Sentences with phrase «medical literature does»

A review of medical literature does not support monthly laboratory testing for all patients who are using standard doses of the acne medication isotretinoin, according to an article published online by JAMA Dermatology.
In summary, the medical literature does not support the theory that circumcision prevents STDs.13

Not exact matches

(Don't look to the extensive medical literature for a clear - cut answer; conclusions differ from study to study.)
Doing so would not lead us to treat animals like people but rather to treat the weakest people like animals, opening the door to such things as conducting medical experiments on the cognitively disabled, which has already been proposed in bioethics literature.
I may be slower than others, but I do not find in the literature absolute statements of the clinical factors unanimously agreed to by medical professionals defining PVS.
Or do you just follow the literature you learned in your medical training; which can be very skewed - just as all the statistics you shot off in your rant.
They're indexed on PubMed (this is database which covers medical literature in case you didn't know).
They have an important place in medical literature, but they do not replace or over-ride comparative evidence.
Choo continued, «This adds to a growing body of literature published over the past three years that is remarkably consistent in demonstrating that state medical marijuana policies do not have a downstream effect on adolescent drug use, as we feared they might.»
«We still don't have great answers to give patients and families, but the medical literature shows there are certainly factors that can influence the risk, severity, and progression of MCI.
All that to say - irregardless of your feelings about Dr. Pompa, the benefits of fasting are well documented throughout history and in medical literature and I'd encourage you to do your own research on it from sources you trust.
The institutional level of fatphobia has to do with access to meaningful participation in society, which includes things like whether or not you feel a sense of belonging when you're out in the world, access to quality medical care, and your ability to see yourself in the culture at large (through things like movies, literature, etc.).
Although medical literature has shown mention of it since the 1940s, doctors did not have a way to diagnose the condition because symptoms appeared so gradual and were so different from man to man.
«When you look at the medical literature, there's a lot on the effects of stress on MS. Not only does it have a role in triggering stress in susceptible people, but there's an obvious role in precipitating relapses once you have it,» Jelinek says.
You could also be a former pre-med student and do lots of research and dive head first into studies and medical literature to make the determination that home birth is the safest and best option for you and your baby.
I don't think the medical literature agrees.
We know now that an infection could not have caused Atkins health problems as told by Dr. Fuhrman here ~ ~ ~ > QUOTE «Ketogenic diets have been shown in the medical literature to cause a pathological enlargement of the heart called cardiomyopathy,» and «The Atkins Corporation denies that Dr. Atkins» own cardiomyopathy - induced heart attack, hypertension, and blocked arteries had anything to do with his diet.
Researchers at King's College in London scoured the medical literature and found 14 studies that met their criteria for a well - done study.
There are a baker's dozen of articles in the medical literature on apple cider vinegar (as indexed by the National Library of Medicine), and indeed there is a case report «Hypokalemia, Hyperreninemia and Osteoporosis in a Patient Ingesting Large Amounts of Cider Vinegar» that does suggest ingestion may lead to potassium wasting.
In September 1992 Anthony Almada was doing his customary search of the recent medical literature at the University of California, San...
It also leaves many medical questions unanswered simply because the answers don't exist in published literature.
Across - the - board recommendations for all pet dogs do not appear to be supportable from findings in the veterinary medical literature.
Do you suppose that conservatives have stopped trusting in medical science, since that the problems with the research literature in that field is quite well identified?
I do not know why a medical researcher would feel qualified to undertake an analysis of consensus in the earth scientific literature
And people do all the time (just look at a lot of the medical literature).
My brother does it all the time with the medical literature.
BTW, a google search for the phrase «temporo - spatially heterogeneous» only finds hits in medical literature for that exact phrase, it doesn't seem to be used in climatology as far as Dr Google can see... even a search for similar phrases only comes up with hits that appear to be in the biological field.
However, I find most students and lawyers (quite reasonably) have enough of a challenge with legal research that I do not expect them to master research in different literature (e.g., business, medical, economics).
Any reliance also did not seem to result in the prescription to plaintiff, as the prescriber's impression from medical literature also would have needed to have been different to affect the prescribing decision.
Moreover, where the general representations to the prescriber were perceived as being consistent with what he understood from the medical literature and other sources, there does not seem to have been reliance on any misrepresentation.
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