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期刊名:Bmj military health

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ISSN:2633-3767

e-ISSN:2633-3775

IF/分区:1.7/Q2

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共收录本刊相关文章索引936
Clinical Trial Case Reports Meta-Analysis RCT Review Systematic Review
Classical Article Case Reports Clinical Study Clinical Trial Clinical Trial Protocol Comment Comparative Study Editorial Guideline Letter Meta-Analysis Multicenter Study Observational Study Randomized Controlled Trial Review Systematic Review
Iain Templeman,E Parish,J Rimmer et al. Iain Templeman et al.
The human gut microbiome can be impacted by a range of environmental and lifestyle factors including diet, antibiotics, physical fitness and acute and chronic stressors. There is also evidence to suggest that specific compositional and/or f...
Faye S Walker,S C Needham-Beck,C A J Vine et al. Faye S Walker et al.
Introduction: Military personnel must manage a multitude of competing physiological and cognitive stressors while maintaining high levels of performance. Quantifying the external workload and cognitive demands of tactical...
Daniel J Hurst,T L Ray Daniel J Hurst
Future warfare will likely involve near-peer or peer-peer conflict in which there is a great risk of mass casualty scenarios. Because of anti-access and area denial, air superiority will not be guaranteed, which will hamper rapid evacuation...
Willian Carrero Botta,J M Magraner,R M Orr et al. Willian Carrero Botta et al.
Introduction: Combat readiness assessments through simulated tasks (STs) have been developed for the Brazilian Air Force (BAF) to establish physical employment standards. Previous research has established BAF critical com...
Christopher L Chapman,E A Schafer,A W Potter et al. Christopher L Chapman et al.
Introduction: The present study determined the (1) day-to-day reliability of basal heart rate (HR) and HR variability (HRV) measured by the Equivital eq02+ LifeMonitor and (2) agreement of ultra short-term HRV compared wi...
Emilia Pietiläinen,K Parkkola,T Vasankari et al. Emilia Pietiläinen et al.
Introduction: The Western lifestyle challenges national defence. Inactivity, obesity, high BP and elevated lipid and glucose levels as well as tobacco use all increase cardiometabolic risk. The present study was thus aime...