The quality of the neighborhood where a child grows up has a significant impact on the number of problem behaviors they display during elementary and teenage years, a study led by Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health researchers suggests.
Not exact matches
Researchers with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health, publishing online Sept. 19 in the Journal of Contaminant Hydrology, developed a mathematical model and conducted experiments
suggesting these small spills may be a larger issue than previously thought.
«This study
suggests a link between PTSD and cardiovascular
health,» said lead researcher Viola Vaccarino, M.D., Ph.D., professor in the department of medicine at Emory University and chair of the department of epidemiology at the Rollins School of Public H
health,» said lead
researcher Viola Vaccarino, M.D., Ph.D., professor in the department of medicine at Emory University and chair of the department of epidemiology at the Rollins School of
Public HealthHealth.
The findings
suggest that
public health campaigns need more testing, according to the
researchers.
Physical activity among children and teens is lower than previously thought, and, in another surprise finding, young adults after the age of 20 show the only increases in activity over the lifespan,
suggests a study conducted by
researchers from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health.
But this study, combined with others, strongly
suggests that these no - goodniks could well contribute to sparking the disease, says James Yager, a cancer
researcher at the Johns Hopkins School of
Public Health in Baltimore.
Because cavities remain a
public health concern, the
researchers suggest making this component part of
health promotion programs alongside obesity.
A single foodborne outbreak could cost a restaurant millions of dollars in lost revenue, fines, lawsuits, legal fees, insurance premium increases, inspection costs and staff retraining, a new study from
researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health suggests.
While the successful
public health campaign to improve infant sleep environments has long been associated with declines in sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), an analysis of 30 years of data by
researchers from Boston Children's Hospital and Dana - Farber Cancer Institute
suggests that Back - to - Sleep is one of several trends that explain the reduced rates of SIDS.
New research conducted by
researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of
Public Health suggests that intermittent fasting may increase one's lifespan.
Researchers from the Johns Hopkins School of
Public Health presented a study last week that
suggests that, in fact, there might be a connection between high levels of folate during a woman's pregnancy and the risk of her child developing autism.
This finding
suggests that government programs designed to promote marriage, such as the federal Healthy Marriage Initiative and others like it that emerged from the 1996 welfare - reform legislation, aren't likely to improve
public health, the
researchers say.
In fact, a new report from
researchers of the University of Minnesota
suggests that the flu vaccine is not as effective as
public health messaging
suggests.
Actually,
researchers suggest that «seropositive cats are likely to be less of a
public health risk than seronegative cats.»
A study from
researchers at Harvard School of
Public Health, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Harvard Medical School released this week
suggests there could be a genetic component to how fried foods affect individuals.