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1 d the problem of visual impairment among our preschool children.
2 al injury and poisoning but not fractures in preschool children.
3 y intervention studies and studies involving preschool children.
4 atterns with the risks of asthma symptoms in preschool children.
5  detect and monitor amblyopia in infants and preschool children.
6 easible and highly beneficial for very young preschool children.
7 ce rates reported by other recent studies in preschool children.
8 cted vegetable and energy intake over 1 d in preschool children.
9            ADHD can be reliably diagnosed in preschool children.
10 ong low-income African American and Hispanic preschool children.
11 tegy for increasing vegetable consumption in preschool children.
12 al activity, and total energy expenditure in preschool children.
13 glucocorticoid therapy was also evaluated in preschool children.
14 tion from a dry food supplement designed for preschool children.
15 typical and atypical disruptive behaviors in preschool children.
16 ressed adults can be identified in depressed preschool children.
17 givers underwent a diagnostic assessment for preschool children.
18 ntal health services are extremely low among preschool children.
19 udy comparing different methods of screening preschool children.
20 nd control families in immunization rates of preschool children.
21 eading to >3 million eye-related problems in preschool children.
22 ated with overweight and eating behaviors in preschool children.
23 W and asthma severity and response to ICS in preschool children.
24 rol scale and then adapting it to Portuguese preschool children.
25 ontribute to improved sustained attention in preschool children.
26 ted with a small increased risk of asthma in preschool children.
27 tly improves an accurate asthma diagnosis in preschool children.
28 eding on the development of sensitization in preschool children.
29 le asthma diagnosis is difficult in wheezing preschool children.
30 onsidered to be a commensal, particularly in preschool children.
31 tudies on prevalence of allergic rhinitis in preschool children.
32 mprove long-term vision outcomes of affected preschool children.
33 stress during pregnancy with early growth in preschool children.
34 urage consumption of vegetables and fruit in preschool children.
35 d to measure maternal child-feeding style in preschool children.
36 To screen for visual impairment in Malaysian preschool children.
37 ove brain systems for selective attention in preschool children.
38 initis prevalence and ARIA classification in preschool children.
39 nfluence later fruit and vegetable intake in preschool children.
40                                              Preschool children, 3-6 y of age, with (n = 118) and wit
41 ith 29% of outbreaks predominantly affecting preschool children, 30% predominantly affecting school-a
42                                              Preschool children admitted to a burn unit demonstrated
43                                        Among preschool children (age 3 yr), C allele of rs3025028 was
44 LA) preschool vision program screened 11 260 preschool children aged 3-5 years in Los Angeles County
45        Visual screening was conducted in 400 preschool children aged 4 to 6 years.
46                    Three hundred consecutive preschool children (aged 2-6 years) were screened using
47 was assessed in 42 infants (ages 0-2 yr), 39 preschool children (ages 3-6 yr), and 38 school-age chil
48  are broader in scope, now extending down to preschool children (ages 4 and 5 years).
49     Rubella vaccination rates were 90.2% for preschool children and 99.8% for school-aged children.
50                   A case-control study among preschool children and a cohort study among primary-scho
51 den of behavioural and emotional problems in preschool children and comorbidities in the Kilifi Healt
52 pirometry can be obtained in the majority of preschool children and has the potential to improve our
53           It is evident from our review that preschool children and infants also contribute a signifi
54 t very early in life and are prevalent among preschool children and infants, often in the absence of
55 percent of all decreased VA in Asian and NHW preschool children and more than 90% of decreased VA wit
56 equirement of three criterion C symptoms for preschool children and raise questions about the appropr
57                                 Seventy-five preschool children and their parents were recruited from
58 and vitamin A status assessment in women and preschool children and to analyze the findings in terms
59 sessment tools so that they can be used with preschool children and to develop more clinically sensit
60           The current anemia burden among US preschool children and women of childbearing age has not
61                  IDA is most prevalent among preschool children and women.
62 dotoxin, and environmental tobacco smoke (in preschool children); and limited or suggestive evidence
63 nal defiant disorder and conduct disorder in preschool children, and outline an agenda for future res
64 l behavior problems can be differentiated in preschool children, and the DSM framework, with some mod
65  was associated with asthma-like symptoms in preschool children, and this association was modified by
66 ted in some studies of older individuals and preschool children, and video-game players outperform no
67 sociated with an increased risk of asthma in preschool children (aOR 1.37; 95% CI 1.02-1.83 and aOR 1
68 a variety of familiar vegetables or fruit to preschool children as a snack would lead to increased se
69 2000), with the greatest decline observed in preschool children, as well as a reduction in the number
70                                           In preschool children at high risk for asthma, two years of
71 dify the subsequent development of asthma in preschool children at high risk for asthma.
72  of multiple screening tests for identifying preschool children at higher risk for vision problems an
73  authors investigated diagnostic outcomes of preschool children at school age and in adolescence.
74                   A final group total of 156 preschool children between the ages of 3.0 and 5.6 years
75 tioning was investigated in 20 adults and 32 preschool children born very preterm.
76 p (n=1000) were encouraged to immunize their preschool children but were not informed of any aid sanc
77 ence that classroom naps support learning in preschool children by enhancing memories acquired earlie
78                            Here we show that preschool children can compare and add large sets of ele
79                                         Most preschool children can perform multiple-breath washout,
80         Child Behavior Checklist version for preschool children (CBCL/1.5-5) externalizing scale (pri
81 When asked, "duck:duckling is like tiger:?," preschool children choose another duckling (object match
82  Origin of Cardiovascular Risk in Overweight Preschool Children cohort study aimed to evaluate at the
83               In this prospective study in a preschool children cohort, we assessed whether the fract
84 behavior problems are the most common reason preschool children come to mental health clinics.
85 ly reduced in moderate uncorrected hyperopic preschool children compared to emmetropic subjects.
86 anges in prevalence of wheezing disorders in preschool children could provide important clues about u
87                                         Many preschool children develop recurrent, severe episodes of
88 However, unlike older asthmatic patients, OW preschool children do not demonstrate reduced responsive
89                  In this cohort of high-risk preschool children, elevated FeNO is associated with inc
90 th, malaria-naive adults and malaria-exposed preschool children elicit vaccine-specific antibodies wi
91 und higher community acquisition rates among preschool children for all serotypes and higher within-h
92 ic mechanisms, (ii) better stratify allergic preschool children for prognosis and (iii) propose novel
93 ye diseases may prevent a high proportion of preschool children from experiencing unnecessary VI and
94  neural mechanisms of selective attention in preschool children from lower socioeconomic status backg
95 epidemiological studies of these problems in preschool children from sub-Saharan Africa have been pub
96                                              Preschool children from the Western Highlands of Guatema
97 haled fluticasone propionate for wheezing in preschool children had no effect on the natural history
98                          Clinically referred preschool children had significantly higher rates of opp
99 ce of schistosomiasis in African infants and preschool children has been largely overlooked, with pre
100 f schistosomiasis within African infants and preschool children has been much better documented in re
101                 Validation for depression in preschool children has been provided by 2 independent st
102           The WHO estimates that 190 million preschool children have vitamin A deficiency (VAD).
103                                         Many preschool children have wheeze or cough, but only some h
104 vailable prediction rules aiming to identify preschool children having asthma at school age are of mo
105       The ways in which objects were used by preschool children (Homo sapiens) was examined by direct
106 orders distinguish referred from nonreferred preschool children in a pattern consistent with that see
107  supplementation with iron and folic acid in preschool children in a population with high rates of ma
108 y responses measured at a follow-up visit in preschool children in relation to reported time with res
109 ucted a tuberculin skin-test survey in 5,119 preschool children in the general population and among h
110                           The study included preschool children in the United States.
111 ddlers does not appear to be sustained among preschool children in this context and does not affect t
112 vioural and emotional problems are common in preschool children in this Kenyan rural area and are ass
113 n severely anemic (hemoglobin < or = 70 g/L) preschool children in Zanzibar, a region of known vitami
114 d with increased risks of asthma symptoms in preschool children, independent of fetal growth.
115 do not establish whether vision screening in preschool children is better than no screening.
116                       Testability for CVD in preschool children is high by 4 years of age.
117      Information on rhinitis epidemiology in preschool children is scarce.
118 r disease risk factors; however, evidence in preschool children is scarce.
119 54% (95% credible interval = 2.43, 2.66) for preschool children (&lt;/= 6 years of age) and 5.03% (95% c
120 swabs and blood samples were taken among 120 preschool children (&lt;4 years of age) at an acute episode
121                              Newly diagnosed preschool children may have clinical and immunological c
122 l blood pressure measurements made in 216 US preschool children (mean age at first analyzable blood p
123 of vegetables or fruit as a snack could help preschool children meet recommended intakes.
124              A prediction rule for asthma in preschool children might help to determine a prognosis a
125                                           In preschool children off controller therapy, OW is associa
126 cept toys from native-language speakers, and preschool children preferentially select native-language
127  and the prevalence of low TBI (<0 mg/kg) in preschool children (PSC) (age range: 6-59 mo) and women
128 ncentrations and inflammation and malaria in preschool children (PSC) (age range: 6-59 mo) and women
129 orted illness, and anthropometric status, in preschool children (PSC) (age range: 6-59 mo) and women
130 ncentrations and inflammation and malaria in preschool children (PSC) (age range: 6-59 mo) and women
131 ncentrations and inflammation and malaria in preschool children (PSC) (age range: 6-59 mo) and women
132 We aimed to evaluate predictors of anemia in preschool children (PSC) (age range: 6-59 mo) by country
133 wed cross-sectional data from 16 surveys for preschool children (PSC) (n = 29,765) and from 10 survey
134 es, and 3) assess risk factors for anemia in preschool children (PSC) and women of reproductive age (
135 study aimed to examine the relations between preschool children's emotional eating and parental feedi
136                 The interactive influence of preschool children's level of physical activity, sex, an
137 time of the year would interact to influence preschool children's sex segregation.
138                                   Of the 400 preschool children screened, 20 of them failed the dista
139           Future prevention interventions in preschool children should target both parents and childr
140 isodic wheeze and multiple-trigger wheeze in preschool children shows conflicting results as to wheth
141 stinct wheezing disorders co-exist in young (preschool) children, some of which (early transient whee
142 aimed to evaluate at the onset of obesity in preschool children the prevalence of metabolic abnormali
143       In a longitudinal prospective study of preschool children, the authors assessed the likelihood
144                             Among Head Start preschool children, the prevalence of amblyopia and stra
145 al biopsy specimens previously obtained from preschool children undergoing clinically indicated bronc
146 etween prenatal antibiotic use and asthma in preschool children using data from the prescription data
147                                    Asthma in preschool children was defined as >/= 3 prescriptions fo
148   A large, prospective cohort of Bangladeshi preschool children was followed up for >3 years.
149 f pregnancy and the development of asthma in preschool children was observed in the case-control anal
150                                        Among preschool children, we found an association between cyto
151         Percent reductions in AOM across all preschool children were (1) 34%, (2) 31%, (3) 9%, (1 and
152               Pigeons, college students, and preschool children were given many trials on this task t
153                                   Sixty-five preschool children were identified as tasters (n = 24) o
154                           Over 3 years, 4040 preschool children were screened in the Vision in Presch
155 re replicated in a second experiment (n = 26 preschool children), where familiar symbols and line dra
156 dict the risk of later asthma in symptomatic preschool children, which is ready to be tested in other
157 and in ethnic and socioeconomic subgroups of preschool children, which suggests good generalizability
158 tion Screening (NCARS) were attempted on 379 preschool children who are members of a Native American
159                                              Preschool children who are not seeking mental health ser
160                                              Preschool children who are unable to perform VIP screeni
161                                              Preschool children who have been neglected or emotionall
162 longitudinal study of emotion development in preschool children who participated in neuroimaging at s
163  longitudinal study of depressed and healthy preschool children who underwent neuroimaging at school
164                                              Preschool children who watch more TV are fatter and are
165 ished prediction rules developed to identify preschool children who will have asthma at school age, a
166 anges in fat mass gain and calcium intake in preschool children, who typically consume below recommen
167 n the score of JPAC and asthma knowledge for preschool children whose asthma onset was within one yea
168  lack of efficacy of oral corticosteroids in preschool children with acute wheeze, the severe complic
169                 With respect to treatment of preschool children with ADHD, studies continue to suppor
170  The sample consisted of 421 newly diagnosed preschool children with ASD 2 to 4 years old (355 boys;
171 h children with asthma, IgE transcripts from preschool children with atopic dermatitis are significan
172 dy was to characterize the IgE repertoire of preschool children with atopic dermatitis with regard to
173 cessfully be used to assess lung function in preschool children with CF and has the potential for lon
174                                           In preschool children with CF, lung clearance index correla
175 , as a means to track disease progression in preschool children with CF.
176  to therapy for exacerbations in infants and preschool children with CF.
177 le in an interventional study in infants and preschool children with CF.
178  endpoint for clinical trials in infants and preschool children with cystic fibrosis (CF).
179 appears to be a valid method for identifying preschool children with disruptive behavior that is impa
180 training intervention offered for parents of preschool children with disruptive behavioral problems s
181                     In 2 separate cohorts of preschool children with episodic wheezing, OCS treatment
182 ue and poorer lung function in steroid-naive preschool children with multiple-trigger wheeze.
183 mited evidence supports this intervention in preschool children with outpatient wheezing illnesses.
184                                              Preschool children with pervasive developmental disorder
185 lower respiratory tract illnesses (LRTIs) in preschool children with recurrent wheeze.
186 ability of having asthma at school age among preschool children with suggestive symptoms.
187        These data suggest that the number of preschool children with VI is projected to increase disp
188  tool for predicting asthma at school age in preschool children with wheeze or cough.
189 ion deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in preschool children, with an emphasis on assessment and m
190 alorie supplementation to pregnant women and preschool children younger than 6 y in the intervention

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