• An April 2023 study similarly looked to examine the association between cannabis use and psychotic disorders in high-risk patients. (hightimes.com)
  • Stair Climbing Tied to Reduced Risk for Heart Disease - Medscape - Oct 19, 2023. (medscape.com)
  • Between 15 January 2020 and 15 June 2021, 776 459 cases were logged in the database, allowing for analysis of real-time risk from the pandemic. (who.int)
  • In response to the outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Japan, a national COVID-19 cluster taskforce (comprising governmental and nongovernmental experts) was established to support the country's Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare in conducting daily risk assessment. (who.int)
  • Most organizations still take a primarily technical view to cyber risk and continue to take an exclusively defensive approach by throwing technology at the problem. (sans.org)
  • Analyzing infosec through the lens of game theory shows that cyber-risk analysis and wasting attacker time may be highly effective cybersecurity strategies. (techtarget.com)
  • Kelly Shortridge, threat analytics product manager for BAE Systems Applied Intelligence, a consulting company based in the U.K., was ardent to explain that game theory is a mathematical language, not actually a theory, and using it to describe cybersecurity shows that the keys to security are in cyber-risk analysis and figuring out how to best waste an attacker's time. (techtarget.com)
  • With this understanding, Shortridge suggested cyber-risk analysis modeled after SWOT analysis , where an IT team must determine the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats present in the game. (techtarget.com)
  • Ultimately, the specifics of defense tactics depend on the results of the cyber-risk analysis. (techtarget.com)
  • The researchers found that being overweight or obese in early and middle adulthood was associated with an increased risk for colorectal cancer (CRC) and noncolorectal GI cancers. (medscape.com)
  • When modeled continuously, we observed 2% to 4% increased risk of both CRC and noncolorectal GI cancer with each 1-unit increase in BMI across all time points," the researchers say. (medscape.com)
  • The finding that regular weekly aspirin use did not modify GI cancer risk suggests that obesity may alter the cancer-preventive effect of aspirin, the researchers suggested. (medscape.com)
  • Reporting in the Journal of the American Medical Association ( JAMA ), the researchers found that those with the highest levels of sodium in their urine (the most accurate way to measure how much salt a person consumes) were more than four times less likely to die from heart disease than those with the lowest intake of sodium. (time.com)
  • In 2004, further data emerged: WHI researchers found that estrogen therapy increased women's risk of stroke and potentially deadly blood clots, and thus, the estrogen-only arm of the trial was also halted . (time.com)
  • Last year, the WHI researchers published a study based on the same data, finding that the blood-clot and stroke risk disappeared after women stopped hormone therapy. (time.com)
  • It is the first time that researchers have found a link between residential traffic noise exposure and hearing-related outcomes . (hindustantimes.com)
  • Researchers aimed to better understand why some people undertake risky, and often detrimental, behaviour, which could help them advise on how to curb undesired risk-taking such as gambling. (irishtimes.com)
  • Researchers have known that women who breastfeed their babies are significantly less likely to develop ovarian cancer, but a new study has revealed that the longer a mother breastfeeds, the smaller her risk for developing the disease. (medicaldaily.com)
  • By examining data from previous studies involving over 5,300 participants, researchers identified specific antibodies that may elevate the risk of cardiac issues, offering new insights into the influence of immune responses to everyday foods on heart health. (theepochtimes.com)
  • While researchers are continuing to study possible risks, the column should have included more of this background for balance. (bigthink.com)
  • It's a very interesting finding," Dr. Rowan T. Chlebowski, a co-author of the study and chief of medical oncology and hematology at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, told the Los Angeles Times . (time.com)
  • Hugo Martín is an assistant editor on the Fast Break Desk, the Los Angeles Times' breaking news team. (latimes.com)
  • He has been a journalist with the Los Angeles Times for more than 30 years, covering politics, transportation, travel, business and the outdoors. (latimes.com)
  • Google risks becoming stale as it avoids investing effectively in new technologies or solutions. (forbes.com)
  • A risk averse investor avoids risks. (indiatimes.com)
  • Higher body mass index (BMI) and changes in BMI over time may increase a person's risk for gastrointestinal (GI) cancer, according to new data from the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening Trial. (medscape.com)
  • The risks vary depending on the person's age, overall health, and medical history. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • In the study abstract, authors note the varying conclusions in the current body of research surrounding cannabis use and triggering the onset of psychosis among high risk individuals. (hightimes.com)
  • The Transportation Security Administration has been moving away from a system that assumes all passengers, including children and the elderly, pose the same security risk. (latimes.com)
  • However, the research suggests that even "silent" sensitivities can pose significant health risks, such as increased cardiovascular threats, challenging the notion that they are less severe than allergies. (theepochtimes.com)
  • Why we are monitoring developments in the non-banks sector, and what risks they might pose for the financial system. (europa.eu)
  • Therefore levodopa is not expected to pose a risk for the environment. (janusinfo.se)
  • A New York Times columnist who has been closely following the COVID-19 pandemic observes that the data indicate the new omicron variant is roughly at the same risk level as the seasonal flu. (wnd.com)
  • however, in the initial stages of the pandemic these were not sufficient for real-time risk assessment owing to limited accessibility, delay in data entry and inadequate case information. (who.int)
  • Two recent pieces in The New York Times illustrate a maddening truth about just how hard it is for the general public to make accurate assessments about risk. (bigthink.com)
  • This semi-automated database was used in daily risk assessments, and to evaluate and update control measures to prevent community transmission of COVID-19 in Japan. (who.int)
  • Current hazard or risk assessments can rely on country risk assessment reports, recurring events, ongoing events in other countries, and various other sources. (who.int)
  • Can Korean economy withstand impact of China's economic risks? (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • These geopolitical-induced headwinds are coming to the fore at the same time as another material drag on activity - the spread of the Omicron variant - fades. (ubs.com)
  • Typically, geopolitical strife tends to serve as a source of short-term downside for risk assets that, over time, is overcome by positive underlying fundamentals. (ubs.com)
  • It is a measured examination of 50 major risks, clustered in economic, environmental, geopolitical, social and technological risk categories, facing the world in the next 10 years. (theconversation.com)
  • Scoring slightly lower in terms of risk are the technology and geopolitical risk categories respectively, where cyber attacks, information systems failures, data fraud, terrorism, fragile states (produced by various combinations of the above), and pervasive entrenched corruption dominate. (theconversation.com)
  • It is alarming that noise seems to increase the risk of tinnitus, cardiovascular diseases and dementia, among other diseases, says Jesper Hvass Schmidt. (hindustantimes.com)
  • Climbing more than five flights of stairs daily is associated with a reduced risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) of about 20%, new observational data suggest. (medscape.com)
  • The risk and hazard to countries can be probabilistically determined as a function of hazard, exposure, vulnerability, and capacity. (who.int)
  • Exposure time: 28 d. (janusinfo.se)
  • Adults who exhibited no change in overweight or obese BMIs between early and later adulthood and those who exhibited increases in BMI from underweight or normal in early adulthood to overweight or obese BMI in later adulthood had a significantly higher risk for CRC and noncolorectal GI cancer. (medscape.com)
  • Of course, dropping blood pressure too low comes with its own health risks - dizziness, fainting and even shock - but most U.S. adults aren't at risk of hypotension. (time.com)
  • A new study , titled "Recreational Cannabis Use Over Time in Individuals at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis: Lack of Associations with Symptom, Neurocognitive, Functioning, and Treatment Patterns" published in the journal Psychiatry Research , examined teens and young adults at risk of developing psychotic disorders. (hightimes.com)
  • In the latest study, published in the journal Lancet Oncology , scientists once again mined data from the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) - the large-scale trial begun in 1991 that first looked at the relationship between hormone replacement therapy and health risks such as breast cancer and heart disease. (time.com)
  • But the combination of vaccines and Omicron's apparent mildness means that, for an individual, Covid increasingly resembles the kind of health risk that people accept every day. (wnd.com)
  • It is, therefore, necessary that traffic noise is considered a health risk that must be taken into account in urban planning and political decisions, says Manuella Lech Cantuaria. (hindustantimes.com)
  • Information on leisure-time physical activity was obtained from the 2007 and 2010 North Denmark Region Health Surveys of 18,874 Danes and linked to data from nationwide administrative registries. (lww.com)
  • In the editorial " Clean Air Act and Dirty Coal at the Supreme Court ," The Times rightly castigates the selfish coal industry for putting its interests above the public's health by attacking provisions of the Clean Air Act that would curtail emissions of toxic pollutants. (bigthink.com)
  • Time To Get Out Of The High-Risk Health Insurance Pool? (wglt.org)
  • More than a dozen of the programs plan to close down in early 2014 or are considering doing so because of new guarantees for consumers in the federal health law, according to the National Association of State Comprehensive Health Insurance Plans , a membership organization for high-risk plans. (wglt.org)
  • The so-called pre-existing condition insurance plans - another type of high-risk plan that was created under the health care overhaul - will cease to exist at the end of the year as well, and members will transition to other coverage. (wglt.org)
  • High-risk pool members shouldn't assume states will provide a lot of assistance with making choices, says Katie Keith , an assistant research professor at the Georgetown University Center on Health Insurance Reforms. (wglt.org)
  • Title : Prime Time: 12-Month Sexual Health Outcomes of a Clinic-Based Intervention to Prevent Pregnancy Risk Behaviors Personal Author(s) : Sieving, Renee E.;McMorris, Barbara J.;Beckman, Kara J.;Pettingell, Sandra L.;Secor-Turner, Molly;Kugler, Kari;Garwick, Ann W.;Resnick, Michael D.;Bearinger, Linda H. (cdc.gov)
  • Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication (CERC) training can help responders and public health professionals prepare to communicate in an emergency. (cdc.gov)
  • CERC trainings are based on lessons learned during public health emergencies, evidence-based practices from the fields of risk and crisis communication, and psychology. (cdc.gov)
  • Health communication professionals, public officials, and others working to share information during the novel coronavirus outbreak can apply Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication (CERC) principles to more effectively develop and share COVID-19 messages. (cdc.gov)
  • CDC's Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication (CERC) webinars help emergency responders and health communication professionals learn more about CERC principles so that they can communicate more effectively during emergencies. (cdc.gov)
  • Agreement on the objectives to reduce mortality and protect health systems, and prioritizing populations over time. (who.int)
  • Country Capacity refers to the combination of strengths, attributes, and resources available within a country to effectively manage and reduce health emergency risks while enhancing resilience. (who.int)
  • The risk of death associated with this surgery varies according to the valve and various other factors. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • The authors note that for women with a family history of breast cancer or other risk factors that make them more vulnerable to the disease, the added hormones might not be a good idea. (time.com)
  • Objectives To determine if risk of multiple sclerosis (MS) is associated with month of birth in countries in the northern hemisphere and if factors related to month of birth interact with genetic risk. (bmj.com)
  • This risk persists even when accounting for traditional heart disease factors such as smoking and diabetes. (theepochtimes.com)
  • What risks lie ahead for financial markets, and what factors are responsible for the emerging vulnerabilities in this sector. (europa.eu)
  • Next come the economic risk factors including chronic fiscal imbalance, severe income disparity, and extreme volatility in energy and agricultural prices. (theconversation.com)
  • And in this globalised lean economy, with its "just in time " supply chain manufacturing, we have the complicating factors of critical systems failure and cyberterrorism as additional risks. (theconversation.com)
  • We'll examine the psychological barriers to communication that tend to emerge in crises, factors that impact perception of risk, and how to build trust to communicate more effectively. (cdc.gov)
  • Time trends, geographic variation and risk factors for gastroschisis in Canada: A population-based cohort study 2006-2017. (bvsalud.org)
  • Log-binomial regression was used to quantify the associations between risk factors and gastroschisis . (bvsalud.org)
  • Risk factors included problematic use of substances (RR 2.61, 95% CI 2.01, 3.39) and hypothyroidism (RR 2.76, 95% CI 1.56, 4.88). (bvsalud.org)
  • risk factors (5 treatment-related hypoglycaemia in type 2 items) and monitoring (6 items). (who.int)
  • We studied the risk factors for hy- a good level of knowledge was 65% items poglycaemia in terms of management of di- correct. (who.int)
  • Analyses were stratified by susceptibility to ASCVD based on family history, genetic risk, and established risk factors. (medscape.com)
  • Then there is a cluster of environmental risks that include rising greenhouse gases, failure of climate change adaptation, and the failure to manage urbanization and land and water resources. (theconversation.com)
  • The company aims to target a new investor audience, such as people who invest in FDs but are reluctant to take risks. (indiatimes.com)
  • An insurance company's 90% TaR is 3 years for liquidity risk under current finance structure. (wikipedia.org)
  • not only for liquidity risk mentioned above, but also for any risks that demands time-based analysis. (wikipedia.org)
  • For the time being, this money overhang cannot cause inflation, because short- and long-term interest rates are near zero and the economy is currently in a liquidity trap. (jordantimes.com)
  • SAN DIMAS, Calif. - The historically low interest rate environment along with a rapid growth of fixed-rate mortgage portfolios and recent changes to the Federal Reserve Bank lending procedures, has lead WesCorp to expand the range of its liquidity and interest-rate risk management tools. (cutimes.com)
  • In 2002, the combination-therapy arm of the study was halted when data revealed that women taking the hormone pills to treat the symptoms of menopause had a 24% increased risk of developing breast cancer. (time.com)
  • The present paper therefore expresses utility as a function of consumption in a standard life cycle model, and illustrates the implications of this model with experimental small- and intermediate-stake risk data from Holt and Laury [Holt, C.A., Laury, S.K., 2002. (lu.se)
  • These agents should not be used for breast cancer prevention, even though we clearly show a lower risk of breast cancer in these women taking hormones. (time.com)
  • Much of my research," Stenstrom told The Irish Times , "investigates how hormones impact consumer decision-making. (irishtimes.com)
  • 1 This may implicate environmental factor(s) such as shared timing of gestation or birth, or both. (bmj.com)
  • This study investigated the psychological aspects of a gestation diagnosed at high risk for first pregnancy before and after birth. (bvsalud.org)
  • Participants indicated that feelings such as fear and anxiety common in normal gestation intensify in a high-risk pregnancy. (bvsalud.org)
  • MUNICH - The increasing risk of a return of inflation in the United States and Europe is beginning to galvanise debates among economists. (jordantimes.com)
  • Because the time paths of these monetary aggregates have increased at a moderate pace since the beginning of the financial crisis in 2008 (perhaps with the exception of the most recent few months), one might be inclined to believe there is no inflation risk. (jordantimes.com)
  • But such a scenario has enhanced the risks of stagflation, which implies a painful phase of high inflation but low or negative growth, aggravating the challenges currently faced by the policymakers," the report said. (indiatimes.com)
  • Taiwan is not at risk of stagflation as the nation's economy would grow at least 2 percent this year with inflation expanding by a similar rate, rendering current monetary policies appropriate, central bank Governor Yang Chin-long (楊金龍) said at a meeting of the legislature's Finance Committee yesterday. (taipeitimes.com)
  • Whether central banks are more preoccupied with downside risks to growth or upside risks to inflation will be an important influence on markets. (ubs.com)
  • The issue is largely limited to Evergrande, Country Garden, and a few other Chinese firms, whose default risks were already known and predicted by the market during the past years," Seung told The Korea Times, Friday. (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • Two government agencies - the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the California Governor's Office of Emergency Services - provide information online about flood risks and other hazards across California. (latimes.com)
  • Studies have suggested that sleeping too much can increase risk of type 2 diabetes. (indiatimes.com)
  • We present a data-driven, generic approach for identifying patients at risk of being mis- or overdiagnosed, here exemplified by chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). (nature.com)
  • Quantitative risk management : concepts, techniques and tools. (wikipedia.org)
  • Far too many organizations do not place the security awareness program under the security or risk management team, to provide the support and partnerships needed by the security awareness officer for success. (sans.org)
  • A community's flood risk changes over time, so the National Food Insurance Program and the Federal Emergency Management Agency continuously work with communities across the country to identify and map flood risks. (latimes.com)
  • We've now taken the infrastructure and risk management technology developed for our investment products and applied it to a wide range of credit products. (cutimes.com)
  • In this paper we explore the case of India, using the example of landslide risk management. (hindustantimes.com)
  • With these tools, we develop a new risk management framework for companies based on the leverage process (the ratio of a company asset process over its debt) and its corresponding alarming level. (springer.com)
  • Lehar, A.: Measuring systemic risk: a risk management approach. (springer.com)
  • The results provide "relatively consistent messaging that overweight or obesity from early to later adulthood as well as BMI increases throughout adulthood were associated with increased risk of GI cancers, especially CRC," the authors of an editorial accompanying the study write. (medscape.com)
  • But in the new study, people who had the most salt in their diets actually had the lowest risk of dying from heart disease. (time.com)
  • First, the study population was relatively young on the whole (participants' ages ranged from 20 to over 60), and therefore at lower risk of hypertension than an older population. (time.com)
  • However, the study did not show any effect on heart disease or an increase in breast cancer risk over the seven-year follow-up. (time.com)
  • In the study, estrogen therapy did not reduce these women's cancer risk. (time.com)
  • As per a study, those who slept for more than 9 hours per night had a 23% increased stroke risk than people who slept for less than 8 hours. (indiatimes.com)
  • 1 Studies of migrants indicate that risk for MS is strongly associated with place of residence early in life, 6 9 but it is not easy to retrospectively study gestational, perinatal, and childhood periods in adult onset diseases. (bmj.com)
  • Studies of month of birth and risk of MS have been carried out in several cohorts of people with MS, but sample sizes, ethnic groups, and statistical methods differed for each study and findings have been inconsistent. (bmj.com)
  • Despite limitations of the study -- relatively "loose" monitoring in the AS arm and potential for selection bias in the selected-treatment arm -- the data provide reason to reconsider the role of AS in men with favorable intermediate-risk PCa, they added. (medpagetoday.com)
  • We study time reversal, last passage time and \(h\) -transform of linear diffusions. (springer.com)
  • A new study published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology establishes a connection between sensitivity to common food allergens and a higher risk of heart disease-related deaths. (theepochtimes.com)
  • The study was not meant to support cannabis use among youth or cannabis as a therapeutic tool for those at psychosis risk. (hightimes.com)
  • Short bursts of high-intensity stair climbing are a time-efficient way to improve cardiorespiratory fitness and lipid profile , especially among those unable to achieve the current physical activity recommendations," study author Lu Qi, with Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, said in a news release . (medscape.com)
  • For confidence level α, VaR can be interpreted as "Required minimum capital to sustain loss" TaR can be interpreted as "Maximum period of time that an adverse event would not occur or would be prevented (ie. (wikipedia.org)
  • As part of a $2.2-billion plan over the next five years, the TSA says it wants to adopt a system that can identify the risk level of each bag based on information about its owner. (latimes.com)
  • Set the level of risk that works best for you and your business. (squareup.com)
  • Risk Manager allows you to customize the level of risk you're willing to accept running your online business. (squareup.com)
  • If that's the case, then we would expect handling money to result in a boost in testosterone and risk-taking among all men, regardless of their level of narcissism. (irishtimes.com)
  • Environment seems to influence risk at a population level, but specific details remain unclear. (bmj.com)
  • For general diffusions with killing, we obtain the probability density of the last passage time to an arbitrary level and analyse the distribution of the time left until killing after the last passage time. (springer.com)
  • In other words, among various investments giving the same return with different level of risks, this investor always prefers the alternative with least interest. (indiatimes.com)
  • The high profit from the carry trade for EM currencies reflects persistent country characteristics likely reflective of risk rather than the interest differential per se. (repec.org)
  • Previous studies have shown that people with high blood pressure can lower their risk of developing hypertension and heart disease by eating less salt. (time.com)
  • We have to remember that many people are at high risk for high blood pressure," says Sacco. (time.com)
  • And when we start going up in age, the proportion of people with high blood pressure approaches 70% to 80% or more, so your lifetime risk of high blood pressure is exceedingly high. (time.com)
  • Most of the gold-standard studies on salt - in which people are randomly assigned to consume diets high or low in sodium - have involved people who either have hypertension or are at high risk of developing it. (time.com)
  • The luggage of passengers deemed high risk would get a more thorough screening than other bags. (latimes.com)
  • High-risk flood areas are labeled with the letters A and V. (latimes.com)
  • While we note that such comparisons of PCa [prostate cancer] mortality should be considered exploratory, as they were not in the original randomization protocol, these data still represent relatively high-quality evidence and underscore the small but increased risk of PCa mortality for patients on AM compared to treatment," wrote Vidit Sharma, MD, and R. Jeffrey Karnes, MD, both of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. (medpagetoday.com)
  • This necessitates a thorough discussion of the risks of AM, particularly for patients with intermediate- or high-risk PCa. (medpagetoday.com)
  • S/he stays away from high-risk investments and prefers investments which provide a sure shot return. (indiatimes.com)
  • that is, while the incidence and severity of primarily viral infections, such as upper respiratory tract infections, may be reduced by regular moderate physical activity compared with sedentary behavior, exhaustive high-intensity exercise has been reported to increase the risk of upper respiratory tract infections among athletes ( 18,19 ). (lww.com)
  • Cannabis and Psychosis: Is There a Link for High-Risk Individuals? (hightimes.com)
  • To date, however, the evidence that cannabis is associated with negative outcomes in individuals at clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis is inconsistent. (hightimes.com)
  • Putting all elements of the risk categories together, water supply and food shortage crises, volatility in energy and agricultural prices, fiscal imbalances, income disparity, and greenhouse gas emissions control, dominate the high scores. (theconversation.com)
  • Enrolled in the Iowa high-risk insurance pool because insurers on the private market won't cover them, the couple pays more than $1,300 each month for a plan with a $2,500 annual deductible and a 20 percent copay for medical services. (wglt.org)
  • Change is coming for many of the roughly 220,000 people in 35 state high-risk pools, although they may not know it yet. (wglt.org)
  • Starting next year, insurers will no longer be able to deny coverage to people because they're sick, and high-risk pools will no longer be necessary for those patients. (wglt.org)
  • Although shuttering high-risk pools will likely cause anxiety for those who rely on them, people may well find better, more affordable coverage on the state-based marketplaces (also called exchanges), which will open in October to offer plans that start in 2014. (wglt.org)
  • In Iowa, where the Petersens live, the state high-risk pool will continue to operate, at least for the time being, officials say. (wglt.org)
  • Chris Petersen says he hasn't heard anything about what's happening with the Iowa high-risk pool. (wglt.org)
  • For consumers, if you're enrolled in high-risk pools, you need to examine your options," she says. (wglt.org)
  • Patients with this entity, although considered to be at low risk for acute coronary syndrome (ACS), nevertheless cause a great deal of stress to emergency care providers and have been considered "high risk" from a medical malpractice standpoint. (medscape.com)
  • others with high risk conditions. (who.int)
  • With America's current-account deficit at an alarming 5.3 per cent of GDP, it was feared that America's net foreign-debt-to-GDP ratio would climb to the point that foreign investors would demand a higher risk premium on dollar-denominated assets. (jordantimes.com)
  • We think credit unions will want to match-fund some of these assets in order to mitigate some of the interest-rate risk," said Burrell. (cutimes.com)
  • ETMarkets Fund Manager Talk: This fund manager recommends balanced portfolio of equity, debt for FY24 Indian investors who are risk-averse should diversify their portfolios across different asset classes such as equity, debt and liquid assets like bonds or cash, according to Ayush Aggarwal, chief investment officer at SMC Private Wealth. (indiatimes.com)
  • If an attacker can't figure out what security tools are in use or where the valuable assets are, it wastes their time and makes an attack less worthwhile. (techtarget.com)
  • What you can do is start to leverage that strength with strategies that lead them down rabbit holes and really waste their time, and leverage the fact that they do have a lot of time and they're willing to spend it. (techtarget.com)
  • This may be a bit of a bummer, but several studies have suggested that those who sleep 9 or more hours have an increased mortality risk than those who sleep 7-8 hours a night. (indiatimes.com)
  • However, incorporation of the newfound PCa mortality and metastasis estimates into such models would cause surveillance to be suitable for even fewer men with intermediate-risk PCa. (medpagetoday.com)
  • Using 284,154 patients diagnosed with COPD, we identified frequent disease trajectories comprising time-ordered comorbidities. (nature.com)
  • Interestingly, as many as 42,459 patients did not present with these time-ordered, common comorbidities. (nature.com)
  • Looking at the latest research conducted by the IDC Financial Insights, this on-demand webinar outlines four practical steps that your credit union can take to not only survive, but also thrive, during challenging times. (cutimes.com)
  • Mr. Baxter explained that the New York Fed felt compelled to pay out A.I.G.'s counterparties in full to unwind derivative contracts because "there was little time, and substantial execution risk and attendant harm of not getting the deal done by the deadline of Nov. 10," when A.I.G. was scheduled to report its earning and could face downgrades from credit ratings agencies. (calculatedriskblog.com)
  • Even so, those people were at no higher risk of developing hypertension. (time.com)
  • Every payment is screened to detect suspicious online transactions with real-time results available in your Dashboard. (squareup.com)
  • Inside the bank, Kafka allows Capital One to build a real-time system that takes advantage of modern data and cloud technologies without exposing customers to unnecessary data breaches, or violating privacy regulations. (brighttalk.com)
  • Our cloud-native offering is designed to be the intelligent connective tissue enabling real-time data, from multiple sources, to constantly stream across the organisation. (brighttalk.com)
  • We developed a unique database for nationwide real-time risk assessment that included these case lists from local government websites and integrated all case data into a standardized format. (who.int)
  • Risk implies future uncertainty about deviation from expected earnings or expected outcome. (indiatimes.com)
  • Cambridge University Press] implies that seemingly plausible small-stake choices under risk imply implausible large-stake risk aversion. (lu.se)
  • Can Genetic Risk Scores Score a Win for Precision Prevention? (cdc.gov)
  • Despite evidence that physical activity affects the immune system ( 9,22 ) and repeated findings of a relationship between physical activity and viral infections ( 1,5,12,15,20,21 ), few studies ( 4,17 ) with a smaller number of outcomes have examined the relationship between physical activity and risk of bacterial infections. (lww.com)
  • Low-Salt Diets Reduce Heart Disease Risk, Right? (time.com)
  • Undetected food reactions could be secretly heightening your heart disease risk. (theepochtimes.com)
  • While these responses may not be strong enough to cause acute allergic reactions to food, they might nonetheless cause inflammation and over time lead to problems like heart disease," said Dr. Jeffrey Wilson, an allergy and immunology expert at the University of Virginia School of Medicine, in a press release. (theepochtimes.com)
  • Weinstock and colleagues sought to determine the short-term risk for adverse cardiac events (ACEs), including life-threatening dysrhythmias, MI, SCA, and death, in low-risk patients admitted to the hospital for presumed ACS. (medscape.com)
  • However, TaR measures risk amount as time(time until an adverse event) rather than value (loss amount). (wikipedia.org)
  • [ 2 ] Stated in more simple terms, the risk that an adverse event will occur purely by virtue of being admitted to a hospital is 15 times higher than the short-term risk for an ACE after a negative workup in the emergency department. (medscape.com)
  • It is a big mistake," Shin Gi-wook, a Korea studies expert at Stanford University, said in a recent interview adding Seoul's withdrawal from the General Security of Military Information Agreement (GSOMIA) puts the "trilateral security framework at risk. (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • Their data also suggest that BMI over time may be associated with GI cancer risk. (medscape.com)
  • Based on that data, scientists just assumed that the same low-salt principle would benefit people at lower risk as well. (time.com)
  • Now the scientists have looked at the data again, tracking women for an additional five years after they stopped taking estrogen, and found that after 12 years of follow-up, women taking estrogen-only therapy showed a 23% lower risk of breast cancer than those who took a placebo. (time.com)
  • In our data, we have found more than 40,000 cases of tinnitus and can see that for every ten decibels more noise in people's homes, the risk of developing tinnitus increases by six per cent, says Manuella Lech Cantuaria, PhD., Assistant Professor at the Maersk Mc-Kinney-Moller Institute and affiliated to the Department of Clinical Research at SDU. (hindustantimes.com)
  • In our decision analytic cost-effectiveness modeling of the original ProtecT data, initial treatment was the preferred option for patients with more than a 2.4% 10-year risk of metastasis on active surveillance. (medpagetoday.com)
  • They added that the findings "contrast with epidemiological data that suggest that cannabis use increases the risk of psychotic disorder. (hightimes.com)
  • One tactic Shortridge suggested was creating fake data or making a system look like a different malware analyst's virtual machine sandbox every time an attacker enters. (techtarget.com)
  • Thus, the conventional intertemporal consumption model under risk appears to be inconsistent with the data. (lu.se)
  • The use of levodopa (sales data Sweden 2021) has been considered to result in insignificant environmental risk. (janusinfo.se)
  • Risk of environmental impact cannot be excluded, since there is not sufficient ecotoxicity data available. (janusinfo.se)
  • There is thus no requirement for companies to stay informed about the development of their substances from an environmental point of view and consequently to update the environmental risk assessment as new data are published. (janusinfo.se)
  • Individuals with obesity may need to increase aspirin frequency or dosage to see an effect, but upping the dose comes with its own risks, including GI bleeding. (medscape.com)
  • Two recent examples from The New York Times, one from a columnist and one in an editorial, illustrate the danger of news media coverage of risk that is alarmist, incomplete, and inaccurate. (bigthink.com)
  • Logistic regression analysis showed that compared with sedentary behavior, all levels of leisure-time physical activities lowered the likelihood of filling an antibiotic prescription. (lww.com)
  • Scoring each risk category for both likelihood and impact, the report highlights that all risk-categories contain elements that have a near certainty of occurrence within the next 10 years with an impact that will be devastating. (theconversation.com)
  • Scoring most highly in terms of both likelihood and impact are the risks associated with water and food shortages. (theconversation.com)
  • The investigators discuss this risk in relation to the reported risk for adverse events during a routine hospitalization that contributes to a patient's death: 1 in 164. (medscape.com)
  • For most people with symptoms, the risk of leaving the condition untreated is greater than the risk of surgery. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • It suggests that even individuals without severe allergic symptoms-but who have IgE antibodies-may face a heightened risk of heart issues, especially when they continue to consume allergenic foods. (theepochtimes.com)
  • To make matters even more confusing, people can have food sensitivities, meaning they have symptoms from foods, for lots of different reasons, including things like lactose intolerance, which have nothing to do with IgE or allergy," Dr. Keet explained to The Epoch Times. (theepochtimes.com)
  • Surprisingly, clinical symptoms improved over time despite the medication decreases. (hightimes.com)
  • TAVI and valvuloplasty are minimally invasive procedures that do not require extended hospital stays, so the recovery time for these procedures is relatively short. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • National planning assists in determining the actions that should be taken in the upcoming weeks, months, and years to prevent, detect, and respond to risks and threats. (who.int)
  • Insurers' foray into capital markets risk could cost them more than they ever bargained for. (risk.net)
  • What risks do we see for financial markets and real estate? (europa.eu)
  • Test of time: the ravaged interior of the Iveagh Markets on Dublin's Francis Street. (irishtimes.com)
  • If home prices should make a U-turn, even in certain local markets, the risk to both borrowers and banks will rise. (thefiscaltimes.com)
  • It predicted a world of increased wealth, consumer choice and confidence aided by globally distributed workforces, along with "just in time" manufacturing, hyper-connectivity of markets and stock exchanges, and the death of the command economy. (theconversation.com)
  • By human risk we mean from people being actively targeted by cyber attackers to simple human errors or mistakes, like autocomplete in email. (sans.org)
  • Far too many organizations approach security awareness as a part time job, with the vast majority of people in this role spending 50% or less of their time on it. (sans.org)
  • Stenstrom and colleagues - John Dinsmore (Wright State University), Jonathan Kunstman (Miami University) and Kathleen Vohs (University of Minnesota) - aimed to better understand why some people undertake risky, and often detrimental, behaviour, which could help them advise on how to curb undesired risk-taking such as gambling. (irishtimes.com)
  • Free unlimited access to Credit Union Times' trusted and independent team of experts for extensive industry news, conference coverage, people features, statistical analysis, and regulation and technology updates. (cutimes.com)
  • Addressing common misconceptions, Dr. Wilson told The Epoch Times: "Perhaps nine out of 10 people with detectable food IgE in their blood can tolerate these foods without obvious allergic reactions. (theepochtimes.com)
  • The Zimbabwean authorities on Wednesday accused an international group of overstating the risks of a cholera outbreak in the sprawling capital city of Harare, ensuring the public that the cholera epidemic that killed 4,000 people in 2008 won't repeat again. (globaltimes.cn)
  • Their risk of bleeding is slightly higher than it is for people without bleeding problems. (medlineplus.gov)
  • safe against the event)" Thus for same α, lower VaR means lower risk and higher TaR means lower risk. (wikipedia.org)
  • Low leisure-time physical activity is associated with a statistically significant 10% lower risk of suspected bacterial infections during a 1-yr follow-up compared with sedentary behavior. (lww.com)
  • They can deliver higher returns, as has been seen in the increasing investments in mid and small cap stocks and funds in recent times," says Ankit Jain, Fund Manager, Mirae Asset Investment Managers (India). (indiatimes.com)