Not exact matches
In fact, one
study published in The BMJ reported that only 46 percent of Oz's
claims were supported by science.
Trump and his aides have cited a 2012 Pew
study and a debunked report
published in The Washington Post in 2014 to back up the false
claims that voter fraud affected the election.
Between 2010 and 2012, taxpayers in the Peach State
claimed about 36 % of all federal tax deductions for easements — despite having only 2.5 % of the nation's land under easement, according to a May 2017 report that Looney, the former Treasury official,
published for the Brookings Institution, where he's now a senior fellow in economic
studies.
According to Living Goods, clients may also be reluctant to buy drugs from other private providers because of the risk of getting a counterfeit medicine.63 Living Goods sent us a
study conducted at the midline of its RCT that
claims that both availability of counterfeit drugs and drug prices decreased at private retailers in areas where CHPs worked.64 According to the
study, about 37 % of private drug shops in the areas it
studied sold fake ACT drugs, 65 and availabilty of fake ACTs was about 50 % lower among non-Living Goods sellers in the areas where Living Goods worked.66 Additional results on these potential effects will be made available when the full RCT is
published.
This guy is not doing scientific «
studies» to show the truth of his
claim and
publishing them and submitting them for peer review.
In 2005, Dr. Brian Mustanski of the University of Illinois at Chicago
published a
study in the esteemed biomedical journal Human Genetics,
claiming he identified three chromosomal regions linked to sexual orientation in men: 7q36, 8p12 and 10q26.
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.
I believe that the popular media story about the Mexico
study article was
published because the Mexico
study claimed results.
Personally, I find it rather ironic that you're lecturing the blog author on the rigor of language, when, faced with the need to support the
claims made by a documentary that has faced absolutely no real standards of intellectual rigor or merit (the kind of evidence you apparently find convincing), you have so far managed to produce a
study with a sample size too small to conclude anything, a review paper that basically summarized well known connections between vaginal and amniotic flora and poor outcomes in labor and birth before attempting to rescue what would have been just another OB review article with a few attention grabbing sentences about long term health implications, and a review article
published in a trash journal.
This important new
study has now been
published and shows how baby foods and formulas are disproportionately targeted with nutrition and health - related
claims.
They assume, and present their statements, as if they are backed up by systematic
studies that prove that parents are not intelligent nor capable enough to take care of the sleep environment within which they «co-sleep» and that during sleep parents all become insensitive to their infants need, and are incapable of responding to their infants needs or conditions when scientific
studies published in the best medical scientific journals contradict and refute their
claims.
You
claim to be able to slice and dice data flawlessly at the CDC Wonder database, yet can't look up numbers in
published studies and blame Cheyney for not spoonfeeding them to you?
Where are you peer reviewed
published studies supporting your
claims?
A
study published last year by Vanderbilt Law found that 84 percent of
claims filed in New York's state courts are settled.
The large
study using
claims data for 369,320 enrollees age 40 and older in a nationwide managed care network who had cataract surgery was
published Nov. 22 in JAMA Ophthalmology.
Worldwide, air pollution
claims as many as 8 million lives,» says Prof. Ariya, senior author of the group's new
study,
published in Environmental Pollution.
A 2015
study in Science
claims at least 13 million years, but a paper
published in August says no more than 3 million.
A Nature
study published in April made a startling
claim: Rounded stones found beside fractured mastodon bones near San Diego were evidence of someone processing the animal's remains 130,000 years ago.
In the
study,
published online June 3, 2014 in the journal Nutrition, Keck School of Medicine researchers analyzed the chemical composition of 34 popular beverages, finding that beverages and juices made with high fructose corn syrup (HFCS), such as Coca - Cola, Pepsi, Dr Pepper, Mountain Dew and Sprite, all contain 50 percent more fructose than glucose, a blend that calls into question
claims that sugar and HFCS are essentially the same.
Amid occasional controversial
claims that cloned babies are well on their way to birth, researchers have
published a
study showing that in cloned mice, defects can be found throughout the genome.
And the setback followed a major stem cell scandal in which biologist Haruko Obokata of the Riken Center for Developmental Biology was found to have falsified data in
studies,
published in 2014, that
claimed a new method of achieving pluripotency.
2 After
studying retracted biology papers
published between 2000 and 2010, neurobiologist R. Grant Steen
claimed that Americans were significantly more prone to commit fraud than scientists from other nations.
The
study was funded by the
Claims Conference and the Israel Science Foundation, and appeared in the journal Psychological Medicine,
published by the Cambridge University Press.
Despite the
claims of basically every online dating site, a new
study published in Psychological Science suggests that algorithms and attraction don't mix.
In 2009 a controversial
study published in Science made an extraordinary
claim: Chronic fatigue syndrome, whose cause had long been unknown, could be linked to a retrovirus that first arose in mice.
The
study came under heavy criticism from Cornell researcher Robert Howarth, who two years prior had
published work that
claimed methane emissions from shale gas operations were far more significant.
Published in Environmental Sociology, a
study written by Dr Matthew J. Cutler of the University of New Hampshire, USA, examines a selection of weather data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Storm Events Database (SED) in order to test this
claim.
The
study,
published this week in Science, also makes a controversial
claim: that heightened surveillance of families with a history of abuse may have biased some
studies taken as evidence for the cycle of violence.
And on Monday a pair of
studies set to be
published in the Astrophysical Journal were unveiled, each
claiming the discovery of a different super-Earth orbiting nearby sunlike stars.
A 2006 analysis
published in the American Journal of Psychiatry found that 90 percent of manufacturer - sponsored
studies of antipsychotic drugs led to
claims that the
study drug was as good as, or superior to, every other drug in its class.
Small
study size, design flaws, publication bias (failure to
publish negative results or duplication of positive results), drug - industry influence, and the play of chance were among the problems Ioannidis found that caused false or exaggerated
claims.
He examined the most - cited clinical
studies published in the top three medical journals between 1990 and 2000 to see how well researchers» initial
claims held up against subsequent research.
It's no surprise then that a
study published 2 years ago created quite a stir by
claiming that modern humans harbor a genetic signature suggesting our ancestors engaged heavily in the practice.
Results from a
study published in Science Translational Medicine show that the publicly available cell line U87MG does not originate from the cell line it is
claimed to do.
Published today, a two - year
study of Android security updates has revealed a distressing gap between the software patches Android companies
claim to have on their devices...
The editor of the journal that
published the
study, Dr. Gerald Weissmann, said, «As we have expanded our understanding of evolution, genetics, and nanotechnology, chances are that «miraculous» cures will become as commonplace as those
claimed by faith - healers past and present.»
The
claim,
published Tuesday in a PLOS Biology
study, is a testament to the awesome complexity of the human genome, but it also illustrates a pressing challenge for the 15 - year - old field.
Studies are first
published claiming that, in the laboratory, certain chemicals used to make plastics demonstrate potential estrogenic effects.
A
study that was just
published in Environmental Science and Technology
claims that PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) are a significant contributor to indoor air pollution because the chemicals are emitted from kitchen cabinets.
April 1995: The Lancet
publishes a paper by Andrew Wakefield and others, based on statistical data misleadingly culled from two unrelated
studies,
claiming to find a possible link between bowel diseases and measles vaccination.
The Beacon Hill Institute
publishes a
study (using discredited analysis)
claiming that a state's renewable standards lead to higher energy costs, as it did in states like Maine and Ohio and Wisconsin and Arizona.
Counter
claims that volcanoes, especially submarine volcanoes, produce vastly greater amounts of CO2 than these estimates are not supported by any papers
published by the scientists who
study the subject.
Results of the College of Medicine
study, which analyzed national insurance
claim data from privately insured women ages 13 to 45 through 2014, were
published today in the journal Women's Health Issues.
The
study also failed to address previous research that had debunked similar
claims; it was the failure to catch this fact during peer review that led the editor of the journal Remote Sensing to resign, saying he took responsibility for
publishing a paper that «should not have been
published.»
Within days of the editor's resignation, Dessler
published a
study refuting Spencer's
claims in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
«Novelty or training variety are important for stimulating further strength development»,
claims a
study published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, and we couldn't agree more.
But a review of 21
studies published earlier this year in Nutrition Reviews refuted that
claim as «inaccurate.»
Recently, a group of Italian researchers from the Universita Politecnica delle Marche
published a
study in Molecular Nutrition & Food Research which
claims that a modest dose of one gram of fish oil per day can reduce cortisol levels and lower stress and anxiety.
We've recently stumbled upon a new
study from London's Kingston University,
published in the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, which
claims that consuming a daily serving of dark chocolate could be very beneficial for athletic endurance and muscle recovery.
Then in 1969 a
study was
published claiming that there was no link, and everyone was delighted and recommenced eating it.