From early studies done in the 1970s and 1980s, we already knew that those who exercised regularly were not only less likely to be depressed, they were also less likely to ever become depressed than their inactive counterparts.
Not exact matches
Can men
study books written by the
early church fathers; and then say, we
did not receive it
from man?
If I look back
from this point on my
earlier studies, I may well ask myself how it ever came about that I
did not learn this much sooner and accordingly speak it out.
It's rather coincidental though that I just read a possible explanation
earlier this morning
from a book that I'm going to be
doing a
study with on my blog.
She asserts that she holds a degree in
early childhood
studies and refrains
from asking the «
do I looks fat?»
Although each of the teams using the PEP exercise program had a dedicated athletic training staff, the success reported in the
earlier study in reducing ACL injuries among 14 - to 18 - year - old competitive female club soccer players - who ordinarily
do not benefit
from direct oversight
from certified athletic trainers (ATCs) or physical therapists - suggest that the program may benefit other age groups and levels of play where direct oversight by medical professionals is far less common.
Earlier this month, researchers
from Spain's University of Oviedo released a
study that found
doing homework was okay for students, as long as it wasn't too much homework.
The Little League report, as well as articles in the media since its release, appear to downplay the injury risk
from curveballs, but a close look at the
study reveals no categorical statement that throwing curve balls at an
early age is not an injury risk factor; it says only that «baseline risk factors for injury to Little League - age pitchers
did not point directly to throwing curveballs.»
Studies have shown that a child doesn't sleep any longer or go to bed any
earlier when eating rice cereal
from a bottle.
A few
studies have supported the utility of test weights in preterm infants: these include a Swedish
study favorably comparing babies cared for in NICUs using test weights vs NICUs that
did not (
earlier attainment of exclusive breastfeeding and
earlier discharge) as well as a small
study from the illustrious LCs at my own institution describing the development of a technique for accurately performing test weights.
Although some SIDS experts and policy - makers endorse pacifier use recommendations that are similar to those of the AAP, 272,273 concerns about possible deleterious effects of pacifier use have prevented others
from making a recommendation for pacifier use as a risk reduction strategy.274 Although several observational studies275, — , 277 have found a correlation between pacifiers and reduced breastfeeding duration, the results of well - designed randomized clinical trials indicated that pacifiers
do not seem to cause shortened breastfeeding duration for term and preterm infants.278, 279 The authors of 1
study reported a small deleterious effect of
early pacifier introduction (2 — 5 days after birth) on exclusive breastfeeding at 1 month of age and on overall breastfeeding duration (defined as any breastfeeding), but
early pacifier use
did not adversely affect exclusive breastfeeding duration.
(It's also not without its critics — a
study from earlier this year noted that the plan hasn't
done as much as it could to help low - and extremely - low income New Yorkers.)
Briccetti says an EPA
study, released in
early June, said there is not widespread drinking water contamination
from fracking, though it
did find some specific instances of drinking water contamination.
Briccetti says an EPA
study, released in
early June, said there is no widespread drinking water contamination
from fracking, though it
did find some specific instances of drinking water contamination.
Earlier animal
studies have shown that A-beta can move into the brain if it's injected into the bloodstream, but scientists didn't know whether A-beta
from the blood can be plentiful enough to form plaques in the brain.
The availability of several years of data
from various sources in two HIE
early - adopter states gave the chance to
do the
study, he notes.
People in the
study with more severe stages of the disease
did not have lower levels of caffeine in the blood, suggesting that the decrease occurs
from the
earliest stages of the disease, according to David G. Munoz, MD, of the University of Toronto in Canada, who wrote an editorial accompanying the
study.
A new
study has found that infants and toddlers
from low - income families who attended a high - quality center - based
early education program
do better in language and social skills after only one year than children who
do not attend the program.
«We don't want people to get the impression they can take the drug we used in our
study to extend their own teens or
early twenties,» says lead author Michael Petrascheck
from The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI), California.
Studies from islands including Flores, Sri Lanka, and others suggest that
early colonizers often coexisted with native fauna, perhaps because their populations were smaller and their technology simpler, or because they
did not introduce invasive species such as rats and dogs.
A
study done by researchers at Fox Chase Cancer Center shows that many relatives of patients who undergo testing for a gene linked to breast and ovarian cancers misinterpret the results, and less than half of those who could benefit
from genetic testing say they plan to get tested themselves — despite the fact that knowing your genetic status may help catch the disease in its
earliest stages.
A Swiss - American team of palaeontologists headed by Torsten Scheyer and Carlo Romano
from the University of Zurich demonstrate in their new
study that the food nets during the
Early Triassic
did not recover in stages.
Early animal
studies have shown that stem cells isolated
from umbilical cord blood can stimulate cells in the spinal cord to regrow their myelin layers, and in
doing so help restore connections with surrounding cells.
«We know
from previous human
studies that changes in gut bacterial composition correlate with the
early development of type 1 diabetes, and that the interactions between bacterial networks may be a contributing factor in why some people at risk for the disease develop type 1 diabetes and others don't,» said Jessica Dunne, Director of Discovery Research at JDRF, which funded the
study.
Several
studies have shown that non-invasive prenatal diagnosis for trisomy syndromes using fetal cell free (cf) DNA
from a pregnant woman's blood is highly sensitive and specific, making it a potentially reliable alternative that can be
done earlier in pregnancy.
Some scientists say these
early findings
from the Reproducibility Project: Cancer Biology, which appear tomorrow in eLife, bolster concerns that too many basic biomedical
studies don't hold up in other labs.
Wayne, an evolutionary biologist, is concerned that this
study's findings don't match up with those
from earlier ones.
The
study in the May 17, 2012
early online issue of Genetics in Medicine was
done by investigators with the Multiplex Initiative, a multi-center collaborative initiative involving investigators
from the National Institutes of Health's Intramural Research Program, Group Health Cooperative in Seattle, and the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit.
«The technology remains at an
early stage, and much more work is needed to make sure that the technique is safe and optimized before we ascertain whether these eggs remain normal during the process, and can be fertilized to form embryos that could lead to healthy babies,» says Ali Abbara, an endocrinologist
from Imperial College London who didn't work on this new
study.
Many elderly men may undergo unnecessary prostate cancer screenings while men in their
early fifties, who are more likely to benefit
from early diagnosis and treatment,
do not, according to a new
study published March 28 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
March 28, 2011 Many elderly men undergo unnecessary PSA screenings Many elderly men may undergo unnecessary prostate cancer screenings while men in their
early fifties, who are more likely to benefit
from early diagnosis and treatment,
do not, according to a new
study published March 28 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
But the authors of the new
study do link stress - reduction techniques with improved immunity: «Added immune control of disease processes, particularly
early — when patients were recovering
from surgery and receiving adjuvant cancer therapies — may have occurred with the declining stress.»
«We know
from earlier research that youth who engage in the choking game also report higher levels of suicidal thoughts than those who don't participate in the choking game at all,» said
study co-author Sarah Knipper.
A more recent
study in 2010 published in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association found that switching
from whole milk to reduced - fat milk at age 2 years
did not appear to prevent overweight in
early childhood.
This stemmed
from a small
study done in the
early 90s.
Interestingly, one
study re-evaluated
early evidence
from the late 60s and
early 70s to find replacing saturated fat with linoleic acid «effectively lowers serum cholesterol but
does not support the hypothesis that this translates to a lower risk of death
from coronary heart disease or all causes.»
Although additional
studies are needed to confirm flax's potential role in prostate cancer prevention, the most recent research has shown that - contrary to reports
from earlier observational
studies - it
does not increase risk.
Due to specialization (and especially
early on with children and the
studies showing its detriment), the majority of injuries stem
from the same repetitive movements being
done over and over.
What we
do really encompasses every bit of the clinical development process —
from early clinical development when compounds are created, to running clinical trials, to conducting post-approval
studies after the drug has been approved by the Food and Drug Association (FDA) or a similar regulatory body outside of the US.
Every
study ever
done underscores the value of music education to young children, and the benefits that come
from being exposed to music
early on.
From James Coleman's
early observational
studies of high schools to the experimental voucher evaluations of the past 15 years, researchers have routinely found that similar students
do at least as well and, at times, better academically in private schools than in public schools.
The authors concluded
from a research
study that adolescents exhibit adult levels of cognitive capability much
earlier than they
do for emotional or social capability.
This
study finds that
Early College students were significantly more likely to graduate
from high school and enroll in — and graduate
from — college than their peers who
did not take part in the program.
Nor
did we register any improvement
from the Second International Mathematics
Study, conducted in the
early 1980s.
They
did this by relying on data
from the
Early Childhood Longitudinal
Study conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics, which tracked a cohort of children
from kindergarten in the fall of 1998 through the end of their fifth - grade year in 2004.
It is entirely possible that the children in Fuller's
study who
did not score well at age five on concepts to which they were not exposed in preschool would, at a later age, outscore those children
from «academically - oriented» preschools; precisely because they engaged in more play - based learning in their
early years.
... This
study is a welcome reminder that as it states, «preschool programs
do prepare children academically for kindergarten, validating contemporary policy initiatives that focus on investing
early,» but that «we must pay careful attention to what is realistic to expect
from one year of preschool education and the conditions under which its benefits persist or diminish.»»
You don't inspire a life long love of reading by making pupils
study «the classics» but by giving them free access to a wide variety of great books
from an
early age.
During the
early months of 2002, five first - grade (second year of school) teachers were enlisted
from teacher - related internet listservs, to
do a cooperative
study of the relationship between fluency in writing the alphabet, and concomitant reading skill.
Effect on Achievement Gaps Data
from a nationally representative sample of children, the
Early Childhood Longitudinal Study — Birth Cohort 2001, reveal that gaps in what children know and are able to do appear as early as 9 months of
Early Childhood Longitudinal
Study — Birth Cohort 2001, reveal that gaps in what children know and are able to
do appear as
early as 9 months of
early as 9 months of age.