-
Stanciole found that after controlling for age, employment, income, race, sex, and other factors, having insurance corresponded with drinking more, smoking more, and being more sedentary.
FORBES: Oregon Health Experiment Shows That Having Health Insurance Is Different Than Being Healthy
-
The researchers found that sitting was associated with a higher death risk after controlling for factors including age, gender, smoking status, physical activity, education, body mass index, as well as living in an urban or city environment.
FORBES: Why Sitting Increases Your Risk of Dying Sooner
-
Children with poor nutrition at age 3 are more aggressive and antisocial in the teenage years after controlling for a host of social adversity factors.
CNN: Opinion: Unlocking crime using biological keys
-
After controlling for other factors which might influence heart disease risk, they found that high levels of distress at age seven were associated with a 31% increased risk of cardiovascular disease in middle-aged women.
BBC: Unhappy childhood linked to heart risk in later life