69 research outputs found
Promoting well-being and desistance through sport and physical activity:The opportunities and barriers experienced by women in prison
Police Integrity and the Perceived Effectiveness of Policing: Evidence from a Survey among Ugandan Police Officers
Problem Behavior in Children of Chronically Ill Parents: A Meta-Analysis
The aim of this meta-analysis is to examine whether children of chronically ill parents differ from norm groups in problem behavior. We report moderator effects and overall effect sizes for internalizing, externalizing and total problem behavior assessed by children and parents. In fixed effect models, we found a significant overall effect size for internalizing problem behavior (number of studies kĀ =Ā 19, total sample size NĀ =Ā 1,858, Cohenās dĀ =Ā .23, pĀ <Ā .01) and externalizing problem behavior (kĀ =Ā 13, NĀ =Ā 1,525, dĀ =Ā .09, pĀ <Ā .01) but not for total problem behavior (kĀ =Ā 7; NĀ =Ā 896). Effects for internalizing and externalizing problem behavior were larger in non-cancer studies, in samples including younger children and younger ill parents, in samples defined by low average SES and in studies including parents with longer illness duration. In addition, effects for externalizing problem behavior were larger in studies characterized by a higher percentage of ill mothers and single parents. With exclusive self-report, effect sizes were significant for all problem behaviors. Based on these results, a family-centered approach in health care is recommended
Influence of depression and early adverse experiences on illicit drug dependence: a case-control study
Verbreitung von Ambrosia-Pflanzen in Deutschland - eine Ursache fĆ¼r die Zunahme von Allergien in Deutschland?
Gender Differences in Alcohol and Drug Use Among Hispanic Adults: The Influence of Family Processes and Acculturation
When in America, Do As the Americans? Exploring the Heterogenity in Immigrants Unhealthy Assimilation
Race, Coping Strategies, and Substance Use Behaviors: A Preliminary Analysis Examining White and American Indian Adolescents
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