The nationwide cohort
study surveyed participants in the Japan Diabetes Complications Study who were between the ages of 40 and 70 and had been diagnosed with diabetes.
Reports by
the study survey participants of gender discrimination by judges, marshals, other counsel, and court personnel against female attorneys in federal litigation practice constitutes, at a minimum, a highly important issue with «important legal implications».
Not exact matches
The researchers drew their data from a number of British and American longitudinal
surveys, including the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing
Study, which includes nearly 5,000
participants born in big US cities between 1998 and 2000.
Research conducted at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas, found that
study participants asked to complete a
survey were significantly more likely to do so if the
survey included a Post-it note with a handwritten message asking for their help, akin to a favor.
In the
study, 276
participants answered a
survey which asked about the cuss words they used most often, and in what circumstances.
In Label Insight's 2016 Transparency ROI
study, 56 percent of
participants surveyed said that more product information inspires more trust in a brand.
I'm thinking they'll have to go a lot younger than that — and hope their
study participants are old enough to correctly read their
survey forms.
,» referencing a
study where
participants completed a
survey about the balance of the effort versus reward from a job.
For the
study, Dr. Jaeger and his co-author, Dr. Jacob Wilson (University of Tampa, Department of Health Sciences and Human Performance),
surveyed 24 healthy, college - aged, resistance - trained
participants.
After finishing the
survey,
participants in the
study can opt for an additional
study and consider submitting DNA collected by a cheek swab to be tested for variants at the Apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene.
Delivery medical records, telephone
surveys, and feeding diaries were used to assess
study participant characteristics including delivery mode and feeding method at the time of stool sample collection (Table 1).
To conduct the
study, researchers developed an online
survey that asked
participants to respond, true or false, to whether they believed it is acceptable to allow a physician to prescribe medication, at the request of a terminally - ill patient, in order to end that person's life.
Studying fathers The
study followed 465 men participating in the Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition
Survey, started in the Philippines in 1983, when the
participants were 1 year old.
All of the
study participants took an initial
survey that asked about a host of issues related to their sexual knowledge, attitudes and behaviors.
The
study participants took the
survey a third time four months later.
To further investigate the prevalence of the phenomenon, the researchers carried out the first large - scale online
study of this barely - known effect, and recruited 4,128
participants to answer a
survey, with 1,058 of these also answering additional trait - related questions.
He and his colleagues will also watch over time as the
study participants who reported childhood trauma continue to respond to
surveys sent to them periodically.
Willett's plan is based on the largest long - term dietary
survey ever undertaken: the 121,700 -
participant Nurses» Health
Study, begun in 1976 by Harvard Medical School professor Frank Speizer, with dietary assessments supervised by Willett since 1980.
In many
studies that rely on
surveys, particularly for those in which the
participants are paid to fill out the
survey, there's always a chance that some answered randomly or carelessly.
Participants also completed in - depth
surveys about their medical records, lifestyle and dietary habits at the start of the
study, after five years and after 10 years.
In one preliminary
study, Laurin used Facebook ads to recruit
participants in San Francisco and
survey them about a citywide ban on selling plastic water bottles.
The
study included 126,233 participants from two large long - term studies — the Nurses» Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow - Up Study — who answered survey questions every 2 - 4 years about their diet, lifestyle, and health for up to 32 y
study included 126,233
participants from two large long - term
studies — the Nurses» Health
Study and the Health Professionals Follow - Up Study — who answered survey questions every 2 - 4 years about their diet, lifestyle, and health for up to 32 y
Study and the Health Professionals Follow - Up
Study — who answered survey questions every 2 - 4 years about their diet, lifestyle, and health for up to 32 y
Study — who answered
survey questions every 2 - 4 years about their diet, lifestyle, and health for up to 32 years.
For the
study, Gabriella Hobbs, MD, and Nancy Keating, MD, MPH, of Harvard Medical School, and their colleagues
surveyed 5284 patients with a new diagnosis of lung or colon cancer, and asked
participants how they involved their families in decisions about their care.
As part of the
study design, surveyors recruited
participants traditionally underrepresented in other
surveys about mobile phone use, including minorities, and people with low incomes.
Limitations of the
study include its reliance on
survey participants to accurately recall and report what they ate and drank, as well as the potential for diet fads or food trends in popular culture to influence how people described their diets, the authors note.
For the
study,
survey participants answered 36 detailed questions about their mobile phone and app use, all posed by digital
survey firm Toluna, based in Wilton, Conn..
Included in the
study were 12,842
survey participants who said that they ate at least one family meal in the week prior to their interview.
In a
survey of more than 25,000
participants from all walks of life, this
study examines at how U.S. adults rely on friends for expressive, instrumental and companionate support.
This
study design allowed the researchers to see how long the effects of exposure to a pro-smoking message could be detected in
participants» responses to the
survey questions.
«Research on friendship: How U.S. adults rely on friends for expressive, instrumental and companionate support: In a
survey of more than 25,000
participants from all walks of life,
study examines at how US adults rely on friends.»
Survey participants did not single out any one industry as being more or less supportive of women, according to the
study, which examined aerospace, transportation and utilities, construction, computer services / software and biotech.
In the
study by Lisa E. Ishii, M.D., M.S.H., of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and her coauthors, 473 casual observers completed a
survey that included images of 13 unique patients before and after surgery, although
survey participants were unaware of patients» surgery status.
In the first
study, published in the March issue of the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 45
participants were told they would have to ask 10 strangers, either in person or via e-mail, to complete a
survey for no pay.
Mo
surveyed 407
study participants in Florida, which was chosen because at the time the data was collected, roughly the same percentage of women held elective office in the state (23 percent) as women held elective office in the nation overall (24 percent).
The current
study differs from previous investigations in that — instead of relying only on
participants» answers to
survey questions about their use of stimulants and other drugs, alcohol consumption and other factors including quality of life — it relied on structured interviews that have been validated for the diagnosis of neuropsychiatric disorders, including substance - use disorders.
To help explain why divorce influences maternal relationships more than paternal ones, and to replicate the first
study's findings, Fraley and Heffernan repeated their analysis with a new set of 7,500
survey participants.
Studies of infertility have tended to recruit research
participants from medical settings such as general practice, so our population - based
survey sample provides a rare insight into those people who, despite having failed to get pregnant after a year of trying, did not seek help from health services.
A full 72 percent of
participants in the
survey, published in Environmental Research Letters, said they «supported» or «somewhat supported» the
study of solar radiation management (SRM).
This new
study used internet - based questionnaires that
study participants completed on their own smartphones to
survey almost 200 young adult drinkers in Switzerland every hour while they were drinking in real - life situations, asking them to report the number of friends present and number of drinks they had consumed.
Studying the effects of diet on weight loss is often confounded by the difficulty in measuring what people actually eat —
participants may not adhere to meal plans, misjudge amounts, or are not truthful in follow - up
surveys.
The
participants completed a
survey to rate the quality of their sleep every month throughout the
study.
During the four - week
study period,
participants completed a baseline
survey and follow - up interviews at two and four weeks to determine the short - term impact of the ads.
Design, Setting, and
Participants We used data from the Health and Retirement
Study (HRS), a nationally representative, population - based longitudinal
survey of individuals in the United States 65 years or older from the 2000 (n = 10546) and 2012 (n = 10511) waves of the HRS.
Study participants included a total of 344 men (ages 39 to 75 years) and 433 women (ages 19 to 76 years) from the 2016 Cooperative Congressional Election
Study post-election
survey, conducted online by YouGov between Nov. 9 and Dec. 14, 2016.
In this
study, researchers identified 5,315 pediatric patients in the CDC's National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey (NHANES) and compared children who reported taking ADHD medications with survey participants not on these medica
Survey (NHANES) and compared children who reported taking ADHD medications with
survey participants not on these medica
survey participants not on these medications.
The researchers noted possible selection bias, as a number of
participants contacted for the
study did not complete initial
surveys and link Cardiogram accounts.
A 2004
study by the Genetics and Public Policy Center of Johns Hopkins University found that 92 percent of
survey participants did not want genetic information shared with employers; and 80 percent of respondents felt health insurers should not have access to their genetic information.
Data from 5,823 individuals was analyzed, taken from one of the few
survey indexes which include values of telomere lengths for
study participants.
Of 264
study participants surveyed in 2013 and 2014, more than 8 in 10 reported at least one negative Facebook experience, such as bullying, meanness, misunderstandings or unwanted contacts.
However, as the researchers point out, «A previous
study undertaken in the same Chadian area in a larger group of sixty rural
participants did demonstrate a weak inverse correlation between B12 and homocysteine concentrations in the twenty subjects most severely protein depleted... It is therefore likely that the hyperhomocysteinemia status of some of our rural subjects in the present
survey might have resulted from combined B12 and protein deficiencies.