Sentences with phrase «lower early mortality»

«Hormone replacement therapy associated with lower early mortality

Not exact matches

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.
Most studies of homebirth in other countries have found no statistically significant differences in perinatal outcomes between home and hospital births for women at low risk of complications.36, 37,39 However, a recent study in the United States showed poorer neonatal outcomes for births occurring at home or in birth centres.40 A meta - analysis in the same year demonstrated higher perinatal mortality associated with homebirth41 but has been strongly criticised on methodological grounds.5, 42 The Birthplace in England study, 43 the largest prospective cohort study on place of birth for women at low risk of complications, analysed a composite outcome, which included stillbirth and early neonatal death among other serious morbidity.
Here are the mortality rates (excluding lethal anomalies) for babies born to low risk women that were confirmed to be alive at the start of labor but die either during birth (intrapartum) or in the first week of life (early neonatal):
An UpToDate review on «Planned home birth» (Declercq and Stotland, 2015) stated that «Large cohort studies using intent - to - treat analysis of midwife - attended, planned, out - of - hospital birth of low - risk women in developed countries have reported reduced rates of cesarean birth, perineal lacerations, and medical interventions, and similar rates of maternal and early perinatal morbidity and mortality compared to planned hospital birth.
Chronic low - grade inflammation is also associated with greater risk for several age - related diseases, including cardiovascular disorders, diabetes, certain cancers, autoimmune diseases, frailty, dementia and early mortality.
Data for the years 1932 - 1934 show that the odds for diabetes were highest and the birth counts lowest in early 1934, nine months after famine mortality peaked between May to July 1933.
«Our results show that prostate cancer mortality was 20 percent lower in counties with the highest incidence of prostate cancer, indicating an early and rapid uptake of PSA testing, compared with counties with a slow and late increase in PSA testing,» says Pär Stattin, lead investigator of the study.
Earlier studies suggested this process contributes to the high mortality and low insulin production often displayed in beta cell transplants, which aim to replace cells that the body's own immune system kills off in type 1 diabetes.
Among these studies are studies on more than 19,000 children representing of 47,000 patient years of growth hormone treatment; a prospective study of 100 adult growth hormone — deficient patients followed for 1 to 4 years, a study of 910 children treated with growth hormone for 11 years, a study of 32 adults and children followed for up to 40 years treated with growth hormone (average 10.8 years); a study of 180 growth hormone — treated children followed for over 6 years with reduced cancer recurrence risk (RR 0.6); a prospective analysis of 289 growth hormone — deficient adults who, after 5 years of growth hormone therapy, showed lower risk of malignancy (RR 0.25) and decreased risk of myocardial infarction (RR 0.19) and early mortality (RR 0.22) compared with the untreated group.
In animal studies, we see the opposite: protein restriction extends maximum lifespan, which means that at high ages, mortality is lower, but increases risk of early death, which means that in middle age mortality is higher.
«the results of this study support earlier observations that dietary intakes low in SF or high in FV [fruits and vegetables] each offer protection against CHD mortality.
The broader point goes beyond what one study did or did not show, and that was that Huntress was very clearly attempting to convince everyone that low protein diets lead to «100 % [early] mortality» No need to deny it, that was the very essence, and fraudulent essence of her very short post trying to mislead readers to exactly that conclusion: low protein means 100 % mortality, she asserted..
Logic 101 — it wouldn't matter one bit if 99.99 % of 80 and 90 year olds were omni, that's irrelevant, if you can observe that out of say 100,000 who eat a «low protein» diet you do not have «100 % [early] mortality» or anywhere NEAR that, then it's obvious how crazy the claim was....
Low carb diets have been shown to lead to early death (increased mortality).
Earlier Asian and American studies have shown an association between eating nuts and peanuts and a lower risk of cardiovascular disease, but the new study was surprising for its revelation that mortality due to cancer, diabetes, respiratory, and neurodegenerative diseases was also lowered.
Found that health conscious people have a lower rate of early mortality - High Health IQ men had 33 % lower mortality than low Health IQ men and for women the difference was 47 %.
And as I have shown (with the help of an example) in one of my earlier posts, term insurance (which is pure mortality charge) has much lower mortality charges as compared to a ULIP.
Although the level premium payment method permits the policyowner to pay the lowest up - front outlay necessary to acquire lifetime coverage, the premiums are still greater than the mortality costs in the early years.
I have found an article by Professor Cindy Shannon (a Quandamooka woman from North Stradbroke Island) on acculturation to be a useful guide in illuminating the path from historical trauma, anger / shame, low socio - economic status and chronic disease to unacceptably early mortality (Shannon 2002).
Aboriginal Australians experience multiple social and health disadvantages from the prenatal period onwards.1 Infant2 and child3 mortality rates are higher among Aboriginal children, as are well - established influences on poor health, cognitive and education outcomes, 4 — 6 including premature birth and low birth weight, 7 — 9 being born to teenage mothers7 and socioeconomic disadvantage.1, 8 Addressing Aboriginal early life disadvantage is of particular importance because of the high birth rate among Aboriginal people10 and subsequent young age structure of the Aboriginal population.11 Recent population estimates suggest that children under 10 years of age account for almost a quarter of the Aboriginal population compared with only 12 % of the non-Aboriginal population of Australia.11
Using experimental methods researchers have found support for: childhood stress (§ 6b) and father absence (§ 6c) lowering preferred age at first birth and increasing sexual risk taking [45,53]; attachment style (§ 6e) influencing parenthood - related thoughts [60]; cultural norms (§ 6m) discouraging reproduction outside stable unions [12]; women's reproductive autonomy (§ 6i) influencing their fertility preferences [47]; paternity uncertainty (§ 6j) discouraging parental investment by men [55]; high cost of children (§ 6l) encouraging delayed reproduction and lower fertility [36,47]; resource stress and limitation (§ 6o) affecting mating preferences [12,36,40,51]; and mortality risk and salience (§ 6p) encouraging a greater interest in children, earlier reproduction and higher fertility [6,41,42,45,57 — 59].
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