Sentences with phrase «reviewed medical study»

There are hundreds of peer - reviewed medical studies examining the efficacy of magnesium in a wide range of health enhancing applications, yet not much attention is directed at the method of delivery.

Not exact matches

Chew tells me that one of the main reasons he's drawn to Omada is that the company has several wide - ranging studies published in actual peer - reviewed medical journals suggesting its system really works.
A review of several such studies found that viewing fictional medical TV programs had a negative influence on viewers» health - related knowledge, perceptions or behaviour in 11 % of studies, a positive influence in 32 % of studies, and mixed influence in 58 %.
«The average medical debt in Massachusetts in 2013 was relatively low at just $ 3,041 (6 percent of total unsecured debt) compared to $ 8,594 (20 percent of total unsecured debt) nationwide,» Austin writes in his 2014 study, portions of which were published in the Maine Law Review.
Yet in a new Manhattan Institute study of New York State hospital ratings on Yelp, which boasts some 140 million unique monthly users, Yelp reviews were correlated with better medical care.
For example, books reviewed in the first months of 1910 included Herbert Croly's The Promise of American Life; Education in the Far East, by Charles F. Thwing; a philosophical study titled Religion and the Modern Mind, by Frank Carleton Doan; Jane Addams's The Spirit of Youth and the City Streets; The Immigrant Tide, by Edward Steiner; Medical Inspectors of Schools (a Russel Sage Foundation study); A. Modern City (a scientific study of that phenomenon), by William Kirk; The Leading Facts of American History, by D. H. Montgomery; and Jack London's collection of short stories, Lost Face.
My current thesis on the study of chaotism in regards to the influx of nuclear ameoba into the thatroglycerinanindoid has receive great reviews from the medical community.
The study protocol was approved by the Tufts Medical Center Institutional Review Board.
A study review by CJ Bacon and colleagues from the Department of Child Health Medical School in the University of Newcastle tracked 649 babies from the age of 8 to 26 weeks to answer the question, «How mothers keep their baby warm?
Researchers writing in the Archives of Women's Mental Health, reviewed 10 medical studies including four with humans and six on animals.
Approval for the study was granted by the University and Medical Center Institutional Review Board.
Even though I am not a researcher or medical professional and the peer - reviewed study is to appear in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, I thought the results were a scare tactic.
In 1995, the Journal of the American Medical Association reviewed the various studies.
This study was reviewed and approved by the Institutional Review Board at the Georgetown University Medical Center.
An UpToDate review on «Planned home birth» (Declercq and Stotland, 2015) stated that «Large cohort studies using intent - to - treat analysis of midwife - attended, planned, out - of - hospital birth of low - risk women in developed countries have reported reduced rates of cesarean birth, perineal lacerations, and medical interventions, and similar rates of maternal and early perinatal morbidity and mortality compared to planned hospital birth.
Whether the key outcomes of caesarean section differ between non-physician clinicians and medical doctors was explored in one review that included six studies conducted in low - income countries.
The study included a review of medical records of 20,169 women who delivered babies from June 2015 through August 2017.
International research on safety of homebirths [1]: «In 2014, a comprehensive review in the Journal of Medical Ethics of 12 previously published studies encompassing 500,000 planned home births in low - risk women found that perinatal mortality rates for home births were triple that of hospital births.
The study received approval from the Boston University Medical Center institutional review board.
The ingredients in Belli products are selected based upon an extensive review of published medical studies.
In two separate peer - reviewed research studies, which were published in the medical journals Neurosurgery and Journal of Neurosurgery, respectively, the researchers found an 83 percent reduction in the number of torn fibers in a standard concussion model when the band was utilized.
A physician who allegedly conducted human brain - activity experiments on people associated with the NXIVM corporation has apparently not published a scientific study in years and there is no indication his private research was being overseen by an independent review board, according to a medical expert and records of the NIH and U.S. National Library of Medicine.
Two researchers from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health published a review in the November 20th issue of the Canadian Medical Association Journal, of several hundred smoking studies.
That may change, thanks to the results of three studies presented here last week at the Fifth International Congress on Peer Review and Biomedical Publication, organized by the Journal of the American Medical Association and the British Medical Journal (BMJ) Publishing Group.
In a clinical review published in the Feb. 10 issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association, Moffitt physicians, Sondak and L. Frank Glass, M.D., described data from an Australian melanoma screening study that supports more extensive high - risk population - based screening programs.
Black, non-Hispanic service members had a rate of 24.4 new diagnoses of hypertension per 1,000 person - years (p - yrs), nearly 50 percent higher than the rates among members of all the other racial and ethnic groups studied, according to the analysis published in the Medical Surveillance Monthly Report, a peer - reviewed journal on illnesses and injuries affecting service members.
Those studies, including their recent paper published in the medical journal Expert Review of Clinical Pharmacology, which demonstrated that the benefits of taking statins have been exaggerated and are misleading.
In this single center, retrospective study at Cleveland Clinic, investigators reviewed the medical records of 439 patients who underwent colectomy over a 15 - year period.
The current study is a retrospective review of imaging and medical records of eight patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) with elevated central venous pressure complicated by PLE who underwent lymphatic imaging and interventions at CHOP.
Ken Dooley, MD, associate professor of pediatrics at Emory and pediatric cardiologist at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, reviewed medical records and made definitive diagnoses for all study participants.
In a study appearing in the September 27 issue of JAMA, Kanu Okike, M.D., M.P.H., of the Kaiser Moanalua Medical Center, Honolulu, and colleagues examined if bias with single - blind peer review might be greatest in the setting of author or institutional prestige.
A first - of - its - kind literature review published in the September issue of Anesthesiology, the official medical journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists ® (ASA ®), suggests although a majority of studies report positive outcomes, there is currently insufficient evidence to support the clinical use of antidepressants for the treatment of postoperative pain.
A new study has found access to electronic health records in acute care situations may influence the care given to that patient, and in some cases, failure to review the EHR could have adversely affected the medical management.
In a 2006 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, the authors reviewed 1000 research articles from 10 high - ranking, international peer - review journals and found that up to 11 % of articles had authors who weren't named.
For the study, 60 women with a history of at least one pregnancy and a diagnosis of neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) were interviewed and their medical records were reviewed.
Researchers led by Jasper Been at Maastricht University Medical Centre in the Netherlands reviewed 11 studies that examined how hospital admissions for childhood asthma and preterm births changed after smoking bans were implemented in various countries and US states.
«Most injuries are minor, but a higher proportion of playground injuries [reviewed in the study] were moderate to severe compared to injuries due to motor vehicles, bicycles or all falls,» explains lead author Kieran Phelan of the Children's Hospital Medical Center of Cincinnati.
To conduct the study, the authors undertook a thorough review of the medical literature.
The study was carried out by the Vision Loss Expert Group, led by Professor Rupert Bourne of Anglia Ruskin University, and shows the prevalence and causes of vision loss in high income countries worldwide as well as other European nations in 2015, based on a systematic review of medical literature over the previous 25 years.
A new study by researchers at Rush University Medical Center reviews research that suggests that the risk for developing Alzheimer's disease among older African Americans may be two to three times greater than in the non-Hispanic white population and that they differ from the non-Hispanic white population in risk factors and disease manifestation.
For the study, researchers reviewed the medical records of 165 people with an average age of 59 who completed nervous system testing and were followed for 10 years.
In the JBJS study, researchers reviewed the BMI, comorbidities, complications, outcomes and cost of care of 8,129 patients who had undergone 6,475 primary TKRs and 1,654 revision TKRs at a major medical center between Jan. 1, 2000 and Sept. 30, 2008.
«Our study has several distinct strengths compared to prior studies including the large number of participants, long - term follow - up, large number of cardiovascular events that were confirmed by medical record review, detailed information about diet and other cardiovascular disease risk factors, and repeated assessment of calcium supplement use over the 24 - year follow up period,» said Julie Paik, MD, MPH, BWH Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, lead study author.
Mental health services should be integrated into disaster response as part of emergency services planning, according to a new study by UT Southwestern Medical Center psychiatrists who completed an exhaustive review of articles on the aftereffects of disasters on mental health.
In this study, researchers reviewed electronic medical records of 100 child pedestrian emergency department visits at St. Christopher's Hospital for Children in Philadelphia, Pa. from January 1 to December 21, 2012, including ambulance dispatch data, patient demographics, procedure (s), diagnoses, and length of stay.
Richard Sloan of Columbia University and his colleagues reviewed every article connecting religion and physical health they could find in Medline, an online service that indexes medical studies.
• Mild to moderate pneumonia: Three days is as effective as eight (el Moussaoui et al., 2006, British Medical Journal); four studies suggest three days is as effective as five in children (Haider et al., 2008, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews).
Ninety - four of the injured individuals elected to enroll in an eight - institution study that began before the end of April 2013 through the efforts of Harvard Catalyst, the clinical and translational science center that facilitated a framework for Harvard Medical School - affiliated institutions to speed the review of human studies.
Patients undergoing spinal fusion surgery who are treated with methadone during the procedure require significantly less intravenous and oral opioids to manage postoperative pain, reports a new study published in the May issue of Anesthesiology, the peer - reviewed medical journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA).
In his study, McGowan reviewed medical records and police reports and interviewed family members to determine whether a subject was abused early in life.
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