Not exact matches
Living in
rural households decreases a person's risk of developing inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), particularly for young children and adolescents, according to a new
study by researchers at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) Research Institute, Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES), and the Canadian Gastro - Intestinal
Epidemiology Consortium (CanGIEC).
Jill was the co-founder of Agrosalud, a non-profit health care program in
rural Guatemala and collaborated with the University of Miami Field
Epidemiology Survey Team on projects in the San Blas archipelago in Panamá, including cholera intervention, scabies and head lice
studies.
Associations of fats and carbohydrate intake with cardiovascular disease and mortality in 18 countries from five continents (PURE): a prospective cohort
study The Lancet (2017) Mahshid Dehghan, Andrew Mente, Xiaohe Zhang, et al., on behalf of the Prospective Urban
Rural Epidemiology (PURE)
study investigators * Interpretation of findings: «High carbohydrate intake was associated with higher risk of total mortality, whereas total fat and individual types of fat were related to lower total mortality.
Leong, Darryl P., Koon K. Teo, Sumathy Rangarajan, Patricio Lopez - Jaramillo, Alvaro Avezum, Andres Orlandini, Pamela Seron et al. «Prognostic value of grip strength: findings from the Prospective Urban
Rural Epidemiology (PURE)
study.»
Also known as the China - Cornell - Oxford Project, the China
Study was an enormous epidemiological endeavor exploring diet and disease patterns in
rural China — a project coined «the Prix of
epidemiology» by the New York Times.
This
study, called the Prospective Urban
Rural Epidemiology (PURE)
study, investigated the relationship between those that ate high carbohydrate foods and those that ate higher fat foods on cardiovascular disease and overall mortality.