Sentences with phrase «long study published»

In a 2015 double - blind, placebo - controlled, six month - long study published in Cancer Prevention Research, 60 mgs of sulforaphane a day from broccoli sprouts slowed the doubling rate of PSA by an amazing 86 percent.
According to one four - year - long study published on World's Healthiest Foods that tracked over 4,000 male health professionals in America, men who ate diets higher in potassium - rich foods had a substantially reduced risk of stroke.
A 20 - year long study published this week in Science suggests theoretical predictions have been off the mark.

Not exact matches

And now there's another reason to grab your morning cup of coffee: A recent study published in the journal Nature Neuroscience suggests that caffeine may also boost our long - term memory.
Earlier this year, researchers published an academic study examining the long - term stock performance of companies that had won the Corporate Health Achievement Award, an annual prize that the American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine has bestowed since 1996.
«A study published last year in Experimental Brain Research appeared to provide some partial scientific support for this idea,» notes BPS, explaining that brain scans of experienced long - distance runners revealed running really does seem to reduce activity in certain key brain areas.
According to an article published in Psychology Today, «Research suggests that, when faced with long tasks (such as studying before a final exam or doing your taxes), it is best to impose brief breaks on yourself.
A new study published by the Clarkson Centre for Board Effectiveness found that publicly listed family businesses in Canada, U.S. and UK survive longer, have more stability in the CEO position and have lower market volatility than their non-controlled counterparts.
A 2005 study by Gregory S. Paul published in the Journal of Religion and Society stated that, «In general, higher rates of belief in and worship of a creator correlate with higher rates of homicide, juvenile and early adult mortality, STD infection rates, teen pregnancy, and abortion in the prosperous democracies,» and «In all secular developing democracies, a centuries long - term trend has seen homicide rates drop to historical lows» with the exceptions being the United States (with a high religiosity level) and «theistic» Portugal.
Lest common sense fail to convince readers that surgery is not a treatment for a mental disorder, a Swedish study published in 2011 found that over the long term, 324 people who had undergone sex - reassignment surgery demonstrated an alarmingly high suicide rate and experienced considerably higher numbers of severe psychiatric problems than were present in the general population.
The four - year - long study, led by University College London, and recently published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal,...
Here is the sheer miracle of it: a literature that long antedated our glorious gains in science and the immense scope of modern knowledge, which moves in the quiet atmosphere of the ancient countryside, with camels and flocks and roadside wells and the joyous shout of the peasant at vintage or in harvest — this literature, after all that has intervened, is still our great literature, published abroad as no other in the total of man's writing, translated into the world's great languages and many minor ones, and cherished and loved and studied so earnestly as to set it in a class apart.
Not only are graduate theological schools producing more theses and dissertations on Wesleyan subjects, but Methodist periodicals (Quarterly Review, Methodist History, Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society) are increasingly printing their articles, and new publishing enterprises are emerging to take up their longer monographic works (among these are Zondervan's Francis Asbury Press imprint, Abingdon's Kingswood Books imprint, and Asbury Theological Seminary's new series in Pietist and Wesleyan Studies) These scholars are quite likely to be found in the Wesley Studies Working Group of the American Academy of Religion.
Robert W. Long, ed., Renewing the Congregation (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1966); M. Edward Clark, William L. Malcomson, and Warren Lane Molton, The Church Creative (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1967); Waldron Howard, Nine Roads to Renewal (Waco, Tex.: Word Books, 1967); Wallace E. Fisher, Preface to Parish Renewal: Study Guide for Laymen (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1968); Gerald H. Slusser, The Local Church in Transition (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1966); Joan Thatcher, The Church Responds (Valley Forge, Pa.: Judson Press, 1970); William R. Nelson and William F. Lincoln, Journey Toward Renewal: New Routes for Old Churches (Valley Forge, Pa.: Judson Press, 1971); Anthony Wesson, Experiments in Renewal (London: Epworth Press, 1971).
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.
When the Anglican patristic scholar and Church historian Trevor Jalland concluded his Bampton Lectures at Oxford in 1942 (published in 1944 as The Church and the Papacy: A Historical Study), he spoke of the Roman Church as having «in its long and remarkable history a supernatural grandeur which no mere secular institution has ever attained in equal measure,» and went on to refer to «its strange, almost mystical, faithfulness to type, its marked degree of changelessness, its steadfast clinging to tradition and to precedent.»
The work, conducted by Professor Rosalba Lanciotti and her research team at the University of Bologna's Department of Agricultural and Food Sciences and published in Frontiers in Microbiology, follows a research study published in late June that showed corrugated containers keep fruit and vegetables fresh up to three days longer than RPCs.
A Drink Might Boost Cognition and Creativity, and Potentially Fight Off the Flu A study published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease finds evidence that adults who drink moderately and regularly have a higher chance of not only living longer, but doing so without developing dementia or other cognitive impairment...
Vegetarian diets can be the way to living a longer and healthier life, according to a study published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine.
In response to «Diet Soda Intake Is Associated with Long - Term Increases in Waist Circumference in a Biethnic Cohort of Older Adults: The San Antonio Longitudinal Study of Aging,» a study published online today ahead of print in the Journal of The American Geriatrics Society, the American Beverage Association issued the following stateStudy of Aging,» a study published online today ahead of print in the Journal of The American Geriatrics Society, the American Beverage Association issued the following statestudy published online today ahead of print in the Journal of The American Geriatrics Society, the American Beverage Association issued the following statement:
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.
dIn 1929, sociologists Robert and Helen Lynd published Middletown: A Study in Modern American Culture, an enduring work that was designed to study your average small American city over a long peStudy in Modern American Culture, an enduring work that was designed to study your average small American city over a long pestudy your average small American city over a long period.
Although the reasons behind this make sense, and the lack of proper maternity leave and breastfeeding breaks is responsible, studies published in the U.S. National Library of Medicine show that moms who work full time don't nurse as long as mothers who work outside the home part - time or are not employed at all.
According to a study published by Lund University Publications, the longer a woman breastfeeds, the less likely she is to develop breast cancer.
A study published by Kaiser Permanente in 2009 found that the longer a mother breastfeeds her child, the more benefits to her health are accrued.
According to a study published in the journal Sleep, when babies and toddlers had a set bedtime routine — including a bath, a massage, and hearing their mom and / or dad sing a lullaby — they fell asleep faster, slept better, and enjoyed a longer stretch of uninterrupted sleep than children who didn't.
Please look at research by Dettwyler, who has published studies on breast - feeding, and found that most children around the world are breast - fed for three to five years or longer.
Mothers can continue to experience excessive sleepiness as long as 18 weeks postpartum, according to an Australian study published on PLOSone.
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.
A study published in Pediatrics in March 2017 reports that there are no long - term cognitive benefits of breastfeeding.
While there is certainly a difference in physical safety between checking on a crying baby and shutting the door overnight, there are no «published studies» telling us how long it is «safe» to leave a baby to cry.
LONDON, England (CNN)-- Parents who choose a stroller that seats their baby facing away from them could risk long - term development problems in their children, according to a study published Friday.
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.
The Academy of Pediatrics published a study in 2002 concluding that swaddled baby's sleep more peacefully by preventing spontaneous arousals (reflex movements) and that baby's stay in REM sleep longer than non-swaddled baby's.
According to statistics kept by the Centers for Disease Control, in 2007, girls» soccer players reported 29,167 concussions, second only to football players.And, a study published in the Jan. 2011 edition of theJournal of Athletic Training said female athletes experience more physical long - term symptoms than male athletes.
According to WebMD, this long - disputed theory that breastfeeding leads to weight loss is a pretty solid argument, citing a Danish study published by the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition that shows higher rates of breastfeeding correlating with a greater likelihood of weight loss by six months postpartum.
Two studies published in 2011, from the same research team, noted that people with supposedly treatment - resistant major depressive disorder, who've been on high doses of antidepressants for a long time, often feel better after weaning off of the medication.
In a new study of over 7,000 older Chinese women published online today in the journal Rheumatology, breastfeeding — especially for a longer duration — is shown to be associated with a lower risk of rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
Medical studies published on the medical website Pediatrics state that keeping a new - born baby in an upright position for long periods of time lowers the amount of oxygen in its blood.
The study, published last month by The Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology, has intensified the years - long debate about whether or how the federal government should regulate perchlorate in the nation's drinking water.
In a British study published in the April 2008 issue of «Acta Pediatrica,» breast - fed babies lost an average of 6.4 percent of body weight before starting to regain weight; 54 percent took longer than eight days to regain their birth weight.
«According to the US Food and Drug Administration, the scientific evidence is «mixed» over the benefits of adding ARA and DHA to baby formula, with no currently available published studies on the long - term impact.
According to Business Wire, the study, published in this month's International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, reports that athletes who drank chocolate milk after intense exercise were able to work out longer and with more power during a second workout compared with athletes who drank commercial sports beverages...
A comprehensive review of all the scientific studies on swaddling published in 2007 concluded that in general swaddled babies arouse less and sleep longer.
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-...]
Women who breast feed for longer have less chance of getting rheumatoid arthritis, a Malmo University study published online ahead of print in the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases suggested (See Women Who Breast Feed for More than a Year Halve Their Risk of Rheumatoid Arthritis).
After 14 years of intense private study, interrupted by long strolls along the Scottish coastline, Smith published the book for which is he known today, An inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations.
Also of note, this new peer - reviewed paper was published not long after another study found that methane is also an issue even where no natural gas development is occurring in northeastern Pennsylvania.
Published yesterday, the long - awaited study called for US troops to switch from a combat role to that of trainers of Iraqi forces by early 2008.
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