A new
study warns against the poor nutritional quality of plant - based milk.
Lastly,
the study warns against believing that the uneven diffusion of the internet across the globe can be remedied with economic incentives alone.
Plenty of
studies warn against this, including one that shows that missing out on just 10 of the best days in the stock market over 160,000 daily returns in 15 markets around the world can cause you to end up with about half of what you would have earned if you had stuck with an index fund over time.
Studies warn against swaddling due to an increased risk of SIDS — sudden infant death syndrome — if babies get overheated or turn over on their stomachs while swaddled.
Yet some believe the FDA and
the studies warning against use of breast milk donation aren't telling the whole story.
Not exact matches
The U.S. Department of Energy has begged for new authority to defend
against weaknesses in the grid in a nearly 500 - page comprehensive
study issued in January 2017
warning that it's only a matter of time before the grid fails, due to disaster or attack.
Early
studies have shown some success, although doctors
warn against people with mental illness self - medicating with mushrooms bought through illicit means.
Many commentators
warn against Chinese nationalism but the
study concludes that even the most prideful Chinese might be open to American reassurance, and there is little reason to view Chinese patriotism per se as dangerous to American interests.
Yet a
warning should be voiced
against too unguarded an application of terms and viewpoints derived from the sociological
study of other human activities.
To U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission See also: REVIEW OF NUMEROUS SIDS
STUDIES THROUGH 2005 September 30, 1999 Ann Brown U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission Office of Information and Public Affairs Washington, DC 20207 Dear Ann Brown, Your
warning against placing infants in adult beds is highly erroneous, irresponsible, and will lead...
As a result of this and other
studies, the AAP has issued an official safety
warning against the use of crib bumpers, deriding the popular product as both dangerous and unnecessary.
In May 1999, the Consumer Product Safety Commission [CPSC] released a
warning against cosleeping or putting babies to sleep on adult beds that was based on a
study of death reports of children under the age of two who had died from 1980 to 1997.
You have likely seen and read a number of
studies that
warn pregnant ladies
against ingesting too much caffeine.
Many years later I learned that the teacher had
warned us
against psychopathic charm, and the leading authority in the
study of psychopathy confirmed that the teacher's advice was sound.
This
study therefore provides important methodological guidance for the application of tDCS and provides further evidence that brain stimulation can improve endurance exercise performance, although the authors
warn against the uncontrolled use of tDCS.
«Previous
studies have shown that antibody preparations that protect
against low doses of virus may be ineffective
against higher doses,» they
warn.
Whole Genome Sequencing Not Informative for All A
study involving data of thousands of identical twins by Johns Hopkins investigators finds that whole genome sequencing fails to provide informative guidance to most people about their risk for most common diseases, and
warns against complacency born of negative genome test results.
Distinctions between synthetic and natural vitamin A have been absent in the extensive media coverage of this
study — on the contrary, the newspaper reports contain implied
warnings against pregnant women eating liver, dairy products, meat and eggs, but none
against eating fabricated foods like margarine and breakfast cereals to which synthetic vitamin A is added — and one is moved to ask if there might be a hidden agenda in bringing these results before the public.
Looking into what is the adequate amount of protein during pregnancy and I came across these
studies, which
warn against * too little * protein.
Boyd, et al
warn against making causal claims given non-random assignment of teachers to students in their
study.
The schools minister Nick Gibb, a fan of PISA, has recently argued in favour of more teacher - led instruction, but school leaders have
warned against using «limited» international
studies to inform assessment policy.
In Connecticut we will commission a «
study» of the practice of assessing teachers» performance on student test scores even though the actual makers of the test, and mountains of literature,
warn against the practice.
No
study stands alone, but in the context of the larger literature the Tennessee
study is a clear
warning against complacency, wishful thinking, and easy promises.
Sense About Science, which listed Ridley as a member of its Advisory Council, itself
warned against such review processes, saying: «sometimes organisations or individuals claim to have put their
studies through peer review when, on inspection, they have only shown it to some colleagues.
James Hansen, the director of the Nasa Goddard Institute for Space
Studies who first
warned the world about the dangers of climate change in the 1980s, has joined other scientists in submitting statements to be considered by a judge at the Information Rights Tribunal on Friday... James Hansen told the Guardian: «Our children and grandchildren will judge those who have misled the public, allowing fossil fuel emissions to continue almost unfettered, as guilty of crimes
against humanity and nature... If successful, the FOI request may, by exposing one link in a devious manipulation of public opinion, start a process that allows the public to be aware of what is happening, what is at stake, and where the public interest lies.»»
A new university
study and the ever - increasing use of wireless devices, such as the BlackBerry, could result in a flood of lawsuits
against employers for creating an allegedly dangerous environment where unpaid overwork is required for success, promotion and job security, a leading law firm
warns -LSB-...] Giving rise to possible claims, is a recent
study by Gayle Porter, Associate Professor of Management at Rutgers University in New Jersey, which suggests possible liability for companies if they keep their employees on «electronic leashes» as part of their job requirements.
Lawsuits
against Glaxo claim that the company failed to properly test the drug and determine safety risks before selling it; failed to
warn the public about dangerous side effects; fraudulently marketed the drug to pregnant women even though it was not approved for this use; and misrepresented results from animal
studies.
However, the
study author has
warned against making assumptions about the cost of coaching relative to other forms of care, saying that the
study found that in most cases it did not reduce health care costs and, in some cases, could increase them.
M Dodson, «The End in the Beginning - Re (de) finding Aboriginality» (1994) 1 Australian Aboriginal
Studies 2 at 5; see also Mick Dodson's
warning against measuring the authenticity of a culture by «the quaintness of its technologies»: M Dodson, «Indigenous Culture and Native Title», (1996) 21 Alternative Law Journal 2 at 5.