Cohort studies

Strong Heart Study

The Strong Heart Study is an ongoing cohort study of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and its risk factors among American Indian men and women. The original cohort began in 1984 with 4,549 participants ages 35–74 from 13 tribal nations and communities in Arizona, Oklahoma, North Dakota, and South Dakota. The need for specific ethnic and cultural understanding and sensitivities was recognized from the onset, so the study has a community-based participatory research (CBPR) model. Community members were involved in all stages of conception, design, and implementation of the research. Now in its seventh phase, the extensive research has led to many important findings about heart disease and unique risk factors in native populations. It is a project funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI). The study maintains field centers in Oklahoma, North and South Dakota, and Arizona and a coordinating center at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center. (Wikipedia).

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Heart Failure Overview

Visit http://www.nucleushealth.com/ to learn how using Nucleus animations can improve patient engagement and content marketing. #HeartFailure #CongestiveHeartFailure #Heart Your heart is a muscular organ that pumps blood containing the oxygen and nutrients your body needs. Heart failure

From playlist Heart (Cardiology)

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Shot Through The Heart | Oddities

Mike and Ryan bring a preserved heart to a cardiologist for analysis. Thursdays @ 10pm on SCIENCE | For more, visit http://science.discovery.com/tv/oddities/#mkcpgn=ytsci1

From playlist Oddities

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Teach Astronomy - Fundamental Forces

http://www.teachastronomy.com/ There are four fundamental forces in nature. In decreasing order of strength, there is the strong nuclear force; the particles involved are quarks. The strong nuclear force holds atomic nuclei together. Twelve times weaker is the electromagnetic force, an

From playlist 24. Chemistry and Context for Life

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The Dangerous Mistake People Make About Heart Attacks

In the US, heart disease is the number one killer of women. But the signs for a heart attack are different between genders. Unlike with men, the sign of an upcoming heart attack in women could be a pain in the jaw, upper abdomen, or back. Science Insider tells you all you need to know ab

From playlist Health Science

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Stanford researchers develop algorithm to diagnose heart arrhythmias

Life-threatening heart arrhythmias can be difficult to detect but a new deep learning algorithm can evaluate each second of a heart signal and diagnose 14 types of arrhythmia with performance similar to that of cardiologists.

From playlist Stanford Highlights

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Applications of Equations - Heart Rate, Simple Interest, Population Growth (L1.4)

This video explains how to use given equations to solve various application problems. Content created by Jen Bohart and Amy Volpe Scottsdale CC Math Department Licensed CC-BY-SA 4.0

From playlist Introduction to Linear Equations in One Variable

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Understanding Basic Blood Pressure Control | Nucleus Health

Visit our website to learn more about using Nucleus content for patient engagement and content marketing for hospitals: http://www.nucleushealth.com/ #HighBloodPessure #Hypertension #BloodPessureControl Blood pressure is the amount of force caused by blood pressing against the walls of y

From playlist Chronic Conditions and Illnesses

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Function of Human Heart

Function of Human Heart Real time 3d animation of Human heart and how it works.

From playlist Biology

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Statistics 5_1 Confidence Intervals

In this lecture explain the meaning of a confidence interval and look at the equation to calculate it.

From playlist Medical Statistics

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That Low Salt Diet Probably Won't Prevent Heart Failure

There have been lots of recommendations over the years to eat a low-sodium diet. We've talked about the evidence on this before. Well, get ready to taste salt again. Research points to the conclusion that low sodium diets don't do much to help with heart failure. Subscribe to Healthcare

From playlist Healthcare Triage

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Why Are Feelings So Complicated?! | Compilation

Emotions are really complicated and interesting, which is why we’ve talked about them a lot here on SciShow Psych. In fact, we’ve talked about them so much that we’ve made a compilation of our favorite emotion-related videos! Hosted by: Brit Garner ---------- Support SciShow by becoming a

From playlist Psych Compilation Videos

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Heart Structure and Dissection | Revision for Biology A-Level and IB

The Kingston University STEM Outreach Centre provides a flexible state of the art space for schools, colleges and community groups to explore Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths. Equipped with an interactive floor, a medical simulation robot, spectrometers and much, much more, we of

From playlist Kingston University STEM Outreach Centre

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Paola Gori-Giorgi - Large-coupling strength expansion in DFT and Hartree-Fock adiabatic connections

Recorded 14 April 2022. Paola Gori-Giorgi of Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam presents "Large-coupling strength expansion in DFT and Hartree-Fock adiabatic connections" at IPAM's Model Reduction in Quantum Mechanics Workshop. Abstract: In this talk I will review and put into perspective severa

From playlist 2022 Model Reduction in Quantum Mechanics Workshop

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Which is Worse: Sugar or Fat? | Food Myths Busted

For decades, we’ve heard how terrible fat is for us, but more recently, sugar has become the new villain. What does the science actually say about these two macronutrients and how they affect our health? Join Olivia Gordon for a myth-busting episode of SciShow all about what we eat! Head

From playlist Uploads

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Dr. Steve Horvath on epigenetic aging to predict healthspan: the DNA PhenoAge and GrimAge clocks

Steve Horvath, PhD, ScD is a professor of human genetics and biostatistics at UCLA's Fielding School of Public Health. Dr. Horvath is the creator of the Horvath Epigenetic Aging Clock. His work incorporates elements of biostatistics, genetics, epidemiology, epigenomics, and other fields of

From playlist Interviews

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How Do Magicians Know Our Choice Of Cards? [4K] | Science of Magic | Spark

Magic has become the latest investigative tool for scientists exploring human cognition, neurobiology, and behaviour. Across the globe, this film follows researchers who are bringing magicians’ tricks into the laboratory. With impossible magic, amazing facts, and opportunities for viewers

From playlist 4K Science Documentaries

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Milgram experiment on obedience | Behavior | MCAT | Khan Academy

Visit us (http://www.khanacademy.org/science/healthcare-and-medicine) for health and medicine content or (http://www.khanacademy.org/test-prep/mcat) for MCAT related content. These videos do not provide medical advice and are for informational purposes only. The videos are not intended to

From playlist Behavior | MCAT | Khan Academy

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Claire Voisin: Gonality and zero-cycles of abelian varieties

Abstract: The gonality of a variety is defined as the minimal gonality of curve sitting in the variety. We prove that the gonality of a very general abelian variety of dimension g goes to infinity with g. We use for this a (straightforward) generalization of a method due to Pirola that we

From playlist Algebraic and Complex Geometry

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Complex polynomials and their factors | Linear Algebra MATH1141 | N J Wildberger

We look at the arithmetic of complex polynomials, prove both the Factor theorem and the Remainder theorem, and discuss the contentious "Fundamental theorem of Algebra" from a computational perspective. ************************ Screenshot PDFs for my videos are available at the website htt

From playlist Higher Linear Algebra

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DNA | Observational study | Mortality rate | Prevalence | Cohort study