My feeling is that the patient should be adequately counseled regarding the risks and benefits as well as the possibility of sperm banking. |
|
What risks do you face when having your tubes tied? Can you get pregnant following female sterilization? |
|
However, fluoridation is a practice largely abandoned by Europe and the rest of the world because of suspected health risks. |
|
Physicians should discuss risks and benefits of all options, including endometrial ablation and hysterectomy, with each patient. |
|
I haven't been able to find much information on the actual risks to adults, so we'll have to wait and see. |
|
But above and beyond these common threats, instant messaging and other chat programs carry their own unique set of risks. |
|
Without the proper equipment, a worker risks injuries such as abrasions, or friction burns. |
|
It also allowed us to measure absolute differences in bleeding risks, which are essential for determining clinical relevance. |
|
Before the key goes into the ignition, before the gear goes into drive, make sure you weigh all the risks. |
|
What are the possibilities and risks of according spirituality some therapeutic value for those on the edge of the abyss of self-destruction? |
|
There has been no quantification of the specific risks for which pollution prevention is needed. |
|
Generally I don't have much fear of clambering over things and taking risks but this was the limit. |
|
The couple decided to try for a baby without seeking specialist advice in case they were warned off due to the risks involved. |
|
While it's not required that the government receive warrants in return, that's one suggestion to compensate it for the credit risks being taken. |
|
Foreign banks have a more sophisticated system for evaluating and pricing credit risks associated with derivative products. |
|
The long-term health risks of placing fluoride into drinking water at source is to be raised at tomorrow's meeting of Kerry county council. |
|
It's a different culture these days and everyone has to be aware, minimise risks and adapt accordingly. |
|
It is vital that risks to men, women, and children are all taken into account as being seriously important. |
|
These risks tend to disappear altogether when factors other than weight are taken into account. |
|
Our case report and review of the literature confirm that water birth has risks for the newborn. |
|
|
In our limited experience, extensive use of the waterboard can introduce new risks. |
|
Treatment aims to contain the femoral head in the acetabulum to reduce the risks of future osteoarthritis. |
|
They also tell him that he can never leave, since that risks jeopardizing the setup for them all. |
|
Is it selfish to seek for personal justice if it risks jeopardising the delicate work of the democratic movement? |
|
The acid test will come for him when a match needs to be won and risks have to be taken. |
|
Robotic high pressure water jetting also greatly reduces the risks of injury to operations personnel. |
|
The aim of this study is to assess the risks of the project, so that a formal quotation can be made. |
|
Instead, every calculation of profit is carefully balanced against the potential risks in an enterprise. |
|
Winston acknowledged that this benefit is balanced against as yet unmeasured risks to the environment and to public health. |
|
Each of the main treatments radical prostatectomy, radiation therapy, and monitoring has risks. |
|
Even in instances in which the likelihood of harm appears low, the costs, demands, risks, and benefits must be carefully weighed. |
|
We all need to be more resourceful in helping people weigh the risks against the potential consequences of their actions. |
|
Although the agency didn't ban these drugs, they did say doctors should weigh the benefits against risks for individual patients. |
|
Should patients have a choice to base their decision on whether or not to take a drug by weighing the risks against the benefits? |
|
As always, try to understand the relevant protocols and weigh the risks against the benefits. |
|
Hiring from a well-known and reputable company will help minimise the risks. |
|
Pesticides pose risks to both human and nonhuman health if they are found in either surface or ground water. |
|
They allowed me to experiment, they allowed me to take risks, which meant I ad-libbed freely and largely amusingly. |
|
Pregnancy and child bearing occur before adolescent girls are fully developed, exposing them to great health risks. |
|
He was also worried about the health risks of rotting, derelict whare, which became breeding grounds for rats and vermin. |
|
|
In most cases, these substances are adulterated with other chemicals and pose risks of overdose. |
|
In particular, war risks underwriters were not interested in justification of the insured value of the vessel. |
|
But they have eye infections and all the other health risks associated with dirty water such as malaria and intestinal worms. |
|
Only in this manner can we hope to reduce the risks of adventurism and miscalculation in a world that retains many thousands of nuclear weapons. |
|
Given the risks associated with spyware and adware, it is important to have a strategy to keep your network safe. |
|
And the agency willingly risks taking the rap in exchange for access to all that client money. |
|
To be honest, I once thought about having another woman, but I did not do it because I was able to be rational, I did not want to take any risks. |
|
Jobs are not easy to come by and if you have a mortgage and a family to support, you cannot afford to take many risks. |
|
It is not an institution with which a prime minister can afford to take risks. |
|
It recognizes we cannot afford to avoid all risk, but rather must manage the critical risks. |
|
Knowing the risks is important and will likely keep you afloat regardless of the water conditions. |
|
More serious risks include life-threatening blood clots, stroke, and heart attack. |
|
The risks of taking medicine have to be weighed against the risks of depression. |
|
Vaccinations are expensive and costs must be weighed up against the risks involved. |
|
The doctor said the benefits of any radiotherapy had to be weighed against the risks of the treatment. |
|
Investors should be aware of the risks involved and remember that the value of securities held may go down as well as up. |
|
A diverse mix of nearly 400 people discussed ways to improve forest health and address wildfire risks through locally driven efforts. |
|
However, keyhole surgery is associated with different risks, such as a higher risk than the open procedure of damage to neighbouring organs. |
|
However, with the rise of phishing, key loggers and associated risks, I now see the true value of my little device! |
|
It is feared that this may cause serious risks in that spies or terrorists could use it to recce sensitive British sites for potential attack. |
|
|
And in some situations reclaimed land is already degraded and faces long-standing feral animal or weed infestation problems and future risks. |
|
One of a kind, the film is proof that American cinema still knows how to take risks and let the imagination soar. |
|
This new situation leads to a reconsideration of national security risks and threats. |
|
Anyone who challenges it from outside the islands risks the wrath of the local kirk and determined opposition from religious groups. |
|
The two treatment groups had different risks of developing rectal cancer but not of developing cancer elsewhere in the colon. |
|
Using existing facilities and human resources can significantly reduce costs and security risks. |
|
As a regular cyclist I know only too well the risks I have to face each day on my way to work. |
|
A reduction in tooth decay would reduce the risks of children dying during dental anaesthetics. |
|
They thrive on risk, happy in the knowledge that the greater the risks taken then the greater the potential rewards. |
|
Mr Thos Lavery of the Garda Water Unit pointed out the importance of safe boating and water activities and how risks can be reduced. |
|
It made you do silly things and it gave you an awful headache, but we never worried about the risks, let alone the long-term health consequences. |
|
Insurers write policies, thus transferring risks customers face to themselves. |
|
Davis exaggerates even when he need not and so risks damaging the cause he's temporarily aligned himself with. |
|
Fearful of being accused of complacency, they fail to allay public fears and often play up hypothetical risks. |
|
One of the risks of far-flung markets with poor regulation is a lack of dependable financial data. |
|
The genetic engineering of food creates two separate and serious health risks involving allergenicity. |
|
Most insurance companies, Rosemary says, make sure that as a matter of course they reinsure their risks. |
|
The public must realise all surgical procedures carry risks and having plastic surgery lays them open to all of these. |
|
Ben, European alpha geek and one of the people behind it, knew there would be risks. |
|
The hospital had a good system in place to monitor risks but was poor in learning from the available information. |
|
|
Specific strategies can help to remedy this deficiency and improve patients' understanding of risks. |
|
The hormones do have risks, as does every drug, natural and non-natural, but they also have their uses. |
|
The implementation of this policy would remove risks associated with environmental tobacco smoke. |
|
There were political overtones, security risks and controversies over ambush marketing, sponsorships, contracts and what not. |
|
I mean, I'm thinking maybe people shouldn't be taking risks, launching into risky strategies with their own family home? |
|
The risks associated with chronic exposure to volatile anesthetic gases have not been established. |
|
Low retail prices promote pesticide use but weak legislation and inadequate law enforcement fail to control risks. |
|
I was confident, knowing that with a minute lead over Jan, with the rain and the wind, I had no reason to take risks. |
|
The cutter, like the forkball in the 1980s, appeals to pitchers because they don't have to take undue risks to throw it. |
|
While diesel is less flammable than gasoline, any fuel leak creates serious safety and environmental risks in a marine setting. |
|
We look at materials and design features that contribute to leaky buildings and some of the potential health risks of leaky homes. |
|
The more it leans on the franchise, industry observers believe, the more it risks killing the golden goose. |
|
There are risks both ways, risks in allowing young people freedom and risks in restricting it. |
|
Notes are annotated on levels of certainty with predictions and risks and possible causes for changes to numbers. |
|
Aside from the risks, equity-linked annuities suffer from the lack of portability that all annuities, as insurance products, possess. |
|
Students have to acknowledge what they don't know, take risks, and rethink what they thought they knew. |
|
The single dose format also reduces risks associated with excessive handling of animals close to calving. |
|
Such high-level favoritism risks further antagonizing citizens who are fed up with officials helping themselves to public funds. |
|
The benefits of using topical anesthesia outweigh the risks associated with general, retrobulbar, and peribulbar anesthesia. |
|
A male colleague and I were given the task of escorting him on a home visit, though only told of the risks upon return. |
|
|
Such activities yield very large returns, but they also accrue very large risks. |
|
The Scottish Arts Council hoped it would mine a rich seam of latent talent and take risks on fledgling authors spurned by larger companies. |
|
So anybody who comes along and says we didn't explain there were some risks is off their rocker. |
|
And they know that I'm willing to take risks, and this is something that I would be willing to give my life for, because I believe in it. |
|
Passive or secondhand smoking means breathing other people's smoke and this can have serious health risks. |
|
In the 21st century we know too much about the risks of smoking, and second-hand smoke, to let the practice continue. |
|
It's the risks relevant to the place where you currently live that affect your life expectancy while living there. |
|
For example, if several smokers were surveyed, it would be logical to assume that they could recite the risks of smoking, yet still smoke. |
|
I was a lifesaver at heart and knew the risks of heat exhaustion better than anyone. |
|
Never shy of taking risks, the series tackled such contentious issues as feminism and South African apartheid. |
|
People are more likely to accept risks when they feel that they are in the driving seat. |
|
Their primary concern is the potential health risks associated with high voltage overhead lines. |
|
They don't want to raise risks of a devastating conflict with the mainland. |
|
They are well aware of their threat exposure and understand the risks associated with the systems in use. |
|
Even though Eva knew of the dangers, the risks, and the lack of information about this man, she let herself be drawn into this strong embrace. |
|
Holly had gotten as far as she had in this life by taking a lot of dangerous risks. |
|
They form part of a larger local discourse on problems, difficulties, dangers, and risks related to life in general. |
|
The spread of the network form and its technologies clearly entails some new risks and dangers. |
|
In the new age of heightened risks and tightened security, who will keep our airports safe? |
|
I know that smoking implies certain health risks, which I am alerted to, now and again, by friends, strangers and the media. |
|
|
Health risks can be reduced by following all safety precautions and instructions provided on pesticide labels. |
|
Other times it is simply an economic view of an industry or product where we insure or reinsure risks. |
|
An option is a type of insurance policy that foreign exchange traders use to hedge their risks. |
|
Insurance is designed to build portfolios of diversifiable risks and to hedge the systematic risk in these portfolios. |
|
Moreover, the puppies have not been socialized and tend to act in disturbing and aggressive ways, making them poor risks as pets. |
|
To limit these risks, the central bank wishes to supervise and regulate the participants of the payments system. |
|
There may be severe credit risks in coming years by investors holding individual bonds, both taxable and tax free. |
|
By accepting the challenge, Casanova risks his life, his reputation and his chance to find true love. |
|
In the risks, gambles and chances by which entrepreneurs risk their fortunes on new ventures, capitalism enters a new heroic phase. |
|
Effective risk management must be based on proactive, continuous assessment of all potential risks to a company. |
|
But some clowns are concerned about the legal risks of throwing custard pies, what with society becoming more litigious. |
|
Romantic comedy is a genre mainly comprised of sappy, syrupy fare with few risks and fewer surprises. |
|
The voice is calling us to leave our foolish fears behind, to take risks, to trust, to begin to really live. |
|
He did not seek to enter the political arena which is where you would seek to place him, with all its attendant risks. |
|
The rest appears as heat, which, above a certain temperature, risks killing the yeast and therefore arresting the fermentation process. |
|
Newspaper and magazine articles about the medical risks and economic consequences of obesity abound. |
|
For all the talk of musicals and artiness, Lee knows there are considerable risks involved with his latest endeavour. |
|
Doing that risks a disenchanted MP from the right wing getting boozed and leaking his or her displeasure to a roving reporter. |
|
Many women get relief with the hormonal creams that are rubbed on the skin, but they haven't been studied as extensively for risks. |
|
I've heard a lot about the potential side effects and health risks of non-caloric artificial sweeteners such as aspartame. |
|
|
The appeal court upheld the High Court judge's ruling that the benefits of vaccination outweighed the risks. |
|
Some patients' choices between using aspirin or a statin may depend on cost as well as their perceived risks of adverse effects. |
|
The growing concern about health care costs increases the risks presented by legalizing assisted suicide and euthanasia. |
|
Let's face it, most of them came here to escape the low quality of life and the glaring risks. |
|
If the ultrasound shows stenosis or atheroma, the patient should understand the risks and benefits of the procedure. |
|
The risks are higher, the stakes lower and the goals would be considered laughable if so many lives were not at stake. |
|
The muscle biopsy can be accomplished as an outpatient procedure and carries the attendant risks of pain, bleeding, infection, and sensory loss. |
|
Low borrowing rates and the absence of currency risks favours Europe at the minute. |
|
This is the first European-wide campaign to raise awareness about the risks to health and safety of chemicals at work. |
|
Both rider and vet would have been conscious of the risks they were taking so close to a games that was marked by a hunt for drug cheats. |
|
Research with animal behavior, and perhaps especially with the great apes, risks wrongly attributing human characteristics to animals. |
|
But, in the end, we must listen to gut instinct, be creative, and take risks. |
|
The sort of mission with massive logistics involved actually is tailor-made for the military, but it also comes with risks. |
|
Women will contribute to a potluck refreshment stand where they sample nutritional food that can help reduce certain health risks and problems. |
|
Hong Kong chicken flu and BSE, or mad cow disease, pose clear health risks to humans. |
|
When private companies enter the field of manned spaceflight, those inherent risks could be magnified. |
|
The degree and magnitude of the health risks involved in cell phone usage have yet to be determined in a comprehensive manner. |
|
Perhaps we fellow painters best understand the enormous risks she confronts at every turn, and quietly applaud her savoir faire. |
|
His business savvy meant he took risks in the technology, telecoms, internet, hotels and construction, retail and automobile sector. |
|
This could only make sense if it were true that some risks are simply off the scale of our everyday experience of danger. |
|
|
We do need to accept that scientific and technological advances will often be accompanied by new risks. |
|
Equip yourself with the right technopreneurial skills and learn how to manage risks and enhance your chances of success in the business world. |
|
The simple fact is that voting Lib Dem risks letting the Tories in by the back door. |
|
But too few recognise that voting for the Liberals risks letting the Tories in through the back door. |
|
Today's teens have more opportunities for taking dangerous risks than ever before. |
|
While these risks are hard to quantify, it is clear that the mechanisms and resources needed to respond to worst case scenarios are not in place. |
|
There was delight as Melissa maneuvered from limb to limb taking unnecessary risks with each move. |
|
Some teachers suggest the problem is linked to a mania for safety outdoors which conditions people to avoid risks. |
|
High-profile cases have highlighted the business risks inherent in badly or inadequately implemented IT projects. |
|
Nobody wants to recruit bad seeds, but when the screws get tightened, risks are taken. |
|
The agency failed to apply the tenfold safety factor when reviewing the risks of the insecticides. |
|
Risk assessment has been stressed as the most scientific method of qualitating health risks and ethical issues. |
|
However, treatment needs to be individualized, weighing the possible teratogenic risks against the benefits of decreased transmission. |
|
But if you do have an x-ray and later discover you are pregnant, the risks are not high enough to have to terminate the pregnancy. |
|
He is aware of the risks involved in margined trading and that the entire amount of his deposit could be at risk. |
|
But, as in all aspects of life, expansion of one's activities beyond previously explored territory involves taking risks. |
|
It does suit some people but you must have your head screwed on and be fully aware of both the risks and rewards. |
|
Tissue and bone banking poses significant risks to recipients if errors are made. |
|
The findings do not tell us anything about the benefits or risks of other modes of HRT administration such as patches, gels, implants or nasal spray. |
|
Of course, this risks a rebellion in the far right of his caucus, which would likely cost him the speakership. |
|
|
The council must know the hazards and risks but they are not playing ball. |
|
Smaller and more versatile aircraft reduce financial and operational risks to airlines, particularly in economic downturns, compared to jumbo jets, he adds. |
|
Goggles or safety glasses might reduce the risks of transmission. |
|
But the vote will drive many from the church and risks schism. |
|
We are reminded that boys are conditioned from an early age to be adventurous and take risks, while girls are taught to be cautious and not stray too far. |
|
Those who prophesied apocalyptic social change faced great risks. |
|
After all, there are much larger risks in this world than traces of copper in your water. |
|
I can think of a dozen equivalent risks faced by emergency planners that by all appearances still do not occupy the minds of these savants of hind-sight. |
|
While you're out of work, you can't afford to take risks with your money. |
|
Until that is assured, only a federal backstop will help speed a viable insurance market for terrorism risks, before there is further damage done to the economy. |
|
So far, they had been lucky enough not to encounter the Sheriff and his party, but she knew the risks of letting one's guard down in a situation like this. |
|
A business that failed to set aside the appropriate insurance premiums for such risks would rightly be considered to be endangering the wealth-producing assets in its keeping. |
|
In the opening credit sequence we know nothing of the man, yet Bolt economically conveys that this is someone who takes risks and finds danger exhilarating. |
|
The commentator Andrew Sullivan harried McCain about the risks of war, recalling Iraq. |
|
He was closest to the situation, knew the risks, knew what they could gain from such a crime, and knew what they stood to lose if they were discovered, which was very little. |
|
By the brutal code of Hollywood, if your big-budget television series isn't tanking the opposition after the first five episodes, it risks being binned. |
|
In assessing the risks of acting on the basis of a reasonably arguable case, you will wish to take account of the ways in which the matter might be brought before a court. |
|
Yet despite the increased risks, use of indoor tanning beds among teenagers remains widespread. |
|
An aviation psychiatrist who advises airlines on the risks posed by air rage has revealed the threat of in-flight vigilantes is already being taken seriously. |
|
The proposed intention will create bad-tempered, frustrated, angry drivers, who will be forced to take risks they otherwise would never dream of doing. |
|
|
In addition, risks for hepatitis C include sharing straws to snort cocaine or receiving a tattoo. |
|
He assured farmers that they were able to underwrite risks of any size and type because it was financed by one of the largest insurance companies in the world. |
|
Patients should be fully informed of the risks and benefits of these medications, including the risks of dependency and of withdrawal after abrupt discontinuation. |
|
Any known health risks to New Zealanders are handled by the New Zealand Food Safety Authority and by the setting of food standards between New Zealand and Australia. |
|
People who carry more weight around their waistlines are at greater health risks than individuals who carry their excess fat in the hips and thighs. |
|
Confusion about what is and is not within the legitimate scope of medicine risks leading the profession into a future full of unmet expectations and knotty ethical quandaries. |
|
Diversifying your assets means putting your money into different kinds of holdings, such as shares, bonds and property, to reduce risks and possible losses. |
|
As with any investment, there are risks involved in buying mutual funds. |
|
Any deviation from the status quo risks shifting the spotlight onto the moderator, notes Louden. |
|
Will a new study showing the health risks of red meat for women send us scurrying back to the salad bar? |
|
Chromium in floppy disks, lead in batteries and computer monitors, and mercury in alkaline batteries and fluorescent lamps also pose severe health risks. |
|
Now that he and his family are displaced and the risks have escalated he wants to leave. |
|
But in attempting to pass the austerity measures, he also risks something of a double jeopardy. |
|
Tough, frighteningly ambitious, politically savvy, and willing to take outsize risks. |
|
Reducing access to credit as a means of preventing overextension, of course, risks reorienting policy towards the paternalistic practices of the past. |
|
I had three different nurse-midwives call me and lecture me on the low risks of an amnio, telling me that I was not taking things seriously enough. |
|
The actors throw themselves around the space, with little heed for the physical risks that they take, and their physical movement is the most representative of their emotions. |
|
The outcome of any public discussion can never be known with certainty, but chances are that it will amplify stories that imply risks of higher oil prices. |
|
But the risks of going to Thailand were well-established prior to the gammy case. |
|
The common thread that binds Americans stems from their individualism, self-reliance, independence, courage to take risks and readiness to challenge the impossible. |
|
|
Military pilots face similar risks and, for them, the greatest safety advance was the ejector seat. |
|
Here, a guide to gauging the risks and payoffs of kill-or-capture operations. |
|
Their failure to adequately inform participants of the risks was morally blameworthy. |
|
Environmentalists warn that public awareness and frustration about air pollution is growing, as are the risks to Chinese health. |
|
Though the risks for the new oral cancer and its anatomic location have changed fundamentally, one epidemiologic fact has not. |
|
Americans need to understand this truth, because otherwise they will be blindsided by the real risks out there. |
|
The West sometimes risks, by its actions, pushing the brics closer together, but there are underlying divides there. |
|
But the military can mitigate the risks simply by virtue of its enormous logistical reach. |
|
In art, the lure of anecdote always presents serious risks, and a good deal of nineteenth century American art succumbed to that drive to explain and amuse. |
|
However, if one mark of the true artist is the willingness to take risks and to venture into uncharted territory, then Churchill is the genuine article. |
|
Disclosure of pan leakage is vital information to a home buyer, and such considerations clearly outweigh the risks and inconveniences of water testing. |
|
It is unlikely that private capital will finance such a tremendous undertaking until the risks are retired and the scalability challenge can be addressed. |
|
Suffice it to say that awareness of the risks of giving offense produces a chilling effect on the ground in Russia. |
|
The medical risks associated with other sleep disorders, including more common conditions like insomnia and restless legs syndrome, are yet to be fully ascertained. |
|
But students also need to be educated about the risks associated with excessive leverage and gimmicky loans. |
|
Some actors feel the studios are unwilling to take chances with these huge global revenues by taking risks in casting. |
|
Chris risks his life to save Dixie, but later claims he only did it to square accounts with Dixie for his having accepted the blame for starting their fistfight. |
|
Lay-offs on such a scale would pose significant proliferation risks when nuclear weapons scientists and technologists are forced to seek work elsewhere. |
|
Why take risks, when the very name of the opera secures sold-out performances, assuming the critics don't assail it, or the conservative crowds don't shun it? |
|
And the risks to the woman need to be properly assessed and clearly explained to her, so that she can take them into account in making her decision. |
|
|
The more extreme risks range from cardiac problems to stunted growth and a diminished immune system. |
|
It can fairly be said that those calls reveal that before the first margin call was made the plaintiff did not understand the risks of a margin account. |
|
At current prices the returns seem quite attractive relative to the risks. |
|
Or would they resist taking the same risks over Poland or even Great Britain? |
|
So the advantages of being able to extract and store the most energy out of the minimum of calories far outweighed any risks. |
|
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. |
|
Cornstarch-based GSE-containing powder fights athlete's foot and jock itch without the risks of talc, which is linked to cervical and lung cancers. |
|
The chief risks involve the theft or diversion of nuclear material from a facility or a physical attack or act of sabotage designed to cause a release of radioactivity. |
|
It now appears to be a choice of weighing the risks against the benefits. |
|
River rafting is more about managing risks than it is about taking them. |
|
I like to create an atmosphere where actors feel safe enough to take risks. |
|
The antihero of the title is actually a nonhero, for he does absolutely nothing and is an Everyman who, like all of us, is afraid to take risks. |
|
Both the Trimmu and Panjnad barrages are about 80 years old, structurally deteriorated and face safety and operational risks. |
|
The minister who launched the beach-cleaning up event warned against risks of water pollution lest that the sea turns into a huge dumping pit. |
|
In 1997 North Sea states and EU representatives agreed a joint approach to identifying risks to the marine environment. |
|
Investigations are limited to establishing cause, promoting awareness of risks and preventing recurrence. |
|
Investigations are thorough but are strictly limited to establishing cause, promoting awareness of risks and preventing recurrence. |
|
Knowledge of the earthquake and tsunami risks has not been widespread among the general public of the islands located near the trench. |
|
This would show up in a larger number of possible mates for AMH humans, with increased risks of inbreeding amongst Neanderthal populations. |
|
So, although it is often asserted that monocultures lead to increased risks of disease and pest attack, the evidence is pauce. |
|
|
Many risks are expected to increase with higher magnitudes of global warming. |
|
This would avoid the inherent risks of damaging the wooden structure if it were lifted out of the water without appropriate support. |
|
The health benefits of cycling outweigh the risks, when cycling is compared to a sedentary lifestyle. |
|
A Dutch study found that cycling can extend lifespans by up to 14 months, but the risks equated to a reduced lifespan of 40 days or less. |
|
On the other, it decreases genetic diversity, increasing the severity of certain disease outbreaks among other risks. |
|
However, recent studies have revealed that the risks and problems of early maturation in males might outweigh the benefits. |
|
These ideas were adopted and adapted in western Europe to the high risks and rewards associated with colonial ventures. |
|
There has been significant controversy associated with the risks and benefits of food additives. |
|
Orderly capital account liberalisation will be promoted with adequate safeguards against volatility and systemic risks. |
|
The health risks of abortion depend principally upon whether the procedure is performed safely or unsafely. |
|
Unreinforced masonry structures constitute one of the largest earthquake risks globally. |
|
Soviet deception may increase the likelihood of undetected non-compliance, although it also risks a re-escalation of the crisis. |
|
Some of these might be job stress, physicality, risks, degree of supervision and ability to work with peers or family members. |
|
Maplecroft Child Labour Index 2012 survey reports 76 countries pose extreme child labour complicity risks for companies operating worldwide. |
|
Most of these risks can be greatly reduced in modern mines, and multiple fatality incidents are now rare in some parts of the developed world. |
|
These communities bear a disproportionate burden of environmental pollution and are more likely to face health risks such as cancer or asthma. |
|
A diverse mix of generation sources reduces the risks of electricity price spikes. |
|
Waterfowl and fish who live in and around the river contain significant levels of PCBs and can present health risks if consumed. |
|
The safeness of the new drug hadn't been proven, so it could only be used experimentally, and you had to sign a waiver accepting the risks. |
|
These risks in addition to the more serious problems of sleepwalking and even sleepdriving raise serious concerns about these drugs. |
|
|
Moreover, even those systems that can decrease these risks, do so with a marked increase in cost. |
|
It was his job to survey buildings in order to determine their value and risks. |
|
A striking example of the risks of ignoring temporal processes comes from work on the endangered Swift Parrot in north-eastern Victoria. |
|
In the high-risk world of futures contracts, pooling the risks could be just another way to take a bath. |
|
Incorporating macadamia nuts into a heart healthy diet can reduce cardiovascular disease risks according to Penn State researchers. |
|
Previously, highlands were special areas visited only by trained personnel and alpinists who understood the risks associated with high altitude. |
|
His ignorant, misleading, populist scaremongering risks us missing out on the biggest opportunity to return powers to the regions in my lifetime. |
|
They often work amid these risks for an appallingly low salary. |
|
In the studies, magnesium sulphate for eclampsia was associated with lower risks of maternal death, recurrent seizure and major morbidity. |
|
There are risks in kayaks that are too small, as well as in those that are too large. |
|
As important as telephone diplomacy is, shuttle diplomacy is also now needed, given the continuing risks of conflict. |
|
Cooking with aluminium foil can have serious health risks, according to a new UAE study. |
|
What action will insurance companies be taking to cover such risks to property and the risks of water poisoning by other chemicals? |
|
Rowland et al have suggested guidelines for managing cardiovascular risks prior to and during treatment with acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. |
|
There was also concern about the use of weedkillers with fears over possible health risks to children and pregnant women. |
|
Nevertheless, many corporations have decided their information is too valuable to expose to the risks represented by the microcomputer. |
|
However, if a joint space is involved, bullets should be removed to prevent the risks of joint destruction and lead poisoning. |
|
Liu was also well aware of the risks that came with the shield. |
|
A new study finds that kidney stones can be added to the list of health risks associated with climate change. |
|
Taking risks is part of GLAD, General Light Affective Disorder, caused by overexposure to daylight, they say. |
|