Thats not clear, says Steven Narod, MD, one of the studys authors and director of the familial breast cancer research unit at
the Womens College Research Institute in Toronto.
Not exact matches
In 1972, when Title IX was signed into law, 90 % of
women's college teams were coached by women, according to research from the Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women in S
women's
college teams were coached by
women, according to research from the Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women in S
women, according to
research from the Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women i
research from the Tucker Center for
Research on Girls & Women i
Research on Girls &
Women in S
Women in Sport.
Founding teams that include at least one
woman get about 18 percent of venture capital, according to
research from Babson
College.
One reliable study conducted by the Center for Retirement
Research at Boston
College estimated that 44 % of men and 58 % of
women will need nursing home care at some point in their life.1
About MaRS Innovation MaRS Innovation is the commercialization agent for Ontario's exceptional discovery pipeline from 15 leading academic institutions, including Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital, The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), MaRS Discovery District, Mount Sinai Hospital, Ontario Institute for Cancer
Research, St. Michael's Hospital, Ryerson University, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Thunder Bay Regional
Research Institute, University Health Network, University of Toronto,
Women's
College Hospital and York University.
Across the nation, more
women are attending
college than men, and according to a CNBC article and
research from the Institute of Family Studies, 2015 marked the first time in history that wives were better educated than their husbands.
From «Martyrs and Heretics: Aspects of the Contribution of
Women to Early Christian Tradition,» in Prasanna Kumari, ed., Feminist Theology: Perspectives and Praxis, Gurukul Summer Institute 1998 (Chennai: Gurukul Lutheran Theological
College and
Research Institute, 1999), pp. 135 — 153.
Research to be presented at The American
College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Session this month (March, 2018) shows
women with normal blood pressure during pregnancy and who breastfed their babies for at least six months following birth had better markers of cardiovascular health years later compared to
women who never breastfed.
Contributors: Members of the writing committee for this paper were Peter Brocklehurst (professor of perinatal epidemiology, National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit (NPEU), University of Oxford; professor of
women's health, Institute for Women's Health, University College London (UCL)-RRB-; Pollyanna Hardy (senior trials statistician, NPEU); Jennifer Hollowell (epidemiologist, NPEU); Louise Linsell (senior medical statistician, NPEU); Alison Macfarlane (professor of perinatal health, City University London); Christine McCourt (professor of maternal and child health, City University London); Neil Marlow (professor of neonatal medicine, UCL); Alison Miller (programme director and midwifery lead, Confidential Enquiry into Maternal and Child Health (CEMACH)-RRB-; Mary Newburn (head of research and information, National Childbirth Trust (NCT)-RRB-; Stavros Petrou (health economist, NPEU; professor of health economics, University of Warwick); David Puddicombe (researcher, NPEU); Maggie Redshaw (senior research fellow, social scientist, NPEU); Rachel Rowe (researcher, NPEU); Jane Sandall (professor of social science and women's health, King's College London); Louise Silverton (deputy general secretary, Royal College of Midwives (RCM)-RRB-; and Mary Stewart (research midwife, NPEU; senior lecturer, King's College London, Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwif
women's health, Institute for
Women's Health, University College London (UCL)-RRB-; Pollyanna Hardy (senior trials statistician, NPEU); Jennifer Hollowell (epidemiologist, NPEU); Louise Linsell (senior medical statistician, NPEU); Alison Macfarlane (professor of perinatal health, City University London); Christine McCourt (professor of maternal and child health, City University London); Neil Marlow (professor of neonatal medicine, UCL); Alison Miller (programme director and midwifery lead, Confidential Enquiry into Maternal and Child Health (CEMACH)-RRB-; Mary Newburn (head of research and information, National Childbirth Trust (NCT)-RRB-; Stavros Petrou (health economist, NPEU; professor of health economics, University of Warwick); David Puddicombe (researcher, NPEU); Maggie Redshaw (senior research fellow, social scientist, NPEU); Rachel Rowe (researcher, NPEU); Jane Sandall (professor of social science and women's health, King's College London); Louise Silverton (deputy general secretary, Royal College of Midwives (RCM)-RRB-; and Mary Stewart (research midwife, NPEU; senior lecturer, King's College London, Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwif
Women's Health, University
College London (UCL)-RRB-; Pollyanna Hardy (senior trials statistician, NPEU); Jennifer Hollowell (epidemiologist, NPEU); Louise Linsell (senior medical statistician, NPEU); Alison Macfarlane (professor of perinatal health, City University London); Christine McCourt (professor of maternal and child health, City University London); Neil Marlow (professor of neonatal medicine, UCL); Alison Miller (programme director and midwifery lead, Confidential Enquiry into Maternal and Child Health (CEMACH)-RRB-; Mary Newburn (head of
research and information, National Childbirth Trust (NCT)-RRB-; Stavros Petrou (health economist, NPEU; professor of health economics, University of Warwick); David Puddicombe (researcher, NPEU); Maggie Redshaw (senior
research fellow, social scientist, NPEU); Rachel Rowe (researcher, NPEU); Jane Sandall (professor of social science and
women's health, King's College London); Louise Silverton (deputy general secretary, Royal College of Midwives (RCM)-RRB-; and Mary Stewart (research midwife, NPEU; senior lecturer, King's College London, Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwif
women's health, King's
College London); Louise Silverton (deputy general secretary, Royal
College of Midwives (RCM)-RRB-; and Mary Stewart (
research midwife, NPEU; senior lecturer, King's
College London, Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwifery).
Research helps fine - tune a
woman's true caloric needs, from the Children's Nutrition
Research Center at Baylor
College of Medicine, has more information (including a handy calculator) on determining your individual caloric needs
Cathy Warwick, chief executive of the Royal
College of Midwives, said the
research was proof of the safety and benefits of home birth for some
women, particularly those who have given birth before, and showed that they could save the NHS money.
«We just don't have enough data to advise
women on the risks of breast milk sharing, and that's one of the reasons why this
research is so important,» said Keim, who is also an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics in The Ohio State University
College of Medicine and of Epidemiology in the
College of Public Health.
Women with normal blood pressure during pregnancy and who breastfed their babies for at least six months following birth had better markers of cardiovascular health years later compared to women who never breastfed, based on research presented at the American College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Ses
Women with normal blood pressure during pregnancy and who breastfed their babies for at least six months following birth had better markers of cardiovascular health years later compared to
women who never breastfed, based on research presented at the American College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Ses
women who never breastfed, based on
research presented at the American
College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Session.
We are supposed to believe that obstetricians (with 8 years of higher education, extensive study of science and statistics, and four additional years of hands on experience caring for pregnant
women), the people who actually DO the
research that represents the corpus of scientific evidence, are ignoring their own findings while NCB advocates (generally high school graduates with no background in
college science or statistics, let alone advanced study of these subjects, and limited experience of caring for pregnant
women), the people who NEVER do scientific
research, are assiduously scouring the scientific literature, reading the main obstetric journals each month, and changing their practice based on the latest scientific evidence.
Individuals Sondra Abdulla - Zaimah, MN, CNM, CPM, Senegal, W. Africa Shannon Anton, CPM, San Francisco, CA Suzanne Arms, Bayfield, CO, Immaculate Deception Gini Baker, RN, MPH, IBCLC, FACCE, Escondido, CA Maggie Bennett, LM, CPM, Seaside, CA Brian Berman, Bainbridge Island, WA Mary Brucker, CNM, DNSc, Dallas, TX Raymond Castellino, DC, RPP, Santa Barbara, CA Elena Carrillo, LCCE, FACCE, CD, Mexico City, Mexico Robbie Davis - Floyd, PhD, Austin, TX, Birth as an American Rite of Passage Henci Goer, BA, LCCE, Sunnyvale, CA, The Thinking
Woman's Guide to a Better Birth and Obstetric Myths Versus
Research Realities Dorothy Harrison, IBCLC, Edmunds WA Jack Heinowitz, PhD, San Diego, CA, Pregnant Fathers Tina Kimmel, MSW, MPH, Berkeley, CA Marshall Klaus, MD, Berkeley, CA, Bonding — Building the Foundation for Secure Attachment and Independence Phyllis Klaus, CSW, MFCC, Berkeley, CA, The Amazing Newborn Judith Lothian, RN, PhD, FACC, Brooklyn, NY Susan Sobin Pease, MBA, CIMI, CMT, San Francisco, CA Paulina G. Perez, RN, BSN, FACCE, Johnson, VT, Special
Women James W. Prescott, PhD, San Diego, CA, Brain Function and Malnutrition Mayri Sagady, RN, CNM, MSN, San Diego, CA Karen A. Salt, CCE, Coconino Community
College, Flagstaff, AZ Irene Sandvold, DrPH, CNM, Rockville, MD Roberta M. Scaer, MSS, Boulder, CO, A Good Birth, A Safe Birth Betsy K. Schwartz, MMHS, Coconut Creek, FL Penny Simkin, PT, Seattle, WA, The Birth Partner: Everything You Need to Know to Help a
Woman through Childbirth Linda J. Smith, BSE, FACCE, Bright Future Lactation Resource Center, Dayton, OH Suzanne Suarez, JD, RN, St Petersburg, FL Sandy Szalay, ARNP, CCE, Seattle, WA Marsden Wagner, MD, MSPH, Washington, DC, Pursuing the Birth Machine Diony Young, Geneseo, NY
Also at 6 p.m., Sen. Liz Krueger hosts «Counterattack: The Media, The War on
Women, and How to Fight» forum, with speakers including Baruch
College Survey
Research Director Micky Blum, lawyer and author Ariel Chesler, comedian and writer Katie Halper, and political analyst Tanya Melich, Baruch
College Newman Conference Center, 151 E. 25th St., Manhattan.
Oladoyinbo, a fellow of the African
Women in Agricultural
Research and Development, stated this at a role - modelling programme she organised at the Federal
College of Education Model Secondary School, Osiele, Abeokuta, Ogun State.
Denosumab (Prolia ®, Xgeva ®) reversed cortical bone loss and increased bone mineral density, lowering wrist fracture rates in
women with osteoporosis, according to new
research findings presented this week at the American
College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting in Boston.
Martin teamed with Richard Lipton, MD, Jelena Pavlovic, MD, PhD, and Dawn Buse, PhD, from Montefiore Headache Center and Albert Einstein
College of Medicine, and Kristina Fanning, PhD, and Michael Reed, PhD, from Vedanta
Research, Chapel Hill, NC, to study 3,664
women who experienced migraine before and during their menopausal years.
Comprehensive neuropsychological testing could provide cardiac arrest survivors better support for the challenges they may face upon discharge, says Dr. Vess Stamenova, first author on the study and a postdoctoral fellow at the
Women's
College Hospital, who completed the
research during her time as a fellow at the RRI.
«
Women going through menopause have an increased tendency to store fat in their livers,» said the study's lead author Colette Miller, a post-doctoral
research associate in the
College of Family and Consumer Sciences» department of foods and human nutrition.
Started in 2001 as the result of feedback received at both the Career Development Center and the
Women's Community Center, this series addresses issues known through higher education research to be of concern to women college stud
Women's Community Center, this series addresses issues known through higher education
research to be of concern to
women college stud
women college students.
Elite schools, both liberal arts
colleges and
research universities, do a better job overall of retaining undergraduates in the sciences: At these institutions 54 % of
women but only 39 percent of men drop out of science before attaining a degree.
The number of breast cancer patients undergoing immediate breast reconstruction operations after mastectomy has grown steadily over the past 15 years, most notably among
women who were once considered too high - risk for reconstruction procedures according to new
research findings published in the October 2014 issue of the Journal of the American
College of Surgeons.
Steven Narod, director of the Familial Breast Cancer
Research Unit at
Women's
College Research Institution in Toronto, believes that cost and not flawed computer programs are to blame for undertesting.
Postmenopausal
women who reached menopause at an earlier age or who never gave birth are at a higher risk for heart failure, according to
research published today in the Journal of the American
College of Cardiology.
«
Research has long suggested people with heart disease in rural areas are at a disadvantage when it comes to access to health care and longevity,» says Dr. Sacha Bhatia, lead author of the study and a cardiologist at
Women's
College Hospital.
Up to half of
women with advanced - stage ovarian cancer might be cured, compared to the current 20 per cent survival rate, argues Dr. Steven Narod, senior scientist at Women's College Research Institute, who calls for a new standard of treatment for women with late - stage ovarian ca
women with advanced - stage ovarian cancer might be cured, compared to the current 20 per cent survival rate, argues Dr. Steven Narod, senior scientist at
Women's College Research Institute, who calls for a new standard of treatment for women with late - stage ovarian ca
Women's
College Research Institute, who calls for a new standard of treatment for
women with late - stage ovarian ca
women with late - stage ovarian cancer.
«For decades,
women have been treated with a combination of treatment options, resulting in poor prognosis for most women with advanced - stage ovarian cancer, but there are many survivors as well,» said Dr. Narod, senior scientist at Women's College Research Insti
women have been treated with a combination of treatment options, resulting in poor prognosis for most
women with advanced - stage ovarian cancer, but there are many survivors as well,» said Dr. Narod, senior scientist at Women's College Research Insti
women with advanced - stage ovarian cancer, but there are many survivors as well,» said Dr. Narod, senior scientist at
Women's College Research Insti
Women's
College Research Institute.
Women with normal blood pressure during pregnancy and who breastfed their babies for at least six months following birth had better markers of cardiovascular health years later compared to women who never breastfed, based on research presented at the American College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Ses
Women with normal blood pressure during pregnancy and who breastfed their babies for at least six months following birth had better markers of cardiovascular health years later compared to
women who never breastfed, based on research presented at the American College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Ses
women who never breastfed, based on
research presented at the American
College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Session.
Ami Radunskaya — a professor of mathematics at Pomona
College, president - elect of the Association for
Women in Mathematics, and director of the national Enhancing Diversity in Graduate Education (EDGE) Program — was chosen as the winner of the 2016 AAAS Mentor Award for launching «dramatic education and
research changes leading to an increase in the number of female doctorates in the field of mathematics.»
If
colleges want to effectively change their campus culture regarding rape, they should also focus on self - defense training for
women rather than just improving their policies and training bystanders to intervene, according to an Appalachian State University professor who has been
researching the
women's self - defense movement since 1993.
See M. M. Robinson, B. L. Yegidis, and J. Funk, Faculty in the Middle: The Effects of Family Caregiving in Universities, Wellesley
College Center for
Research on
Women, Working Paper 296 (Wellesley, 1999).
Funding: Financial support was provided by start - up funds from the University of Illinois, Urbana - Champaign Department of Anthropology and Institute for Genomic Biology (KC), Academic Senate funds from the University of California, Riverside, and start - up funds from Skidmore
College (RN), K12HD055892 (National Institutes of Health Building Interdisciplinary
Research Careers in
Women's Health Program (JR)-RRB-, and start - up funds from Harvard University (KH).
«Recent
research also has shown that focusing on bystander intervention for both men and
women is really effective and that's the direction we need to be taking on
college campuses.
While
research consistently estimates that one in every four
women in higher education will experience rape or attempted rape during their
college careers, limited proactive approaches to address the issue are found on Texas
college campuses, according to the Crime Victims» Institute at Sam Houston State University.
«We found that there was a lot of
research regarding insomnia in general but very little that addressed the insomnia trajectory in one of the higher risk groups of
women — those transitioning to menopause,» says Dr. Colleen Ciano of the
College of Nursing at The Pennsylvania State University and lead author of the study.
Dr. Kevin Conway, AgriLife
Research wildlife and fisheries scientist,
College Station, and Daemin Kim, a former graduate student of Conway's now at Ewha
Womans University, Seoul, South Korea, collaborated on the paper «Redescription of the Texas shiner Notropis amabilis from the southwestern U.S. and northern Mexico with the reinstatement of N. megalops.»
Research from King's
College, London, found
women who ate the foods absorbed certain chemicals in their bloodstream.
Prior to Providence
College, she led pre-award activities at one of the largest gender - focused
research - and - action organizations in the world, Wellesley Centers for
Women at Wellesley
College.
Additional researchers on this study are Thushangi N. Pathiraja, Ph.D., Shiming Jiang, Ph.D., Yuanxin Xi, Ph.D., Jason P. Garee, Ph.D., Dean P. Edwards, Ph.D., Martin J. Shea, Rachel Schiff, Ph.D., and Wei Lei, Ph.D., all of, or formerly of, Baylor
College of Medicine; Shweta Nayak, M.D., of Magee -
Womens Hospital of UPMC; Adrian V. Lee, Ph.D., Jian Chen, M.S., and Nancy E. Davidson, M.D., all of UPCI; Richard J. Santen, M.D., of the University of Virginia; Frank Gannon, Ph.D., and Sara Kangaspeska, Ph.D., formerly of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory and now at QIMR Berghofer Medical
Research Institute in Brisbane, Australia, and at Institute for Molecular Medicine, Helsinki, Finland; Jaroslav Jelinek, M.D., Ph.D., and Jean - Pierre J. Issa, M.D., both of Temple University; Jennifer K. Richer, Ph.D., and Anthony Elias, M.D., both of the University of Colorado; and Marie McIlroy, Ph.D., and Leonie Young, Ph.D., both of the Royal
College of Surgeons of Ireland.
«
Research is uncovering very dramatic differences in how the genders experience pain,» says Mark Allen Young, a professor at New York
College of Podiatric Medicine and author of
Women and Pain: Why It Hurts and What You Can Do.
It makes sense that there are risks, explains co-author Andrea L. DeMaria, PhD, assistant professor of public health and the co-director of the
Women's Health
Research Team at the
College of Charleston.
But, of equal importance is,
research out of the Baylor
College of Medicine that has determined some of these drugs — like calcium channel blockers (CCBs)-- can raise the risk of pancreatic cancer in menopausal
women.
ElenasModels.com releases
research on demographics of Russian
women seeking men for marriage - According to the
research, 90 % of Russian ladies seeking foreign men are
college graduates.
Research indicates almost half of all
college women have suffered abuse... (read more)
That is more than double the 13 % that did so when we last asked about this behavior in 2005.16
Women are a bit more likely than men to conduct this type of
research, those with a
college education are more likely to do so than those who have not attended
college, urban and suburbanites are more likely to do so than rural residents, and online daters are more likely to do so than non-online daters.
Research suggests having few
women in
college in these fields and in technology companies creates a vicious cycle.
When doctoral candidate Elizabeth Blair set out to
research how
college women make meaning of their intimate relationships, she anticipated hearing stories about romance, care, and love, especially considering the decades of
research that associated these narratives with
women.
That is sooner than U.S. averages for all workers: the U.S. Social Security normal retirement age for anyone born after 1960 is 67, and the Boston
College Center for Retirement
Research estimates the national average retirement age at 62 for
women and 64 for men.