Conflicts of interest in
medical journal publishing: An analysis of the (in) effectiveness of current industry guidelines Presenter: Rachel Hendrick, University of Edinburgh, UK
A new article in the Journal of Medical Ethics (published by the British
Medical Journal Publishing Group) is a case in point, telling us to use assisted reproduction technices (such as IVF or eventually, cloning) for our needs — to heck with the welfare of the future child!
It can be difficult to get excited about acronyms, but last week the British
Medical Journal published an article about QOF which got us very excited indeed.
A report announcing the new «in vitro booster vaccination» technique was published Monday in The Journal of Experimental Medicine, a prestigious peer - reviewed
medical journal published by the Rockefeller University Press.
In 2016, The BMJ
medical journal published a study in which researchers examined data from The Nurses» Health Study, a large - scale study involving nearly 7,000 participants of European descent, to help determine if there is a genetic basis for smelling asparagusic acid.
In 2008, the British
Medical Journal published research concluding acupuncture can be a significant, clinically relevant adjunct to IVF, relaxing the uterus and increasing blood flow for the successful implantation of an embryo.
Not exact matches
Chew tells me that one of the main reasons he's drawn to Omada is that the company has several wide - ranging studies
published in actual peer - reviewed
medical journals suggesting its system really works.
A 2005 study
published in the
medical journal The Lancet found the approach was roughly as effective as a placebo.
Between 2000 and 2012, 34 people died as a result of using supplements, according to a 2017 study
published in the
Journal of
Medical Toxicology.
Decades of research, including a new study
published in December in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association, has failed to find substantial evidence that vitamins and supplements do any significant good.
For the study,
published this week in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association, researchers pitted people assigned to follow a traditional restricted - calorie diet (eating roughly 25 % of their normal daily calories) against those who were told to fast every other day (eating 25 % of their normal calories on fast days and 125 % on the other days) for a year.
A study
published in a
medical journal, The Lancet, revealed that drinking 100g of alcohol a week increases risk of mortality.
During this analysis, the panel of
medical and sleep experts formally reviewed more than 300 articles
published in peer - reviewed
journals.
A 2015 study
published in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association suggested that teens who vaped had three times the risk of eventually smoking conventional cigarettes as teens who never tried e-cigs.
A 2014 article
published in the academic
journal Medical Forces & Society concluded that transgender service members were as deployable and medically ready as their cisgender peers, with few exceptions.
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.
He
published numerous papers in
medical journals, frequently gave talks at
medical congresses, and was a well - known name among European researchers and practitioners of disaster medicine.
Published in Canadian
Medical Association
Journal, the report puts a damper on the idea that switching to food and beverages sweetened with artificial sweeteners (rather than sugar) has any major health benefits.
That's according to a study
published in
medical journal The Lancet.
A team of scientists from the Center for Resuscitation Science at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden compared ambulance arrival times to drone deliveries in a simulation study
published in the JAMA
medical journal.
But according to research
published in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association Tuesday, at an average of $ 14,350 per patient in 2015, its price exceeds the savings from averting cardiovascular events.
Hans Albert granted the permission, making Harvey promise that his father's mind would be used for careful scientific study and the findings
published in legitimate
medical journals.
A recent research letter
published in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association found that gun violence is the least - researched leading cause of death in the United States.
In an editorial in The
Journal of the American
Medical Association, a Stanford School of Medicine professor criticizes the company for operating in «stealth mode for more than a decade» in order to «change the entire health system» without
publishing anything in peer - reviewed biomedical
journals.
In 1990, ground breaking evidence and research on Human Growth Hormone by Daniel Rudman, M.D. shook the
medical world (
Published in the prestigious New England
Journal of Medicine) with the announcement that 12 men, aged 61 to 81 had received human growth hormone treatment and had reversed up to the equivalent of 20 years of aging in only six months with human growth hormone injections.
An accomplished author as well, Mr. McCourt's academic articles have been
published in the Alberta Law Review, Saskatchewan Law Review, Manitoba Law
Journal, Canadian Family Law Quarterly, Legal
Medical Quarterly, and The Barrister.
Partisans of the new scientism are fond of recounting the «Sokal hoax» — physicist Alan Sokal submitted a paper heavy on jargon but full of false and meaningless statements to the postmodern cultural studies
journal Social Text, which accepted and published it without quibble — but are unlikely to mention a similar experiment conducted on reviewers of the prestigious British Medical J
journal Social Text, which accepted and
published it without quibble — but are unlikely to mention a similar experiment conducted on reviewers of the prestigious British
Medical JournalJournal.
This is precisely what many supporters of the direct killing of infants argued in an «infanticide symposium»
published by the
Journal of
Medical Ethics in 2013.
As late as October 2006, the
journal of the British
Medical Association, The Lancet,
published a study conducted by researchers from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and al - Mustansiriya University in Baghdad estimating that, since March 2003, there were some 601,027 more Iraqi deaths from violence than would have been expected without a war.
A new study
published in The Lancet
medical journal has found a link to heightened stress and a greater risk of heart disease and stroke within three to four years.
A recent study from researchers at Oxford University
published in the
medical journal The Lancet looked at how changing weather patterns will affect the planet's ability to grow enough food to adequately feed the global population, and the results are terrifying: They predicted that because of large scale agricultural changes, 247,970 could die in China alone by the year 2050.
The
Journal of
Medical Ethics recently
published are article justifying the killing of newborn infants,» After - birth abortion: why should the baby live?»
Though there have been more than a thousand papers
published on coconut oil in
medical journals, there is little evidence it helps with Alzheimer's disease.
This study was
published in the British
Medical Journal (1924.
An article
published in the «Ceylon
Medical Journal» in 2006 stated that medium - chain fatty acids, such as those found in coconuts, are used directly by the body as fuel, not broken down and absorbed like other saturated fats.
Third, coconut water... A new rat research
published in the February 2015
Journal of
Medical Food suggests that coconut water improves diabetes: coconut water reduces blood sugar levels as well as hemoglobin A1c levels (in alloxan - induced diabetic rats).
In a recent study
published by the Canadian
Medical Association
Journal eating 1 serving (3/4 cup) per day of beans or legumes lowers LDL levels by 5 %.
A similar meta - study was conducted and
published in May of 2013, analyzing the existing
medical literature regarding dietary fats and heart disease in the
journal Advances in Nutrition.
Lancet, which is one of the most prestigious
medical journal,
published an article on August 27, 2015, announcing that Japanese men and women have the best healthy life expectancy among 188 countries in the world.
The Australian Beverages Council has responded to a study by the Harvard
Medical School,
published in the Human Reproduction
journal, which looks at the correlation between sugar - sweetened drinks and the age at which girls have their first period, saying that girls who consume «sugary drinks» tend to start their menstrual periods earlier.
In response to «Fructose - Rich Beverages and Risk of Gout in Women,» a study
published online today in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association, Dr. Richard Adamson, former director, Division of Cancer Etiology and scientific director, National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health; former vice president of Scientific and Technical Affairs for the American Beverage Association; current president of TPN Associates, LLC, and consultant to the American Beverage Association, said:
In response to «Consumption of sugar sweetened beverages, artificially sweetened beverages, and fruit juice and incidence of type 2 diabetes; systematic review, meta - analysis, and estimation of population attributable fraction,» a paper
published today in the British
Medical Journal, the American Beverage Association issued the following statement:
The third and most recent paper cited in the Central Florida
Medical School paper, which is only available at the time of this writing as a pre-publication preview, is from the Department of Paediatric Dermatology, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Birmingham, UK, but
published in the Indian
Journal of Dermatology late 2016.
The second study presented by the Central Florida
Medical School paper was performed in the Jose R. Reyes Memorial
Medical Center, Manila, Philippines and
published in the International
Journal of Dermatology in 2013.
Although there are literally hundreds of scientific studies
published in recent
medical journals describing the amazing health benefits of antioxidant rich Red Palm Fruit Oil, the average health conscious consumer or health professional knows very little about this oil.
29 January 2015 Media Statement Australian Beverages Council responds to Harvard
Medical School Study The Australian Beverages Council has responded to a study by the Harvard
Medical School,
published in the Human Reproduction
journal, which looks at the correlation between sugar - sweetened drinks and the age at which girls have their first period, saying that girls -LSB-...]
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.
ALEXANDRIA, Va. - In response to a study just
published in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association concerning the risks associated with bisphenol A (BPA), the Glass Packaging Institute (GPI) encouraged parents to choose glass in order to lessen their children's exposure.
In 1995, Jack Challem wrote in The Nutrition Reporter that more than 1,300 studies on capsaicin had been
published in
medical journals...