Studies have shown that the tree would be safe with only minor interventions. |
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Such interventions could be carried out with patients before they are discharged from hospital. |
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However, these incentives are often distorted by interventions in the market. |
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An important step in meeting this challenge is to integrate interventions whose targets are linked, socially and aetiologically. |
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The growth of mammoth government interventions tends to be a one-way ratchet. |
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More emphasis should be placed on describing interventions that are particularly relevant to the purpose of the case report. |
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They call for field research and action research that introduces, observes, and records the outcomes of interventions over time. |
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Benign interventions include hot and cold packs, bandages, canes, lotions, vitamins and nutritional supplements. |
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In this sense, his authorial interventions served, in his own mind, to create an emotionally authentic text. |
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Prominent right-wing pundits like to portray the above interventions as woolly-headed meddling by decadent, smug millionaires. |
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He's also thinking about interventions that might help reduce these men's automatic stress responses. |
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He didn't explain how he persuaded them not to remain aloof from his experimental interventions. |
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All surgical interventions and anesthesia were conducted in conformity with institutioned guidelines. |
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The challenge of malnutrition is not well addressed by existing interventions. |
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People with traditional religious beliefs may view psychic phenomena as miracles or divine interventions by God. |
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As a result, the patient may attempt to function without biofeedback or may rely primarily on pharmacologic interventions. |
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The main interventions included the introduction of quality circles and surveillance activities. |
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It will result in inappropriate and wasted research funds, time, and effort, and may influence dangerous interventions. |
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The protocol for treatment recommended specific interventions related to stage of the pressure of the ulcer. |
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Most prefer personal timepieces for documentation of routine care interventions. |
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In pharmacological interventions, analgesic and sedative agents were more often used concomitantly than individually. |
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For, as with Sutton, Petrov has put a few noses out of joint with his match-winning interventions this season. |
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There were sharp interventions and denunciations of the present globalisation process as the root of widespread poverty. |
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In addition, a better integration will facilitate the discovery of genes for novel biomarkers and targets for new therapeutic interventions. |
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Even though natural interventions work for some people, those with severe cases should consult an allergist for treatment. |
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Without some intrusive interventions to disrupt patterns of homicides, population trends alone are likely to spur some growth in murder tolls. |
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However, uncertainty remains regarding the effectiveness of interventions to reduce lead hazards and blood lead levels. |
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We can make our observations and interventions on behalf of the emerging poem or story. |
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Behind the parade of diets and workout regimes there have been more direct interventions. |
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Ecosystems are delicate and complex, easily disrupted by clumsy interventions. |
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Second the costs of interventions, both explicit and implicit, did not become excessive. |
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Research shows it's less helpful in normal labours and can lead to unnecessary interventions. |
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They eagerly, even desperately, seek to create or receive such interventions. |
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As economic interventions go it must surely rank as one of the biggest failures in history. |
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Not only had he given his all going forward, he had helped out at the back with telling interventions. |
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Also the possibilities of realist strategies as radical interventions should be broached. |
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The result is one of the simplest artistic interventions I have ever seen and one of the most unforgettable. |
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They were frustratingly denied by late deflections or timely interventions. |
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Many have raised several matters that Ann's kindly interventions have resolved. |
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What we have here then is an extraordinary range of fairly informed interventions. |
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Most lyrical of all his interventions there is the restaurant on the edge of the vineyards. |
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Many interventions can be delivered through day surgery rather than lengthy hospital stays. |
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Box 1 shows the main interventions for urinary tract infections and sore throat. |
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The internet is a feasible and powerful tool in delivering community based health interventions. |
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Soft interventions form part of the normal to and fro of bilateral and multilateral relations between states. |
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The committee therefore recommended continuing evaluation of all recommended interventions and policies. |
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Such interventions have been reported to help pregnant women, for example, cope with stress and reduce the possibility of low birthweight babies. |
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The studied interventions included psychotherapy, psychodrama, cognitive behavior therapy, relaxation therapy, and guided imagery or hypnosis. |
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Regulation will open the way for increasingly restrictive interventions by the state. |
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Most interventions by an umpire detract from the spectacle and hence are unwelcome to players and spectators. |
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Before and after studies may also show a lack of equivalence between comparators, and interventions may vary. |
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These interventions fall under the general rubric of cognitive behavioural therapy. |
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In social support interventions, a resource person was provided to assist patients in meeting the challenges of the illness. |
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Recently, psychoeducational interventions have been designed for families with members with depression, bipolar disorder, or any mood disorder. |
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These interventions involved buying or selling financial assets payable in U.S. dollars or other convertible currencies. |
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While further research is needed in every area, it is clear that the UK is currently underinvesting in interventions research. |
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Public health and nutritional interventions can have an important role in reducing child undernutrition. |
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The diversity of program interventions addressed all of the factors outlined in the ecological perspective. |
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Studies of couple interventions have emphasized married couples as the research participants and intended consumers. |
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This may be true on personal issues but I think with regard to military interventions this is not fair. |
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He above all is a master of narrative, and these speeded-up interventions lend the tale an irregular pulse. |
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Macrolevel interventions can trigger competition between constituencies with opposing values and are often controversial. |
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All of these books were ambitious, unorthodox, noteworthy, and yet ultimately uninfluential interventions from the margins. |
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It is not unknown for government interventions to boomerang creating situations worse than the original problem. |
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These simple lifestyle interventions may just help to preserve our mental faculties as we age. |
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And even if we had convincing evidence that these interventions worked, they still raise substantial ethical concerns. |
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Combined medical interventions may be the most effective treatment approach to hirsutism. |
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We turn to the Internet chat room for textual interventions in our sexual, political and aesthetic lives. |
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While such technological interventions can sometimes be lifesaving, their routine overuse often generates problems. |
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The evidence for the effectiveness of interventions for weight loss among overweight adults, compared with obese adults, is limited. |
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Moreover, evidence indicates that smoking-cessation interventions do not interfere with recovery from chemical dependency. |
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All of our interventions are comprised of both transcultural and culturally specific ingredients. |
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This finding has implications for our distinction between transcultural and culturally specific aspects of interventions. |
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This community outreach effort goes on informally between our scheduled interventions. |
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Adverse outcomes of interventions were corneal exposure, ulceration, phthisis bulbi, and severe recurrent trichiasis. |
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Often those attempting something positive were scythed down by ill-timed interventions. |
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She was referring to something called cogitative behavioral interventions that have been shown to be quite effective. |
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Such constant interventions in faraway countries might seem to hold limited appeal for Americans. |
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He communicated with shareholders, both by circularizing them and by his detailed interventions at shareholders' meetings. |
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The delicate interventions that he applies to each of his pieces convey a hypersensitivity to materials and an attention to texture. |
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The Cochrane review of nine small trials of hypnotherapy found it no more effective than other behavioural interventions. |
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His clinical and research interests include the treatment of anxiety disorders and hypnotic interventions. |
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Hypnotic training and interventions that reach low to moderate hypnotizable subjects are particularly needed. |
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From the street, the new interventions poke and peek out slyly above rooftops and through gaps in the street frontage. |
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These interventions are Creation, the Incarnation of Christ, Pentecost, and the Second Coming. |
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Most of the problems associated with chronic or incurable illness, being social issues, require interventions by communities. |
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In sum, the institutions were historically narrow in scope and have eroded further because of state interventions. |
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Raters observed a total of 18 different interventions judged to facilitate productive enactments. |
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Experienced therapists use as many as 2 dozen distinctly different interventions to initiate and facilitate enactments. |
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Broadly defined, rehabilitation includes a wide array of non-medical interventions for those with schizophrenia. |
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This part consists of six sections, reflecting and emphasising the breadth of available non-physical interventions. |
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Psychopathology and psychiatric nosology became the legitimate framework for these interventions. |
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With the advent of potent acid suppression, surgical interventions that increase the barrier function of the lower esophagus should be avoided. |
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Remember the parting of the Red Sea, along with so many other interventions which led to the Exodus from Egypt. |
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Progressive symptoms, crippling claudication and limb ischemia warrant more aggressive interventions. |
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Irrespective of motivation, government resources are not inexhaustible and humanitarian interventions have to be selective. |
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Current treatment options for pituitary tumors will be discussed and appropriate interventions recommended. |
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Behavioral interventions have also attempted to reduce energy consumption and pollution by altering transportation-related behavior. |
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In extreme cases, surgical interventions, such as a cystectomy and ileocystoplasty procedure, have been used. |
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Other family interventions are effective in reducing social problems although the results are mixed. |
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Some states have enacted statutes requiring mandatory reporting, civil and criminal penalties and emergency interventions. |
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What interventions can be made at an architectural level to make our city a more engaging place to live? |
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In the case of an anorexic patient, the guardian would approve resuscitation and psychiatric interventions. |
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We reviewed the literature that assesses the cost effectiveness of CPD interventions in health care. |
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To discriminate between successful and unsuccessful interventions we need evidence. |
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The evidence suggests that such interventions have limited utility in the general population. |
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His interventions were haphazard, ill prepared, and there was plenty of room for others to take initiatives. |
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If CAV is present, then options such as coronary interventions may be used, depending on whether focal disease is present. |
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Many social and psychological interventions require a thorough understanding of the sociocultural context, which outsiders typically do not have. |
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Clearly, more studies assessing the relative utility of specific airway interventions and their impact on morbidity and mortality are needed. |
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Harm reduction interventions have the potential to reduce the perils of both drug use and drug prohibition. |
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It will become even harder to swing public opinion behind humanitarian interventions if war profiteers and racist thugs are direct beneficiaries. |
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But these interventions also served humanitarian purposes, and presumably were intended to do that too. |
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As the patient was allowed to verbalize these feelings, she agreed to some behavioral interventions to help with the problem. |
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The performer's notoriously spiky interviews and awards show interventions have also made headlines around the world. |
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For the most part, both of these books are valuable interventions in an academic world where theories are always dead on arrival. |
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Inappropriate interventions, including blood tests and measurement of vital signs, should be discontinued. |
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What are the variations in diagnostic tests and interventions for the potential clinical abnormality? |
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Many of the parents qualified their comments about punitive interventions with statements about the ineffectiveness of their efforts. |
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The condition appears to be responsive to behavioral interventions, but some have questioned the acceptability of such procedures. |
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Perhaps a piecemeal approach prevents many interventions from reaching the required critical mass. |
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This article describes principles and practical procedures for effective communication and simple interventions. |
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Most reported interventions have begun with assessment of seizure precipitants, looking particularly for emotionally based triggers for seizures. |
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Evidence is accumulating that questions the value of pre-emptive interventions in other fields of medicine, such as breast cancer. |
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Such analyses were considered important to prioritize community needs and help community-based interventions. |
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No studies were found that evaluated appropriate interventions for patients placed in the prone position. |
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Psychiatrists faced with a patient with a treatment-refractory mood disorder often turn to colleagues for advice about additional biological interventions. |
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The introduction of cardiac monitors may allow additional interventions, as full medical kits often include other drugs such as lignocaine and digoxin. |
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One obvious barrier is that healthcare systems are culturally, politically, economically, and socially bound in a way that cardiological interventions are not. |
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The Roosevelt Corollary was invoked by the government to justify military interventions in Nicaragua, Cuba, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Mexico. |
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Our unpopular and unending interventions in the Middle East brought nothing but instability. |
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When we see how much patients improve by simply visiting a treatment setting, it can even make us more realistic about our psychodynamically oriented interventions. |
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However, there are no data to support this assertion and neither is there information about other obstetric interventions associated with medical insurance status. |
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The prospect of an interoceanic canal across Nicaragua generated attention in the nineteenth century and encouraged repeated external interventions. |
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But Hofer's studies also found that specific interventions helped with their separation distress. |
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The authors claim that these findings support the conclusion that interventions improving insulin sensitivity may be beneficial in reducing the atherogenic risk. |
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When impairment is identified, students are informed of faculty concerns, and these are addressed through a variety of interventions, including remediation and dismissal. |
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Human rights as an ideology is a potent mobiliser of support for imperialist interventions and, as mentioned, a formidable guarantor of legitimacy. |
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The media also vividly portrayed the emotional sequel of the disaster reiterating the importance of emotional support and psychological interventions. |
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This is largely due to nonsterilized foreign exchange market interventions aimed at keeping the exchange rate between the renminbi and the dollar stable. |
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Occasionally one of my patients is ensnared by one of these superior medical systems and I am struck dumb by the interventions done in the name of quality of care. |
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For over a quarter of a century percutaneous coronary interventions have been used to treat patients with coronary artery disease, yet restenosis continues to be a problem. |
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Hence, we concluded that unless studies give much more extreme relative risks, randomised trials of anti-infective interventions may be needed to help determine causality. |
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Complementary medicine has similar blind spots, and its need to defend its specific interventions undervalues what it has to teach about holism and healing. |
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When there is no direct randomised evidence, the adjusted indirect method may provide useful information about relative efficacy of competing interventions. |
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Second, policy has sought to reduce the range of price interventions that can serve as a form of indirect taxation on emerging capitalist farmers. |
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An evidence base is emerging for the efficacy of a number of speech and language therapy interventions, especially in dysphasia, stammering, laryngectomy, and dysphonia. |
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Even minimal interventions involving generalizable and relatively inexpensive self-help materials tailored to pregnant women in a single brief session have proved successful. |
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The concept of equipoise is essential to the requirement of scientific validity, and is particularly relevant to research that compares interventions. |
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However, only single randomised controlled trials for each of the tested interventions were available, most were of small sample size, and all used unvalidated symptom scores. |
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A small-profile embolic protection filter is designed to allow the capture and removal of dislodged embolic material during cardiovascular interventions. |
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The obvious ability for the transitorily poor to pull themselves up by their own bootstraps means that policy interventions on their behalf are not needed. |
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Could it be our interventions hinder the body's strategies to heal itself? |
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To identify effective interventions and their relative effectiveness in preventing such falls, we conducted a meta-analysis of relevant randomised controlled trials. |
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Making appreciable impact on the quality of patients' lives with relatively small interventions will always be one of the joys of working in palliative medicine. |
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They note that smoking is a major health problem among forensic psychiatric inpatients, and that a range of factors militate against effective interventions. |
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Most of these lives would be saved by increased use of simple curative interventions, such as antimalarials and antibiotics combating dysentery and pneumonia. |
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I really hate those 1990s interventions where you just tripped over stuff, which was like an ego-trip. |
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Political interventions and more prestigious research areas seem to have contributed to a prolonged downturn in antimicrobial research after the second world war. |
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Yet despite attempts to reduce adverse events through multilevel interventions and information technology, widespread change in the culture of health care remains elusive. |
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Unresearched interventions on this subject are actually very destructive and unhelpful for those of us who live in the area and wish to see a happy future for all concerned. |
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But we should campaign for a European nuclear-free zone, for massive reductions in European military expenditure and against international interventions. |
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This article concludes by suggesting ways in which the currently stalemated debate might be revitalized by principled interventions from scholars and concerned citizens. |
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Research is needed to refine the interventions so they better address different types of families, in different situations, and at different points in course of illness. |
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The Republicans claimed that such interventions were necessary not only for financing government but also for protecting domestic industry and jobs. |
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Each parameter has a tortuous history of manual and semi-automated interventions that I simply cannot just go back to early versions and run the update prog. |
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Certainly, Conroy's interventions were crucial to the outcome of the game. |
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There are concerns that indirect comparisons may be subject to greater bias than direct comparisons and may overestimate the efficacy of interventions. |
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It will come to pass, in the very near future, that we will be using pharmacogenetics to guide our therapeutic interventions in our patients with asthma. |
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What most people fear, after all, is a death that comes after repeated aggressive interventions have left them helpless and dependent on technology. |
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Practitioners have also sought African antecedents to prevailing African-American values in their attempts to fashion more effective clinical interventions. |
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In future, with further interventions to circumvent the problems we have identified herein, telomerised cells may still be a viable alternative. |
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Both groups were evaluated in terms of joint position error using a digital dual clinometer before and after the interventions. |
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Nutritional assessment was also included and corrigible interventions were followed. |
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The policy's price controls and market interventions led to considerable overproduction. |
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It also helped precipitate the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, during which the Scots carried out major military interventions. |
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Traditional interventions include pelvic floor exercises and open retropubic colposuspension. |
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The differences between England and the Germanies sprang from the absence or presence of ministerial interventions. |
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Palmerston was suspicious of France's interventions in Lebanon, Southeast Asia and Mexico. |
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Following administration of the interventions, serum levels of PSA, EPA, DHA, GLA, lipid profile and reproductive hormones were remeasured. |
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Banging the journalistic drum loudest for these buttinsky interventions is modern progressivism's hometown newspaper, The New York Times. |
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In Italy, filibustering has ancient traditions and is expressed overall with the proposition of legal texts on which interventions take place. |
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All of these interventions can also influence the foreign exchange market and thus the exchange rate. |
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The central bank may subsequently reduce the money supply by various means, including selling bonds or foreign exchange interventions. |
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The new scheme reorders the site through a series of strong, simple interventions that civilize the experience of bus travel. |
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A variety of interventions aimed at reducing delays in IV-tPA administration for eligible patients with stroke have been investigated. |
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Some perceive these interventions as overcoming homogenized, corporatized landscapes and consumer-oriented monoculturalism. |
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However, he accepted interventions in the economy, such as a tax on alcohol, if there were sufficient utilitarian grounds. |
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In the late 1990s and 2000s, international interventions authorized by the UN took a wider variety of forms. |
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However, like most of our interventions, treatment with proton pump inhibitors has not only benefits but also potential complications. |
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But the young MP had attacked his leader as early as 1843 on Ireland and then on foreign policy interventions. |
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And now music therapists are devising interventions to help preemies thrive in the NICU and beyond. |
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Most recently, however, the BIS was studied in relation to nociception in sedated patients undergoing various surgical interventions. |
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Our team of researchers was interested in what studies had been done around interventions such as reminders and stop orders in this area. |
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Meanwhile, the Soviets incurred high costs for their own foreign interventions. |
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In order for trauma interventions to be effective then, dichotic understandings of the genocide will have to be bridged. |
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The financial phase of the crisis led to emergency interventions in many national financial systems. |
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Venezuela is trapped in a vicious cycle of distortionary interventions, weak policy frameworks, and economic and social deterioration. |
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Additional funding for food assistance programs is urgently needed, along with support for complementary sectorial interventions. |
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Robinson, that contains comparisons of Mary Shelley's original text with Percy Shelley's additions and interventions alongside. |
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All interventions resulting from formative research were pretested with the priority population, and revisions were made accordingly. |
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The interventions in both the water and on land should be examined for their preventability and their Minimierbarkeit. |
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Complicated connections in the strategic succession of America's global interventions propel this phenomenon of self-fulfilling prophecy. |
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Among psychological interventions, existential therapies including Logotherapy are approaches addressing the concepts of burnout and hope. |
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Good pharmacologic interventions are lacking, but after ruling out other causes of fatigue, psychostimulants can be considered. |
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Primary universal schoolwide interventions are designed to address the majority of students' instructional needs. |
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To what extent do graduates of integrative programs receive effective training in spiritual interventions? |
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Human scale can also be improved along landscaping and streetscaping interventions. |
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Without specific interventions, microalbuminuria may progress to overt nephropathy in years. |
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Newborn upper airway obstruction secondary to micrognathia and Pierre Robin sequence can be managed with conservative and surgical interventions. |
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Our targeted interventions are aimed at the students who need help the most. |
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Lessons learned from interventions and operations research to eradicate female genital cutting throughout Africa demonstrate this point. |
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For example, previous research suggests that interventions originally developed for adults should not be given directly to younger clients. |
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More concretely, we need to move from climate-friendly policies to the implementation of mitigatory and adaptive interventions wherever possible. |
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To inhibit these problems human interventions, such as transfer of forest reproductive material, may be needed. |
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When first-and second-line interventions fail, consider desipramine or nortriptyline. |
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The studies cited above investigated the dynamics of rido with the intention of helping design strategic interventions to address such conflicts. |
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It preaches Westernism, the toxic fruits of which are all too clear in our supposedly benevolent interventions in the Near and Middle East. |
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Other programs have used a combination of some or all of the aforementioned interventions in a multifactorial approach. |
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Unlike some of the more colorful faith healers of the past, Dr. Krieger does not claim miraculous cures or divine interventions. |
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Taking multiple interventions artificially inflates the duration of a speech and thus may be used as a tactic to prolong a speech. |
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Different therapeutic interventions for male infertility have to be developed depending on the severity of germ cell deficits in individual patients. |
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Systematic reviews show that psychosocial interventions can help women stop smoking in late pregnancy, reducing low birthweight and preterm births. |
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If conservative treatment fails, surgical interventions like botulinum toxin injection, sacral nerve stimulation, or detrusor myectomy are recommended as further options. |
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Thus far, the interventions involving mathematics to problem-gamblers were limited to didactical interventions, either school based or in experimental research. |
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All this made Hall something of a modernist, in the sense that his interventions cut into established ideological fixities, calling forth new possibilities in cultural life. |
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Despite advances in medical, surgical, and critical care interventions, infective endocarditis remains to be a disease associated with considerable morbidity and mortality. |
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During this time, Walpole also made two interventions in the Lords. |
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A founding member of Dykes Can Dance, a troupe that stages interventions at New York clubs, Samson shares music duties, makes art, and choreographs the stage show. |
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However, nurses still have to assess each individual patient, identify their fall risks, and design nursing interventions to meet his or her specific needs. |
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The patient with osteitis pubis did not have a satisfactory outcome with surgery alone, medical treatment, or physical therapy interventions commonly prescribed by physicians. |
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New septic shock biomarker test could boost better interventions. |
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Genetic interventions for developing a picroside production platform would require knowledge on biosynthetic pathway and key control points, which does not exist as of today. |
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In the same way as for conventional therapies, drugs, and interventions, it can be difficult to test the efficacy of alternative medicine in clinical trials. |
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Second, it means that these interventions are enabled and disenabled by the national, regional and local politics and economics of our school systems. |
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This mixed-migration requires targeted and sustained interventions, difficult to initiate where the government is unable to disambiguate between groups. |
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In his trenchant lyrics as well as in his political interventions, Matoub developed a reputation for saying what Kabyles thought in secret but felt unable to say. |
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Across the healthcare continuum, a range of tools and practices help to identify and stratify high-risk, high-cost patients and determine appropriate interventions. |
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In addition to the usual threats to the validity of interventions to change health care, infection control interventions are particularly prone to regression to the mean. |
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Macmillan made occasional political interventions in retirement. |
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One of the reasons for these policy interventions is the belief that locally owned enterprises can benefit from the foreign owned enterprises through productivity spillovers. |
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It is often health interventions that best prime the pump for such economic growth, especially where there is a heavy burden of disease that is readily prevented or cured. |
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Policy interventions to decrease passive smoking in public areas such as restaurants and workplaces have become more common in many Western countries. |
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While Reagan's interventions against Grenada and Libya were popular in the United States, his backing of the Contra rebels was mired in controversy. |
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The following years saw more direct involvement by English armies, including in the Breton War of Succession, but these interventions also proved fruitless at first. |
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This article describes the ways that behavioral interventions used in juvenile justice systems are shaped by racist assumptions about reformability. |
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The surgical interventions covered in the registry include gastric banding, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, sleeve gastrectomy, and biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch. |
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This case highlights an important finding on the peripheral smear that can lead to interventions that may prevent future episodes of severe sepsis in hyposplenic patients. |
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The 15 principles that frame the document highlight how schoolwide behavioral interventions can significantly reduce or eliminate the use of restraint and seclusion. |
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During the second period, the successive interventions of France, Spain, and the Netherlands extended the naval war until it ranged from the West Indies to the Bay of Bengal. |
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But this will only happen if children's exposure to second-hand smoke does not reduce as a result of a mix of stop smoking interventions and campaigns. |
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The next steps are to take these results and apply them to prevention interventions that are tailored to individual characteristics, such as impulsivity. |
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Bed interventions consisted of complete encasement of the mattress, box spring, and pillows plus either weekly professional or in-home laundering of nonencased bedding. |
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In the treatment of affective disorders, chronotherapeutics offers a new synthesis of nonpharmacologic interventions designed to accelerate remission. |
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