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1 ator decision, and an unrelated death from a motor vehicle accident.
2 The most frequent mechanism of injury was a motor vehicle accident.
3 f the cervical spine within 48 hours after a motor vehicle accident.
4 he T3 group died from cranial trauma after a motor vehicle accident.
5 age range: 2-10 years) who had experienced a motor vehicle accident.
6 acute PTSD in women and men after a serious motor vehicle accident.
7 t and physical reactivity to memories of the motor vehicle accident.
8 being in a manual occupation and injury in a motor vehicle accident.
9 d in an emergency department within 6 h of a motor vehicle accident.
10 old woman who suffered near-drowning after a motor-vehicle accident.
11 y old and had become paraplegic because of a motor-vehicle accident.
12 ality, repeated hospitalizations, falls, and motor vehicle accidents.
13 aumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in victims of motor vehicle accidents.
14 se, natural causes, homicides, suicides, and motor vehicle accidents.
15 ed, seen in 0.67% of patients admitted after motor vehicle accidents.
16 myocardium from the four persons who died in motor vehicle accidents.
17 ts for asthma, pneumonia, heart failure, and motor vehicle accidents.
18 e, ischemic heart disease, and visits due to motor vehicle accidents.
19 y department sustaining polytrauma following motor vehicle accidents.
21 ngs of distress in situations similar to the motor vehicle accident and physical reactivity to memori
22 munity study group of 122 victims of serious motor vehicle accidents and a comparison group of 42 (wh
23 ritraumatic dissociation is common following motor vehicle accidents and is a risk factor for acute a
24 Rates of PTSD are high in victims of serious motor vehicle accidents and remain high 9 months later.
25 in a hospital emergency department following motor vehicle accidents and to describe the prevalence a
26 ascular disease, stroke, daytime sleepiness, motor vehicle accidents, and diminished quality of life.
27 od physical and sexual abuse, partner abuse, motor vehicle accidents, and natural disasters, with mos
29 e the highest prevalence of substance abuse, motor vehicle accidents, and sexually transmitted diseas
31 jury mortality rates and fatality rates from motor-vehicle accidents (crashes in US usage) are higher
33 a disproportionate increase in homicide and motor vehicle accident deaths in the Great Lakes and a s
34 excess liver disease, homicide, suicide, and motor vehicle accident deaths were negatively correlated
36 r neuropsychiatric outcomes (i.e., injuries, motor vehicle accidents, education, substance use disord
39 were more likely to have been involved in a motor vehicle accident, had higher Injury Severity Score
40 ed were more likely to have been involved in motor vehicle accidents, had higher Injury Severity Scor
42 ia from a C7-T1 subluxation as a result of a motor vehicle accident in July 2006, presented with comp
43 7 RR, 1.06; 95% CI, 1.01-1.10; P = .01), and motor vehicle accidents (lag 0 RR, 1.13; 95% CI, 1.04-1.
45 ving Time (DST) transition acutely increases motor vehicle accident (MVA) risk ("DST effect"), which
47 treatments and DM, brachial plexopathy with motor vehicle accidents, myasthenia gravis and NMJ disor
48 ts age 18-65 years who had been in a serious motor vehicle accident (N=122) were assessed with the St
50 reas exposure to nonassaultive trauma (e.g., motor vehicle accident, natural disaster) was best expla
51 m, motor vehicle accidents with pedestrians, motor vehicle accidents of unspecified type, accidental
53 opulation studies include increased risk for motor vehicle accidents, psychotic symptoms, and short-t
55 e four types of psychiatric outcomes after a motor vehicle accident that were noted overlap, are pers
56 clude that the excess risk of mortality from motor vehicle accidents that was associated with Gulf Wa
57 ans, the significant excess of deaths due to motor vehicle accidents that was observed during the ear
58 y recognition of psychiatric consequences of motor vehicle accidents that would enable early interven
59 One month after the accident, 34.4% of the motor vehicle accident victims met criteria for PTSD (ve
60 of PTSD were higher (25.2% and 18.2%) in the motor vehicle accident victims than in the comparison gr
64 exposure with risk of ED visits for CHF and motor vehicle accidents were robust against adjustment f
65 ssues obtained from four persons who died in motor vehicle accidents were used as negative controls f
67 nificantly raised mortality were alcoholism, motor vehicle accidents with pedestrians, motor vehicle