In one 12 -
week study published in The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, EpiCor was given to 116 people who hadn't received any flu vaccination.
Reduced - nicotine cigarettes were beneficial in reducing nicotine exposure and dependence, and also the number of cigarettes smoked per day, when compared with standard - nicotine cigarettes in a six -
week study published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Not exact matches
For the
study,
published this
week in the Journal of the American Medical Association, researchers pitted people assigned to follow a traditional restricted - calorie diet (eating roughly 25 % of their normal daily calories) against those who were told to fast every other day (eating 25 % of their normal calories on fast days and 125 % on the other days) for a year.
Last
week, a
study published by the Kauffman Foundation using census data from the past 50 years, revealed some eye - opening statistics about the number of immigrant - led companies in America.
According to a
study published this
week by the Pittsburgh - based market research group CivicScience, digital device addiction is at an all - time high: 59 percent of U.S. online consumers over the age of 13 consider themselves at least «somewhat» addicted to their digital devices.
A
study published in May found that for adults aged 60 - 88, walking for 30 minutes four days a
week for 12
weeks appeared to strengthen connectivity in a region of the brain where weakened connections have been linked with memory loss.
A
study published in a medical journal, The Lancet, revealed that drinking 100g of alcohol a
week increases risk of mortality.
That's one conclusion you can draw from a new research
study, titled «Firming up Inequality,»
published this
week by the National Bureau of Economic Research.
Another
study published last
week by Verizon came to a similar conclusion.
A
study published last April suggested that in less than a
week, a diet high in saturated fat can reduce your muscles» ability to turn the sugar in food into energy.
Researchers in Illinois
published a
study this
week that found that raising the minimum wage to $ 15 could help families better afford decent housing.
His insight is bolstered by a recent
study published in January in the American Heart Association's journal Circulation that found that the best results for heart health were gleaned when participants worked out four to five times a
week.
According to a new scientific
study published in Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, subjects who meditated for about 30 minutes a day for eight
weeks had measurable changes in gray - matter density in parts of the brain associated with memory, sense of self, empathy, and stress.
There have been many
studies published over the years that working less results in higher productivity (hint: the optimal number is less than 40 hours per
week).
According to a
study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences this
week, the best way to avoid catching a cold on an airplane is to sit in a window seat — and stay there for the entirety of the flight.
In a
study published this year that tracked Best Buy's ROWE program, researchers at the University of Minnesota found that, while it had helped reduce employee turnover, women who took part still spent 10 hours more on child care per
week than their male flextime colleagues.
One of the most recent
published studies and easily to access for free, was conducted by Moro and her colleagues and investigated the effects of eight
weeks of time - restricted feeding on metabolic factors, body composition, strength and other markers in resistance - trained males.
And a
study by Mara Cecilia Ostfeld that was
published last
week in the journal Political Behavior similarly concluded that «as White Democrats learn about Democratic outreach to Latinos, they become less supportive of Democrats.»
Last
week, we
published the Tenth Safe Withdrawal Rate
Study!
Researchers at the University and Chicago and Minnesota last
week published an extraordinary
study on broker misconduct.
Sad news from the halls of research today, in which a
study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition says that eating fried potatoes two or more times a
week can double your risk of early death.
Last
week Carter
published a Lessons from Life
Study Bible, with the subtitle Personal Reflections with Jimmy Carter.
Last
week, The Lancet journal
published the results of a global, large - scale
study about abortion trends.
This
week the University College London (UCL)
published findings from a UK - based
study looking at the impact of a range of health and lifestyle factors on wellbeing — one of the factors was fruit and vegetable consumption.
The good news: Three
studies on gluten contamination in labeled gluten - free foods have been
published in the past few
weeks.
A comprehensive new
study published this
week in the prestigious British Journal of Nutrition shows very clearly that how we grow our food has a huge impact.
A 2008
study published in the British Society for Investigative Dermatology found that participants who consumed tomato paste for 12
weeks experienced over 30 % more protection from UV light than the control group.
Another
study published in Social Psychological and Personality Science discovered that the gold standard for happiest couples are those that have sex once a
week.
This
week's featured article is a recent
study featured in a report by WSBT Television and soon to be
published in the Journal of Applied Developmental Science.
A
study published last month indicated that four units a
week was not enough to harm a fetus.
It seems pretty clear though that 12
weeks should just be the beginning of what's considered an acceptable amount of leave: a 2013
study published in the Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law found that women who return to work earlier than six months after giving birth are more likely to develop PPD than those who were able to spend more time at home.
A newly
published study out of the University of Michigan Health System finds compression socks worn after a marathon improve performance in coming
weeks.
An epidemiological
study published in the journal Pediatrics found no higher SIDS rate for co-sleeping babies older than 11
weeks — unless the mother smokes.
According to a
study published in the Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, most women (59 percent) experienced an onset of pregnancy symptoms by their fifth or sixth
week, while 71 percent reported symptoms by the end of
week six and 89 percent by
week eight.
The three recent papers
published in American Journal of ObGyn: Wax metaanalysis (2010), Chervenak (2013), Grunebaum **** (see note at bottom)(Apgar 0, 2013) and the U.K. Birth Place
study (2013) report perinatal death rates from homebirth as 3 times or 10 times higher than perinatal death rates in the first
week than hospital birth.
Mothers can continue to experience excessive sleepiness as long as 18
weeks postpartum, according to an Australian
study published on PLOSone.
And a new
study published last
week in JAMA Pediatrics suggests that a probiotics might prevent colic in the first place.
It is also incredibly difficult to
study, so before I get to discussing the
study published in Pediatrics this
week about the possible effects of -LSB-...]
If you read the scientific and medical literature, the controversy about bed sharing safety primarily concerns babies less than 20
weeks old, and the most recent meta - analysis of
published studies found no evidence of increased risk for babies over 3 months of age (Carpenter et al 2013).
In two new
studies published online this
week in the Journal of Athletic Training, lead author Marc Norcross of Oregon State University documents how women who were asked to undergo a series of jumping exercises landed more often than men in a way associated with elevated risk of ACL injuries.
Choosing to have a baby outside a hospital comes with a slight increased risk of death to the baby in the United States but a lower likelihood of a C - section, according to a
study of Oregon births
published this
week in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Regarding vitamin D deficiency, consider the following from August 2009: «A whopping 70 percent of American kids aren't getting enough vitamin D, and such youngsters tend to have higher blood pressure and lower levels of good cholesterol than their peers, according to two new
studies published this
week in the journal Pediatrics.
This
week the BMJ finally retracted a Chandra
study it
published in 1989 based on research he conducted for Mead Johnson: «This concluded that mothers with a family history of allergy should use hypoallergenic (hydrolysed) formula feed if they were not breast feeding.»
Two
weeks before the Systematic Review was
published, the Lucas
study — which aimed to test a hypothesis that «duration of breast feeding is related to changes in vascular function relevant to the development of cardiovascular disease» — was
published in the BMJ alongside 2 press releases and a leader article.
Although the Australian work of McIntosh (2010) found that infants under two who spent one night or more a
week and toddlers who spend 10 days a month of overnight time in their non-primary caregiver's care are more irritable, more severely distressed and insecure in their relationships with their primary parent, less persistent at tasks, and more physically and emotionally stressed, this
study has been largely discredited by a recently
published consensus report endorsed by 110 child development experts (Warshak, 2013), which found that McIntosh drew unwarranted conclusions from her unrepresentative and flawed data.
Three
studies published in the past few
weeks have offered more insight into that issue, concluding that the self - reporting of concussions by college players varies by position, with offensive linemen the least likely to report concussions and less significant hits to the head.
A 1993
study published in the Journal of Tropical Pediatrics found that preterm babies weighing between 1,000 and 1,500 grams, or between slightly more than 2 to 3 pounds, who were exclusively breastfed after discharge from the special care nursery, doubled their birth weight at age 10
weeks.
One
study published in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology demonstrated that expectant moms who did 45 minutes of water aerobics twice weekly over the course of 6
weeks experienced an increased sense of well - being, and a reduction in stress and fatigue.
An Australian
study published in the journal Birth looked at 593 pregnant women during a four -
week period.
Over 1000 medical
studies are being
published world wide every
week.