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Health Care Transition for Youth and Adults with IDDWood, David L., Edwards, L., Hennen, B. 25 April 2016 (has links)
Book Summary: This book provides a broad overview of quality health care for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD). It focuses on providing the reader a practical approach to dealing with the health and well-being of people with IDD in general terms as well as in dealing with specific conditions. In addition, it offers the reader a perspective from many different points of view in the health care delivery system as well as in different parts of the world. This is the 3rd , and much expanded edition, of a text that was first published in 1989 (Lea and Fibiger). The second edition was published in 2006 (Paul Brookes) and has been used as a formal required text in training programs for physicians, nurses and nurse practitioners as well as by administrators who are responsible for programs serving people with IDD. This book is considered the “Bible” in the field of health care for people with IDD since 1989 when the first edition came out.
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Transforming Early Childhood Community Systems in NE TNWood, David L. 01 November 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Promoting Health Care Transition Readiness Among Youth with HydrocephalusWood, David L. 16 February 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Life Course Health Development Model for Emerging AdulthoodWood, David L. 31 January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Child Poverty and Its Impact on Child HealthWood, David L. 29 November 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Comorbidities of Pediatric EpilepsyWood, David L. 13 July 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Executive Function as a Moderator of Obesity in InfancyMusacchio, Katherine, Dixon, Wallace E., Jr., Dalton, William T., III 05 April 2012 (has links)
Childhood overweight and obesity have experienced epidemic growth in recent years. Excessive adiposity presents challenges to orthopedic, neurological, pulmonary, gastroenterological, endocrinal, and social development. Thus, the time course of weight development in early childhood is of special public health concern. A major goal of childhood obesity research is to identify mechanisms contributing to excess weight gain. In infancy, executive function has been identified as one possible contributor. Unfortunately, no studies have yet examined infant obesity risk with respect to executive function development. In this study, we present the first evidence that executive function may be linked to obesity risk in infancy. Thirty middle-class, primarily White infants visited the lab of the ETSU Program for the Study of Infancy at 18 and 21 months of age. Measures of infant weight and recumbent length were taken at both ages. Weightfor-length BMI z-scores were derived from international growth curves published by the World Health Organization. Executive function was measured at the 21-month visit, using the Multilocation Search Task. In this task, infants are shown the location of a cracker in one of five drawers. Once infants select the correct drawer on three successive trials, the cracker is moved to a new drawer in plain view of the child, and the child is asked to find the cracker again. The location of the cracker is changed on two more trials. Children’s perseverating responses to the old cracker location is viewed as an inverse measure of executive function. Results showed that from 18 to 21 months of age, BMI z-scores decreased significantly [t(30) = 2.63, p = .013]. This finding suggests that on average, infant BMI scores decreased across the three-month period. To explore whether executive function performance varied as a function of infant BMI, we divided our sample into two BMI groups via median split. A mixed-design ANOVA revealed that infants with the greatest decreases in BMI from 18 to 21 months (i.e., the “Hi Decrease” group), showed the greatest gains in performance across the three trials of the executive function task [F(2, 25) = 5.29, p = .012]. Specifically, by Trial 3 of the multilocation search task, Hi Decreasers were making an average of 0.57 perseverative errors, whereas the Lo Decreasers were making an average of 2.231 perseverative errors. These results are consistent with expectations. To the extent that executive function capacity helps regulate weight gain, it stands to reason that infants with greater executive function capacity would be advantaged in regulating their eating behaviors. Although we recognize that there are likely multiple contributors to infant and child obesity, findings from the present study supports the possibility that one of these contributors may be executive function. To our knowledge, this is the first study documenting a link between executive function and infant BMI.
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Attention Deficit & Hyperactivity DisorderWood, David L. 16 November 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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White Paper on Health Care Transition for Youth with HydrocephalusWood, David L. 29 June 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Improving the Provision of Health Information for Families with Young ChildrenPatsimas, Tatiana, Schetzina, Karen E., Jaishankar, Gayatri Bala 25 October 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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