Write them down in
your new health journal.
Not exact matches
A few companies in the
Journal article seem to have found some creative ways to get around this, using the data they've vaccuumed up to enable
new insights about employee
health.
In an essay for the
New England
Journal of Medicine some seven years ago, the eminent management scholar Michael Porter famously asked, «What Is Value in
Health Care?»
A study published in the
journal Health Psychology has some dead simple advice for anyone hoping to finally make that
new, healthy habit stick.
Recently in the quarterly
journal New Space they published an outline of what remains to be done to understand the
health risks.
A formidable portion of the world's public
health woes is tied to pollution, according to
new research published in the
journal Lancet.
One of
New York's most prominent hospital CEOs shared his thoughts on the future of
health care reform in an interview with the Wall Street
Journal.
Zeke Emanuel, Aaron Glickman, and David Johnson propose in the
Journal of the American Medical Association a
new «affordability index» as a way to measure
health costs in America.
New York, Wall Street Journal — Genomic Health Inc. has struck a deal to commercialize a new blood test that can help advanced prostate cancer patients decide whether to try costly new - generation drugs or rely on much cheaper traditional chemotherapy to improve their chances for surviv
New York, Wall Street
Journal — Genomic
Health Inc. has struck a deal to commercialize a
new blood test that can help advanced prostate cancer patients decide whether to try costly new - generation drugs or rely on much cheaper traditional chemotherapy to improve their chances for surviv
new blood test that can help advanced prostate cancer patients decide whether to try costly
new - generation drugs or rely on much cheaper traditional chemotherapy to improve their chances for surviv
new - generation drugs or rely on much cheaper traditional chemotherapy to improve their chances for survival.
For a more specific treatment of preventive programs, see Gerald Caplan, Principles of Preventive Psychiatry (
New York: Basic Books, 1964) For the application of these principles of prevention to the role of the clergyman, see J. A. Snyder, «Clergymen and Widening Concepts of Mental
Health,»
Journal of Religion and
Health, July, 1968.
Mr. Capretta is also a Contributing Editor at The
New Atlantis, and is the author of that
journal's
health care policy blog, Diagnosis.
If you start digging around in medical
journals such as JAMA, the
New England
Journal of Medicine, Annals of Internal Medicine and the
Journal of Epidemiology, you'll find some pretty amazing research linking coffee to a wide number of
health benefits.
A
new study published in Avicenna
Journal of Phytomedicine sheds further light on how coconut oil, virgin coconut oil in particular, enhances cardiovascular
health, in direct contradiction to the U.S. government claims that coconut oil leads to heart disease.
Recent research published in the Maternal and Child
Health Journal digs into the effects of breastfeeding on depression in
new mothers.
This may not have caused concern in the past — fluoride has always been touted as a dental protectant — but a
new report in Environmental
Health journal finds a strong link between prenatal and postnatal fluoride exposure and Attention Deficit Disorder occurrence.
His book, Birth Day: A Pediatrician Explores the Science, the History, and the Wonder of Childbirth (Ballantine Books, 2009), received praise from The
New England
Journal of Medicine, The Lancet, The
Journal of Midwifery and Women's
Health, and The Washington Post, among other publications.
Dr. Lyerly has been supported by the National Institutes of
Health and the Greenwall Foundation's Faculty Scholars Program, and her work has appeared in numerous
journals, including Science, the Hastings Center Report, and The American
Journal of Public
Health, as well as the
New York Times and Huffington Post.
A
new study in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Gynaecology confirms what many who have undergone a hospital birth already know: the use of the labor - inducing drug pitocin (synthetic oxytocin) leads to great pain and suffering, including serious adverse, unintended health effects to both mother and infa
new study in the Australian and
New Zealand Journal of Gynaecology confirms what many who have undergone a hospital birth already know: the use of the labor - inducing drug pitocin (synthetic oxytocin) leads to great pain and suffering, including serious adverse, unintended health effects to both mother and infa
New Zealand
Journal of Gynaecology confirms what many who have undergone a hospital birth already know: the use of the labor - inducing drug pitocin (synthetic oxytocin) leads to great pain and suffering, including serious adverse, unintended
health effects to both mother and infant.
His work has appeared in Billboard Magazine, Consumer Reports, Esquire, Family Circle, Field & Stream, Forbes, Harvard Business Review, Men's
Health,
New York Times, Outdoor Life, Outside Magazine, Rolling Stone, Sports Illustrated, Wall Street
Journal, and dozens of others.
-LSB-...] That's the unsurprising conclusion of a
new Australian study, but the research — published in Infant Mental
Health Journal — takes our knowledge of father - baby bonding in a
new direction.
In a fascinating
new study published in the
journal Obesity, researchers found that cutting sugar in children's diets for just ten days caused marked improvements in their metabolic
health - despite the fact that the sugar was replaced by other... [Continue reading]
The vast majority of sack lunches that kids bring to school aren't properly cooled or refrigerated and could pose a
health hazard to young children, a
new study in the
journal Pediatrics suggests.
In keeping with the rather serious tone infecting The Lunch Tray this week (except for the comic relief provided by the school lunch lady action figure — thank goodness for her), the Wall Street
Journal recently reported on two
new studies showing that good heart
health starts in childhood — and that poor habits can potentially cause cardiac problems later in life.
A
new report out of Harvard University and published in the
journal Evolution, Medicine and Public
Health, suggests that a mother's milk may impact her little one's mood and behavior for the better — meaning every time you nurse, you help nudge your baby toward a calmer and happier outlook.
In their revised suggested clinical guidelines for
health care providers, published in the
journal Breastfeeding Medicine, researchers discuss how infant cluster feeding (among other factors) can lead some
health practitioners to prematurely suggest supplementation with formula to
new moms.
According to a
new study in the Maternal and Child
Health Journal, continuing to breastfeed at the six - month mark was significantly associated with a nursing - friendly child care setting.
Dr. Kendall - Tackett is a Research Associate at the Crimes against Children Research Center at the University of
New Hampshire, Clinical Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Texas Tech University School of Medicine in Amarillo, Texas, and a Fellow of the American Psychological Association in both the Divisions of
Health and Trauma Psychology, Associate Editor of the
journal Psychological Trauma, and Editor - in - Chief of Clinical Lactation.
Dr. Kendall - Tackett is author of more than 310
journal articles, book chapters and other publications, and author or editor of 22 books in the fields of trauma, women's
health, depression, and breastfeeding, including Treating the Lifetime Health Effects of Childhood Victimization, 2nd Edition (in press, Civic Research Institute), Depression in New Mothers, 2nd Edition (2010, Routledge), The Psychoneuroimmunology of Chronic Disease (2010, American Psychological Association), and Breastfeeding Made Simple, 2nd Edition (co-authored with Nancy Mohrbacher,
health, depression, and breastfeeding, including Treating the Lifetime
Health Effects of Childhood Victimization, 2nd Edition (in press, Civic Research Institute), Depression in New Mothers, 2nd Edition (2010, Routledge), The Psychoneuroimmunology of Chronic Disease (2010, American Psychological Association), and Breastfeeding Made Simple, 2nd Edition (co-authored with Nancy Mohrbacher,
Health Effects of Childhood Victimization, 2nd Edition (in press, Civic Research Institute), Depression in
New Mothers, 2nd Edition (2010, Routledge), The Psychoneuroimmunology of Chronic Disease (2010, American Psychological Association), and Breastfeeding Made Simple, 2nd Edition (co-authored with Nancy Mohrbacher, 2010).
In an editorial published Tuesday in the British Medical
Journal, Dr. Edwin Mitchell, professor of child
health research at the University of Auckland in
New Zealand, wrote, «So what needs to be done?
A
new study to appear in the
Journal of Econometrics and reported by Science Daily has found that participation in the National School Lunch Program («NSLP») reduces food insecurity among impoverished children by 3.8 percent and reduces poor general
health by 29 percent.
NEW YORK (Reuters
Health)- Children under 4 years of age fare better in motor vehicle accidents when they are riding in rear - facing rather than forward - facing car seats, according to a report published online in the British Medical
Journal.
The Wall Street
Journal Financial Guidebook for
New Parents shows you the way, with information on how to: safeguard your child's well - being with wills, trusts, and life insurance; best weigh your child - care options and decide whether to go back to work; save on taxes with child - friendly tax credits and deductions plus tax - advantaged benefits at work; manage your family's
health - care costs; save for long - term costs by setting up a college fund; spend smart and save money at every stage of your child's development; continue to contribute to your own retirement savings
Poughkeepsie, NY... On Friday, June 28th at 4 pm, the Dutchess County Department of
Health will host a Ribbon Cutting and Open House event at its
new location in the Poughkeepsie
Journal building located at 85 Civic Center Plaza, Suite 106 in the City of Poughkeepsie.
The findings, publishing online this week in The
Journal of Clinical Investigation, open
new doors to someday developing vaccines to prevent staph skin infections, which account for 14 million outpatient visits, nearly 500,000 hospital admissions and $ 3 billion to $ 4 billion in inpatient
health care costs in the U.S. per year.
In a
new article in the journal Science, historians at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health and the City University of New York challenge those claims through a careful examination of the eviden
new article in the
journal Science, historians at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public
Health and the City University of
New York challenge those claims through a careful examination of the eviden
New York challenge those claims through a careful examination of the evidence.
In addition to being a contributing correspondent at Science News, her work has appeared in numerous publications, including Reader's Digest, Self, Prevention, Glamour, Newsweek, Men's
Health, Ladies Home
Journal, Parenting, O and the
New York Times.
In addition to its potential use in treating age - related
health problems, metformin can treat portal hypertension — high blood pressure in the liver resulting from cirrhosis, according to a
new study in American
Journal of Physiology — Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology.
Survivors of melanoma were more likely to limit exposure to the sun than people who had never had the disease, but some still reported seeking out suntans and getting sunburns, reports a
new article in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a
journal of the American Association for Cancer Research by Rachel Isaksson Vogel, PhD, an assistant professor in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's
Health at the University of Minnesota.
The study, funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), part of the National Institutes of
Health, will appear online on March 3 in the
New England
Journal of Medicine (NEJM) to coincide with its presentation at a meeting of the 2018 Joint Congress of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology (AAAAI) and the World Allergy Organization (WAO) in Orlando, Florida.
In a
new study published in the
Journal of
Health Psychology, researchers from the University of Surrey have found dieters who eat «on the go» may increase their food intake later in the day which could lead to weight gain and obesity.
According to a
new study published in the February issue of the American
Journal of Preventive Medicine, the belief that e-cigarettes pose less of a
health risk may lead to increased experimentation with e-cigarettes among young adults.
In part because «botanicals are complex mixtures of chemicals,» supplements in this category present «a serious and growing public
health problem,» Marcus and a colleague, pharmacologist Arthur Grollman of the State University of
New York at Stony Brook, wrote in The
New England
Journal of Medicine in 2002.
The largest urban
health systems, which serve as safety nets for large patient populations with lower socioeconomic status and greater likelihood to speak English as a second language, do worse on government patient satisfaction scores than smaller, non-urban hospitals likely to serve white customers with higher education levels, according to a
new study by Mount Sinai researchers published this month in the
Journal of Hospital Medicine.
In a report in the American
Journal of Public
Health performed in
New York City, subways were the loudest mass transit option, with potentially hearing - damaging noise levels.
A recent study published in PLoS ONE, a peer - reviewed scientific
journal, provides
new information for public
health officials on mitigating the spread of infection from emerging flu viruses.
While Steve's at the conference of the World Federation of Science Journalists in London, we look ahead to some of the programming coming your way in the coming weeks, and we replay our 2007 interview with surgeon Atul Gawande, whose recent research in The
New England
Journal of Medicine and writing in The
New Yorker have caused a big stir in the medical and
health care reform communities.
Media reports of public
health breakthroughs made possible by big data have been largely oversold, according to a
new study, published in the American
Journal of Preventive Medicine.
The study, published in the American
Journal of Public
Health, showed that the rates of
new and recurrent concussions initially increase after a law goes into effect.
The findings, published Aug. 25 in The
New England
Journal of Medicine, are based on a review of more than 1,000 studies of excess weight and cancer risk analyzed by the World
Health Organization's International Agency for Cancer on Research (IARC), based in France.
This is the finding from a study published in the latest issue of Australian and
New Zealand
Journal of Public
Health.