The push for the database stems
from a study published earlier this month in the Annals of Internal Medicine which found 91 % of the 2,848 patients who had previously overdosed were later prescribed opioids by their doctors.
Meanwhile, there was some good news a couple of weeks ago for Britain,
from a study published by the Economist Intelligence Unit.
The findings come
from a study published 5 November in Social Psychological and Personality Science that included 1.27 million teenagers and more than 50,000 adults.
The first hint of nicotine's curious benefits came
from a study published in 1966 by Harold Kahn, an epidemiologist at the National Institutes of Health.
Evidence
from a study published in the journal Applied Cognitive Science shows that people will believe a videotaped version of an event, even if it differs from the reality they lived through.
This is the finding
from a study published in the latest issue of Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health.
Results
from a study published online in the Journal of Pediatrics hold the potential to substantially improve clinical decision - making to determine when a premature newborn is ready for oral feeding.
The industry, however, has taken comfort
from a study published in Britain last year by the government's Health and Safety Executive (HSE).
Evidence
from a study published earlier this year from the Weisel lab suggests that platelets in people with these diseases are less effective at clot contraction, thereby contributing to clots being more obstructive.
Details
from the study published online today in the Association for Computing Machinery's digital library.
Environmentalists who are skeptical about genetically modified crops should think again, judging
from a study published last June.
We learned just recently,
from a study published online in Menopause in July, that women with HIV do face a bigger menopause challenge than uninfected women because they have worse menopause symptoms.
Results
from a study published in Science Translational Medicine show that the publicly available cell line U87MG does not originate from the cell line it is claimed to do.
The data
from the study published in the US journal Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise shows that a high fitness level offers particularly effective protection for professionals who experience a high degree of stress in the workplace.
In the presentation, Dr. Gudkov discusses findings
from a study published earlier this month in the journal Aging, which identified a subset of immune cells, which the authors called senescence - associated macrophages (SAMs).
This is the big finding
from a study published in the journal Diabetes & Metabolic Syndrome: Clinical research & Reviews.
These results have been concluded
from a study published by the British Journal of Nutrition in the year 2013.
This is a figure
from a study published in the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine in 2009, from researchers at Penn State (no wisecracks please).
Here's a line
from a study published by the NIH, comparing Low CARB diets (LCD) with Low FAT diets (LFD): Compared to the LFD, the LCD had significantly larger decreases in cravings for carbohydrates / starches and preferences for high - carbohydrate and high - sugar foods.
Evidence for the first point comes to
us from a study published in 2001 by researchers from Skidmore College.
Check out this info
from a study published in the Journal of Periodontology.
The strongest evidence that Head Start elicits lasting effects comes
from studies published in 1995 and 2000 by Janet Currie and her colleagues at UCLA.
This comes
from a study published in a journal called Animal Cognition and it involved Labrador retrievers and toys.
The researcher Karen Overall Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, analyzed all dog bite statistics
from studies published between 1950 and 2000 worldwide.
I can not begin to imagin the uproar that would happen if author refused to hand over data
from a study they published.
In this map
from the study published in Science Advances, regions shown in green and blue will likely get wetter as the planet warms, and regions show in brown shades will get drier.
But the latest revelations
from a study published in Weed Science
According to numbers calculated
from a study published by the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, a single opossum can consume between 5,500 and 6,000 ticks per week.
Despite doubts all round about whether this measure will, if passed, have the effect hoped for, Scotland might take heart
from a study published last month which, the authors say, is «the first empirical evaluation of the impact of minimum pricing as a public health measure designed to limit consumption.»
There will be nearly 1.3 million deaths from cancer in Europe in 2011, according to predictions
from a study published in the cancer journal, Annals of Oncology.
To maximize our ability to use a common framework for variable definition, we also requested original data
from all studies published prior to 2008 that met inclusion criteria.
Not exact matches
Researchers at the University of Basel in Switzerland recently
published findings
from a series of
studies in which 480 people were shown portraits of faces manipulated to appear warm or cold and competent or incompetent.
GOOGLE»S AI HELPS TO PREDICT CARDIOVASCULAR CONDITIONS BY ANALYZING EYE SCANS: Google and Verily — Google - parent Alphabet's life sciences unit — are exploring new ways that artificial intelligence (AI) can be used to identify patients» risk of suffering
from a cardiovascular event, such as a heart attack or stroke, according to a newly
published study by the two Alphabet subsidiaries.
Low - income Americans saw no improvements in blood pressure, their risk of heart disease, or a drop in the share of people who smoke between 2011 and 2014 compared with the period running
from 1999 to 2004, according to a
study published in the journal JAMA Cardiology.
The
study,
published by the Environmental Defense Fund's (EDF) Climate Corps program, says that solar and wind jobs have grown at rates of about 20 % annually in recent years, and sustainability now collectively represents four to four and a half million jobs in the U.S., up
from 3.4 million in 2011.
Last week, a
study published by the Kauffman Foundation using census data
from the past 50 years, revealed some eye - opening statistics about the number of immigrant - led companies in America.
The
study,
published today in the journal Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open, found most of the fictional patients (71 %) were transferred
from emergency directly to the operating theatre.
A
study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine found that the more time subjects spent sitting during the day, the greater their chances of dying
from all causes, including cancer and heart disease.
That's one conclusion you can draw
from a new research
study, titled «Firming up Inequality,»
published this week by the National Bureau of Economic Research.
The Facebook participants in the
study, which was
published in the journal Social Psychological and Personality Science, were recruited
from across the United States.
Just before the holiday season, Stone Temple Consulting's Eric Enge (whom I know
from the digital - marketing - conference speaking circuit)
published a mammoth blog post, «Twitter Engagement Unmasked: A
Study of More than 4M Tweets.»
As well, several consumer - confidence
studies published in March reported improved confidence numbers — about 25 % of Canadians believe they will be better off financially a year
from now.
A group of psychologists
from Yale and other universities tested this in 2009 with a
study published in «Psychological Science».
MDG Advertising drew
from a
study originally
published by Yahoo! and Ipsos to find out which platform mobile users prefer.
A recent
study published in the American Sociological Review clearly showed that, in a white collar environment, allowing workers some control over their own schedules, including being able to work
from home, had a positive effect on employees» work - family balance without sacrificing productivity.
In the
study «Dominant CEO, Deviant Strategy and Extreme Performance: The Moderating Role of a Powerful Board,» to be
published next year in the Journal of Management
Studies, Tang and co-authors Mary Crossan and Glenn Rowe of the Ivey School of Business examined the experience
from 1997 to 2003 of 51 publicly traded computer firms.
In a
study published in The European Journal of Social Psychology, students who wrote out self - advice using «you» not only completed more problems but said they would be happier to work on more in the future compared with students who used «I.» The researchers speculated this is because second - person self - talk may trigger memories of receiving support and encouragement
from parents and teachers in childhood.
In a
study recently
published in Harvard Business Review, researchers analyzed three decades of data
from 829 U.S. firms and found that compulsory diversity training actually reduced managerial diversity.
That's one of the takeaways
from new research on drone laws
published Tuesday by research group The Center for the
Study of the Drone at Bard College.
In 2015, researchers
from Harvard and the Boston Attention and Learning Laboratory
published a joint
study that found people in their mid-40s — specifically, age 43 — tended to do the best on tests of concentration.