access to care and mortality rates for children with heart disease in diverse socioeconomic countries. There remain significant gaps in this research area. Thus, the “Top 4” suggestions for managing increased heat risk projections for children with cardiac conditions are: (1) health professionals
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Children With Cardiac Disease and Heat Exposure: Catastrophic Converging Consequences?
Luc Souilla, Pascal Amedro, and Shawnda A. Morrison
Essentials for Best Practice: Treatment Approaches for Athletes With Eating Disorders
Jenny H. Conviser, Amanda Schlitzer Tierney, and Riley Nickols
-Borgen & Torstveit, 2004 ), with some rates of EDs among athletes appear to be increasing ( Chatterton & Petrie, 2013 ). Eating disorders are substantially different from more common eating-related and body-related frustrations and, once established, do not remit without professional treatment. Timely access to care
Preventing Suicide and Promoting Mental Health Among Student-Athletes From Diverse Backgrounds
Karrie L. Hamstra-Wright, John E. Coumbe-Lilley, and Eduardo E. Bustamante
Access to and Benefits From Services Among Athletes? Unfortunately, the same disadvantages that lead to inequities in suicidality and mental illness also influence access to care and benefit derived from care. In Davis et al’s 7 review of 70,988 adolescent screens in a primary care setting, compared
The 7th International Conference on Ambulatory Monitoring of Physical Activity and Movement
regarding access to care and their impact on dystonia. The dystonia non-motor symptom scale and the SF-36 were also used to measure the impact of dystonia on quality of life (HRQoL). Results: There were 72 responses (n = 60 female, mean 56 years, cervical dystonia: 27%). Twenty five percent of respondents