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1 P-1) from two smaller overlapping BACs ("BAC marriage").
2 to "morality" issues (e.g., abortion and gay marriage).
3 ssault, female genital mutilation, and child marriage.
4 hinese MSM's decisions around disclosure and marriage.
5 ractiveness of those engaging in interracial marriage.
6 or appears to be accentuated by the state of marriage.
7 ignificant after controlling for duration of marriage.
8 policies is crucial for prevention of child marriage.
9 , especially regarding abortion and same-sex marriage.
10 ses the progress of research on the study of marriage.
11 omen move into their mates' residences after marriage.
12 nflict between family of birth and family of marriage.
13 who are the offspring of a nonconsanguineous marriage.
14 l of polygyny without locking any men out of marriage.
15 research documenting the health benefits of marriage.
16 mmodate to the dissolution of their parents' marriage.
17 states without policies permitting same-sex marriage.
18 rence in those with AUD registrations before marriage.
19 d by cultural norms prescribing cross-cousin marriage.
20 their future, or were in less well-adjusted marriages.
21 ilies, 12 were the offspring of first-cousin marriages.
22 successful pregnancies from three different marriages.
23 reported social preference for cross-cousin marriages.
24 opted the traditional practice of endogamous marriages.
25 is significantly increased in consanguineous marriages.
26 d ancestry and a high rate of consanguineous marriages.
27 on divisive social issues, such as same-sex marriage?
30 ould know each other's genetic status before marriage (92%), that carriers of the same defective gene
31 clans, and lineages) and practice exogamous marriages (a man chooses a bride in a different lineage
32 fe had some positive resources (e.g., a good marriage, a low level neuroticism, enjoyment of vacation
33 combine a high proportion of consanguineous marriages, a high incidence of TB, and an excellent clin
35 e are approximately 23 million lost years of marriage among men and 48 million lost years of marriage
37 .A. Fay published an analysis of nearly 5000 marriages among deaf individuals in America collected du
38 collected pedigree data on 311 contemporary marriages among deaf individuals that were comparable to
39 unding effect and the customary first-cousin marriages among the ancestral Islamic populations in Qat
42 2004 to 2018 period, opposition to same-sex marriage and abortion was 3 to 4 percentage points more
43 These conclusions are driven by declines in marriage and are robust to different assumptions about t
45 ios (ORs) for the associations between child marriage and both fertility and fertility-control outcom
49 on a range of interpersonal processes, from marriage and divorce rates to risk-taking and violent cr
51 s showed that subsequent achievements-age of marriage and educational attainment-had mediating effect
53 on at all ages, relationships between age at marriage and female well-being are largely equivocal, an
57 time in education and late age to enter into marriage and of parenthood have led to the rise of a new
58 ed questions about the shifting landscape of marriage and reproduction in US society over the course
59 rogeneity exists in the relationship between marriage and reproductive health across adolescent mater
60 both men and women, the associations between marriage and risk for alcohol use disorder in cousins, h
63 access to health care, equality in deciding marriage and the number and spacing of children, and par
64 no significant relationships between type of marriage and the total number of alive children and numb
65 tal warts; it was negatively associated with marriage and was not associated with the number of inter
66 r menarche had earlier sexual debut, earlier marriage and were more often Herpes simplex type-2 (HSV-
67 uraging voters (n = 972) to support same-sex marriage and whether attitude change persisted and sprea
68 in India, and the associations between child marriage and women's fertility and fertility-control out
69 onflicts, sex trafficking and slavery, early marriage and/or pregnancy, and the absence of adequate a
73 empirical data: studies of well-functioning marriages and families, the role of adult relationships
74 ing coefficient were used to prohibit inbred marriages and prohibit breeding of some pairs of pedigre
76 ual initiation, first union (cohabitation or marriage), and first birth and used logistic regression
79 d consumption, smoking, alcohol consumption, marriage, and childbearing (women) and to predict BMI us
80 riage, number and kind of transitions out of marriage, and durations spent in various marital statuse
81 and the rates of health insurance coverage, marriage, and employment among patients who had attained
83 that the psychological and social aspects of marriage, and in particular health-monitoring spousal in
84 (or both) of individuals who have sex before marriage, and increase barriers to accessing sexual and
85 eas such as social interactions, employment, marriage, and independent living than adults without cer
86 Accusations of women were mainly from kin by marriage, and particularly from husbands and co-wives.
87 s 'child marriage', widely equated to forced marriage, and recognized as damaging to multiple dimensi
88 and cooperation for agricultural resources, marriage, and reproduction in one contemporary Ethiopian
89 s reduces a man's agricultural productivity, marriage, and reproductive success, as resources diminis
90 es of parasite stress for mating strategies, marriage, and the differing roles and restrictions for m
91 assess the extent of HIV transmission within marriages, and HIV-prevention efforts remain focused on
93 ation, employment, or training [NEET]; child marriage; and demand for contraception satisfied with mo
95 ugh in some communities where consanguineous marriages are prevalent they represent the most frequent
99 US Constitution requires that dissolution of marriage be made achievable regardless of ability to pay
100 to estimate the number of years spent out of marriage because of these causal relationships in the to
101 tients was the offspring of a consanguineous marriage; because the Arg384Cys change in him was hetero
102 arriage transitions in rural Tanzania, where marriage before or just after 18 years of age is normati
103 has been long overlooked and predict that a marriage between cell biology and RNA biology holds the
106 ,000 births, including sufficient numbers of marriages between first and second cousins to estimate i
108 pothesis based on anti-fat discrimination in marriage can also account for such correlations between
109 ement and resilience, and an intact parental marriage can substantially buffer these adverse effects
110 ntexts in which adolescents have autonomy in marriage choices and in which marriage promotes economic
112 se attractiveness patterns into the model of marriage decisions produces asymmetries in interracial m
114 e events in the nonpecuniary domain, such as marriage, divorce, and serious disability, have a lastin
115 andemic data showed that by the end of 2020, marriage, divorce, death, and birth rates were higher co
117 tation of state policies permitting same-sex marriage during the full period of YRBSS data collection
119 ther investigation of other outcomes such as marriage, education, household net worth, and earnings s
120 the impact of different medical therapies on marriage, employment and economic burden in IBD patients
121 MCIBDQ, SF-36, disease activity index (DAI), marriage, employment and economic burden questionnaires
125 t, cognitive activity, social isolation, and marriage), environmental factors (nitrogen oxide, partic
130 planning, child protection (especially child marriage, female genital mutilation, and immunisation),
132 tunting at age 24 mo to adult human capital, marriage, fertility, health, and economic outcomes.
135 llection, the Register of Births, Deaths and Marriages (for birth registrations), the Admitted Patien
136 n most human populations, but dissolution of marriage has always affected a significant proportion of
138 step-parents, and the practice of polygynous marriage have all been claimed to negatively impact chil
143 to assess the contribution of consanguineous marriage, improvements in child survival, and other fact
145 ories saw an increase in prevalence of child marriage in girls (n=6) and boys (n=8) despite declines
148 se has occurred, but the shift towards later marriage in most countries has led to an increase in pre
149 use of the common practice of consanguineous marriage in the Middle East, which results in the relati
152 se patients, prominently from consanguineous marriages in the Middle East, who display profound hyper
153 flect socioeconomic status], and duration of marriage) in proportional hazards regression, we found t
155 Given the ongoing decline in consanguineous marriage, inherited hearing loss will likely be much rar
156 spectives by developing a theory of species "marriage." Initially, ecological drift may determine whi
157 m 18 years as the minimum age for consent to marriage, international human-rights standards do not re
159 ntly outside marriage, it is unknown whether marriage is adversely associated with reproductive healt
163 g before age 18 occurs predominantly outside marriage, it is unknown whether marriage is adversely as
166 ge customary court cases concerning assault, marriage, land, and property violations, third-party eng
167 xplicit bias were decreasing before same-sex marriage legalization, but decreased at a sharper rate f
168 w, we tested whether state-by-state same-sex marriage legislation was associated with decreases in an
169 e latter adjusting for age, education level, marriage length, polygamy, socioeconomic status, and mon
170 e covariates including age, education level, marriage length, polygamy, socioeconomic status, months
171 rst, using a demographic model, we show that marriage markets are skewed sufficiently feminine, under
172 promotes economic and social security, early marriage may be better understood as serving the strateg
174 petition combined with parental control over marriages may escalate conflict between same-sex sibling
175 are consistent with the hypothesis that such marriages might well have contributed to the high freque
178 t maternal age groups, suggesting girl child marriages must be examined separately from marriages at
179 n of current marital status, timing of first marriage, number and kind of transitions out of marriage
186 d are the new opportunities arising from the marriage of concepts of supramolecular and mechanochemic
195 fined, unimolecular macromolecules through a marriage of multistep flow synthesis and iterative expon
198 ysis, and a clear need is identified for the marriage of simulation, with respect to both combinatori
200 Looking forward, perhaps the most fruitful marriage of the advances in molecular genetics and treat
202 ns to this dilemma will necessitate a closer marriage of theoretical and modeling studies linked to e
210 ymmetric associations ranging from temporary marriages of convenience to long-term fellow travellers.
213 old resources (e.g. food, heritable land and marriage opportunities), are key to understanding the ti
214 collected from participants 18 months after marriage or 6 months after first childbirth, whichever w
216 n urban Zambia and Rwanda takes place within marriage or cohabitation, voluntary counselling and test
220 5% CI, 1.90-4.57), and showed lower rates of marriage (OR, 0.72; 95% CI, 0.63-0.84) and parenthood (O
221 : odds ratio [OR], 1.28; 95% CI, 1.13-1.44), marriage (OR, 1.26; 95% CI, 1.20-1.34), and higher Injur
224 ings in older patients were a higher rate of marriage (P =.02), more difficulty in taking medications
225 0.25 SDs, respectively), characteristics of marriage partners (1.39 y older, 1.02 grade more schooli
226 h pedigree included three-generation data on marriage partners that included at least one deaf proban
228 ciated with stronger personal relationships (marriage/partnership, contact with friends), broader soc
229 This supports the view that dispersal for marriage played an important role in the evolution of la
239 ve autonomy in marriage choices and in which marriage promotes economic and social security, early ma
240 s heavily controlled by parents via arranged marriages, rather than the selection of the marrying ind
246 alty and Judaism were associated with higher marriage satisfaction, whereas possession of an M.D. deg
251 iors toward wives, sexual activities outside marriage, sexually transmitted disease (STD) symptoms, c
252 ecisions produces asymmetries in interracial marriage similar to those in the observed data in terms
253 ic variables such as age, sex, race, income, marriage status, insurance status, and highest education
254 ential confounding factors are maternal age, marriage status, race, years of education mother's heigh
260 ationships through civil unions and same-sex marriage, the experiences of same-sex couples raising ch
261 subjects were the progeny of consanguineous marriages; therefore, a homozygosity mapping strategy wa
262 faces tend to be similar at the beginning of marriage, they do not converge over time, bringing facia
264 tigate the impact of current marital status, marriage timing, divorce and widow transitions, and mari
265 ments worldwide have raised the legal age of marriage to 18 years, some are also considering raising
266 had no lifetime alcohol use disorder, while marriage to a spouse with lifetime alcohol use disorder
270 ls adjusted for demographics and duration of marriage to estimate odds ratios (ORs) for the associati
271 distress as a novel mechanism that may link marriage to inflammation-related diseases, and even pose
273 ed in our analyses were age, marital status, marriage type, whether pregnant or post partum, gestatio
274 An escalating global campaign to end early marriage typically assumes that its high prevalence is d
276 Among births to mothers aged <18 years, marriage was associated with greater adjusted odds of pr
281 ancers, the survival benefit associated with marriage was larger than the published survival benefit
285 In both sexes, the protective effect of marriage was significantly stronger in those with than t
286 high prevalence of customary consanguineous marriages, we have developed a gene-targeted next genera
288 addition, two siblings from a consanguineous marriage were found to be homozygous for the deletion.
289 Two siblings, products of a consanguineous marriage, were markedly deficient in both albumin and Ig
290 their husband were less satisfied with their marriage when they discontinued HCs if their husband had
291 atures of two siblings from a consanguineous marriage who presented with respiratory hypoventilation
292 n 2 siblings, the products of a first-cousin marriage, who experienced recurrent bacterial and candid
294 or, this phenomenon is referred to as 'child marriage', widely equated to forced marriage, and recogn
295 h exchanges most often involve cross-cousins-marriage with the child of a parent's opposite-sex sibli
296 te policies in 32 states permitting same-sex marriage with year-to-year changes in suicide attempts a
298 both BaYaka and Bondongo communities, men in marriages with greater conflict had higher testosterone.
300 the legal age of sexual consent with that of marriage would restrict the ability of adolescents to le