But, in this «
first published study of more than a dozen HABRI - funded research projects», the discoveries are notable and should be shared widely.
Not exact matches
A
study published in the Academy
of Management Journal found that the
first 90 days on the job are crucial.
Alliance Research then
published the
first - ever
study on the Client Reporting firms, another
of the Four Pillar Firms and predicted in 2013 a consolidation
of this burgeoning segment.
There is something
of a boom going on these days in Melville
studies, with Kelley's book and at least half a dozen other major academic monographs appearing from university presses, and with two new full - length biographies
published last year: Laurie Robertson - Lorant's relatively unimportant but informative Melville: A Biography (Potter, 752 pages,, $ 40) and the
first volume
of the endlessly detailed Herman Melville (Johns Hopkins University Press, 941 pages,, $ 39.95) by Hershel Parker, the grand old man
of Melville
studies.
First, a
study published in 2016 showed that during «2013 and 2014, only 4
of 69,406 authors
of peer - reviewed articles on global warming, 0.0058 percent or 1 in 17,352, rejected» anthropogenic global warming.
The
study began with Eberhard Bethge's reconstruction
of Ethics,
first published in 1949.
A
study published in 2000 by the ELCA revealed that
of the cohort
of newly minted pastors, 71 percent placed constraints upon where they could move due to the needs or desires
of a spouse; 58 percent restricted their
first call to a location in or near a large city; 36 percent were opposed to serving in a small congregation; and 32 percent were opposed to serving in a rural setting.
By the beginning
of this century a great change had taken place and James Orr prefaced his defense
of the traditional position by sketching the widespread questioning and rejection
of «bodily resurrection» by Christian scholars.10 In 1907 Kirsopp Lake
published the
first study of the resurrection, in English, which rested upon a thorough application
of historical criticism to the New Testament records and he concluded that «The empty tomb is for us doctrinally indefensible and is historically insufficiently accredited.
The research institute I direct, housed at Regent University in Virginia,
published the
first study of its kind...
Of course I have been talking, in the
first story, about the beleaguered but unbowed Mark Regnerus, the sociologist whose New Family Structures
Study was
published in Social Science Research in 2012.
The
first two
of these
studies were
published roughly a decade apart: Robert L. Kelly's Theological Education in America in 1924 and William Adams Brown and Mark A. May's four - volume
study The Education
of American Ministers in 1935.3 A major purpose
of both
studies was fact - finding.
His book The Evolution
of Early Christianity a Genetic
Study of First Century Christianity in Relation to its Religious Environment,
published in 1914, was a manifesto
of the socio - historical programme.
As representatives
of the minimalists I will consider Edward Schillebeeckx's Jesus: An Experiment in Christology (Crossroad
Publishing Co., 1979), a long and weighty
study of current New Testament scholarship, and Thomas Sheehan's The
First Coming: How the Kingdom
of God Became Christianity (Random House, 1986), a more accessible argument based on the results
of Schillebeeckx and a number
of others.
A team
of researchers
published a
study first of its kind in the Journal
of Agriculture and Food Chemistry in 2008 analyzing the phytoestrogen content
of eggs among other animal food products and vegetarian substitutes (10).
OMSCo said the milk
study, conducted independently by the Universities
of Liverpool and Glasgow from 2002 - 2005 and
published in the Journal
of Dairy Science, is the
first to consider a cross section
of UK farms over a 12 - month production cycle.
A
first of its kind pilot
study titled, «The Celiac Patient Antibody Response to Conventional and Gluten - Removed Beer,» was
published online by the Journal
of AOAC International, and was conducted by GIG at the University
of Chicago's Celiac Research Center.
We are indebted to Dr. Ronald Mensink for providing updated meta - analysis results, to Dr. Peter Clifton for providing risk estimates from his
published study, and to the organizers
of and participants in the
First International Symposium on Trans Fatty Acids and Health (Copenhagen, September 11 — 13, 2005) for informative discussions and international perspectives on trans fatty acids and cardiovascular health.
While use
of the TGase enzyme is not new in for gluten - free products, the
study is the
first to formulate bread without the addition
of hydrocolloids, according to results
published in the Journal
of Cereal Science.
A
study by psychologist John Gottman
published in 2000 in the Journal
of Family Psychology found that as many as two - thirds
of couples experience a significant decline in marriage satisfaction, including less - frequent or less - satisfying sex, more conflict and more emotional distance, after the
first baby arrives.
A
study published in the American Journal
of Epidemiology notes that preeclampsia is less likely to occur in a subsequent pregnancy the closer it occurs to the
first.
One Italian
study published in 2005 by the National Institutes
of Health showed a lower episiotomy rate, shorter
first stage
of labor and no increased rate
of infection.
A
study published in 2005 used ultrasound to look at the position
of more than 1,500 babies
of first - time mothers over the course
of labor.
The most recent findings
of the Belarus
study (an excellent, large scale, randomized,
first world
study) were recently
published and show that 11 year - olds have a 17 % GREATER chance
of being obese or overweight if they were in the breastfeeding group than in the control group.
A
study published in the BJOG: An International Journal
of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, suggests that mothers have a higher chance
of experiencing depressive symptoms four years after giving birth than in the
first twelve months after their child is born.
In 2007, researchers
published the
first randomized, controlled
study of the effect
of being raised in an orphanage; that
study, and subsequent research on the same sample
of Romanian orphans, found that compared with babies placed with a foster family, those who were sent to institutions had lower IQs, slower physical growth, problems with human attachment and differences in functioning in brain areas related to emotional development.
The Western Australian
study, the results
of which were
published in the Jan 2011 issue
of Pediatrics, which «
studied more than 2900 children born between 1989 and 1991 from before birth to the age
of 10» and «found that boys who were breastfed for the
first six months
of life received significantly higher scores in math, reading and spelling compared to formula - fed children with the same socioeconomic background.»
A new
study, set to be
published in the journal Pediatrics, has suggested that hundreds
of babies» lives would be saved if 90 %
of the mothers in this country breast - fed them during the
first 6 months
of their lives.
Experts estimate that one in four new fathers becomes depressed after the birth
of their child, and a 2014
study published in Pediatrics found that depression among new dads increases by 68 percent during the
first five years
of baby's life.
The findings
of the
first Purdue
study alone were troubling, said Larry J. Leverenz, PhD, ATC, a Clinical Professor in the school's Department
of Health and Kinesiology, shortly after the
study was
published, because it meant that players were:
In fact, it appears the sheer amount
of time parents spend with their kids between the ages
of 3 and 11 has virtually no relationship to how children turn out, and a minimal effect on adolescents, according to the
first large - scale longitudinal
study of parent time to be
published in April in the Journal
of Marriage and Family.
The three recent papers
published in American Journal
of ObGyn: Wax metaanalysis (2010), Chervenak (2013), Grunebaum **** (see note at bottom)(Apgar 0, 2013) and the U.K. Birth Place
study (2013) report perinatal death rates from homebirth as 3 times or 10 times higher than perinatal death rates in the
first week than hospital birth.
The
study,
published in the US journal Proceedings
of the National Academy
of Sciences, followed hundreds
of young Filipino men for nearly five years, measuring their testosterone regularly before and after they
first became fathers.
A recently
published study by researchers in the Center for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children's Hospital is the
first to compare and describe the occurrence and distribution patterns
of basketball - related injuries treated in emergency departments and the high school athletic training setting among adolescents and teens.
A
study published in the August 2009 journal Obstetrics and Gynecology found that expecting moms who quit in the
first trimester actually raise their odds
of delivering a healthy full - term, full - size baby to about the same as that
of a nonsmoker.
While donor human milk undergoes extensive screening and testing to ensure its safety, a
first -
of - its - kind
study by the Connecticut Human Milk Research Center at Connecticut Children's Medical Center,
published in the Journal
of Human Lactation (JHL), has found a serious lack
of standardized data among donor milk banks across North America.
Olsen & Clausen: The
first study listed, by Olsen and Clausen, was from 2012 and was
published in the Cochrane Database
of Systematic Reviews.
The
first study listed, «Outcomes
of planned home births with registered midwife versus planned hospital birth with midwife or physician» was
published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal in 2009.
Studies published in The Lancet earlier this year confirmed what we have long believed, that babies fed exclusively on breast milk for at least the
first 6 months have the best chance
of thriving through childhood and adolescence.
In a 2011
study published in Pediatric Research, the DHA and ARA - supplemented babies exhibited improved sustained attention, compared to those fed formula without DHA or ARA during the
first 12 months
of life.
In the
first study ever to combine maternal and pediatric health outcomes from breastfeeding in a single model, Harvard researcher Dr. Melissa Bartick and colleagues
published a new
study showing that most
of the impact from optimal breastfeeding the US in on maternal health.
A recent
study conducted by Dutch researchers and
published in the peer - reviewed BMJ found that the
first three months
of pregnancy is a crucial time for a baby's hearth health later in life.
When I
first encountered the Price et al.
study, I remembered a
study this same group
of researchers
published 10 years ago in the British Medical Journal demonstrating that controlled crying lessened the risk
of postpartum depression (Hiscock & Wake, 2002).
A
study published in November has shown that infants getting their
first round
of immunizations slept longer over the next 24 hours if they had their shots later in -LSB-...]
Venneman and colleagues5 recently demonstrated that infants who are formula fed are twice as likely to die
of SIDS than breastfed infants based on a case control
study of 333 SIDS cases compared to 998 aged matched controls in Germany, from 1998 - 2001, consistent with previously
published reports.35 While no
studies show that co-sleeping in the form
of bedsharing, specifically, is imperative for breastfeeding enhancement, many
studies have shown that in order to get more sleep and to ease caring for their infants the decision to breastfeed often leads mothers to adopt routine bedsharing for at least part
of the night36 - 40 even where they never intended to do so.41, 42 Indeed, nearly 50 %
of breastfeeding mothers in the United States and Great Britain adopt bedsharing for some part
of the night,38,43 - 45 and breastfeeding women are twice as likely to sleep with their babies in the
first month relative to mothers electing to bottle - feed.39
She co-authored the
first study of outcomes
of licensed midwife - attended births in Washington,
published in Birth in 1994.
Study: Lack of breastfeeding costs lives, billions of dollars April 5, 2010 If most new moms would breastfeed their babies for the first six months of life, it would save nearly 1,000 lives and billions of dollars each year, according to a new study published Monday in the journal Pediat
Study: Lack
of breastfeeding costs lives, billions
of dollars April 5, 2010 If most new moms would breastfeed their babies for the
first six months
of life, it would save nearly 1,000 lives and billions
of dollars each year, according to a new
study published Monday in the journal Pediat
study published Monday in the journal Pediatrics.
The
study, recently
published in the Journal
of Affective Disorders, is one
of the
first to evaluate the rate
of depression in mothers at the three onset time points: 24.9 percent
of participants developed depression pre-pregnancy, 36.7 percent developed it during pregnancy (prenatal) and 38.4 percent developed depression during the postpartum period.
(CNN)-- If most new moms would breastfeed their babies for the
first six months
of life, it would save nearly 1,000 lives and billions
of dollars each year, according to a new
study published Monday in the journal Pediatrics.
Douglas Carswell et al
published a report for the Centre for Policy
Studies in 2007 arguing for them on the
first of these grounds.
«There's now a parallel boom in research,» said Steingraber, who says the
first four months
of 2014 saw more
studies published than all
of 2011 and 2012 combined.