Results 201 to 210 of about 2,963,910 (260)
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Major Life Events and Changes in the Behavioural Functioning of Children
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines, 1990Abstract The relationship between major life events and changes, across a 2‐yr period, in the level of parent‐reported behavioural/emotional problems in 1397 children from a general population sample was investigated using a highly modified version of the Coddington Life Events Record and the Achenbach Child ...
Frank C Verhulst
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Simplified Scaling for Life Change Events
Journal of Human Stress, 1980A relative simple interval scaling method for adjustment to life change events was compared to the original, more difficult, proportinate scaling method. Ranking of life events by both methods was extremely similar. Evidence also was found that today Americans scale several minor life change events as requiring greater adjustment than that estimated ...
R H, Rahe, D H, Ryman, H W, Ward
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Perception of Life Change Events by the Elderly
Nursing Research, 1975The perception of the amount of adjustment necessitated by the occurrence of common life events was assessed for 41 members of a senior citizens' club who ranged in age from 65 to 84. Significant agreement was found between the elderly subjects and the normative sample with regard to rank ordering of the life events.
A F, Muhlenkamp, L D, Gress, M A, Flood
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Life Events and Religious Change
Review of Religious Research, 1989Over the course of a lifetime, virtually everyone experiences change in their level of religious belief and activity. Some of these changes are modest in scope; others are more dramatic, as in the case of religious conversion or loss offaith. This paper examines the effect of a variety of life events on changes in religious belief and behavior.
Stan L. Albrecht, Marie Cornwall
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Life Change Events, Ballistocardiography and Coronary Death
Journal of Human Stress, 1975Thirty-six men and women who experienced a documented myocardial infarction, half of whom ultimately died from their disease and half of whom survived over a six-year period, provided longitudinal recent life changes and ballistocardiographic data. The 18 patients who died from their coronary disease indicated a significant buildup in life changes ...
T, Theorell, C R, Rahe
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Life events and brand preference changes
Journal of Consumer Behaviour, 2003AbstractThree types of variable have been used to explain brand preference changes: consumer characteristics, marketing mix factors and situational influences. The study presented in this paper focuses on the relationship between life events experienced by individuals, resultant stress and lifestyle changes and changes in brand preferences.
Anil Mathur +2 more
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BMJ, 1996
In June 1950 I was sitting in a tin roofed hut without electricity which used to be my private clinic. A poor looking middle aged man with bare feet entered and asked me whether I was the doctor whom he had been advised to approach to treat his family.
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In June 1950 I was sitting in a tin roofed hut without electricity which used to be my private clinic. A poor looking middle aged man with bare feet entered and asked me whether I was the doctor whom he had been advised to approach to treat his family.
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Influenza as a life changing event
BMJ, 2010Pandemic flu is nothing new, and in the three years from 1889 the world was, as now, in its grip. The year 1891 found a little known Dr Conan Doyle struggling to build an ophthalmic practice in two rented rooms, one to be a consulting room and the other a waiting room, close to Harley Street.
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The Meaning of Life (Events) Predicts Changes in Attachment Security
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 2003Building on prior research, which has failed to find consistent effects of life events on change in self-reported adult attachment security over time, the present study tested the hypothesis that it is the meaning people assign to events, rather than the objective features of events, that is associated with changing levels of security.
Joanna, Davila, Erica, Sargent
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2019
Abstract A key element in social work and social work education is a belief in the ability to change, discovering previously hidden strengths along the way. Study participants were asked to look back on their careers as social work educators and recount a life-changing event (for themselves and/or their students).
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Abstract A key element in social work and social work education is a belief in the ability to change, discovering previously hidden strengths along the way. Study participants were asked to look back on their careers as social work educators and recount a life-changing event (for themselves and/or their students).
openaire +1 more source

