The girl is cured of her sickness, leading one to believe that perhaps all she needed was some physical contact. |
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I don't think it's a sickness that causes somebody to engage in aberrant behavior. |
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Downsizing produced an increased risk of sickness absence, in line with earlier findings. |
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One way I justify my wanderlust is by calling it a form of travel sickness. |
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Hundreds of thousands of people have been ordered to stay indoors for the day and dozens of people are suffering radiation sickness. |
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A dirty bomb would boost the radiation level above normal levels, increasing the risk of cancer and radiation sickness to some degree. |
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Detonated in a densely populated city, it can kill thousands from radiation sickness and leave the area uninhabitable. |
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People very close to the blast could conceivably suffer radiation sickness and might require hospital care. |
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Who cared if they got radiation sickness, as long as the ore was being mined? |
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Sam performs an autopsy on a car crash victim and finds the body is wrought with radiation sickness. |
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However, the civilians who were killed by the bomb and the survivors who developed radiation sickness left an unforgettable legacy of fear. |
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An increasing number of credible eyewitnesses testified to the unspeakable torment of radiation sickness. |
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However, no individual cases of radiation sickness are discussed in any detail. |
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They suffered from radiation sickness, but the military denied that was the cause of their illness. |
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Over the next several months, tens of thousands more died from their injuries, including radiation sickness caused by the nuclear devices. |
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They will know the routes, and a good one is worth his weight in gold, in event of sickness and other contingencies. |
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Why have these partnerships ignored the most neglected diseases, such as kala-azar, Chagas' disease, and sleeping sickness? |
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The rarefied air requires a mandatory period of two or three days enforced rest on arrival in order to ward off headaches and mountain sickness. |
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Jerry sprays her horse to protect it from the African horse sickness bedevilling the province. |
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The outbreak of African horse sickness in this area is cause for concern but is not as severe as previous outbreaks, vets said. |
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It covers your repayments against accident, sickness, involuntary unemployment. |
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When I eventually did go on to have a family of my own, I realised that the sickness was, in fact, the sign of a stable pregnancy. |
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Remember, my sickness had held me back from exploring things that other young people could experience. |
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The number of working days lost due to sickness for police officers is continuing to fall, according to a new Greater Manchester Police report. |
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Altitude sickness, parasites, frostbite and being gored by a yak are some of the reasons most people prefer to travel in their armchairs. |
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During this time his expenses had swallowed up the small amount which he had succeeded in laying up previous to his sickness. |
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This is not resuscitation, it is a deliverance from adversity, whether it be sickness, or some other lamentable circumstance. |
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I led a trip in the Everest National Park and two people collapsed from altitude sickness. |
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In 1952 on a house boat in Kashmir, I had another throat infection and, I think, altitude sickness. |
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Many trekkers arriving in Nepal will have established views on drug treatments for altitude sickness. |
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We didn't know it at the time but two people died of altitude sickness on that mountain the week before. |
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Indeed Spanish Jesuit fathers in South America were the first in Western literature to document the symptoms of altitude sickness. |
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The chewing of the leaf helps with the symptoms of altitude sickness, wards off hunger, and provides mild stimulant effects. |
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The bad news was that a trekker from another party had been struck down with a combination of altitude sickness and pneumonia. |
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Great care is taken to acclimatise trekkers to increasing altitudes to avoid problems with altitude sickness. |
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He finally had to feign illness due to altitude sickness and return to Beijing to be re-assigned to another post. |
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It's been shown that if you keep returning to high altitudes, the effect of altitude sickness slowly reduces brain tissue volume. |
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Whether it was the beginnings of altitude sickness, hypothermia, or simply fatigue I have no idea. |
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Exhausted, he develops altitude sickness and, because neither brother has a rope, cannot descend by the same steep route. |
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You have to climb very slowly to avoid altitude sickness, which is your biggest danger. |
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There will always be staff sickness, but the high costs show how important it is to get the action plan in place. |
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On the other hand, smallpox has been eradicated, sleeping sickness has become rare, and polio and leprosy are under control. |
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They recommend anticholinergics and antihistamines for the treatment of nausea associated with vertigo or motion sickness. |
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But clearly the very deep sickness in the system itself is not so easily cured. |
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You can also take antihistamine tablets containing drugs such as cyclizine or cinnarizine to prevent travel or motion sickness. |
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A knock to the head can cause symptoms such as loss of consciousness, light-headedness, dizziness, nausea, and sickness. |
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But for the past few weeks, due to her sickness, Chad, the ringmaster and manager of the circus refused to let her on the tightrope. |
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There is so much sickness that I want to remind listeners that everyone has goodness in them. |
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The loneliness forced upon her by her sickness is what makes her so special. |
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This accident, sickness and unemployment cover is a right royal rip-off, as this article reveals! |
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Throughout the whole sickness he regularly preached every Lord's Day in some of the churches. |
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The sickness and invalids benefit strategy is showing encouraging results in assisting people to recover and return to employment. |
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The leading sachem Massasoit told them that the population had been destroyed by a sickness. |
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A significant contemporary understanding about sickness is that much of it is autogenic, that is, self-induced. |
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She felt altogether awful and wondered if the stress of her life had something to do with her physical sickness. |
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Malnutrition and tropical diseases such as malaria, schistosomiasis, and sleeping sickness are widespread. |
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Other common diseases include schistosomiasis, sleeping sickness, poliomyelitis, tuberculosis, and pneumonia. |
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I still have a bad cough as my body rids itself of sickness, but my head feels good. |
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Kevin is one of the many people born with shortened limbs after his mother took thalidomide to treat morning sickness during pregnancy. |
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Between 1957 and the early 1960s, thalidomide was used by several thousand pregnant women across the world to ease their morning sickness. |
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Symptoms such as pain or sickness can indicate that there is a more serious problem inside the body. |
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Rebecca toyed with the edge of the thick blanket closest to her face, knowing her sickness would not allow her any sleep. |
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A doctor from Olaf Tryggvason went aboard, but all he could find by way of sickness was a man who had barked his shin on a barrel. |
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Most of the suffering due to sickness could be avoided if we knew the basics of health, exercise and nutrition. |
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Resistance to sleeping sickness is one trait that potentially could spread through selective breeding. |
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When sickness does arrive they can be used to complement the medico's treatment. |
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At the end of the third sennight since the sickness had started, Raul's fever finally broke. |
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In retrospective studies, rates for acute allergic reactions range from 23 to 56 percent, with even higher rates for delayed serum sickness. |
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Antivenins contain a fairly hefty chunk of horse serum, and if big doses are used serum sickness results and may need steroids. |
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Viruses, crystals, and serum sickness reactions are known causes of acute, self-limited polyarthritis. |
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Late serum sickness reactions can be treated with oral H1 blockers or corticosteroids. |
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The courageous eight-year-old was taken to hospital suffering from what is believed to be a bout of serum sickness. |
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And then you're in the same problem that divers have when they come up from a great depth, the problem of nitrogen bends, decompression sickness. |
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The bends, or decompression sickness, occurs as that dissolved nitrogen comes back out of solution as a diver surfaces. |
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Often called the bends, decompression sickness causes nitrogen bubbles in the tissues of a diver's body when he attempts to surface too rapidly. |
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The woman reported symptoms of decompression sickness, or the bends, and was immediately put on oxygen as their boat headed back to the harbour. |
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The sickness was far progressed by that time, and the emancipated retching man that had spoken to a younger boy was only a shadow of his father. |
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Abraham's mother, Nancy Hanks Lincoln, died of milk sickness in 1818 and was buried on this hill. |
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Tremetol may be transmitted through the milk and butterfat to humans and other animals, causing milk sickness in them. |
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There used to be entire epidemics of milk sickness where people would be fine one day and dead the next. |
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His is indeed a calling of skill, not to wait for the cries of pain, but recognise betimes a sick body not yet conscious of its sickness. |
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Why anybody would want to hurt her was beyond him, though mental sickness instantly popped into his head. |
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For the majority of sufferers, travel sickness resolves as soon as the journey is completed. |
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Every time I tried to read the motion of the bus seemed to induce travel sickness. |
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Some people find that acupressure bands worn on the wrists are helpful in alleviating symptoms of travel sickness. |
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His main research interest is the molecular biology and biochemistry of the organism that causes African sleeping sickness. |
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Bogus sickness appears to be rising and genuine, short-term illness is also on the increase. |
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She was still in her first trimester, so she wasn't showing yet, but she was suffering from morning sickness. |
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Each time he would shudder with fear and with sickness from the drugs, and he would swear to change. |
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Human African trypanosomiasis or sleeping sickness is one of the most important but equally most neglected tropical infections. |
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The tsetse fly transmits sleeping sickness, midges transmits lumpy skin disease and three-day stiff sickness. |
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The main health threats are sleeping sickness, transmitted by the tsetse fly, and malaria. |
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It used to be known as altitude sickness or tropical sickness, but it seems to be more and more prevalent. |
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We are all being encouraged to make private provision for education, unemployment, sickness, health and retirement. |
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John looked deep into Anne's eyes as he promised to remain true through sickness and health. |
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Whether in sickness or in health, weakness or strength, every one is of infinite value before God and must be treated as such. |
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They might get signs of sickness like headache, dizziness, faintness, weakness or a choking feeling. |
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Undoubtedly, new genetics are set to enrich our knowledge of human behavior in sickness and in health. |
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Just what does for better or for worse, in sickness and in health mean anyway? |
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Sixty-one years ago, they promised to love each other in sickness and health. |
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They paid out sums to meet losses of earnings and health care expenses arising from sickness or injury at work. |
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Mine. I promised to care for her, in sickness and in health, and she promised not to die again without ample warning. |
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For doctors, the noises made by the body the heart, breath, and bowel sounds are clues to its health or sickness. |
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People who can control their own diabetes save themselves a great deal of sickness. |
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Her special interests include the role of the spiritual dimension in all kinds of healing, and the body-mind link in sickness and health. |
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Pregnancy sickness, even severe sickness, is not associated with any harm to your baby. |
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Her problems started when young thirteen year old Ann was sent home from Clough House suffering sickness. |
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The fact that father's sickness was exacerbated if not caused by over-indulgence in Mekhong is neither here nor there. |
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With this regimen, he had diarrhoea and sickness, and the acute attacks of gout continued. |
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York District Hospital managers today appealed for visitors who have suffered sickness and diarrhoea to stay away from its grounds. |
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Now people who have suffered from diarrhoea or sickness within 48 hours of their intended visit to the hospital have been urged to stay away. |
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A wave of sickness washed over Aydah as he realized that what she was saying was absolutely true. |
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There may also be nausea, sickness or diarrhoea, and a feeling of exhaustion. |
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Lauren runs over to her mother and puts a hand to her mouth, hoping to stop the feeling of sickness that is washing over her. |
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Bites from snakes can also contain venom, causing the symptoms of diarrhoea and sickness. |
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The tot had been suffering from sickness and a cold and had been closely watched by his parents throughout the night. |
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They were very ill when they were born and suffered from sickness and diarrhoea. |
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The arrested man vomited up blood, not drugs, and suffered diarrhoea and sickness for a week following this incident. |
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Tasting as bad as it looked it was hard to swallow and even then it hit his stomach hard washing waves of sickness through him. |
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There are also more immediate benefits such as prevention of nausea and sickness caused by iron overload. |
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Hepatitis A is a viral infection that causes fever, sickness, stomach pain, vomiting and eventually jaundice. |
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In October some guests were quarantined in their rooms after a similar outbreak of sickness. |
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A few drops of lavender in a bath is often thought to combat morning sickness. |
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The sickness in her mind was a reflection of the sickness of her life, a sickness created by her family and her society. |
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Many women find a car journey with regular morning sickness quite an ordeal. |
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Hyperemesis Gravidarum is very acute morning sickness, which may require supplementary hydration, medication and nutrients. |
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Sickness produces symptoms and collateral damage that disrupt or sabotage health. |
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The mere fact that sickness levels require wholescale investigation suggests managers are unable to explain what happens within their areas of responsibility. |
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A sense of girlish fantasy and romance underlies these works, one that is tinged with sickness and mortality as well as that creepy airlessness which Todd has made her own. |
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She was a firm believer in barley sugar as a cure for travel sickness. |
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Sickness and venereal diseases run rampant in the packinghouses where they pack meat with their bare hands. |
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The higher you go, the higher the risk of developing altitude sickness, or much more dangerous, pulmonary or cerebral edema, excess water in the lung or brain. |
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The deadly African horse sickness, which has restricted the movement of horses to South Africa in recent years, was a cause for concern when considering the stallion's future. |
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Does all this betoken a possibly lethal sickness in the west? |
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Furthermore, equine-derived antitoxin carries with it the risk of side effects, the most worrisome of which include serum sickness and anaphylactic reaction. |
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I hated the whole journey there, complaining first of seasickness, then sickness of riding my horse, and finally just plain sickness of travelling. |
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Even if I could manage not to feel that horrible stabbing sickness in my gut when someone got hurt, the thought of actually injuring someone still made me feel ill. |
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Sickness levels at Burnley Council need to be tackled more rigorously, according to a new report. |
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The first stage of the healing process is the appearance of the sickness. |
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Rarely the drug may cause a reaction resembling serum sickness. |
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The prestigious annual Horse Show, for which 117 horses have been entered, is to go ahead this weekend despite an outbreak of African horse sickness in parts of the province. |
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Once sickness arrived they had little natural resistance and quickly died. |
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They will be at risk of many other illnesses besides altitude sickness. |
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The note-taking during the reading of the Flusser book enabled me to overcome the travel sickness in the arrhythmic opening movement that is inevitable in an unfamiliar book. |
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Symptoms vary with the drug and the sensitivity of the affected person, but include, as separate reactions, hives, serum sickness, and, sometimes, anaphylaxis. |
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Just as she closed the door she felt a wave of sickness wash over her. |
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Further it would have been possible to ensure that there was some cover when one of the jobsharers was on holiday or absent on account of sickness. |
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The temple is a number of buildings surrounding this man-made pool where devotees gather around and bathe themselves to purify and cure of any sickness. |
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A few drops of peppermint or lavender oil added to a handkerchief or tissue and inhaled will also ease the nausea associated with travel sickness. |
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The news is being taken as confirmation that Kate is fully recovered from her pregnancy sickness. |
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The tale of the Sickness of the Men of Ulster features the gynandrous horse goddess Macha who is associated with shape shifting. |
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You have a severe headache with fever, sickness and possibly a rash. |
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So football imitates life and the healthiest managerial marriages are those that stick together in sickness and in health, for richer, for poorer. |
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And like narcosis in deep-diving, there is the ever-present spectre of altitude sickness that affects the climber's ability to correctly assess the environment around him. |
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Miss Smith said the damp has made the sickness she has felt through her pregnancy worse and fears the damp atmosphere could affect her baby's health. |
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And so while some died from sickness, others died from thirst. |
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At 65 years of age, having only ever taken three days off work due to sickness, the matron has a lot to be thankful for and is certainly well deserving of a rest. |
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He said most of the troops had been inoculated against anthrax, while they also possessed antidotes to combat nerve gas and tablets to alleviate effects of radiation sickness. |
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The final two survivors are doctors, who have to contend with the human cost of the collapse of Hiroshima's infrastructure and who document the details of radiation sickness. |
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They experience boredom, sickness, early deaths and they aggress, attacking and even killing human beings. |
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According to reports, she has hyperemesis gravidarum, the evil older sister of morning sickness. |
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And now that you mention it, I also got seasick, and had altitude sickness, and had to be rescued a few times. |
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He was left weakened, dehydrated and in pain by altitude sickness and exhaustion. |
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You could get radiation sickness if you happen to be in the area. |
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Nursing helped to assuage injuries, fatigue, crankiness, and even sickness. |
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I knew there would be good times and bad, sickness and health, broken dishwashers and giant cockroaches in the bathroom. |
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The pressure-drops through the engine are minimal, which means the fish avoid decompression sickness, or the bends, as they pass through the machine. |
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East African sleeping sickness, caused by T brucei rhodesiense, is a zoonosis with an extensive animal reservoir in ungulates, including game animals. |
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She is in her eighties, and suffering from sickness and diarrhoea. |
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All the children were suffering from sickness, vomiting and twitching. |
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In humans, this is known as decompression sickness, or the bends. |
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Symptoms of radiation sickness evolve over time in distinct phases. |
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This optional life, accident, sickness and unemployment insurance pays off your balance if you die, or pays your monthly repayments if you can't work. |
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The coca leaf, considered sacred in Quechua culture, has many healing properties, one of them being the reduction of nausea and headache from altitude sickness. |
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There are many people who do many right things under the influence of sickness, affliction, death in the family, public calamities or a sudden qualm of conscience. |
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The director of strategy and development was to have been disciplined over the matter but was absent from work through sickness and later resigned. |
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Acute mountain sickness may be caused by abnormal regulation of brain and spinal fluid volume in response to low oxygen at high altitudes. |
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According to Castellani, dehydration also made acute mountain sickness worse. |
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The second phase involves asking about life history of nausea or pain, such as having car sickness or abdominal pains as a child. |
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That same cancerous sickness of short-sighted tribalization spreads throughout modern Japan's cultures of business and governance. |
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Some African groups carry duplications of genes that may protect against sleeping sickness caused by trypanosome parasites. |
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Contrary to Cordes, the truth of sickness and death, as Cottier points out, is a consequence of original sin. |
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A SMALL business lobby group has urged doctors to tighten procedures for issuing sickness cover notes. |
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In many places, melarsoprol has been the only treatment available for second stage sleeping sickness. |
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According to a new book, two researchers believe they have discovered a set of common denominators associated with cellular sickness issues. |
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Any absence for reasons of sickness or incapacity in the first three months of employment will be regarded as sick leave without pay. |
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You already protect you, and look after you in sickness and in health. |
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The illness known as milk sickness took the life of Nancy Hanks Lincoln when young Abe was only 9 years old. |
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It seems if Bahrain were not to have tear-gassing, it would be a country without sickness. |
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Preliminary results show that the drug, already used to treat sleeping sickness, corrects autism-like symptoms in mice. |
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A recent survey on HAT in Benue state showed that the areas surveyed were no longer endemic for sleeping sickness. |
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The excellent ride quality, for example, is particularly useful when it comes to avoiding car sickness in small passengers. |
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And although I have nothing to base this on, I rather think that the roominess inside will help avoid car sickness for little ones. |
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Manuel Pellegrini has warned Newcastle there won't be any travel sickness when his Manchester City side hit the road this season. |
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The second phase involves asking about life history of headache, such as having car sickness or abdominal pains as a child. |
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Car sickness can creep up very quickly, so always have some wet wipes and a change of clothes, just in case. |
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Even a little car sickness incident around Dolgellau didn't break the holiday spirit. |
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My son suffers from travel sickness and I find giving him a ginger biscuit during a car or boat journey really helps ward of car sickness. |
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She died of cirrhosis, brain fever, consumption and green sickness before she reached twenty. |
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In 1502, Arthur died at the age of 15 of sweating sickness, just 20 weeks after his marriage to Catherine. |
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The 33rd, along with the rest of the army, suffered heavy losses from sickness and exposure. |
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A few months later, they both became ill, possibly with the sweating sickness which was sweeping the area. |
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Malicious magic users can become a credible cause for disease, sickness in animals, bad luck, sudden death, impotence and other such misfortunes. |
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As it became clear that this might be his final sickness, friends and opponents alike came to call. |
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The larger industrial firms provided pensions, sickness benefits and even housing to their employees. |
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Poor living conditions led to high rates of sickness, injury, and death, as well as sabotage and criminal activity. |
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The National Insurance Act of 1946 provided sickness and unemployment benefits for adults, plus retirement pensions. |
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In 1949, unemployment, sickness and maternity benefits were exempted from taxation. |
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These organizations provided insurance for sickness, unemployment, and disability, providing an income to people when they were unable to work. |
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It excels Homers moly, cures this, falling sickness, and almost all other infirmities. |
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The troops suffered greatly from cold and sickness, the shortage of fuel led them to start dismantling their defensive Gabions and Fascines. |
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Serum sickness is a type III hypersensitivity reaction that occurs one to three weeks after exposure to drugs including penicillin. |
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In the encyclopedias its horn was said to have the power to render poisoned water potable and to heal sickness. |
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Following escape from a pressurized submarine, the crew is at risk of developing decompression sickness. |
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The pain and sickness caused by manna are the effects of its operation on the stomach. |
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What happened to the crew is unknown, but it is believed that they died of sickness. |
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Some scientists suggest that sonar may trigger whale beachings, and they point to signs that such whales have experienced decompression sickness. |
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In late August Howard wrote to Elizabeth, the Privy Council and Walsingham of the terrible sickness that had spread throughout the fleet. |
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Lice, such as Trichodectes canis, may cause sickness in wolves, but rarely death. |
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However, this shunt reduces the amount of compressed gases from entering tissues therefore reducing the risk of decompression sickness. |
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The sleeping sickness epidemic in Africa was arrested due to mobile teams systematically screening millions of people at risk. |
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When at last the pope was suffering from a very severe sickness, he spontaneously requested, one after another, each of the last sacraments. |
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However, the infertility of the land led to famine and sickness in the garrison. |
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Their beliefs revolve around a ritual ceremony called Wor, where they will be plagued by all kinds of bad luck and sickness. |
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During the worst of the sickness, only six or seven of the group were able to feed and care for the rest. |
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They also reported suffering from Green tobacco sickness, a form of nicotine poisoning. |
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The diviner is consulted for various reasons, such as the cause of sickness or even death. |
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In the 18th century four Chamonix men almost made the summit of Mont Blanc but were overcome by altitude sickness and snowblindness. |
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These depressed him, and he initially strove to overcome ageing, sickness, and death by living the life of an ascetic. |
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They thought it was unheard of for a woman to suggest being in a position of control, especially in sickness. |
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Ghosts might also cause sickness or even invade the body of ordinary people, to be driven out through strong medicines. |
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Second, Acetazolamide has been demonstrated in well-designed clinical trials to reduce the symptoms of altitude sickness. |
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I'll be climbing steadily upwards for six to eight hours a day, coping with dangerous altitude sickness, blisters and biting cold. |
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A DOCTOR'S daughter has died from suspected altitude sickness while trekking in Peru on a gap year after university. |
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It centres on Kevin Rutley, who we meet after he has suffered a bout of car sickness in his nan's car. |
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To help alleviate nausea, indigestion, queasiness or motion sickness, combine peppermint, lemon and ginger essential oils. |
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Doctors ruled out both thallium the heavy metal originally blamed for his sickness and radiation. |
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They ruled out speculation that the heavy metal thallium was to blame for his sickness and also said radiation poisoning was unlikely. |
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Sickness did not abate over the three and a half years of Federal occupation as Helena became known as one of the most insalubrious locations in the Union. |
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Moose sickness, a neurological disease of moose infected with the common cervine parasite, Elaphostrongylus tenuis. |
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Altitude sickness, or soroche, is a constant threat, but we are lucky and leave this surreal, unforgettable place intact. |
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According to ABC News, users have also taken to Twitter to vent out their feeling of motion sickness as a result of the transitions. |
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The school's scientists also developed the first drug to treat malaria and pioneered treatments for sleeping sickness and relapsing fever. |
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The tsetse fly carries the trypanosome parasite, which causes sleeping sickness in humans and nagana in livestock. |
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Modern culture's obsession with unflawed bodies rarely allows for speech about death or sickness, much less their being appropriate. |
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A junkie uses only to avoid junk sickness, otherwise known as withdrawal. |
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With Alexis Sanchez on fire, the Gunners could pile on the misery today, as long as their travel sickness doesn't kick in again. |
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Our man with Blues BLUES finally shook off their travel sickness with a 3-1 win at Millwall. |
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I submitted therefore without enquiry but it was a bold experiment on his part on the health of an octogenary, worn down by sickness as well as age. |
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This means everyone can see and helps avoid the dreaded car sickness. |
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Rapid changes in altitude sometimes result in other conditions such as altitude sickness, acute mountain sickness and high-altitude pulmonary edema. |
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It is thought measuring blood flow through a particular blood vessel can help to predict who is at greater risk of developing acute mountain sickness at altitude. |
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There's one more symptom of morning sickness that I think is so important and so underdiscussed that I want to give it its own chapter, and that is depression. |
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However, despite their wretched record of not having won a top-flight away game in their last 26 attempts, Fulham showed no signs of travel sickness against Stoke. |
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He has also acted as an advisor to the World Health Organisation on disease control programmes for sleeping sickness, river blindness, elephantiasis and guinea worm. |
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The protein of the blood plasma is not a constant but a fluctuating quantity, being lowered in sickness and subnutrition and raised in supernutrition. |
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A sensory panel was used to test faster absorption through the buccal cavity, which will result in earlier onset of action against motion sickness. |
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Depression, weight gain and sickness are just a few of the health risks when internal biological clocks fall out of sync with daily life, a chronobiologist warns. |
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These films... are evidence of a deep cultural malaise. The need to make them and the desire to consume them are symptoms of a contemporary sickness unto death. |
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Sickness and diseases such as, dysentery, malaria, smallpox, and yellow fever used in preparing medicine. |
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The Soho Foundry was also innovative in the field of personnel management, setting up executive development programmes, sickness benefit schemes and welfare programmes. |
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It also meant that, compared to an archer or crossbowman, an arquebusier lost less of his battlefield effectiveness due to fatigue, malnutrition or sickness. |
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The severe dislocations of war and Reconstruction had a severe negative impact on the black population, with a large amount of sickness and death. |
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There are several ways to help prevent or lessen motion sickness. |
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He then wasted another two months at the Cape Verde Islands, by which time one ship had been lost, 98 men had died of sickness and 50 had deserted. |
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One crewman died from radiation sickness after returning to port, and it was feared that the radioactive fish they had been carrying had made it into the Japanese food supply. |
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This leads to bubbles in blood gases and can cause decompression sickness. |
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These six dead whales were studied, and CAT scans of two of the whale heads showed hemorrhaging around the brain and the ears, which is consistent with decompression sickness. |
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Bones show the same pitting that signals decompression sickness in humans. |
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Unemployment benefits and sickness benefits were to be universal. |
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For example, a person who wants a job but is not available for work due to sickness or disability would be classed as economically inactive, not unemployed. |
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I know how unfit it is for me to write with any other hand than mine own, but by my troth my fingers are so disjointed with sickness that I cannot steadily hold a pen. |
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His images of sickness, vomit, manure, and plague reflected his strongly satiric view of a world populated by all the fools and knaves of England. |
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He suffered altitude sickness and gearbox failure and even witnessed the aftermath of a fatal crash involving French motorcyclist Thomas Bourgoin, for instance. |
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Unemployment benefit, sickness benefit, old age pensions, child benefit and disability benefits should always remain with the State and not a private company. |
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A MOUNTAIN climber who contracted severe altitude sickness after trying to conquer Mount Everest has been told he could be left disabled for life. |
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The tsetse fly spreads the parasitic diseases human African trypanosomiasis, known as sleeping sickness, and Nagana that infect humans and animals respectively. |
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The trypanosome, a parasitic single-cell eukaryote, is responsible for sleeping sickness in humans and nagana in livestock through much of sub-saharan Africa. |
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Indeed, pet behavioural problems are numerous, and can include destructive behaviour in cats, barking, chewing, car sickness and separation anxiety. |
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Several rescuers were suffering from altitude sickness at the 4,600-metre site, a member of the search teams told the official Xinhua news agency. |
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In the late 1950s and early 1960s up and down Britain, mothers who had taken thalidomide, a drug to prevent morning sickness, gave birth to babies with shocking deformities. |
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Among the dangers for anosmia sufferers is not being able to detect a gas leak, or when food has gone off with the inevitable risk of sickness or food poisoning. |
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The coca leaves juice has a mild stimulant effect, and is known to ease stomach pain and help people from the lowlands cope with altitude sickness. |
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For other women who are experiencing less severe morning sickness, there are both natural remedies or practical methods such as travel sickness bands. |
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The 38-year-old was struck down by a bout of potentially fatal altitude sickness on Sunday after scaling 12,000ft of the 19,341ft peak in Tanzania, East Africa. |
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Yet despite being prescribed antinausea drugs, the sickness continued. |
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More than 150,000 prescriptions for two drugs to treat withdrawal symptoms or induce sickness when alcohol is drunk were written in 2009, data for England revealed. |
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The trip will also examine the impact of acute mountain sickness, a debilitating condition often experienced on ascent to high altitude, on ability to stave off illness. |
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In the late 50s and early 60s up and down Britain, mothers who had taken thalidomide, a drug to prevent morning sickness, gave birth to babies with shocking deformities. |
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