And, numerous
leading medical studies back up this claim.
Not exact matches
«Our survey results clearly show that when it comes to cardiovascular disease, marital status really does matter,» said Dr. Carlos Alviar, who
led the
study at New York University's Langone
Medical Center.
A wide - ranging new
study led by NewYork - Presbyterian / Weill Cornell
Medical Center suggests a protective correlation between counties in states with strict gun laws and ones that border them but may have more permissive policies.
Although gun violence is one of the
leading causes of death in America, it is also one of the most poorly researched, according to a January 2017
study published in the Journal of the American
Medical Association.
This has
led to several new ventures, including launching a new post-conception app and gathering anonymized user information for use in
studies for the
medical community.
«Over the past 15 years,
led by California, 15 states plus the District of Columbia have adopted laws permitting some form of marijuana consumption or distribution for
medical use,» notes the See Change Strategy
study.
For example, books reviewed in the first months of 1910 included Herbert Croly's The Promise of American Life; Education in the Far East, by Charles F. Thwing; a philosophical
study titled Religion and the Modern Mind, by Frank Carleton Doan; Jane Addams's The Spirit of Youth and the City Streets; The Immigrant Tide, by Edward Steiner;
Medical Inspectors of Schools (a Russel Sage Foundation
study); A. Modern City (a scientific
study of that phenomenon), by William Kirk; The
Leading Facts of American History, by D. H. Montgomery; and Jack London's collection of short stories, Lost Face.
Virginia Commonwealth teaches communication design, fashion design and interior design; Carnegie Mellon University Qatar, business and computer science; Texas A & M University at Qatar, chemical, electrical, mechanical and petroleum engineering; Weill Cornell
Medical College in Qatar, premedical and medical studies leading to the M.D.
Medical College in Qatar, premedical and
medical studies leading to the M.D.
medical studies leading to the M.D. degree.
The Australian Beverages Council today said a new
study published in
leading medical journal Obesity validates what we have long known; when used consistently, low - and no - kilojoule or «diet» beverages can assist people to manage and lose weight.
Media Release 28 May 2014 New
study affirms diet beverages play positive role in weight loss The Australian Beverages Council today said a new
study published in
leading medical journal Obesity validates what we have long known; when used consistently, low - and no - kilojoule or «diet» beverages can assist people to manage and lose weight.
They could be explained, said
lead author, John O'Kane, MD, of the University of Washington Sports Medicine Clinic, by differences in methodology (prospective data collection with weekly interviews in the current
study versus data reported by athletic trainers in the other
studies), and under - reporting in previous
studies that captured concussions only in athletes seeking
medical attention.
That the
study found concussion rates for ice hockey (10 per 100,000) and football (8 per 100,000) among younger athletes (7 - to 11 - year - olds) much higher than the overall concussion rate (1 per 100,000), were «not surprising» to
lead author, Lisa L. Bakhos, M.D., a Pediatric Emergency Medicine Attending at Jersey Shore University
Medical Center in Neptune, New Jersey.
In 2007, a landmark British
study published in The Lancet
medical journal found that artificial food colors and preservatives increase hyperactivity in children,
leading the European Union to require warning labels on foods containing any of six specific food colors.
A new
study published in the British
Medical Journal serves to debunk your doctor's advice that walking during labor
leads to faster outcomes.
The slower times
led researchers to believe that the 5 - second «threshold may be a useful cutoff for exploration in future
studies as a criterion for having an athlete stop play pending
medical evaluation for concussion.»
The Lancet
study authors comment, «The fact that the reproductive cycle includes breastfeeding and pregnancy has been largely neglected by
medical practice,
leading to the assumption that breastmilk can be replaced with artificial products without detrimental consequences.»
After residency, Dr. Chandra spent 5 years
studying with, and working with, Dr. William Lee Cowden, MD a
leading expert in the treatment of chronic Lyme disease and other complex
medical conditions.
In a
study published in the Canadian
Medical Association Journal, researchers
led by Anita Kozyrskyj found that babies born by C - section harbored a different set of microbes in their digestive tracts than those born vaginally, and that infants who were breast - fed had a different recipe of bacteria in their guts than those who were given formula.
The journey through the arts ultimately
led back to her first love of medicine, and she completed her premedical
studies at Columbia University, followed by an MD degree from the Weill Cornell
Medical College.
«Our results showed that 15 - to 19 - year - olds accounted for 56.7 percent of the Ulnar Collateral Ligament Reconstruction (UCLR) or Tommy John surgeries performed in the U.S. between 2007 - 2011,» said Dr. Brandon Erickson of the Rush University
Medical Center in Chicago, Ill., and the
lead author of the
study.
A recent
study led by Columbia University
Medical Center found that almost half of young baseball players have been encouraged to keep playing despite experiencing arm pain.
Views are particularly polarised in the United States, with interventions and costs of hospital births escalating and midwives involved with home births being denied the ability to be
lead professionals in hospital, with admitting and discharge privileges.5 Although several Canadian
medical societies6 7 and the American Public Health Association8 have adopted policies promoting or acknowledging the viability of home births, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists continues to oppose it.9
Studies on home birth have been criticised if they have been too small to accurately assess perinatal mortality, unable to distinguish planned from unplanned home births accurately, or retrospective with the potential of bias from selective reporting.
«For genetic abnormalities, it's not just a woman's problem anymore,» says Harry Fisch, a professor of urology at Weill Cornell
Medical College and the
study's
lead author.
Significantly, the data showed that reducing the number of head hits in practice did not, as a later
study by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh
Medical Center [4] predicted,
lead to higher force impacts during games.
As part of a Dutch prospective cohort
study (2007 — 2011), we compared
medical indications during pregnancy and birth outcomes of 576 women who initially preferred a home birth (n = 226), a midwife -
led hospital birth (n = 168) or an obstetrician -
led hospital birth (n = 182).
A 2013
study by Cheryl Watson at The University of Texas
Medical Branch at Galveston found that even picomolar concentrations (less than one part per trillion) of BPS can disrupt a cell's normal functioning, which could potentially
lead to metabolic disorders such as diabetes and obesity, asthma, birth defects or even cancer.
They are also hoping ongoing
medical studies showing the benefits of the Snoo will
lead to government and insurance company approval of the Snoo as a
medical device.
A
study by the Department of Family Medicine at Georgetown University
Medical Center, Washington D.C. found that outside sources, such as antibiotics, can kill both bad and good bacteria and
lead to abdominal distress.
Professor Jane Norman at the
Medical Research Council's Centre for Maternal and Fetal Health in Edinburgh is
leading the AFFIRM
study.
Dr. Thomas Trojian of Drexel University College of Medicine was
lead author of a new
study that showed a sharp increase in the number of youth athlete receiving
medical treatment for sports - related concussions after CT concussion laws were passed in 2010.
Encourage investigators and funding agencies to pursue
studies that further delineate the scientific understandings of lactation and breastfeeding that
lead to improved clinical practice in this
medical field.216
The
study was
led by research engineer Julie Mansfield, along with a team of researchers at The Ohio State University Wexner
Medical Center, according to a press release sent to Romper.
Increasingly better observational
studies suggest that planned hospital birth is not any safer than planned home birth assisted by an experienced midwife with collaborative
medical back up, but may
lead to more interventions and more complications.
The
study,
led by Robin L. Haynes, Ph.D., of Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard
Medical School, appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Increased awareness of the nutritional and
medical benefits of breastfeeding, including reduced incidence of infection and allergic reaction, 1 — 9 has
led to its endorsement by
medical and professional groups10 — 12 and to substantial increases in the number of women choosing to breastfeed.13, 14 A
study of 300 British children showed that children who consumed breast milk in the early weeks of life also had significantly higher IQ scores at 7.5 to 8 years on an abbreviated version of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) than those who were not breastfed.15 The sample was made up of preterm infants fed breast milk or formula by tube.
If you read the part you quoted in context, you will see that it is a call for more
studies in light of the fact that «Increasingly better observational
studies suggest that planned hospital birth is not any safer than planned home birth assisted by an experienced midwife with collaborative
medical back up, but may
lead to more interventions and more complications.»
Research
led by Barry M. Lester, PhD, director of the Brown Center for the
Study of Children at Risk at Women & Infants Hospital of Rhode Island and professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at The Warren Alpert
Medical School of Brown University, found the single greatest contributor to long - term neurobehavioral development in preterm infants is maternal involvement — and that a single - family room NICU allows for the greatest and most immediate opportunities for maternal involvement.
Eight
studies compared a midwife -
led continuity model of care to a shared model of care (Begley 2011; Biro 2000; Flint 1989; Hicks 2003; Homer 2001; Kenny 1994; North Stafford 2000; Rowley 1995), three
studies compared a midwife -
led continuity model of care to
medical -
led models of care (Harvey 1996; MacVicar 1993; Turnbull 1996) and two
studies compared midwife -
led continuity of care with various options of standard care including midwife -
led (with varying levels of continuity),
medical -
led and shared care (McLachlan 2012; Waldenstrom 2001).
However, there is a lack of consistency in estimating maternity care cost among the available
studies, and there seems to be a trend towards a cost - saving effect of midwife -
led continuity of care in comparison with
medical -
led care.
«Breast milk contains certain things that might be protective later on in life and might actually program an infant's metabolism at a very early stage,» said Dr. Nisha Parikh,
lead investigator of the
study and cardiovascular fellow at the Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center in Boston.
One
study suggests a higher cost, and one
study no differences in cost of postnatal care when midwife -
led continuity of care is compared with
medical -
led maternity care.
The lobbying group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, or PhRMA, commissioned a
study that found the tax would actually
lead to higher insurance and
medical costs for New Yorkers.
Findings from a
study into Crohn's disease,
led by William G. Kerr, Ph.D., of SUNY Upstate
Medical University, and his collaborators at the Erasmus
Medical Center in the Netherlands, provide the first evidence that patients with debilitating inflammatory bowel disease lack sufficient quantities of a protein that comes from the SHIP1 gene.
«Certainly,
medical school, residency, Ph.D. training, all those kinds of advanced degrees are set up with a lot of expectations, and by and large the people that are doing them are driven,» says Deborah Goebert, a psychiatrist at the University of Hawaii, Manoa, and
lead investigator of the
study.
«Previous
studies have linked intake of high fructose corn syrup sweetened beverages with asthma in school children, but there is little information about when during early development exposure to fructose might influence later health,» said Sheryl L. Rifas - Shiman, MPH, a
study lead author and senior research associate at Harvard
Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute.
«It's sort of like you are standing on a diving board as a
medical student and you are right at the end and you are doing okay, but then something happens in your personal life and you just tip over,» says Liselotte Dyrbye, an internist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and
lead investigator of the
study, which appeared in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
«Virtual house calls for chronic diseases like Parkinson's are not only as effective as in - person care but broader adoption of this technology has the potential to expand access to patient - centered care,» said Ray Dorsey, M.D., the David M. Levy Professor of Neurology at the University of Rochester
Medical Center (URMC) and
lead author of the
study.
In collaboration with a team from Harvard -
Medical School, researchers
led by Pedro Simas (iMM) and Kenneth Kaye (Harvard)
studied a protein of the Kaposi virus vital for maintaining infection.
An international
study led by scientists from Inserm and Paris Diderot University (France), the University of Chicago (USA), the National Heart and Lung Institute (UK) and the University of Colorado Anschutz
Medical Campus (USA) together with researchers of the Trans - National Asthma Genetics Consortium (TAGC) has discovered five new regions of the genome that increase the risk of asthma.
«Based on our data, CABG is still the preferred option for multivessel disease,» said Seung - Jung Park, M.D., a cardiologist at Asan
Medical Center in Seoul, South Korea, and the
study's
lead author.