Sentences with phrase «more intervention research»

Despite achievements, the concern that Indigenous people have been over-researched without corresponding improvements in their health remains.40 Most commonly, the solution has concentrated on calls to shift from an overemphasis on descriptive research to more intervention research.

Not exact matches

«Repeated intervention to maintain the currency's stability is at odds with the «more flexible exchange rate mechanism» the central bank announced just three weeks ago,» wrote Chen Long of Gavekal Dragonomics in a research note on Wednesday.
For other research on dietary intervention for Alzheimer's Disease, here are some more articles to consider:
With more than 15 years of experience, Dr. Dubost has worked in the areas of clinical nutrition, research, public health intervention, education and communications.
Demand for our program is growing, and Challenge Success is working hard to ensure that we continue to provide research - based assessment and interventions that reduce student stress and increase academic engagement for more schools and families across the country.
However, research shows that a baby in an undesirable position in the womb (the most common cause of back labor) is more likely to experience difficulty descending through the birth canal leading to interventions and complications that include:
It is my view, based on very superficial and inadequate research, that it is more likely that they were caused by the same things that cause homebirth deaths — an over-optimistic assumption that birth is safe, and interventions are left too late.
Each year more research is under way to better understand the causes of autism and the most helpful intervention strategies.
Most sleep training research studies whether an intervention is effective at shutting down the baby so parents get more sleep.
The effect of these kinds of supports on home visitors has not been well studied, but some research on similar interventions indicates implementation of evidence - based practices with fidelity monitoring and supportive consultation predicts lower rates of staff turnover, as well as lower levels of staff emotional exhaustion relative to services as usual.29, 30,31 Moreover, a supportive organizational climate has been associated with more positive attitudes toward adoption of evidence - based programs.32
Identifying core components of interventions found to be effective and understanding what it takes to implement those components with fidelity to the program model is critical to successful replication and scale - up of effective programs and practices in different community contexts and populations.7 There is growing recognition in the early childhood field of the importance of effective implementation and the need for implementation research that can guide adoption, initial implementation, and ongoing improvement of early childhood interventions.8, 9,10 The promise of implementation research and using data to drive program management is compelling because it offers a potential solution to the problem of persistent gaps in outcomes between at - risk children and their more well - off peers.
Research shows that women who have continuous support during labor have a shorter, more comfortable labor, experience fewer interventions (including cesarean birth), and use pain medication less often.
It would be great to have more good research examining the long - term effects of interventions.
The detailed examples provided in midwives» accounts may usefully assist the reader in this regard, but further research is required to explore the topic more fully and to examine the impact of the interventions identified (e.g. management of early labour, home visits in early labour, delayed admission to hospital, water birth, Verbena cocktail) on the progress of labour and birth outcomes.
The primary goal of parent support programs is to provide support and information in ways that help parents become more capable and competent.2, 3 Research now indicates that to reach this goal, it is necessary that staff use practices that are family - centered as opposed to professionally - centered, and capacity - building as opposed to dependency forming.4, 5,6,7 The key characteristics of family - centered practices include: treating families with dignity and respect; providing individual, flexible and responsive support; sharing information so families can make informed decisions; ensuring family choice regarding intervention options; and providing the necessary resources and supports for parents to care for their children in ways that produce optimal parent and child outcomes.8, 9,10,11
Finally, given that fatherhood is an emerging field of research, more prospective studies need to be conducted on the quality of fathering experiences, the types of effective interventions for fathers, and the different needs of fathers across cultures.
Given the desirability of breastfeeding, it is possible that women in the intervention group felt more guilty about discontinuing breastfeeding than control women because of relationships developed with the peer counselor, and thus, they did not answer telephone calls when the research assistant called to ascertain feeding status.
Research shows that many times interventions are done more for convenience sake than for medical reasons.
There seems to be a general consensus that more rigorous research of different types of interventions would add to our knowledge about which programs for fathers of young children would be most effective.
Four themes described current challenges: lack of placement opportunities, education versus clinical practice, evidence - based support of physiologic birth, and the need for more research on pedagogical strategies that effectively educate future nurses to advocate for minimal intervention birth options for all women.
An understanding of the effects of birth weight and gestational age on the regulation of infant growth by genetic and environmental effects may assist in tailoring research, counseling, and possibly interventions in infant growth to specific subgroups in which attaining a health benefit is more likely.
The study, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), supports other findings that interventions aimed at improving individuals» wellbeing and quality of life can be far more effective if they are carried out among groups of people in ways that generate a strong sense of group identity.
A new Norwegian diet intervention study (FATFUNC), performed by researchers at the KG Jebsen center for diabetes research at the University of Bergen, raises questions regarding the validity of a diet hypothesis that has dominated for more than half a century: that dietary fat and particularly saturated fat is unhealthy for most people.
The results can be used to focus research on other therapeutic interventions that may be more effective in preventing preterm delivery in twin gestations.»
While previous research supported the effectiveness of distraction during painful procedures, specifically needle pain, the investigators hypothesized that the new VR technology, an arguably more powerful and immersive intervention could be even more effective at reducing pain and anxiety.
She added, though, that small sample sizes and other methodological challenges necessitated more research in order to demonstrate exactly which interventions hold the most promise for dual - language learners.
If, however, you are more interested in research you could become a health outcomes researcher, collecting data on therapeutic interventions for drug companies, or there is the Scientists Training Programme offered by the NHS.
«While much more research is needed, it is exciting to consider that pharmacological intervention in these cellular processes might help slow or even prevent disease progression.»
But Robert Heinssen, who is chief of the Adult Treatment and Preventive Intervention Research Branch at the NIMH and who led the study, claims that prodromal symptoms, when considered in the context of a full medical history, can produce a much more accurate prediction.
The Harnessing Online Peer Education (HOPE) intervention is just one of more than 200 research projects the Obama administration spotlighted on 6 July, as it announced new actions to tackle the rising opioid epidemic in the United States.
New research shows that bariatric surgery (also known as obesity surgery) is much more effective than an intensive lifestyle / medication intervention at reversing type 2 diabetes in patients with only mild - to - moderate obesity.
«It would be helpful to have research looking to see whether screening interventions coupled with strategies to increase uptake of recommended evaluations and treatments may be more effective in improving outcomes,» Chou said by email.
Interventions designed to reduce alcohol use among fraternity members are no more effective than no intervention at all, according to an analysis of 25 years of research involving over 6,000 university students published by the American Psychological Association.
More research is needed to determine the efficacy of alcohol interventions specifically for sorority members,» she said.
«It would definitely be that we do need more research on race - based bullying and more interventions at the school level.»
Improved detection and surgery for congenital abnormalities, better medical care during pregnancy and childbirth, and more research on effectiveness of injury interventions could help improve survival in these countries.
The study, published in The BMJ, is the largest research project in the world looking at lifestyle interventions in pregnancy, involving more than 50 researchers from 41 institutions.
This area of research could someday pave the way for more practical interventions that could help ensure that ethical decisions are made.
She also calls for more research to establish the causal links between bullying and depression, and to drive specific interventions to reduce victimisation.
The research has shown that the earlier autism can be spotted, the more beneficial intervention can be.
More importantly, the intervention was associated with overall marriage quality: As in other research, more positive automatic reactions to the partner predicted greater improvements in marital satisfaction over the course of the stMore importantly, the intervention was associated with overall marriage quality: As in other research, more positive automatic reactions to the partner predicted greater improvements in marital satisfaction over the course of the stmore positive automatic reactions to the partner predicted greater improvements in marital satisfaction over the course of the study.
Critically, the findings underscore the need for more research efforts focused on secondary prevention, which would include early detection and early intervention.
«We had hoped the new pharmacotherapy would help more people quit, but this is not what is happening,» said lead author Shu - Hong Zhu, PhD, a professor in the Department of Family Medicine and Public Health and director of Center for Research and Intervention in Tobacco Control at UC San Diego.
Public health and research efforts must focus more intensely on identifying and implementing additional or new interventions that halt transmission in hospitals and community settings,» says Neel R. Gandhi, MD, associate professor of epidemiology at Emory's Rollins School of Public Health.
More extensive research and new interventions are needed, he adds, if we are to reach the AHA's goal of increasing the proportion of the population in ideal cardiovascular health by 2020.
Professor Paul Montgomery, University of Birmingham, who led the research said: «We are all keen to help kids who are struggling at school and in these times of limited resources, my view is that funds should be spent on more promising interventions.
While much more research is needed, there is exciting potential here for new interventions in clinical situations.
«The earlier we diagnose it, the more we'll understand the disease and the better and more potent our interventions may be,» says research scientist Harvey Kliman of the Yale School of Medicine.
While deaths from infectious diseases have been steadily declining as a result of research and medical intervention, preterm birth has remained a much more difficult problem, say the authors of a recent study that collated child mortality rates and their associated causes between 2000 and 2013.
New research from BYU's autism experts is providing clues into the link between aggression and autism — clues the team hopes will eventually lead to more effective intervention.
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