Sentences with phrase «report bad outcomes»

A new study found that patients with mCRPC had higher PSA response with enzalutamide vs abiraterone, but no difference in time to progression, and reported worse outcomes in those with quantifiable ctDNA.

Not exact matches

As Dan Mangan reports for CNBC, «despite spending well in excess of the rate of any other of those countries in 2013, the United States achieved worse outcomes when it comes to rates of chronic conditions, obesity and infant mortality.»
An IMF report leaked to Reuters shows that Greece's public debt is likely to peak at 200 % of its national income within the next two years, with the risk that the actual outcome could be even worse.
British Columbia leads the provinces in educational outcomes for young Aboriginal adults, while Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta lag badly, according to a report released today by the C.D. Howe...
British Columbia leads the provinces in educational outcomes for young Aboriginal adults, while Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta lag badly, according to a report released today by the C.D. Howe Institute.
In a report released earlier this year, the commons education committee also found «no convincing evidence of the impact of academy status on attainment in primary schools», adding that while «some chains such as Harris have proved very effective at raising attainment... others achieve worse outcomes than comparable mainstream schools».
Johnson's predicament is the least of the bad outcomes from the war between the state's two leading Democrats, which is hurting the city in ways that are not often explained in the many media reports about it.
When participants envisioned the most positive outcome, their energy levels, as measured by blood pressure, dropped, and they reported having a worse experience with the actual event than those who had conjured more realistic or even negative visions.
Poorer children have worse cognitive, social - behavioural and health outcomes because they are poor, and not just because poverty is correlated with other household and parental characteristics, according to a new report from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).
«Avoiding unnecessary FFP transfusion is important because there have been reports that associated the use of excess FFP with worse outcomes among patients that required less - than - massive transfusions.»
In summary, we report evidence for a β - catenin — mediated immune evasion in 42 % of melanoma primaries overall and in 73 % of those with the worst outcome.
Reporting only aggregated adherence rates could create an incentive to avoid groups with worse outcomes rather than undertaking interventions to improve their care.41 Some health plans or clinicians may avoid enrolling minority patients, for whom performance rates are typically lower.42, 43 Stratifying performance rates by race, ethnicity, or other demographic characteristics may mitigate such undesired effects by not penalizing organizations that disproportionately treat minority patients.
Stratified reports could also raise awareness of racial disparities in care, provide a framework for feedback and accountability of health plans and clinicians, and ideally promote effective efforts to improve care for patients who experience worse outcomes, particularly black Americans with diabetes, hypertension, or heart disease.
Publishing in the The Lancet, researchers have looked at the high fat diets versus high carbohydrate diets across 18 countries and reported worse health outcomes in those with high carbohydrate diets.
«Older children [aged 6 - 12 years] were more likely to report intentional ingestion and to have adverse health effects and worse outcomes than were younger children, suggesting that older children might be deliberately misusing or abusing alcohol hand sanitizers,» wrote the team led by Dr. Cynthia Santos, of the CDC's National Center for Environmental Health.
The report found that students who use computers moderately at school tended to have better learning outcomes than students who rarely used them, but the worrying discovery was that students who use computers «very frequently» at school do much worse, even after accounting for social background and student demographics.
Like other skeptics, Carter seized on a 2010 report from Stanford University's Center for Research on Education Outcomes that portrayed many charter schools as doing no better, and indeed sometimes worse, than traditional schools nationwide.
The report recommends that «civil rights advocates keep a watchful eye on ESSA performance data to show if the new state accountability systems are translating to worse academic outcomes for historically overlooked groups of students.»
As I've reported before (see here, here, and here), the program's outcomes are lackluster at best, yet the Mayor has trumpeted his plan as a panacea for all that ails the city's worst 86 schools.
The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development said in a 2015 report that heavy users of computers in the classroom «do a lot worse in most learning outcomes» and that: «In the end, technology can amplify great teaching, but great technology can not replace poor teaching.»
The ways in which a strong middle class leads to better educational outcomes, such as middle - class parents putting pressure on administrators to fire or transfer bad teachers, are described more completely in our companion report, «The Middle Class Is Key to a Better - Educated Nation.»
This report argues that poverty and broad social factors drive high dropout rates and other bad outcomes.
A new report released by Stanford University's Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO) investigates five years of charter school performance in Ohio and finds that the average charter school is performing worse than the average public -LSB-...] Read More»
Often, an unfavourable credit report is the outcome of some bad monetary luck.
[* I originally wrote «worst - case outcomes» and that doesn't precisely reflect the contents of the report.
Commenting on the report, Lord Jay of Ewelme, acting Chairman of the House of Lords EU Committee, said: «The overwhelming weight of evidence suggests that «no deal» would be the worst possible outcome for the UK, in terms of the economy, security, the environment and citizens» rights.
Three prospective, longitudinal (1 - 3 years), naturalistic studies of panic disorder7 - 10 found that the presence of a PersD was associated with worse outcome of panic disorder symptoms and functioning; 1 study found an association with a lower likelihood of remission.9, 10 These studies are limited by use of self - report PersD instruments, 7,9,10 only 1 follow - up assessment, 8 follow - up of only1 year, 7,9,10 and retrospective recall.8 Only 1 study9, 10 used DSM - III - R criteria for the PersDs, although with a self - report instrument.
However, we found that having sex to avoid disappointing your partner (i.e., for avoidance goals) is actually associated with partners reporting less desire and satisfaction.1 In other words, when people simply «give it up» to avoid negative outcomes in their relationships, their partners have less positive sexual experiences and feel worse about the relationship.
Paying Later: The High Costs of Failing to Invest in Young Children (PDF - 220 KB) Pew Center on the States, Partnership for America's Economic Success (2011) Reports the findings of a study that explored the social costs caused by an array of bad outcomes, including child abuse and neglect, high school dropouts, criminal activity, teen pregnancy, drug and alcohol abuse, and other health problems, and how these costs could be reduced by investing in evidence - based early childhood programs.
Well over half of future recidivist delinquents can be predicted at age 7 from the child's aggressive behaviour together with the family's ineffective child rearing practices.5 On the other hand, where protective factors exist, the outcome can be good: figure 1) shows the school report of the 9 year old Winston Churchill, whose conduct was «exceedingly bad
Another problem is the possibility of reverse causation in which bad later life outcomes induce reports of more negative early childhood experiences.
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