Results 181 to 190 of about 1,875,087 (327)
Worldwide, more than one in 10 children or adolescents is diagnosed with a mental disorder. Cash transfer programs, which aim to reduce poverty and improve life outcomes by providing direct cash assistance to families and incentivizing or enabling spending on education, health service use, dietary diversity and savings, have been shown to improve the ...
Sara R. Jaffee +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Background Adolescent depressive symptoms may mark the beginning of long‐term trajectories of socioeconomic disadvantage, yet their role in shaping labor market outcomes remains understudied. This study investigates the longitudinal association between depressive symptoms in adolescence and precarious employment in adulthood and explores the mediating ...
Jinho Kim +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Caregiver sensitivity is the extent to which a caregiver notices a child's signal, interprets it correctly, and responds quickly and appropriately. Although originally introduced to developmental science as the key antecedent of attachment security, decades since its conception, hundreds of studies have been conducted examining the predictive ...
Marissa D. Nivison +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Background From a functionalist perspective, parenting behaviors have adaptive functions and are partly expressions of genetic variation. Maternal genes that have effects on children are often referred to as indirect maternal genetic effects. Indirect genetic effects provide a means for measuring the role of parenting without the need for specifying ...
Espen Moen Eilertsen +8 more
wiley +1 more source
Family quality‐of‐life burden in chronic spontaneous urticaria: A multicentre study
Poor control of chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) significantly worsens family members' quality of life, especially in emotional, physical, and social domains. Higher disease severity was linked to increased caregiving burden and household expenditures, highlighting the need for family‐centred CSU care and support across diverse global populations ...
Beatrice Martinez Zugaib Abdalla +33 more
wiley +1 more source
Quantify or Classify? Recommendations for Ambiguous Loss Versus Boundary Ambiguity
ABSTRACT The theory of ambiguous loss is a psychosocial theory born out of my interdisciplinary interests and training in human development, family science, psychology, sociology, and psychiatry/family therapy. Historically, qualitative and mixed methods advanced this theory; today, an ambiguous loss scale is wanted.
Pauline Boss
wiley +1 more source
Positive Youth Development for Youth Living in Structurally Diverse Families
ABSTRACT Research on family structure diversity and youth well‐being has largely aligned with deficit orientations, emphasizing that living in structurally diverse families is a potential risk‐factor for youth well‐being and development. In this article, I advocate for increased strengths‐based scholarship on youth living in structurally diverse ...
Jonathon J. Beckmeyer
wiley +1 more source
THE GENERATIONING OF POWER: A COMPARISON OF CHILD-PARENT AND SIBLING RELATIONS IN SCOTLAND
S. Punch
semanticscholar +1 more source
<i>Chironomus</i> sp. J - an elusive species from the <i>Chironomus plumosus</i> (Linnaeus, 1758) sibling-species group (Diptera, Chironomidae). [PDF]
Golygina VV.
europepmc +1 more source

