Family Matters article Jun 1996
Showing 488 results
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Promoting the healthy functioning of young children with developmental disabilities, and their families
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Family Matters article Jun 1996
Families, young people and health care
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Family Matters article Jun 1996
Families, parents and chronic childhood illness
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Family Matters article Jun 1996
Child Care and the Family: NICHD study in the United States
This article reports on the preliminary outcomes from a major longitudinal study of the influences of non parental child care, experienced during the first year of life, on the developmental progress of the children involved.
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Family Matters article Jun 1996
Costs of children in Australia - update
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Policy and practice paper Jun 1996
Intergenerational transmission of maltreatment
Review of the literature on intergenerational transmission of maltreatment, and whether and how maltreated children become abusive parents.
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Policy and practice paper Jun 1996
Child maltreatment and family structure
Discussion Paper 1 Produced by the National Child Protection Clearinghouse.
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Family Matters article Mar 1996
Australian Living Standards Study: A brief overview
This article presents an overview of the goals, methodology and data sets in a major, innovative study of the living standards of Australian Families - the Australian Living Standards Study (ALSS), undertaken by the Australian Institute of Family Studies its methodology and data sets.
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Family Matters article Mar 1996
Australian Living Standards Study Bibliography 1991-1996
This article presents a bibliography of Australian Living Standards Study material produced to date by the Australian Institute of Family Studies.
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Family Matters article Mar 1996
Bulk Billing and the use of GP services
This article examines the relationship between frequency of parents' visits to their GP and residential location, payment arrangements (bulk billing or not), and other factors which may affect both service use and parents who visited their doctor more frequently or less frequently than their health status would appear to predict, and the factors linked with such high or low use.