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Showing posts with label risk factors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label risk factors. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Small strategic dietary changes yield surprisingly large health and environmental returns [Anthropocene, September 2021]

Title:
Small strategic dietary changes yield surprisingly large health and environmental returns 
 
Author: 
Emma Bryce 
 
Published:  
Anthropocene, 3 September 2021 
 
From the article:
Meticulously ranking almost 6,000 foods, researched showed how simply swapping some ingredients for others could incrementally add hours and days to our lives and reduce environmental harms, too. 
 
ALSO SEE 
 
Stylianou, K.S., Fulgoni, V.L. & Jolliet, O. Small targeted dietary changes can yield substantial gains for human health and the environment. Nat Food 2, 616–627 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s43016-021-00343-4 
 

Saturday, September 4, 2021

Does postponing retirement affect cognitive function? A counterfactual experiment to disentangle life course risk factors [Scholarly Article - Social Science & Medicine: Population Health, 2021]

Title:
Does postponing retirement affect cognitive function? A counterfactual experiment to disentangle life course risk factors
 
Authors:
Jo Mhairi Hale, Maarten J. Bijlsma & Angelo Lorenti
 
Published:
Social Science & Medicine - Population Health,  September 2021
 
Abstract:
Evidence suggests that contemporaneous labor force participation affects cognitive function; however, it is unclear whether it is employment itself or endogenous factors related to individuals’ likelihood of employment that protects against cognitive decline. We exploit innovations in counterfactual causal inference to disentangle the effect of postponing retirement on later-life cognitive function from the effects of other life-course factors. With the U.S. Health and Retirement Study (1996–2014, n = 20,469), we use the parametric g-formula to estimate the effect of postponing retirement to age 67. We also study whether the benefit of postponing retirement is affected by gender, education, and/or occupation, and whether retirement affects cognitive function through depressive symptoms or comorbidities. We find that postponing retirement is protective against cognitive decline, accounting for other life-course factors (population: 0.34, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.20,0.47; individual: 0.43, 95% CI: 0.26,0.60). The extent of the protective effect depends on subgroup, with the highest educated experiencing the greatest mitigation of cognitive decline (individual: 50%, 95% CI: 32%,71%). By using innovative models that better reflect the empirical reality of interconnected life-course processes, this work makes progress in understanding how retirement affects cognitive function.
 

Monday, July 26, 2021

New Research Finds Time Spent Among Trees Might Help Kids' Brains Grow And Develop [Science Alert, July 2021]

Title:
New Research Finds Time Spent Among Trees Might Help Kids' Brains Grow And Develop

Author:
Carly Cassella

Published:
Science Alert, 24 July 2021

From the article:
A long-term study among 3,568 students in London, between the ages of 9 and 15, has found those kids who spent more time near woodlands showed improved cognitive performance and mental health in adolescence.

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Scolarly Article (Nature, 27 April 2020) - Aerodynamic analysis of SARS-CoV-2 in two Wuhan hospitals

Title:
Aerodynamic analysis of SARS-CoV-2 in two Wuhan hospitals

Authors:
Yuan Liu, Zhi Ning, Yu Chen, Ming Guo, Yingle Liu, Nirmal Kumar Gali, Li Sun, Yusen Duan, Jing Cai, Dane Westerdahl, Xinjin Liu, Ke Xu, Kin-fai Ho, Haidong Kan, Qingyan Fu & Ke Lan 

Published:
Nature, 27 April 2020
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2271-3

From the abstract:
"The ongoing COVID-19 outbreak has spread rapidly on a global scale. While the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 via human respiratory droplets and direct contact is clear, the potential for aerosol transmission is poorly understood1–3. This study investigated the aerodynamic nature of SARS-CoV-2 by measuring viral RNA in aerosols in different areas of two Wuhan hospitals during the COVID-19 outbreak in February and March 2020."