Not exact matches
In response to such forces, Disney shrank its film - productions arm to focus on family - oriented titles — concepts at little
risk of
dying from loneliness.
A giant new study, reported
in the New York Times, found that people who drank between three and five cups of coffee a day had a 15 percent lower
risk of
dying young from heart disease and several other medical conditions.
The study found that adults who sat for 11 hours or more per day had a 40 % increased
risk of
dying in the next three years than those who sat for less than four hours a day.
Another study reported by The New York Times
in 2008 found that men who did not take a vacation at least once a year had a «21 percent higher
risk of death from all causes and were 32 percent more likely to
die of a heart attack».
According to research published
in Progress
in Cardiovascular Diseases, jogging is the best form of exercise for increasing your life span, lowering the
risk of
dying from any disease by 40 percent.
«What we generally see,» says the Canadian - born Katzmarzyk, «is that people who sit more during the day have a higher
risk of
dying from any cause, and
in particular, mortality from heart disease.»
consider your own logic: so here's a doctor who chooses not simply to make piles of cash
in the US, but goes to the poorest continent not the planet...
risking his life to work with people
dying from an incredibly dangerous virus... openly admitting he is motivated by his faith
in a God who didn't just
risk his life, but gave it for others...
One of the reasons children
in Gaza were
dying is that Palestinian terrorists deliberately put them at
risk by locating their rocket launchers next to schools and residential neighborhoods.
At the
risk of sounding «flaky» and «corny» and although process thinkers and readers once they have finished this book will understand, I need to mention three very special creatures
in my life: Buksi, my eighteen year old cat who
died Easter Sunday, 1987; Csibi, my two year old cat; his mother, Whiskers, now four.
Just a lot of «grasshppers» at a «disco»; as we
died in Vietnam; rode as Freedom Riders at the
risk and sometimes cost of our lives; were killed, beaten, imprisoned, and then abandoned by Rev. Moon: as he made billions taking everything out of the sea
in illegal trawling nets: while no one was watching...
New research from Harvard University actually suggests that attending «religious services» at least once a week will significantly lower your
risk of
dying over the next decade and a half — and these results have been replicated
in enough studies and populations to be considered highly reliable.
So to really do Pascal's wager right, if I am to not
risk Hell, then I must convert to every religion ever known, then
die in childbirth.
As the Pope still has significant influence over the less educated masses
in these parts of the World, he has exercised this power by: (a) Using some of the Vatican's incomprehensible wealth to educate these vulnerable people on health family planning and condom use; (b) Supporting government programs that distribute condoms to high
risk groups; (c) Using its myriad of churches
in these regions to distribute condoms; or (d) Scaring people into NOT using condoms, based upon his disdainful and aloof view that it is better that a person
die than go against the Vatican's position on contraceptive use.
«He's not at
risk of
dying, but he could be at any moment
in the event of some complication,» said Jorge Albarracini about his son.
I still don't understand people's obsession with boxing players
in to a specific role... The whole «true DM» is a
dying breed, even Coquelin is arguably something else considering the advanced positions he takes up often
in front of Santi and takes major
risks in winning the ball back for us... IMO, the reason Coquelin has had such a successful integration into the first team is that he focussed incredibly hard on the basics of his role first and foremost before adding other elements to his game (long - balls, driving runs into space, more aggressive ball movement
in general) it's not rocket science to tell a player to curb the attacking side of their game and focus primarily on defence before attack... Nor is it that hard to see that playing
in a midfield pairing with either Ramsey or Cazorla is going to be different as well.
We all know that Granit Zhaka is banned and Aaron Ramsey will not be
risked by Wenger so early
in his recovery, but we have Elneny on the sidelines who must be
dying for a game and can surely fill the gap.
Putting many MANY studies together has been done, and going
in for a repeat c - section with my fourth baby knowing that I had a more than 3-fold increased
risk of
dying on the table than if I was attempting a vaginal birth after 3 previous c - sections was hard to deal with.
A study released by the National Institutes of Health
in 2004 indicated that children who were breastfed had a 20 % lower
risk of
dying between 28 days and our year old when compared to children who weren't breastfed during this time.
The
risk of
dying in the first six months of life for babies who receive infant formula is 14 times higher.
However, despite the fact that almost all home births are low
risk, the actual outcomes are bad,
in that more babies
die during or after birth, and more are injured during birth.
This woman had the courage to accept that her decision to refuse induction resulted
in the death of her baby, and she made a point of countering the «babies know when to be born / some babies just bake longer / babies aren't library books» with «My son
died because he was postdates and I didn't understand the
risks.»
Every labor and delivery carries the
risk of the baby
dying, especially if the mother is attended by an incompetent practitioner without adequate backup
in case something goes wrong.
In fact, joining a community group could actually cut your risk of dying next year in hal
In fact, joining a community group could actually cut your
risk of
dying next year
in hal
in half.
Yes, babies
die in hospitals — though they are predominantly premature, no prenatal care, congenital defects, etc, not HEALTHY TERM babies — but the RELATIVE
RISK is MUCH lower than comparable risk homebi
RISK is MUCH lower than comparable
risk homebi
risk homebirth.
In Oregon, babies die at the hands of CPMs at a much higher rate than they do in hospital, comparing low - risk wome
In Oregon, babies
die at the hands of CPMs at a much higher rate than they do
in hospital, comparing low - risk wome
in hospital, comparing low -
risk women.
Yes people
die in car accidents wearing their seatbelts, but the RELATIVE
RISK of that happening compared to those that aren't wearing seatbelts is much LOWER.
I can show you mounds of evidence that most people driving drunk get home safe, most people who don't wear seat belts don't
die when driving home, that most kids who are not put
in car seats survive, but why incur more
risks to an already risky process?
Test Leads to Needless C - Sections A 2006 analysis found that fetal heart monitoring failed to reduce the
risk of a baby's
dying late
in pregnancy, during birth, or shortly after birth — and increased cesarean section rates and forceps deliveries, compared with listening to a baby's heart rate intermittently.
In fact, when compared with newborns put to the breast within an hour of birth, the risk of dying in the first 28 days of life is 41 per cent higher for those who initiated 2 to 23 hours after birth, and 79 percent higher for those who initiated one day or longer after birt
In fact, when compared with newborns put to the breast within an hour of birth, the
risk of
dying in the first 28 days of life is 41 per cent higher for those who initiated 2 to 23 hours after birth, and 79 percent higher for those who initiated one day or longer after birt
in the first 28 days of life is 41 per cent higher for those who initiated 2 to 23 hours after birth, and 79 percent higher for those who initiated one day or longer after birth.
«Babies
in the United States have a higher
risk of
dying during their first month of life than do babies born
in 40 other countries, according to a new report.
Cut the
risk of
dying in childbirth
in half and double the
risk of drunk driving and it's still more than a factor of 10.
Your midwives saw to it that was maintained as well by not warning you that all of the data on homebirth
in the US show a 3 - 8x higher
risk of the baby
dying in homebirth than
in hospital birth.
The ABSOLUTE
risk that she gets
in an accident (including single car accidents where no one else is involved) if she drives drunk is about 20 times less than her baby
dying in childbirth.
What hardly ever gets pointed out,
in the «babies
die in hospitals» [faux] argument is that, while, yes, babies do
die in hospitals, it is after everything possible has been done to save them, whereas
in homebirth babies are put at the utmost
risk of death by not having proper staff / equipment / conditions, etc. to save them.
Most people do admit that there are negligent midwives, there are women having homebirths that should have been
risked out and there are babies that are being delivered to low
risk mums that have
died or been brain damaged without expert medical care
in a hospital.
No one is claiming that 100 % of homebirth will end
in disaster (if it was the case, humanity would have
died long ago) But you had a higher
risk of
dying or losing you baby.
Women and their babies are at
risk of
dying in hospitals as well.
A woman's lifelong
risk of
dying in a car accident is much higher than her
risk of
dying in childbirth, but during the year of pregnancy, the pregnancy is a bigger threat.
It's your child's total
risk of
dying if you not only skip a car seat, but drive him
in a car with no anti-lock brakes, no airbags, non-tempered windshields, no crumple zones, and no seatbelts, every day until age 10.
What irritates me most about these people is that it never sinks
in that there's a far greater
risk of infant mortality
in non-hospital births; they only seem to realize that there's a chance period that the baby could
die,
in the same way that a baby can
die in any birth.
And it's not like the
risk of a baby
dying at homebirth is greater than the
risk of a baby
dying in a car accident.
Please point us toward the stories about term babies who were born to low
risk women who had no known problems before birth that all of a sudden
died in a hospital.
Well, the vast majority of women give birth
in the hospital, especially those at the highest
risk for complications, so of course there is a larger absolute number
dying in the hospital.
Based on the same report, your child's total
risk of
dying in a car accident by age 25: 188 per 100,000.
Babies
die in hospitals as well, and for me I believe the
risks are worse there for a healthy woman with ahealthy pregnancy.
It may also help explain why the US does comparatively well for perinatal outcomes but very badly
in terms of infant mortality, if massive, high tech, emergency, intervention, which is readily available, has kicked the can down the road, past the neonatal period, but the baby
dies at some later date (and it will be higher
risk for the rest of infancy, at least, due to prematurity).
The
risk of a mother
dying after a c - section is about 1
in 5,000.
The probability of a baby
dying from a home birth is approximately twice the probability of a child
dying in a car accident at any point from birth to age 25, and ten times as high as the
risk of
dying in a car accident between birth and age 10.
1
in 11 women
in Afghanistan still
die due to pregnancy / childbirth (lifetime
risk), and this is a big improvement over just 10 years ago.
However, reducing
risks is not a failsafe way to prevent SIDS and at least 300 babies still
die in the UK each year.