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Lucyna M. Lach

Researcher at McGill University

Publications -  66
Citations -  2525

Lucyna M. Lach is an academic researcher from McGill University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychosocial & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 56 publications receiving 2177 citations. Previous affiliations of Lucyna M. Lach include University of Toronto & Montreal Children's Hospital.

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Determinants of participation in leisure activities in children and youth with cerebral palsy: systematic review.

TL;DR: A systematic review of databases using the keywords participation, cerebral palsy, leisure, and recreation to describe participation in leisure activities by children with CP and identify personal and environmental factors that influence participation.
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Health among caregivers of children with health problems: findings from a Canadian population-based study

TL;DR: Logistic regression showed that caregivers of children with health problems had more than twice the chances of reporting chronic conditions, activity limitations, and elevated depressive symptoms, and had greater odds of reporting poorer general health than did caregivers of healthy children.
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The health and psychosocial functioning of caregivers of children with neurodevelopmental disorders.

TL;DR: Caregivers of children with both neurovelopmental disorders and behaviour problems exhibited a greater number of health and psychosocial problems than their counterparts of either condition or neither condition.
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I just want to be normal: A qualitative study exploring how children and adolescents view the impact of intractable epilepsy on their quality of life

TL;DR: This qualitative study explores how children and adolescents with medically refractory seizures experience the impact of epilepsy on their quality of life within the domains of physical, emotional/behavioral, social, and cognitive/academic function.
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Cognitive, psychosocial, and family function one year after pediatric epilepsy surgery.

TL;DR: Assumptions regarding the benefits of seizure control after pediatric epilepsy surgery for cognitive, psychosocial, and family function were explored in a prospective study of 51 children with intractable epilepsy.