Not exact matches
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.
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.
Lynne
lead the global launch
of Absorb, recognized by Wall Street
Journal as
Medical Device Technology Innovation
of the Year and Popular Mechanics.
MassDevice is the
leading medical device news business
journal telling the stories
of the devices that save lives.
Jain elaborated on those successes in an article in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association last year, noting the efficiencies lead to better outcomes for patients, who can more reliably receive routine medical care and stay out of emergency rooms; doctors, who can more easily manage patients» chronic conditions; and cost - savings for the broader medical system, as managing chronic disease is substantially cheaper than repeated ER
Medical Association last year, noting the efficiencies
lead to better outcomes for patients, who can more reliably receive routine
medical care and stay out of emergency rooms; doctors, who can more easily manage patients» chronic conditions; and cost - savings for the broader medical system, as managing chronic disease is substantially cheaper than repeated ER
medical care and stay out
of emergency rooms; doctors, who can more easily manage patients» chronic conditions; and cost - savings for the broader
medical system, as managing chronic disease is substantially cheaper than repeated ER
medical system, as managing chronic disease is substantially cheaper than repeated ER visits.
In 2007, a landmark British study published in The Lancet
medical journal found that artificial food colors and preservatives increase hyperactivity in children,
leading the European Union to require warning labels on foods containing any
of six specific food colors.
This has also raised question about the effectiveness
of the conflict
of interest policy
of the
medical journal Lancet, given that two
of the
lead authors
of its series on Maternal and Child Nutrition were members
of Nestle's Creating Shared Value Advisory Committee.
In a study published in the Canadian
Medical Association
Journal, researchers
led by Anita Kozyrskyj found that babies born by C - section harbored a different set
of microbes in their digestive tracts than those born vaginally, and that infants who were breast - fed had a different recipe
of bacteria in their guts than those who were given formula.
She remains actively involved locally in the San Francisco Ob / Gyn Society and as a member
of the Obstetrics and Gynecology Department at California Pacific
Medical Center (a
leading Bay Area hospital group) and serves as a reviewer for the
journals Fertility and Sterility, Endocrinology and Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Research
led by a team at Women & Infants Hospital
of Rhode Island and The Warren Alpert
Medical School
of Brown University has been published in the February 10, 2014 online edition
of Pediatrics, the official
journal of the American Academy
of Pediatrics.The research indicates that premature babies benefit from being exposed to adult talk as early as possible.
The Harrison Act did not recognize addiction as a treatable condition and therefore the therapeutic use
of cocaine, heroin or morphine to such individuals was outlawed —
leading the
Journal of American Medicine to remark,» [the addict] is denied the
medical care he urgently needs, open, above - board sources from which he formerly obtained his drug supply are closed to him, and he is driven to the underworld where he can get his drug, but
of course, surreptitiously and in violation
of the law.»
This is the main finding
of new research
led by investigators at NYU Langone
Medical Center and its Perlmutter Cancer Center and published online May 19 in the
Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
«These findings suggest fears
of increased risky sexual behaviour following HPV vaccination are unwarranted and should not be a barrier to vaccinating at a young age,» says Dr. Smith, the
lead author on the study that was published in the Canadian
Medical Association
Journal.
Changes in key genes clearly define four previously unknown conditions within the umbrella diagnosis
of schizophrenia, according to a study
led by researchers from NYU Langone
Medical Center published online April 28 in EBioMedicine, a Lancet
journal.
A new report published in JAMA: The
Journal of the American
Medical Association earlier this month found that head injuries
led an estimated 2.5 million people to visit a U.S. emergency room in 2010, and about one third
of the cases were children.
The results
of the study, funded by the Malaria Eradication Scientific Alliance (MESA), are published in one
of the world's
leading medical journals The Lancet Infectious Diseases, and show that adding high doses
of ivermectin, an endectocide class
of drug, to the antimalarial dihydroartemisinin - piperaquine (DP) had a major and prolonged effect on mosquito mortality.
The work appears in a paper in the October 19 issue
of the
journal Nature, and was
led by David Anderson — Seymour Benzer Professor
of Biology; Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Institute for Neuroscience Leadership Chair; Howard Hughes
Medical Institute Investigator; and director
of the Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Institute for Neuroscience.
This is the finding
of a study in both mice and human patients
led by researchers at NYU Langone
Medical Center and published online June 9 in the
journal Cell.
For patients with gender dysphoria undergoing male - to - female transformation, a stepwise approach to facial feminization surgery (FFS)
leads to good cosmetic outcomes along with psychological, social, and functional benefits, according to a study in the February issue
of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery ®, the official
medical journal of the American Society
of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS).
«If this study is representative
of the
medical cannabis market, we may have hundreds of thousands of patients buying cannabis products that are mislabeled,» says experimental psychologist Ryan Vandrey, Ph.D., an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and lead author of a report on the study published June 23 in the Journal of the American Medical Assoc
medical cannabis market, we may have hundreds
of thousands
of patients buying cannabis products that are mislabeled,» says experimental psychologist Ryan Vandrey, Ph.D., an associate professor
of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School
of Medicine and
lead author
of a report on the study published June 23 in the
Journal of the American
Medical Assoc
Medical Association.
The study,
led by researchers at Boston Children's Hospital, is detailed in the June 27 issue
of the
Journal of the American
Medical Association.
The video features editor - in - chief
of Science, Marcia McNutt, and the editors
of Science Translational Medicine and Science Signaling, Katrina Kelner and Nancy Gough, who discuss the
leading medical research being published weekly in the two
journals.
The research does not conclude that the Asian tiger mosquito (Aedes albopictus) can transmit Zika to humans, but it highlights the need for deeper research into additional potential vectors for the virus that has rapidly spread through the Americas since its initial outbreak in 2015, says Chelsea Smartt, Ph.D., associate professor at the Florida
Medical Entomology Laboratory at the University
of Florida and
lead author on the study to be published this week in the Entomological Society
of America's
Journal of Medical Entomology.
That is the conclusion
of a major new review, written by
leading world experts and published in the
medical journal, Addiction.
The ironclad notion that obesity
leads to disease and early death is wrong: In a 2005 report published in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association, the CDC showed that people classified as overweight live longest, with the moderately obese achieving longevity comparable to that
of people at «normal» weights, and acknowledged that this finding «is consistent with other results.»
The research, which was
led by Yanming Wang, a Penn State University associate professor
of biochemistry and molecular biology, and Denisa Wagner, senior author with decades
of research on thrombosis at the Boston Children's Hospital and the Harvard University
Medical School, will be published in in the Online Early Edition
of the
journal Proceedings
of the National Academy
of Sciences during the week ending 10 May 2013.
Discover senior editor John Langone interviewed more than a dozen
leading epidemiologists in the United States, Britain, and France and consulted such publications as The
Journal of the American
Medical Association and The Lancet.
In their forthcoming paper in the
Journal of Medical Entomology, «Factors
of Concern Regarding Zika and Other Aedes aegypti - Transmitted Viruses in the United States,» Max J. Moreno - Madriñán
of the Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis and independent research entomologist Michael Turell argue that a
leading factor in outbreaks
of Zika, yellow fever, dengue, and chikungunya — all transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito — is low socioeconomic conditions in developing countries.
In 2001 the editors
of the 12
leading medical journals decried what they described as a «draconian» situation for academic researchers, but even that extraordinary joint statement went largely unheeded.
But hard - core allopathic medicine has its own hall
of shame: profit - driven research that virtually ignores unpatentable plant - based medicines, antibiotic overkill that yields invulnerable super-pathogens, and — according to a
lead article in the April 15, 1998 issue
of the
Journal of the American
Medical Association — an estimated 100,000 deaths a year in U.S. hospitals directly caused by adverse reactions to pharmaceutical drugs.
The study,
led by Elsayed Z. Soliman, M.D., director
of the Epidemiological Cardiology Research Center at Wake Forest Baptist
Medical Center, is published in the April 27 issue
of the American Heart Association
journal Circulation.
The research,
led by Ali Torkamani, assistant professor
of Molecular and Experimental Medicine at TSRI and assistant professor and director
of Genome Informatics at STSI, was published October 11, 2016, in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association (JAMA).
The results
of the Endovascular Therapy Following Imaging Evaluation for the Ischemic Stroke (DEFUSE 3) trial, presented at the International Stroke Conference 2018 in Los Angeles and published on Jan. 24 in the New England
Journal of Medicine, demonstrated that physically removing brain clots up to 16 hours after symptom onset in selected patients
led to improved outcomes compared to standard
medical therapy.
That was the finding
of a recent international study, in which the Center for Physiology and Pharmacology
of MedUni Vienna played a significant part and which has now been published in the
leading medical journal «Nature Medicine.»
In addition to reducing headache frequency and severity, surgical treatment for migraine
leads to significant improvements in everyday functioning and coping ability, according to a study in the January issue
of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery ®, the official
medical journal of the American Society
of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS).
In a study published today in the British
Medical Journal, an international team
led by Imperial College London and KU Leuven, Belgium describe a new test, called ADNEX, which can discriminate between benign and malignant tumors, and identify different types
of malignant tumor, with a high level
of accuracy.
In a paper published in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association Pediatrics, Gene H. Brody, the study's
lead author and co-director
of the UGA Center for Family Research, and his colleagues used MRI scans to examine the brain development
of 59 adults who participated in SAAF at age 11 with 57 adults from nearly identical backgrounds who did not.
In a letter to the
Medical Journal of Australia published today, a Monash University -
led team is asking for hepatitis C virus patients to gain improved access to drugs to prevent liver related deaths.
The other major focus
of the plan is to strengthen health teams and boost resources needed to diagnose cases, treat patients and trace other people they may have infected, a plea echoed this week by
leading doctors from Sierra Leone writing in
medical journal The Lancet.
Areán, the
lead researcher on the study published Dec. 20 in the
Journal of Medical Internet Research (JIMR), found that people who were mildly depressed were able to see improvements in all three groups, including the placebo.
The work published in the current issue
of the
journal Cell includes collaborators comprised
of computational and evolutionary biologists and
leading malaria experts from Baylor, Columbia University
Medical Center, Princeton University, Pennsylvania State University and the National Institute
of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).
In a letter published in the cancer
journal Annals
of Oncology, researchers
led by Professor Jean - Philippe Spano, head
of the
medical oncology department at Pitie - Salpetriere Hospital AP - HP in Paris, France, report that while treating an HIV - infected lung cancer patient with the cancer drug nivolumab, they observed a «drastic and persistent decrease» in the reservoirs
of cells in the body where the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is able to hide away from attack by anti-retroviral therapy.
The Jan. 12 issue
of the
journal Science provides an in - depth and timely review
of the key developments that have
led to several successful gene therapy treatments for patients with serious
medical conditions.
The findings, published online today in the
leading medical journal The Lancet, demonstrate the benefits of cancer centres providing early specialized palliative care in outpatient clinics, says principal investigator Dr. Camilla Zimmermann, Head, Palliative Care Program, UHN, and Medical Director, Al Hertz Centre for Supportive and Palliative Care at the Princess Ma
medical journal The Lancet, demonstrate the benefits
of cancer centres providing early specialized palliative care in outpatient clinics, says principal investigator Dr. Camilla Zimmermann, Head, Palliative Care Program, UHN, and
Medical Director, Al Hertz Centre for Supportive and Palliative Care at the Princess Ma
Medical Director, Al Hertz Centre for Supportive and Palliative Care at the Princess Margaret.
In a review paper published in the
journal Immunity, a group
of leading vaccine scientists — including Dan H. Barouch, MD, PhD,
of Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center (BIDMC)-- outline advances in the hunt for a Zika vaccine and the challenges that still lie ahead.
That is the finding
of a study
led by researchers at NYU Langone
Medical Center and published May 20 in the
journal Science.
A new test using peripheral vision reaction time could
lead to earlier diagnosis and more effective treatment
of mild traumatic brain injury, often referred to as a concussion, according to Peter J. Bergold, PhD, professor
of physiology and pharmacology at SUNY Downstate
Medical Center and corresponding author
of a study newly published online by the
Journal of Neurotrauma.
«For improved brain function, the results suggest that it's not enough just to exercise more,» said Eric Vidoni, PT, Ph.D., research associate professor
of neurology at KU
Medical Center and a
lead author
of the
journal article.
But researchers on a UCLA -
led study published in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association have found that the procedure has benefits for people up to 7.3 hours following the onset
of a stroke.
In the same issue
of The American
Journal of Pathology, another team
of investigators from the University
of Kansas
Medical Center,
led by Dr. Wen - Xing Ding, PhD, Department
of Pharmacology, Toxicology, and Therapeutics, also report that FOXO3 protects against acute ethanol - induced steatosis and liver injury.