The pharmaceutical measures were not associated with the other
health outcomes studied.
A common retort by the industry is that rates of
the health outcome studied - whether it's asthma or preterm birth - are lower in fracking areas than in areas without fracking, or that the rate of the outcome is decreasing over time.
Not exact matches
And we repeated our
studies with other
health outcomes we would not expect to be affected by the fracking industry.
Additionally, the
study recommended the military pre-screen all troops prior to their deployment to Guantanamo to identify pre-existing behavioral
health conditions in order to prevent «those at increased risk for negative behavioral
health outcomes from being assigned» to the base.
The Harvard
study joins a growing collection of investigations in the academic literature that attempt to determine whether a physician's gender plays a role in
health outcomes.
As Gallup notes, previous research has tied well - being scores to
health outcomes including life expectancy and a lower risk of obesity, while some
studies suggest that taking time off positively impacts the brain and heart.
The
studies are amazing, I think, in terms of the extent to which loneliness has negative
health outcomes.
Nutritionist Marion Nestle, whose voice we always listen for on these matters, warns that this
study still does not prove that eating chocolate causes better
health outcomes, only that it's been associated with them.
Moreover, the
study only measured dietary behaviors at the very beginning of the
study, yet makes conclusions about
health outcomes over 12 years.»
«While we can't make a direct link between higher caffeine consumption and lower incidence of cognitive impairment and dementia, with further
study, we can better quantify its relationship with cognitive
health outcomes.
In British Columbia, in a longitudinal
study which partly controlled for fathers» mental
health outcomes, multivariate analysis found adverse employment experiences among fathers strongly associated with their sons» attempted / completed suicide later, and with elevated odds for daughters» attempted suicide (Ostry et al, 2006).
I would suggest you read http://www.ahrq.gov/Clinic/tp/brfouttp.htm"rel = «nofollow» > Breastfeeding and Maternal and Infant
Health Outcomes in Developed Countries, which is a metaanalysis of a large number of
studies involving breastfeeding and formula feeding in developed countries.
However, a recent
study that used a more sophisticated analysis found that it was not breastfeeding, but socioeconomic conditions, that contributed to differences in
health outcomes.
The
study, which was published online in the October, 2016 issue of the Journal of Consumer Psychology, found that authoritative parenting led to the best
health and development
outcomes for kids, according to co-author Les Carlson, PhD, professor of marketing at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln.
These correlational
studies show a relationship between breastfeeding and positive
health outcomes.
Current research includes: co-leading organisational case
studies in Birthplace in England, a national
study of birth
outcomes in home, midwife led, and obstetric led units; investigating the relationship between measures of safety climate and
health care quality in A and E and intrapartum care; and conducting nested process evaluations of two trials of obesity in pregnancy behavioural interventions.
Dr. Fisher believes that dispassionate, rigorous
study of birth across all settings is more important than ever given disparities in women's access to trained and licensed care providers, current and future physician workforce issues, rising costs of
health care, and unacceptably high rates of adverse
outcomes for mothers and infants in the U.S. compared to other industrialized countries.
Ongoing projects include
studies of gene - environment interactions and adverse pregnancy
outcomes, as well as informed medical decision making demonstration projects in Medicaid maternity populations and within HealthWise, the nation's largest source of
health information materials distributed through healthcare networks.
But, these
studies are all correlational, so it could be that parents who breastfeed are somehow different from parents who don't breastfeed in systematic ways that lead to positive
health outcomes.
Nine
studies were included in the meta - analysis of child
health outcome of births attended by midwives in homes or in hospitals.
Tough refers the Adverse Childhood Experiences
Study, a powerful epidemiologic study showing the link between adverse early experiences and a wide range of negative health outc
Study, a powerful epidemiologic
study showing the link between adverse early experiences and a wide range of negative health outc
study showing the link between adverse early experiences and a wide range of negative
health outcomes.
Forty - three primary
studies on infant
health outcomes, 43 primary
studies on maternal
health outcomes, and 29 systematic reviews or meta - analyses that covered approximately 400 individual
studies were included in this review.
Personally, I find it rather ironic that you're lecturing the blog author on the rigor of language, when, faced with the need to support the claims made by a documentary that has faced absolutely no real standards of intellectual rigor or merit (the kind of evidence you apparently find convincing), you have so far managed to produce a
study with a sample size too small to conclude anything, a review paper that basically summarized well known connections between vaginal and amniotic flora and poor
outcomes in labor and birth before attempting to rescue what would have been just another OB review article with a few attention grabbing sentences about long term
health implications, and a review article published in a trash journal.
Improving the behavior of the parent or caregiver of children in high - risk situations actually changes their physical chemistry, according to the
studies Tough cites, leading to fewer behavior problems and greater success in school, as well as measurably better
health outcomes as years pass.
Our use of observational data reflects the existing literature on lactation and maternal
health; apart from a single randomized trial examining the effect of exclusive lactation duration on maternal weight loss, 48 there are no published
studies of maternal
health outcomes in randomized trials of breastfeeding.
«Women who expect it's going to be hard and are employed nevertheless have better mental
health outcomes,» said the
study's author, Katrina Leupp, a University of Washington sociology graduate student.
Of particular importance is the fact that the
study sample was sufficiently large for most
health outcomes to rule out even modest increases in risk.
The extent to which midwifery is integrated into a
health care system probably explains some of the differences in practice and
outcomes reported in U.S. and European
studies.
Of note, our models may underestimate the true maternal costs of suboptimal breastfeeding; we modeled the effects of lactation on only five maternal
health conditions despite data linking lactation with other maternal
health outcomes.46 In addition, women in our model could not develop type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension, or MI before age 35 years, although these conditions are becoming increasingly prevalent among young adults.47 Although some
studies have found an association between lactation and rates of postmenopausal diabetes22, 23 and cardiovascular disease, 10 we conservatively limited the duration of lactation's effect on both diabetes and MI.
Another strength is that our results provide a more complete assessment of socioeconomic inequalities in breastfeeding rates, by estimating both relative and absolute inequalities, than common practice in inequality assessments.23 Finally, our
study analysed effects of the intervention not only on an immediate, direct
outcome (breastfeeding) but also on a long - term consequence of breastfeeding (child cognitive ability) that is associated with important
health and behavioural
outcomes in later life.27
Our
study illustrates that a randomized intervention trial with good socioeconomic information can help assess interventions designed to improve population
health not only by examining the intervention effects on primary
outcomes but also by evaluating the intervention's impact on socioeconomic inequalities.
For the purposes of this economic evaluation, the forms were initially used in a related
study funded by the National Institute of
Health Research (NIHR) research for patient benefit programme «assessing the impact of a new birth centre on choice and
outcome of maternity care in an inner city area,» which will be reported in full elsewhere, comparing the costs of care in a free standing midwifery unit with care in an obstetric unit in the same trust.16 The data collected included details of staffing levels, treatments, surgeries, diagnostic imaging tests, scans, drugs, and other resource inputs associated with each stage of the pathway through intrapartum and after birth care.
Many
studies looking at
health outcomes have included infants with any breastfeeding, for example, a few days or weeks, in the same category with infants breastfeeding exclusively for six months, thus diluting the measurable impact.
As part of the pregnancy
outcome study, information regarding the maternal socioeconomic status,
health history, pregnancy exposures, and pregnancy complications was collected before the known pregnancy
outcome.
Several reviews have concluded that home visiting can be an effective strategy to improve the
health and developmental
outcomes of children from socially disadvantaged families.2 - 4 However, effects have not been found consistently and some
studies have reported no impact.
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.
The
study, published in the Journal of Midwifery & Women's
Health on Thursday, looked at the home birth
outcomes for roughly 17,000 women as recorded in the Midwives Alliance of North America data collection system between 2004 and 2009.
Group prenatal care can substantially improve
health outcomes for both mothers and their infants, a new study led by the Yale School of Public Health has
health outcomes for both mothers and their infants, a new
study led by the Yale School of Public
Health has
Health has found.
While some
studies have looked at
outcomes much later in life, this new
study is the first to assess how breastfeeding affects markers of heart
health in younger and middle - aged women, about a decade after having children.
The
study's senior author, Associate Professor Natasha Nassar from the University of Sydney Menzies Centre for
Health Policy said: «While the association between being born earlier — lower gestational age — and poorer developmental
outcomes is well established, our results revealed that poor development is further exacerbated in the case of planned birth, where a considered decision made to deliver an infant determines gestational age.
The
study drew data from the Pregnancy
Outcomes and Community
Health (POUCH) and POUCHmoms
studies, which were funded by the National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
In today's peer - reviewed Journal of Midwifery & Women's
Health (JMWH), a landmark
study confirms that among low - risk women, planned home births result in low rates of interventions without an increase in adverse
outcomes for mothers and babies.
Next, Alexander and Kjerulff plan to
study whether relationship and social - support factors influence child
health outcomes associated with colic, such as gastrointestinal problems or food allergies, as children age.
Improvements in either exclusive breastfeeding rates or in the percentage of feedings derived from breast milk were observed in 2 PC
studies, along with improvements in
health outcomes.
In combination, these
studies indicate that PC can improve breastfeeding initiation, duration, exclusivity, and select infant
health outcomes.
In this
study, we ascertained
outcomes of all planned home births attended by registered midwives in an entire
health region with a single - payer universal
health care system.
These findings are all consistent with the growing body of literature on the impact of adverse childhood experiences on neurological, cognitive, emotional and social development, as well as physical
health.38 Although some
studies have found no relation between physical punishment and negative
outcomes, 35 and others have found the relation to be moderated by other factors, 12 no
study has found physical punishment to have a long - term positive effect, and most
studies have found negative effects.17
One research summary found that after reviewing all available
studies regarding the
outcomes of using IBCLCs, mothers who had higher breastfeeding initiation rates, a longer duration of exclusive breastfeeding, a longer duration of any breastfeeding, higher breastfeeding rates for all infant age groups, AND better maternal and infant
health outcomes as compared to those who didn't seek out IBCLC support (5).
The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Canada, conducted an extensive 20 - year
study of pregnant women, their experiences with morning sickness and the
health outcomes for their babies.
In addition to birthweight, other perinatal
outcomes examined in previous
studies include the timing and quantity of prenatal care,
health - care costs at and around birth, and infant and neonatal mortality.