For each item, evidence was reviewed from peer - reviewed literature and several sports
medicine consensus statements.
Not exact matches
«In the case of heat stroke, the definitive care is cooling, which may best be performed immediately onsite before transport,» said Dr. Jolie C. Holschen, a Loyola
Medicine emergency medicine physician and co-author of the expert panel's consensus st
Medicine emergency
medicine physician and co-author of the expert panel's consensus st
medicine physician and co-author of the expert panel's
consensus statement.
Recommended amount of sleep for pediatric populations: A
consensus statement of the American Academy of Sleep
Medicine.
In 2015, the American Academy of Sleep
Medicine and Sleep Research Society published a
consensus statement that adults should sleep 7 or more hours per night on a regular basis to promote optimal health.
Blood and urine samples taken from athletes to spot signs of doping should be stored for 10 years, to enable technology to catch up with substances that currently evade detection, says a
consensus statement of international anti-doping bodies, published in a special issue of the British Journal of Sports
Medicine.
No child or young athlete should be subjected to genetic testing to spot sporting talent or boost performance, concludes an international panel of experts in a
consensus statement published in the British Journal of Sports
Medicine.
Prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of the overtraining syndrome: joint
consensus statement of the European College of Sport Science and the American College of Sports
Medicine.
Meeusen, Romain, et al. «Prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of the overtraining syndrome: joint
consensus statement of the European College of Sport Science and the American College of Sports
Medicine.»
The previous ACVIM (American College of Veterinary Internal
Medicine)
consensus statement is anything but a
consensus on vaccination for Lyme.
In 2016, the American College of Veterinary Internal
medicine published a
consensus statement on this very subject.
In a recent
consensus statement, the American College of Veterinary Internal
Medicine proposed that the traditional classification of heart failure (I, II, III, IV) based on the New York Heart Association classification could be complemented by a new one staging the progression of MVD in A, B, C and D. Then, group A was represented by those dogs that have hereditary predisposition but no signs of MVD and group B were those with MVD but no signs of CHF.