Outcomes of disease prevention and management interventions in food pantries and food banks: protocol for a scoping review
Not exact matches
«Although evidence
of benefits with vitamin D supplementation in cardiovascular
outcomes are still lacking, strategies to raise endogenous vitamin D should probably be advised in the
prevention of cardiovascular
disease.»
Tags: aspirin, Bezos, bioengineering, Breast Cancer, Cameron Turtle, Cancer etiology -
prevention -
outcomes, CAR t - cell, Clinical Research, Colorectal Cancer, genome, hiv, hiv vaccine, hiv vaccine trials network, Human Biology, immunology, Jason Bielas, Lawrence Corey, Matthias Stephan, merkel cell carcinoma, metastasis, Molecular basis
of cancer, mylotarg, Obliteride, Paul Nghiem, philanthropy, Polly A Newcomb, Public Health Sciences, RNA, Ruth Etzioni, Soheil Meshinchi, Steven Henikoff, Transplant and Immunotherapy, Tumor specific translational research, Vaccine and Infectious
Disease, Vaccine development - Viral cancers
We also performed subgroup meta - analyses by type
of prevention (primary v secondary: in this study, trials involving healthy populations or patients with any specific
disease except for cardiovascular
disease were classified as primary
prevention trials, and trials involving patients with cardiovascular
disease were classified as secondary
prevention trials), type
of supplement by quality and dose (each supplement, vitamins only, antioxidants only, or antioxidants excluding vitamins), type
of outcome (cardiovascular death, angina, fatal or non-fatal myocardial infarction, stroke, or transient ischaemic attack), type
of outcome in each supplement, type
of study design (randomised, double blind, placebo controlled trial v open label, randomised controlled trial), methodological quality (high v low), duration
of treatment (< 5 years v ≥ 5 years), funding source (pharmaceutical industry v independent organisation), provider
of supplements (pharmaceutical industry v not pharmaceutical industry), type
of control (placebo v no placebo), number
of participants (≥ 10000 v < 10000), and supplements given singly or in combination with other vitamin or antioxidant supplements by quality.
Cook NR, «Long term effect
of dietary sodium reduction on cardiovascular
disease outcomes: observational follow - up
of the trials
of hypertension
prevention.
«We focus on metabolic - based research
outcomes and mechanisms that advance the treatment and
prevention of disease»
Healthy child development is the foundation for human capital and the basis for future community and economic development.1 A significant body
of convergent research emphasises the importance
of the prenatal and early years for health and developmental
outcomes throughout the life course.2 For a growing number
of children, suboptimal developmental trajectories are well established by the time they start school, and become increasingly difficult and costly to modify with the passage
of time.3 Thus, investing in young children is important for the
prevention of disease later in life and contributes to their full participation in society as healthy and productive adults.4, 5
This stepped - care sequential
prevention model has the potential to maximise
outcomes for both high - risk and low - risk students across a range
of mental illnesses and reduce the considerable burden
of disease associated with these illnesses in adolescence.
A review and analysis
of the health and cost - effective
outcome studies
of comprehensive health promotion and
disease prevention programs at the worksite: 1993 — 1995 update