The results also showed that substituting other healthy protein sources, such as fish, poultry, nuts or legumes, was associated with a lower risk of
death over the study period.
Not exact matches
A large 2011
study of close to 39,000 older women
over 25 years found that women who took them in the long term actually had a higher overall risk of
death than those who did not.
If the trend continues, the world could see as many as 116,000 additional
deaths annually, according to a recent
study — essentially eliminating the impressive gains made
over the past 15 years.
Overall, participants who maintained healthy eating patterns throughout the
study period lowered their risk of
death between 9 - 14 %, with even those who started out with unhealthy eating patterns seeing a reduced risk the more healthy food they added
over time.
According to the Fast Company article, «
Study Finds Work - Life Balance Could Be a Matter of Life and
Death,» researchers from Indiana University's Kelley School of Business found that people who work in highly stressful jobs with little to no control
over their work life were 15.4 % more likely to die sooner.
Studies using the Rorschach inkblot test have revealed that subconscious preoccupation with
death is very common among those
over fifty.
The latest
study published in June 2012, showed that high school students in the United States had significant progress
over the past two decades in improving many youth risk behaviors associated with the leading cause of
death in their age group, car crashes.
When I finally had a chance to speak, we were already running
over the 2 1/2 hours allotted for the roundtable, so I was only able to briefly touch on two of my many message points: one, that the game can be and is being made safer, and two, that, based on my experience following a high school football team in Oklahoma this past season - which will be the subject of a MomsTEAM documentary to be released in early 2013 called The Smartest Team - I saw the use of hit sensors in football helmets as offering an exciting technological «end around» the problem of chronic under - reporting of concussions that continues to plague the sport and remains a major impediment, in my view, to keeping kids safe (the reasons: if an athlete is allowed to keep playing with a concussion,
studies show that their recovery is likely to take longer, and they are at increased risk of long - term problems (e.g. early dementia, depression, more rapid aging of the brain, and in rare cases, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, and in extremely rare instances, catastrophic injury or
death.)
Studies warn against swaddling due to an increased risk of SIDS — sudden infant
death syndrome — if babies get overheated or turn
over on their stomachs while swaddled.
Lots of babies have died and many
studies have been conducted
over the years to get to the bottom of these
deaths.
Over the following year, I proceeded to analyze the BMJ 2005
study and demonstrate that it actually shows that homebirth with a CPM in 2000 had a
death rate nearly triple that of low risk hospital birth in the same year.
It's funny watching homebirth advocates fall all
over themselves looking for reasons not to accept the results of the Wax homebirth
study that showed that homebirth triples the neonatal
death rate.
And so, a recent German
Study of about
over 300 infants who had died from Sudden Infant
Death Syndrome, they were compared with 1000 age - matched controls and found that breastfeeding reduced the risk of SIDS by 50 percent.
A recent
study in the journal Pediatrics reviewed the
deaths of 119 sleeping infants (less than 2 years of age) in St. Louis
over a four - year period.
The
study looked at infant
death rates between the years of 1984 and 2004 and found that
deaths classified as accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed (ASSB) increased four-fold
over this time period.
One major
study in the United States found that the number of aspiration - related
deaths dropped significantly
over a five - year period in the early 1990s when parents started putting their babies to sleep on their back.
In a
study published in the journal Pediatrics, researchers found that
over the course of eight years, nearly 75 % of
deaths in babies under four months occurred in a bed - sharing situation.
«Future
studies are needed to determine if the effect of this intervention is sustainable through the first 6 to 12 months of life, and if this intervention can significantly reduce the incidence of sleep - related
death in large populations
over time.»
«No association between «bad cholesterol» and elderly
deaths: Systematic review of
studies of
over 68,000 elderly people also raises questions about the benefits of statin drug treatments.»
There, she
studied the contribution to global
death tolls, and their trajectories
over time, of cardiometabolic risk factors (including high blood pressure and obesity) and undernutrition.
A 2015
study in the journal Nature estimates they cause at least 3.3 million
deaths each year globally, and a recent
study in Geophysical Research Letters found they cause
over 500,000 annual
deaths in India alone.
A
study published in January in Environmental Health Perspectives reported that daily
deaths over a decade in metropolitan Boston peaked on days when concentrations of three common air pollutants were at their highest, even though those levels would currently satisfy the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
The
study, published online July 31 in Cell
Death and Disease, suggests a new approach to treating the estimated 3 million people in the U.S., and
over 300 million worldwide, living with type 1 diabetes.
A 2002
study of beluga whales in Canada's Saint Lawrence Estuary suggested that PAH pollution caused
over a quarter of the 263
deaths reported there between 1983 and 1999, by inducing various cancers.
Over the next decade, Southwood's «cosmic vision» program calls for, among other goals, landing spacecraft on Mars, Mercury, Saturn's moon Titan, and a comet; observing the birth, evolution, and
death of stars and galaxies at gamma ray and infrared wavelengths;
studying the afterglow of the big bang; and mapping the positions and motions of nearly every star in the Milky Way.
Death rates from natural disasters rose
over that period, reaching an average of more than 99,700
deaths per year, the
study found.
Professor Anderson said
studies had shown that high intensity exercise
over a sedentary lifestyle significantly reduced the risk of
death.
A new
study by researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health found that
death rates among people
over 65 are higher in zip codes with more fine particulate air pollution (PM2.5) than in those with lower levels of PM2.5.
«As these drugs are considerably cheaper than current therapies, they can improve treatment in the developing world where the number of
deaths from cancer is predicted to increase significantly
over the next ten years,» said Dr Federica Sotgia, another leader of the
study.
Economist Bisakha Sen wants to
study how US states» gun laws and gun cultures correlate with certain crimes and with firearms
deaths in each state — and whether differing laws and cultures in neighboring states «spill
over» to influence a state's statistics.
The
study finds that overwhelmingly the greatest risk of canine rabies is in the poorest countries; the
death rate (
deaths / 100,000 people) is highest in countries in sub-Saharan Africa, while India has the highest number of fatalities, with
over 20,000 human
deaths annually.
The results of the
study by Marc Baguelin and colleagues from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine in the UK, Public Health England, and Athens University of Economics and Business, show that the current flu vaccination policy that targets people aged 65 years and
over and also those in high risk groups has reduced the number of flu infections and associated
deaths in these groups
over the past 14 years.
The most thoroughly
studied site was Samburu in northern Kenya where every elephant birth and
death over the past 16 years has been recorded.
The mosquito - borne virus chikungunya may lead to severe brain infection and even
death in infants and people
over 65, according to a new
study that reviewed a chikungunya outbreak on Reunion Island off the coast of Madagascar in 2005 - 2006.
34 %: Speaking of power, a seven - year
study of people in their 60s found that stressful, high - demand jobs can be good for you if you have control
over your workflow: Those with high - demand, high - control jobs saw a 34 percent decrease in the likelihood of
death compared with folks in high - control, low - demand jobs.
The largest (Hellquist et al) and longest running (Tabár et al) breast cancer screening
studies in history reconfirm that regular screening cut breast cancer
deaths by roughly a third in all women ages 40 - and -
over — including those 40 - 49 — and disprove the lower USPSTF estimates.
Although those
studies show a correlation
over time between the passage of medical marijuana laws and opioid overdose
death rates, they do not provide any evidence that the laws caused the reduction in
deaths.
Additional results of the
study show that the relationship between lower opioid overdose
deaths and medical marijuana laws strengthened
over time;
deaths were nearly 20 percent lower in the first year after a state's law was implemented, and 33.7 percent lower five years after implementation.
In a new
study, a hospital surveillance program focusing on reducing the risks of sepsis, known as the two - stage Clinical Decision Support (CDS) system, was found to reduce the risk of adverse outcomes, such as
death and hospice discharge for sepsis patients, by 30 %
over the course of one year.
Cold weather kills 20 times as many people as hot weather, according to an international
study analyzing
over 74 million
deaths in 384 locations across 13 countries.
Over the 19 years of the
study, 1800 adverse cardiac events occurred, including heart attack, stroke or
death due to heart disease or stroke.
The
study failed to meet both of its co-primary endpoints in that it did not show a significant benefit of steroid treatment
over placebo in terms of either the overall rate of
death or a composite metric that included
death, heart attack, stroke, new renal failure or respiratory failure.
The overall increase amounted to 142 additional
deaths over the 25 - year
study period.
Two
studies presented at the Biology of Genomes meeting in Cold Spring Harbor, New York, last week show how human genomes have changed
over centuries or decades, charting how since Roman times the British have evolved to be taller and fairer, and how just in the last generation a gene that favors cigarette smoking led to early
death in some groups.
The
study analysed
over 74 million (74,225,200)
deaths between 1985 and 2012 in 13 countries with a wide range of climates, from cold to subtropical.
Study participants» control of individual and composite factors was also examined in relation to the occurrence of new cardiovascular events (including heart attacks, coronary
deaths, strokes, heart failure, percutaneous interventions and bypass surgeries)
over an average follow - up of 11 years.
The initial
study did not factor in natural birth and
death rates, since the hypothetical epidemic took place
over 100 days, resulting in natural births and
deaths being negligible compared to the impact of the zombie virus
over a short time frame.
A-C ranges from a luxury to a necessity to a literal lifesaver: a recent
study (Alan Barreca et al., Adapting to Climate Change: The Remarkable Decline in the U.S. Temperature - Mortality Relationship
over the 20th Century) by American economists showed heat - related
deaths in the U.S. dropped from roughly 3,600 per year to just 600 around 1960.
In this
study that followed a large population of Swedish women
over 16 years, the difference in median age at
death between women with menopause at 40 years and women with menopause at 60 years was 1.3 years.
Deaths from pulmonary hypertension have increased
over the past decade, according to a
study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).