Sentences with phrase «very few scientific studies»

The ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center notes there are very few scientific studies looking at the efficacy and safety of CBD use in companion animals.
Suggesting these kinds of radical lifestyle changes to otherwise healthy women who experience painful menstrual cramps seems cruel and irresponsible since there are very few scientific studies on curing menstrual pain and therefore no proof these changes work.
Despite its long history of use in aromatherapy, cedar essential oil has been tested in very few scientific studies.
I can't speak to the power of ESP for certain, as very few scientific studies have addressed this topic.

Not exact matches

This makes it very difficult to accurately predict weather changes more than a few days in advance, though weather forecasters are continually working to extend this limit through the scientific study of weather, meteorology.
«I've been working, studying, and taking photos of the wonderful wildlife in the Chernobyl area for over 20 years and am very pleased our work is reaching an international scientific audience,» says Tatiana Deryabina from the Polessye State Radioecological Reserve in Belarus, a few miles from the site of the Chernobyl accident.
What is lost in many headlines is that scientific studies usually express their results as a change in risk of developing a disease, not a direct causation, and very few diseases are caused by one chemical or one food additive.
Although there haven't been many scientific studies undertaken to see and verify the usefulness of creatine nitrate, nevertheless, from the very few studies so conducted, it has been successfully concluded that creatine nitrate approximately contains almost ten times the water solubility like its counterparts creatine monohydrate.
That's because truly scientific research is extremely difficult, time - consuming, and costly — and thus very rare — which is precisely why the WWC has found so few studies to be satisfactory.
Very few studies have been done to ascertain scientific support numbers for AGW, but I would venture a guess that professional scientists in those fields have a feel for where their colleagues agree and disagree and they read each other's work and run in the same circles.
I would say that the more a scientific issue overlaps with world views, the more politics interferes, but I would say that there are relatively few scientific issues that have no political ramifications (even the very act of studying science is politically linked), and many, many scientific issues that have overlap with political issues.
There are too many studies (objective, dispassionate, and scientific) which prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that with very few exceptions that famines are not based on a lack of food but a lack of money to buy food.
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