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1 tors, including for SDG 3 (healthy lives and wellbeing).
2 utions to intestinal function and organismal wellbeing.
3 ttern change, and to explore how this shapes wellbeing.
4 ctable effect on donors' mental and physical wellbeing.
5 hese impacts over consumers' preferences and wellbeing.
6 ong, and affects nutrition and psychological wellbeing.
7 s only each time period's discounted average wellbeing.
8 kers to assess human performance, health and wellbeing.
9 hey pose serious threats to human health and wellbeing.
10 plex biological problems in human health and wellbeing.
11 e lifelong and dynamic effects on health and wellbeing.
12 t in a significant improvement in population wellbeing.
13 ciated with meaningful effects on health and wellbeing.
14  been demonstrated to promote relaxation and wellbeing.
15  physical, psychosocial, sexual, and overall wellbeing.
16  pre-injury levels of function and long term wellbeing.
17 , physical and psychosocial functioning, and wellbeing.
18  biodiversity, ecosystem function, and human wellbeing.
19 ntal lactate production may compromise fetal wellbeing.
20 mental impact, economic viability and social wellbeing.
21 nity required for our health, sustenance and wellbeing.
22  with compromised employee's performance and wellbeing.
23  adverse effects of maternal stress on fetal wellbeing.
24 ant distress, which impacts their health and wellbeing.
25 ys an indispensable role in our survival and wellbeing.
26 are likewise central to long-term health and wellbeing.
27 e and resilient society for human health and wellbeing.
28 ssed mood and impaired hedonic and eudemonic wellbeing.
29 volunteers in relation to patient and family wellbeing.
30 t may have quantifiable consequences for our wellbeing.
31 okine to improve disease outcome and patient wellbeing.
32 on also correlate positively with subjective wellbeing.
33 lth related quality of life and psychosocial wellbeing.
34 ed for long-term gains in maternal and child wellbeing.
35 d provide new tools for enhancing health and wellbeing.
36 uman rights, and to improve their health and wellbeing.
37 egarding an individual's physical and mental wellbeing.
38 entieth century transformed human health and wellbeing.
39 overall state of the individual's health and wellbeing.
40 profound impact on modern medicine and human wellbeing.
41 ldren even when it diminishes their personal wellbeing.
42 ive associations with evaluative and hedonic wellbeing.
43 neficial effects on residents' psychological wellbeing.
44  associated with higher levels of subjective-wellbeing.
45 rs, with potential negative implications for wellbeing.
46 surement and improvement of care and patient wellbeing.
47 the future for health and the maintenance of wellbeing.
48 nce with several conditions related to child wellbeing.
49  repercussions of lockdown on their work and wellbeing.
50 tions for understanding animal psychological wellbeing.
51  loss, which may ultimately compromise human wellbeing.
52  research for education policy and for human wellbeing.
53 ich is correlated with reduced self-reported wellbeing.
54 te distress, improve adaptation, and promote wellbeing.
55 tions of their rights that affect health and wellbeing.
56 which would have many benefits to health and wellbeing.
57 istress, and decrements in mental health and wellbeing.
58 k-adjusted outcomes, and with costs or staff wellbeing.
59 on between living arrangements and emotional wellbeing.
60 inequalities and improve people's health and wellbeing.
61  developmental goal, predictive of long-term wellbeing.
62 and the services that they provide for human wellbeing.
63 highlighting the impact of this on their own wellbeing.
64 that oral disease affects overall health and wellbeing.
65 ption demands without experiencing a loss in wellbeing.
66 ve biodiversity and support human health and wellbeing.
67 ring loss (ARHL) is a threat to future human wellbeing.
68 roups, functional impairment, and subjective wellbeing.
69  needs to be resolved to maintain the host's wellbeing.
70 d social inequalities and enhance population wellbeing.
71 ty, restrictive gender norms, and health and wellbeing.
72  that patients found improved their sense of wellbeing.
73 males reported greater inattention and lower wellbeing.
74 onfounded by unmeasured factors of household wellbeing.
75 s reliable patterns in historical subjective wellbeing.
76 lf-management is an important determinant of wellbeing.
77 xibility and choice are key to retention and wellbeing.
78 esults in reduced physical and psychological wellbeing.
79 olish may have consequences for our everyday wellbeing.
80 it to shared goals for children's health and wellbeing.
81  versus placebo for FACT-P social and family wellbeing (0.30 [95% CI -0.25 to 0.85] vs -0.64 [-1.51 t
82 5]; 0.83 [0.69 to 0.99]; p=0.037), emotional wellbeing (36.73 [33.12 to 38.21] vs 29.47 [22.18 to 33.
83 ociated with reduced mean score for physical wellbeing (7.6, 95% CI 2.7-12.4); intellectual impairmen
84 s and higher productivity, making subjective wellbeing a focal issue among researchers and government
85 nd present new analyses about the pattern of wellbeing across ages and the association between wellbe
86 rt and take responsibility for older adults' wellbeing across settings.
87 tial to improving health, human capital, and wellbeing across the life course.
88                           The maintenance of wellbeing across the lifespan depends on the preservatio
89 s disorder, common mental disorders, general wellbeing, alcohol consumption, physical symptoms, and f
90 l depression, not least of which is impaired wellbeing among children of depressed mothers, preventio
91 dia use across waves 1 and 2 predicted lower wellbeing among girls only (adjusted ORs 0.86 [0.74-0.99
92 ality of Life Questionnaire ([CP-QoL] social wellbeing and acceptance, feelings about functioning, pa
93 shows a U-shaped relation between evaluative wellbeing and age in high-income, English speaking count
94  or older from the National Study of Health, Wellbeing and Ageing.
95 nts living with HIV face challenges to their wellbeing and antiretroviral therapy adherence and have
96 iour and relationships are key components of wellbeing and are affected by social norms, attitudes, a
97 fy childhood trajectories towards health and wellbeing and are modified by economic and social factor
98  post-absorptive energetics that can inhibit wellbeing and be fatal.
99 (ELS) can be very harmful to an individual's wellbeing and brain development.
100         The primary endpoint for mothers was wellbeing and caregiving knowledge, practices, and skill
101       An inability to do this affected their wellbeing and compassionate care giving to others.
102 ine whether mentoring had an impact on carer wellbeing and confidence in caring.
103 variables, the physical environment, health, wellbeing and demographic variables were examined with m
104 ort quality and support quantity, as well as wellbeing and depression.
105  and turn health into an engine for economic wellbeing and development.
106 ow soil biodiversity loss might affect human wellbeing and ecosystem sustainability.
107 ving overall survival, enzalutamide improves wellbeing and everyday functioning of patients with meta
108 d puberty in children, and affecting general wellbeing and fertility in adults.
109 s are associated with improved psychological wellbeing and have cognitive, physiological, and social
110                                   Subjective wellbeing and health are closely linked to age.
111 e air quality and significantly affect human wellbeing and health.
112 specially as these injuries affect patients' wellbeing and increase the cost of care for both patient
113 ness, which itself benefits human health and wellbeing and indirectly raises survival.
114 t skeletal muscle mass guarantees functional wellbeing and is important for high level performance in
115 l utilitarianism (TU), which considers total wellbeing and is standard in social cost of carbon dioxi
116 ental health is likely to improve children's wellbeing and life course.
117  of death worldwide and also impede economic wellbeing and macroeconomic performance.
118 s women's physical, social and psychological wellbeing and often requires frequent hospital admission
119  the potential to improve both psychological wellbeing and quality of life in some patients with IBD,
120 ctivity and damage and questionnaires on the wellbeing and quality of life of the children.
121 can make a major contribution to the medical wellbeing and quality of life of these children.
122 sments of physical, emotional, and spiritual wellbeing and quality of life) given six times over 4 mo
123                          The future of human wellbeing and security depends on our ability to deal wi
124 c of the inaugural Raffles Dialogue on Human Wellbeing and Security held in Singapore on Feb 2-3, 201
125 lth 3.9 units (2.5 to 5.3, n=133), emotional wellbeing and self-esteem 1.3 units (0.2 to 2.3, n=133),
126 participation and physical health, emotional wellbeing and self-esteem, access to services, family he
127 ving and for health that emphasises people's wellbeing and social justice.
128 inants, and its costs in terms of population wellbeing and societal impact.
129 nually, with considerable adverse effects on wellbeing and socioeconomic development.
130 ation/Network (NNN) has established a Mental Wellbeing and Stigma Task Group (MWS) to address these i
131                                        Staff wellbeing and stress were assessed by anonymous mental h
132 eing across ages and the association between wellbeing and survival at older ages.
133             The apparent association between wellbeing and survival is consistent with a protective r
134 condition, with a profound impact on patient wellbeing and survival.
135  Brain-gut interactions affect psychological wellbeing and symptom reporting in functional gastrointe
136 for both midwives' personal and professional wellbeing and the wellbeing of the workforce, in additio
137 toms, treatment side-effects, and functional wellbeing) and FACT-G physical and functional wellbeing
138 fects participants' understanding, emotional wellbeing, and behaviour.
139      Regular exercise can improve health and wellbeing, and can help individuals to achieve their tar
140 resent a conceptual model connecting CRVS to wellbeing, and describe an ecological association betwee
141  despite anaemia's adverse effect on health, wellbeing, and economic productivity.
142 disease activity, patient physical function, wellbeing, and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) we
143 t advances in the specialty of psychological wellbeing, and present new analyses about the pattern of
144 reby, linking global phenomena to consumers' wellbeing, and shifting the focus of OA impacts to asses
145 de has a significant effect on pain, general wellbeing, and sleep quality.
146  the evaluation of other parameters of fetal wellbeing are necessary for comprehensive assessment of
147     Worldwide challenges to child health and wellbeing are rapidly becoming existential threats to ch
148 present a global agenda for child health and wellbeing as a blueprint for the practice of paediatrics
149 lf-harm at 15 years with the Development and Wellbeing Assessment (DAWBA) questionnaire, and depressi
150 ribute to local economies, and improve human wellbeing at a scale relevant to addressing global threa
151 main below recommended levels for health and wellbeing at the three and six month time points.
152 >=3] indicating psychological distress), and wellbeing at wave 3 (life satisfaction, feeling life is
153 vironmental impacts produced, and the social wellbeing attained by populations that play different ro
154 ces, we find little difference in subjective wellbeing between people with and without children.
155 ounted for unique variance in impairment and wellbeing beyond core ADHD symptoms.
156  control is associated with better perceived wellbeing but also with non-ergonomic work schedules, su
157  of infrastructure promises to enhance human wellbeing but risks causing substantial harm to natural
158 is consistent with a protective role of high wellbeing, but alternative explanations cannot be ruled
159 t for individual human and animal health and wellbeing, but is also central to surveillance programme
160 t attempts to tackle stress and psychosocial wellbeing, but it is under-utilized and lacks a comprehe
161 ective way to promote physical and metabolic wellbeing, but molecular mechanisms underlying exercise
162 an lead to a lifetime of improved health and wellbeing by challenging not only attitudes and behaviou
163 er relationship to maximise the individual's wellbeing by identifying needs, filling gaps in provisio
164                  Three aspects of subjective wellbeing can be distinguished-evaluative wellbeing (or
165 y when compared to healthy controls, whereas wellbeing derived from yoga in PTSD is associated with l
166  happiness or related subjective measures of wellbeing directly reduce mortality.
167 luding quality of life, depression, anxiety, wellbeing, distress, coping, or adjustment as a primary
168 nfounders, happiness and related measures of wellbeing do not appear to have any direct effect on mor
169 ellbeing) and FACT-G physical and functional wellbeing domains.
170 hronic diseases, no chronic pain), emotional wellbeing (e.g. few depressive symptoms, good sleep), gr
171 t health, and by extension, human and animal wellbeing, ecosystem function, and agricultural producti
172 hereby creating serious risks for health and wellbeing, especially in vulnerable populations but ulti
173 od episodes are interspersed with periods of wellbeing (euthymia).
174 werment through new knowledge, Psychological wellbeing, Expanding social worlds and Increased physica
175 parental life-threatening condition on their wellbeing, factors that influence communication, and the
176 ve wellbeing (or life satisfaction), hedonic wellbeing (feelings of happiness, sadness, anger, stress
177 ing gender equality and improving health and wellbeing for all, quantitative data and methods to prec
178 ignificant part of their economy and broader wellbeing from this biodiversity.
179 e Lancet Commission on adolescent health and wellbeing, from 1990 to 2016.
180 worldwide, while supporting human health and wellbeing globally.
181                              Assessing fetal wellbeing has evolved from the ancient awareness of 'qui
182 dimensional construct of physical and social wellbeing, has been expanded and adapted for patients wi
183 green exercise on physical and psychological wellbeing have been found, yet little is known about the
184 al schooling increase so too does health and wellbeing; however, it is unclear whether the associatio
185 social media use and later mental health and wellbeing in adolescents, and how these effects might be
186 peaking countries, with the lowest levels of wellbeing in ages 45-54 years.
187 in midlife helps to maintain good health and wellbeing in aging.
188 d working hour characteristics and perceived wellbeing in comparison to traditional scheduling.
189  for social cohesion, sense of community and wellbeing in diabetes health practices and policies.
190  perceived age discrimination and health and wellbeing in England.
191 However, information on long-term health and wellbeing in former athletes is limited.
192 rventions for mental health and psychosocial wellbeing in humanitarian settings.
193 ciated with greater likelihood of health and wellbeing in individuals surviving to older ages.
194  working hour characteristics and employees' wellbeing in irregular shift work change after implement
195  behaviour for someone experiencing relative wellbeing in later life, or if ill health was construed
196  shows decreased wellbeing with age, whereas wellbeing in sub-Saharan Africa shows little change with
197  importance of green environments for mental wellbeing in sub-Saharan African settings experiencing r
198 nal effects on both physical and psychiatric wellbeing in subsequent adulthood.
199 s a key physiological marker of neurological wellbeing in the newborn infant although systems-level m
200 be the threats to survival, development, and wellbeing in the occupied Palestinian territory using hu
201 sion of targets related to mental health and wellbeing in the UN's Sustainable Development Goals, as
202 ng, as well as ADHD symptoms, impairment and wellbeing in those with and without ADHD.
203 ritical consequences for ecosystem and human wellbeing in tropical contexts where alternatives to geo
204 ntry results within a theory of children and wellbeing in which adults sort into parenthood according
205 tween social media use and mental health and wellbeing in young people.
206 o children would likely improve both patient wellbeing (in terms of preventing side-effects) and redu
207 n which evidence was equivocal, and physical wellbeing, in which comparison was not possible.
208 st implications because intelligence affects wellbeing, income, and education outcomes.
209  shift work can negatively affect health and wellbeing (increased accidents, fatigue, absenteeism) bu
210 dex was positively associated with emotional wellbeing independently of sex, social class, health sta
211  questionnaire and the psychological general wellbeing index (PGWB).
212 nd subjective measures of general health and wellbeing indicates that the total non-financial health
213 t and has negative implications for resident wellbeing; interventions to reduce role misidentificatio
214  Study of Ageing, we identify that eudemonic wellbeing is associated with increased survival; 29.3% o
215 ation between physical health and subjective wellbeing is bidirectional.
216 k; the monitoring of both fetal and maternal wellbeing is essential.
217 phasises that attention to sexual health and wellbeing is needed throughout the life course.
218                   We conclude that emotional wellbeing is positively associated with extent of partic
219 offs in water availability and socioeconomic wellbeing is recommended for assessing the sustainabilit
220 rceive to assess women's antenatal emotional wellbeing, it is important that midwives can identify wo
221 cial and economic determinants of health and wellbeing (jobs, housing, physical infrastructure).
222 inty of outcomes, safeguarding psychological wellbeing), justifying donor sacrifice (confidence in re
223 improving quality of life, higher subjective wellbeing leads to fewer health problems and higher prod
224 s associated with wealth, income, subjective wellbeing, less depression, low social isolation and lon
225 kills also predicted sustained psychological wellbeing, less loneliness, and a lower incidence of new
226 ncreases lifespan and improves their overall wellbeing mainly through the restoration of impaired mus
227                                              Wellbeing might also have a protective role in health ma
228 tions, unhealthy lifestyle, and lower mental wellbeing might reduce excess mortality among the isolat
229                                              Wellbeing, mood and performance in more difficult cognit
230 al outcomes like sleep, stress, and physical wellbeing need to be addressed and systematically examin
231 in addition to immediate impacts on maternal wellbeing, obesity during pregnancy has detrimental effe
232 ctive gender norms to improve the health and wellbeing of 0-24 year olds.
233 refore investigated whether SSLPs affect the wellbeing of 3-year-old children and their families.
234 ion is important for the overall fitness and wellbeing of animals and humans, and although we know a
235 considerable consequences for the health and wellbeing of billions of people around the world, remedy
236 re in children and ensure optimal health and wellbeing of children who are HEU and their families.
237 ered social norms undermining the health and wellbeing of children, adolescents, and young adults.
238 ngredient for new functional foods targeting wellbeing of diabetic and elderly people.
239                         We conclude that the wellbeing of elderly people is an important objective fo
240 dearth of research evaluating the health and wellbeing of family caregivers of patients with frontote
241  aquaculture activities is important for the wellbeing of future generations in terms of employment a
242  support should be provided to safeguard the wellbeing of health-care providers.
243 cognise and treat ADHD is detrimental to the wellbeing of many patients seeking help for common menta
244 with serious consequences for the health and wellbeing of old people.
245 e of interventions to improve the health and wellbeing of people who are dependent on opioids, covera
246  disorders significantly impacts the overall wellbeing of people with HIV.
247                                     When the wellbeing of professionals is low their performance decr
248 ecurity and maintain the social and economic wellbeing of small-scale and commercial fishers globally
249  cycles, as well as monitoring physiological wellbeing of the animal via analysis of the animal's env
250 urthermore, mental illness impacted physical wellbeing of the chest at all timepoints.
251 d the medical complications and psychosocial wellbeing of the donors during the first postoperative y
252                                          The wellbeing of the next generation is also compromised.
253  personal and professional wellbeing and the wellbeing of the workforce, in addition to other materni
254     Cash-transfer programmes can improve the wellbeing of vulnerable children, but few studies have r
255 mic, psychosocial, and physical risks to the wellbeing of women and their families across economic st
256                                              Wellbeing of Women charity, the New Zealand Continence A
257    UK National Institute of Health Research, Wellbeing of Women, Hannah Eliza Guy Charity (Birmingham
258      This may reflect our patients' relative wellbeing on antipsychotic medication.
259   Network meta-analysis was not feasible for wellbeing or suicidal ideation or self-harm outcomes, an
260 ve wellbeing can be distinguished-evaluative wellbeing (or life satisfaction), hedonic wellbeing (fee
261 sychological symptoms, carers' psychological wellbeing, or delay in institutionalisation.
262 s indicate potential exists for differential wellbeing outcomes of a 12 h shift pattern and negative
263 litation on use of health care and patients' wellbeing over 1 year.
264 0.0001), and for patients with worse general wellbeing (performance status 2-4) versus those who were
265 nable Development Goals, in terms of health, wellbeing, productivity, and equity in current and futur
266 uld focus more on adolescents' developmental wellbeing, promote peer support network among adolescent
267 ased survival; 29.3% of people in the lowest wellbeing quartile died during the average follow-up per
268 ation growth entails overall improvements in wellbeing-rather than merely cost savings-again depends
269                                        Human wellbeing relies on the Biosphere, including natural res
270 red the effect of treatment on self-reported wellbeing, reported here.
271 lop the intellectual skills, creativity, and wellbeing required to become healthy and productive adul
272 tional, mental component summary, and social wellbeing scores and work productivity metrics by WPAI:H
273 ease activity indices or other psychological wellbeing scores when compared with control in patients
274 ess, anger, stress, and pain), and eudemonic wellbeing (sense of purpose and meaning in life).
275  Despite its importance to sexual health and wellbeing, sexual function is given little attention in
276 propriate surveillance of maternal and fetal wellbeing should be followed in pregnant women who prese
277 hensive investments in adolescent health and wellbeing should be given high priority in national and
278 ing new horizons for reproductive health and wellbeing.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The gonadotropin-releas
279  4.5-year period in the Emotional Health and Wellbeing Study (EMHS) in Quebec, Canada.
280 = 845 trios) and the retrospective Cambridge Wellbeing Study (n = 315 trios) (3,480 samples in total)
281 ticipating in the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study to extend this observation to African Am
282     Data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study, a recent cohort of children born in urb
283 ing data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study, this study examined the effects of the
284 dolescents from the Fragile Families & Child Wellbeing Study.
285 rvention self-report anxiety and depression, wellbeing, suicidal ideation, or self-harm.
286 elopment of both psychopathology and optimal wellbeing that holds long-term promise for the developme
287 ciated with long-term deleterious effects on wellbeing that seem insusceptible to years of nurturance
288 t was "being fully responsible for patients' wellbeing-'this is my duty'".
289 e a health determinant, improving health and wellbeing through different mechanisms.
290                    Using a novel three-stage wellbeing valuation, analysis of the associations betwee
291                            None of the other wellbeing variables showed statistically significant cha
292 l analyses, subjective ratings of alertness, wellbeing, visual comfort and cognitive performance were
293                               Ensuring donor wellbeing warrants ongoing monitoring after living kidne
294                                 Psychosocial wellbeing was not included as an outcome in the meta-ana
295 , with focus on integrating aspects of human wellbeing, welfare and ecosystem sustainability.
296 e would deny an intuitive sense of increased wellbeing when spending time in beautiful locations.
297 at the causal effect of children on parental wellbeing, which is the target for most of the literatur
298 ly account for the variations in patterns of wellbeing with age across different parts of the world.
299 Europe show a large progressive reduction in wellbeing with age, respondents from Latin America also
300 ents from Latin America also shows decreased wellbeing with age, whereas wellbeing in sub-Saharan Afr

 
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