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1                           A third (32.9%) of Aboriginal AMI patients had a revascularization within 3
2 that derive from Austronesian (as opposed to aboriginal) ancestors and the retention of PAn cognates.
3 berculosis lineages currently circulating in Aboriginal and French Canadian communities.
4 uvialuit that differentiates them from other Aboriginal and Native American populations.
5  after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) for Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal patients sequentially cont
6 he total psychological distress burden among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults could be at
7 ubstantially to psychological distress among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults, and to ine
8 mmunality, from the cross-sectional National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey, Nat
9 nd eligible patients were regular attendees (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged >/= 35
10 ial sources of vitamin D for remote-dwelling Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, of whom 39
11 mber of disability-adjusted life years among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples with epile
12 t among the Australian population, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
13 ing and social and emotional wellbeing among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
14  people and colonial structures, directed by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
15 rres Strait Islander Health Survey, National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey, Nat
16 de, birth cohort, sex, socioeconomic status, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status, and school
17 data from Mayi Kuwayu: the National Study of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Wellbeing.
18                            Participants were Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander children and th
19  64,169 (51.4%) were male, 6,566 (5.3%) were Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander children, and t
20     The models additionally adjusted for the Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander status of the c
21  probability of vaccination by maternal age, Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander status, socioec
22                      We find that Papuan and Aboriginal Australian ancestors diversified 25-40 thousa
23            We examined genetic affinities of Aboriginal Australian and New Guinean populations by usi
24  do not support a close relationship between Aboriginal Australian and PNG populations but instead su
25  other continents, including a comparison of Aboriginal Australian and South Asian haplogroup C chrom
26 ontribute to extreme susceptibility to OM in Aboriginal Australian children.
27 , and a range of insects once contributed to Aboriginal Australian culture and diet.
28 eas the Mungo Man (WLH3) sample contained no Aboriginal Australian DNA.
29 ll: first, signs of South Asian admixture in Aboriginal Australian genomes have been reported on the
30 strated both the uniqueness and antiquity of Aboriginal Australian genomes.
31   One of these was a previously unidentified Aboriginal Australian haplotype belonging to haplogroup
32                                              Aboriginal Australian hunting fires have been hypothesiz
33 The HLA (rs9272622) associations reported in Aboriginal Australian individuals could not be replicate
34               We have further resolved known Aboriginal Australian mitochondrial haplogroups and disc
35                                   Nearly all Aboriginal Australian mitochondrial haplogroups detected
36 stry of these natural materials long used by Aboriginal Australian peoples.
37 quences and SSO types split PNG highland and Aboriginal Australian populations and link Aboriginal Au
38 and Papua New Guinea (PNG), coastal PNG, and Aboriginal Australian populations were typed with a pane
39 d Aboriginal Australian populations and link Aboriginal Australian populations with populations from
40 obtaining important information from ancient Aboriginal Australian remains.
41                             In contrast, the Aboriginal Australian sequences are intermingled through
42                         Here, we sequence 13 Aboriginal Australian Y chromosomes to re-investigate th
43 wide genetic analysis was undertaken in 1263 Aboriginal Australians (398 RHD cases; 865 controls).
44 ere we generate high-coverage genomes for 83 Aboriginal Australians (speakers of Pama-Nyungan languag
45                             We estimate that Aboriginal Australians and Papuans diverged from Eurasia
46                  However, all of the studied Aboriginal Australians descend from a single founding po
47 s, have been used and continue to be used by Aboriginal Australians for numerous technical and cultur
48  Finally, we report evidence of selection in Aboriginal Australians potentially associated with livin
49                    The population history of Aboriginal Australians remains largely uncharacterized.
50                                              Aboriginal Australians represent one of the oldest conti
51  is the major genetic risk factor for RHD in Aboriginal Australians studied here.
52                                              Aboriginal Australians were less likely to have revascul
53 ascularization procedures after AMI than non-Aboriginal Australians, and this was largely explained b
54                                              Aboriginal Australians, Near Oceanians, Polynesians, Fij
55  we analyze large-scale genotyping data from aboriginal Australians, New Guineans, island Southeast A
56 ovan DNA segments in present-day Papuans and Aboriginal Australians.
57 risk factors for severe otitis media (OM) in Aboriginal Australians.
58 quencing the mitogenomes of 127 contemporary Aboriginal Australians.
59 ighland PNG clusters that do not include any Aboriginal Australians; the highland PNG clusters have c
60                                              Aboriginal burning in Australia has long been assumed to
61 e land-management strategies consistent with Aboriginal burning regimes.
62 e to demonstrate the processes through which Aboriginal burning shapes arid-zone vegetational diversi
63                                              Aboriginal cell designs are taken to be simple and loose
64                                   Australian Aboriginal children 6 to <12 months old who had received
65 onal dose of Rotarix was given to Australian Aboriginal children 6 to <12 months old.
66 le GAS strains, including strains endemic in Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory of Aust
67 ) clinics, 2 community health centers, and 1 Aboriginal community controlled health organization in N
68                                              Aboriginal community residents aged >2 years in 7 remote
69                                              Aboriginal community residents aged >2 years in seven re
70 d patients from Australian general practice, Aboriginal community-controlled and government-run Indig
71 extinctions in the arid zone coincident with Aboriginal depopulation.
72  to surrounding settlements, and an adjacent Aboriginal estate where traditional Aboriginal fire mana
73 y, and dendrochronology, we show that on the Aboriginal estate, C. intratropica populations depend on
74 pecialist assessment was associated with non-Aboriginal ethnicity (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 4.02; 9
75 lysis, HCV treatment was associated with non-Aboriginal ethnicity (AOR, 4.59; 95% CI, 1.49-14.12), li
76 ncluded younger admission age, male sex, non-Aboriginal ethnicity, a diagnosis of bronchiolitis and l
77 levels >6 log IU/mL, HIV coinfection and non-Aboriginal ethnicity.
78 was 41 years, 71% were male, and 15% were of Aboriginal ethnicity.
79                      Since 2006, traditional Aboriginal fire management at this site has been overlai
80 adjacent Aboriginal estate where traditional Aboriginal fire management endures.
81 ical consequences of the loss of traditional Aboriginal fire management on fire-exposed savannas on t
82 rast Kakadu National Park, where traditional Aboriginal fire management was severely disrupted during
83                                 We show that Aboriginal fires are smaller, more tightly clustered, an
84 mmunities settled and began interacting with aboriginal foraging societies approximately 3,500 years
85 ies, whereas most of the remaining Taiwanese aboriginal groups are more genetically distant to these
86 ely benefit threatened small-mammal species, Aboriginal hunters should be considered trophic facilita
87 ne ethnographic observations of contemporary Aboriginal hunting and burning with satellite image anal
88 variability on landscapes dominated by Martu Aboriginal hunting fires with those dominated by lightni
89 l dose of Rotarix administered to Australian Aboriginal infants 6 to <12 months old increased the pro
90      The origins and genetic affinity of the aboriginal inhabitants of the Canary Islands, commonly k
91 to both contemporary Mongolians and American aboriginals is the more likely origin of the founders of
92 ization commencing in 1802 ad that disrupted Aboriginal landscape burning.
93                            The mtDNAs of the aboriginal M. macedonicus and M. spicilegus are each oth
94  The mtDNA results support the view that the aboriginal M. spretus is the sister group of the other f
95 ent study, for the first time, 293 Taiwanese aboriginal males from all nine major tribes (Ami, Atayal
96 n American, 53 [6%] were Asian, 24 [3%] were Aboriginal or Pacific islander, and 57 [6%] were other r
97 ie, they, or either parent, were recorded as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander on one or more birt
98 SD, 6.6] years; 46 [3.2%] self-identified as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander, 237 [16.5%] as Asi
99           Within the same hospital, however, Aboriginal patients had a revascularization rate 18% low
100                                              Aboriginal patients had a revascularization rate 37% low
101  a revascularization rate 37% lower than non-Aboriginal patients of the same age, sex, year of admiss
102 dial infarction (AMI) for Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal patients sequentially controlling for admitti
103 ation within 30 days compared with 39.7% non-Aboriginal patients.
104 lower rate of private health insurance among Aboriginal patients.
105 eed dispersal and landscape burning by Martu Aboriginal people affects the distribution of three pref
106   Phenotypic similarities between Australian Aboriginal People and some tribes of India were noted by
107 he other hand, affinities between Australian Aboriginal People and southern Indians were suggested ba
108 ve mints have traditionally been used by the aboriginal people for natural remedies; however, their b
109 on asthma and its intermediate phenotypes in Aboriginal people from the Kimberly region of Australia
110 ster/crayfish were collected and prepared by Aboriginal people using traditional and contemporary met
111 l hospitals, a higher comorbidity burden for Aboriginal people, and to a lesser extent a lower rate o
112 hylmercury (MMHg) to many of Canada's Arctic Aboriginal people.
113  Eastern Canada whose fruit has been used by aboriginal peoples to treat various illnesses, and has r
114 ce that two probands related to the Manitoba Aboriginal population group within which COFS syndrome w
115 atients with COFS syndrome from the Manitoba Aboriginal population group.
116 opulation for M. tuberculosis gene flow into Aboriginal populations during the fur trade era.
117 omic deletion, is at highest frequency among Aboriginal populations in Ontario, Saskatchewan, and Alb
118 ion heterogeneity displayed by the Taiwanese aboriginal populations is close to that exhibited among
119 ation patterns suggesting that small, mobile Aboriginal populations potentially needed access to drin
120         Cambodia harbours a variety of human aboriginal populations that have scarcely been studied i
121 n the mid-1950s Western Desert of Australia, Aboriginal populations were in decline as families left
122 during the early twentieth century following Aboriginal relocation to surrounding settlements, and an
123                                        Adult Aboriginal residents of 7 remote communities were invite
124 riphosphatase and guanylyltransferase as the aboriginal state of the capping apparatus.
125 se child died, matched 5:1 for age, sex, and Aboriginal status.
126 our ancestry that is more closely related to aboriginal Taiwanese than to any present-day mainland po
127  conifer was able to persist with burning by Aboriginal Tasmanians, despite episodic widespread fores
128  were Maori (New Zealand), and 295 (8%) were Aboriginal/Torres Strait Islander (Australia).
129  of 21 multiplex pedigrees with gout from an aboriginal tribe in Taiwan.
130 y (monitor lizards), which is a specialty of Aboriginal women.

 
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