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Koger, Susan M.; Schettler, Ted; Weiss, Bernard – American Psychologist, 2005
Developmental, learning, and behavioral disabilities are a significant public health problem. Environmental chemicals can interfere with brain development during critical periods, thereby impacting sensory, motor, and cognitive function. Because regulation in the United States is based on limited testing protocols and essentially requires proof of…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Psychologists, Public Health, Developmental Disabilities
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Goins, R. Turner; Williams, Kimberly A.; Carter, Mary W.; Spencer, S. Melinda; Solovieva, Tatiana – Journal of Rural Health, 2005
Context: Many rural elders experience limited access to health care. The majority of what we know about this issue has been based upon quantitative studies, yet qualitative studies might offer additional insight into individual perceptions of health care access. Purpose: To examine what barriers rural elders report when accessing needed health…
Descriptors: Access to Health Care, Delivery Systems, Social Isolation, Focus Groups
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Secret, Mary; Peck-Heath, Claudia – Journal of Family Issues, 2004
This study investigated the relationship between maternal labor force participation and the general health and school performance of school-age children in public assistance families. Data were obtained from face-to-face interviews with 97 mothers drawn from a random sample of public assistance recipients in one community. Using a measure of…
Descriptors: Welfare Services, Mothers, Well Being, Labor Force Nonparticipants
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Cloutier, Paula F.; Manion, Ian G.; Walker, Jan Gordon; Johnson, Susan M. – Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 2002
Couples with chronically ill children are particularly at risk for experiencing marital distress. The study presented here is a 2-year follow-up of a randomized control trial that assessed the efficacy of Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) in decreasing marital distress in a sample of couples with a chronically ill child. Thirteen couples with…
Descriptors: Marriage Counseling, Followup Studies, Intervention, Counseling Techniques
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Boyt, Margaret A. – Journal of School Nursing, 2005
Dysfunctional elimination may be learned, to some degree. Because children spend nearly half of their waking hours at school, there is the potential for school to have a significant impact on their elimination patterns. Surveys were mailed to 1,000 randomly selected Iowa public elementary school teachers; 467 of the surveys were returned. Findings…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, School Nurses, Elementary School Teachers, Child Health
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Tappe, Marlene K.; Burgeson, Charlene R. – Journal of Teaching in Physical Education, 2004
"Physical Activity and Health: A Report of the Surgeon General" ("Physical Activity and Health"; United States Department of Health and Human Services [USDHHS], 1996) documented for the first time the cumulative body of evidence related to physical activity and health. This report completed the set of Surgeon General's reports…
Descriptors: Public Health, Physical Activities, Physical Education, Physical Activity Level
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Strohschein, Lisa – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2005
A process-oriented approach to parental divorce locates the experience within the social and developmental context of children's lives, providing greater insight into how parental divorce produces vulnerability in some children and resiliency in others. The current study involves prospectively tracking a nationally representative sample of…
Descriptors: Children, Mental Health, Foreign Countries, Depression (Psychology)
Obringer, S. John; Coffey, Kenneth – Physical Disabilities: Education and Related Services, 2006
Diabetes is a condition where high amounts of glucose are found in the bloodstream due to impaired secretion of insulin. The hormone insulin was discovered by two physicians, Fredrick Banting and James Mcleod in 1921. Individuals with severe diabetes typically controlled their glucose level with multiple daily injections of insulin. Recently the…
Descriptors: Diabetes, Literature Reviews, Equipment, Medical Services
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Daniels, Stephen R. – Future of Children, 2006
Researchers are only gradually becoming aware of the gravity of the risk that overweight and obesity pose for children's health. In this article Stephen Daniels documents the heavy toll that the obesity epidemic is taking on the health of the nation's children. He discusses both the immediate risks associated with childhood obesity and the…
Descriptors: Obesity, Heart Disorders, Incidence, Hypertension
Cross, Donna; Hall, Margaret; Howat, Peter – American Journal of Health Education, 2003
Few pedestrian injury prevention programs appear to articulate the theory upon which their design and evaluation are based. This article describes how theory was used to plan, develop, implement, and evaluate the educational component of a comprehensive child pedestrian intervention. Organizational and planning theories were used to guide the…
Descriptors: Intervention, Traffic Safety, Prevention, Program Effectiveness
Zero to Three, 2005
This article describes the revised and updated "Diagnostic Classification of Mental Health Disorders of Infancy and Early Childhood, Revised Edition (DC:0-3R)." The authors describe the impetus for developing the original diagnostic classification system for children from birth to age 3 in the 1980s. There was a need for a diagnostic…
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Classification, Infants, Toddlers
Landrigan, Philip J. – Zero to Three, 2005
The author looks at the sharp increase in a number of childhood disorders--including asthma, certain cancers, and learning/behavioral disabilities--and the role environmental toxins may play in this increase. He describes the need to train many more health professionals in prenatal and children's environmental health and the national network of…
Descriptors: Child Health, Program Descriptions, Child Development, Environmental Influences
Sattler, Barbara – Zero to Three, 2005
Each of the elements required to create a healthy baby--genetics, the anatomy of the male and female reproductive system, the processes by which eggs and sperm are produced, the processes by which the embryo is created and implanted, maternal health during pregnancy, and embryonic/fetal growth and development--is vulnerable to damage by…
Descriptors: Child Health, Pregnancy, Risk, Genetics
Patton, Sharyle – Zero to Three, 2005
Biomonitoring is a public health tool that has been used by scientists and researchers for decades to test blood, bone, urine, hair, human milk, adipose tissue, and other body substances for the presence of toxic chemicals, in order to assess what is called the "chemical body burden." Biomonitoring helps to: (1) identify which chemicals…
Descriptors: Public Health, Children, Public Policy, Child Health
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Kreuter, Marshall W.; De Rosa, Christopher; Howze, Elizabeth H.; Baldwin, Grant T. – Health Education & Behavior, 2004
Complex environmental health problems--like air and water pollution, hazardous waste sites, and lead poisoning--are in reality a constellation of linked problems embedded in the fabric of the communities in which they occur. These kinds of complex problems have been characterized by some as "wicked problems" wherein stakeholders may have…
Descriptors: Health Promotion, Health Personnel, Poisoning, Public Health
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