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1 ne of physicians (6 [0.1%] of all identified offenses).
2 s evolved from that of host defense to tumor offense.
3 unished than white students are for the same offense.
4 ching between chemical defense and herbivore offense.
5 had been found guilty of a serious criminal offense.
6 were severe or if sharing it was a repeated offense.
7 nd legal immigrants across a range of felony offenses.
8 by anticipating human error in unintentional offenses.
9 problems, and are convicted of more criminal offenses.
10 r violent and sexual offenses than for other offenses.
11 ts in forced-choice responses for all twelve offenses.
12 t contact and in people charged with violent offenses.
13 rrested for non-physically aggressive sexual offenses.
14 ely 0.24% per year) were disciplined for 465 offenses.
15 lop effective interventions to prevent these offenses.
16 ns is disciplined each year for a variety of offenses.
17 erate them for short sentences for low-level offenses.
18 nificantly predict violent, drug, and sexual offenses.
20 rbidity (8.5% of whom had at least 1 violent offense; adjusted OR, 1.2; 95% CI, 1.1-1.4; P<.001 for i
21 or criminal history to be charged with a new offense after handgun purchase (RR, 7.5; 95% confidence
23 ted 8.4% of the physically aggressive sexual offenses and 9.0% of the non-physically aggressive sexua
24 noncarceral management of nonviolent alleged offenses and in line with average international incarcer
25 ricans fail to appear in court for low-level offenses, and warrants are then issued for their arrest.
26 d that the notes caused confusion, worry, or offense; and 20% to 42% reported sharing notes with othe
27 oportion of physicians disciplined for these offenses are allowed to either continue to practice or r
28 Those willing to escalate over even trivial offenses are considered honorable whereas those who do n
31 ge, sex, race/ethnicity, probation time, and offense at 2 urban agencies that exemplify specialty and
33 ysicians (39.9%) disciplined for sex-related offenses between 1981 and 1994 were licensed to practice
34 k of arrest for physically aggressive sexual offenses but were 3 times more likely to have been arres
35 st bacteria are protected from environmental offenses by a cell wall consisting of strong yet elastic
38 orical, and psychiatric variables as well as offense characteristics and legal outcomes were describe
39 fication Standard (UCCS), and the Text-based Offense Classification (TOC) tool to address these short
41 3% of those with schizophrenia had a violent offense compared with 17.9% of their unaffected siblings
42 phrenia, 1054 (13.2%) had at least 1 violent offense compared with 4276 (5.3%) of general population
44 ation framework, built on 313,209 hand-coded offense descriptions from 24 states, to translate raw de
45 y in plant defenses in response to herbivore offense differs for physical and chemical defense and ch
48 rrying (RR, 11.7; 95% CI, 6.8-20.0), violent offenses generally (RR, 10.4; 95% CI, 6.9-15.8), and Vio
49 ogy, but the prevalence and dynamics of such offenses have not been well delineated, making it diffic
51 idespread criminal justice contact for minor offenses, how common is jail incarceration for minority
54 cluded any physical assault, robbery, sexual offenses, illegal threats or intimidation, and arson.
56 of youths found guilty of a serious criminal offense in Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, or Maricop
57 sicians disciplined per year for sex-related offenses increased from 42 in 1989 to 147 in 1996, and t
59 isdemeanor conviction and no convictions for offenses involving firearms or violence were nearly 5 ti
61 election favors extreme phenotypes, predator offense is costly, and prey defense is effective against
63 ine of physicians who commit any sex-related offenses is an important public health issue that should
64 y the semantic content of trials for violent offenses is functionally indistinguishable from that for
65 iscipline against physicians for sex-related offenses is increasing over time and is relatively sever
66 sary to identify physicians at high risk for offenses leading to disciplinary action and to develop e
68 ; 95% CI, 6.9-15.8), and Violent Crime Index offenses (murder or non-negligent manslaughter, forcible
69 dministrative crime data often must classify offense narratives into a common scheme for analysis pur
71 The use of nucleases as toxins for defense, offense or addiction of selfish elements is widely encou
73 cts in wrongness ratings for seven and eight offenses (out of twelve), respectively, and we observed
74 rsons with prior convictions for misdemeanor offenses pass criminal records background checks and leg
76 had at least 1 conviction for a misdemeanor offense prior to handgun purchase, and 2795 had no prior
79 des were assigned for the different types of offenses relied on by medical boards for imposing physic
80 status, an almost doubled hazard of violent offense remained (hazard ratio, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.8-1.9).
85 arent in an increase in retraction for "new" offenses such as plagiarism and a decrease in the time-t
86 greatest risk for nonviolent firearm-related offenses such as weapon carrying (RR, 11.7; 95% CI, 6.8-
89 included the proportion of inmates with drug offenses, the length of inmate stay, and the jail from w
91 l per se (laws stating that it is a criminal offense to drive with a blood alcohol concentration abov
92 at time of index incident and index incident offense type, women with temporary protection orders in
95 stment [OR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.0-3.5]), criminal offenses (verbal violence [OR, 2.2; 95% CI, 1.2-4.0] and
98 s of 2 or more years for a sexual or violent offense were classified into four groups: no psychosis (
99 ians, physicians disciplined for sex-related offenses were more likely to practice in the specialties
102 nificantly increased risk for arrest for sex offenses, whereas for sexual abuse, the AOR (2.13; 95% C
103 t preferences significantly predict property offenses, while self-control problems significantly pred
104 mined official records of arrests for sexual offenses with and without physical aggression to compare
105 ore severe (P<.001) than for non-sex-related offenses, with 71.9% of sex-related orders involving rev
107 buse comorbidity (of whom 27.6% committed an offense), yielding an increased risk of violent crime am