder

Journal of Neuroscience Nursing, 1985
Neurofibromatosis (NF) is a devastating illness which is extremely variable in its symptoms, intensity, and progression. Nursing literature has suffered markedly from lack of information on this important health care problem. This article is the result of an interface of the senior author's own personal experience with neurofibromatosis and an ...
R L, Messner, M R, Messner, S J, Lewis
openaire   +2 more sources

Mob families and mad families

Archive for Mathematical Logic, 1998
The standard example of an almost disjoint family is the collection of branches \(b\) of \(T\) a countable splitting tree. For this review we fix \(T = \omega^{ \omega_2\). Both proofs proceed by adding sets via forcings that preserve unbounded sets in the ground model.
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Family configuration and family size

Biodemography and Social Biology, 1986
In a sample of 61829 US families the probability of having an additional child is higher in those families with all the children the same sex as compared to those families with children of both sexes. Data are from families of American high school students who took the National Merit Scholarship Qualifying test in 1965.
C T, Gualtieri, R E, Hicks
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The Family Doctor and the Suicidal Family

Psychiatry in Medicine, 1970
Suicide is a broad social problem, the full scope of which extends beyond the medical profession. The physician is, nevertheless, one of the most important figures in the field of suicide prevention. Particularly because of the growth of community psychiatry and other changes in psychiatric practice, it is more urgent than ever that the physician be ...
J, Richman, M, Rosenbaum
openaire   +2 more sources

Three Families with Familial Cardiomyopathy

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1965
Excerpt In 1949 Evans (1) described a degenerative disease of the myocardium that occurred in the same family and named the condition "familial cardiomegaly." Since that original report, Battersby ...
D L, BOYD   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Gene dose of apolipoprotein E type 4 allele and the risk of Alzheimer's disease in late onset families.

Science, 1993
E. Corder   +8 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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