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1                                     Juvenile detention.
2 s' illustrate the experiences of involuntary detention.
3 h nonsense-mediated decay or by nuclear mRNA detention.
4 fluenced positive experiences of involuntary detention.
5 s varied in how they experienced involuntary detention.
6 y of psychiatric disorders after youth leave detention.
7 ined psychiatric disorders after youth leave detention.
8 g youth in achieving positive outcomes after detention.
9 lude a new legal framework for indeterminate detention.
10 een patients were detained (median length of detention, 14.5 days).
11 d splicing, and half showed increased intron detention, altering transcript pools of >300 genes.
12 tions have been raised as to whether certain detention and interrogation procedures amount to torture
13                         This includes humane detention and the delivery of justice and adequate healt
14 l services, appropriate facilities for civil detention, and detaining patients long enough to assure
15 nal-justice systems, high rates of pre-trial detention, and overcrowding.
16 alongside making applications for compulsory detention, assessment and treatment.
17  detention, participants were interviewed in detention between November 20, 1995, and June 14, 1998,
18 ersons after their discharge from short-term detention, by means of community-based directly observed
19 f a large subnucleolar structure, termed the detention center (DC).
20 18 years, each of whom was incarcerated at a detention center in metropolitan Atlanta, Ga.
21 ited from the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center, Chicago, Illinois, between November 20
22  abuse in adolescents admitted to a juvenile detention center.
23 ouths (11-17 years old) at an urban juvenile detention center.
24 of people who use drugs into compulsory drug detention centres (CDDCs) is common throughout East and
25 enile detention facility, adults at homeless detention centres, and women and men at a remand centre
26                         However, involuntary detention could result in an unexpected rise in incidenc
27 , and intimate partners; unlawful arrest and detention; discrimination in accessing health services;
28 pregnancy intentions and having a partner in detention each mediated the effect of partner's gang mem
29  have a disorder approximately 5 years after detention, even after adjusting for demographic characte
30 fugee clinics (2,409; 6.4%) and correctional/detention facilities (2,325; 6.1%) were the next most co
31 f alternatives to incarceration, prisons and detention facilities could be leveraged to promote prima
32 , and drug use in street youth at a juvenile detention facility, adults at homeless detention centres
33                           Twelve years after detention, females were more likely than males to have p
34  among delinquent youth 5 and 12 years after detention, focusing on sex and racial/ethnic differences
35 arriving in the USA are likely to be held in detention for months or years pending adjudication of th
36 reatment depending upon intended use such as detention in basins prior to use or chlorination is requ
37 argest Zambian prisons, reforms to pre-trial detention in South Africa, integration of mental health
38 wet ponds, dry detention ponds, dry extended detention, infiltration basin, and filtering practices)
39      This omission is critical because after detention most youth return to the community, where they
40                  For example, 12 years after detention, non-Hispanic white males had nearly 3 times t
41 ficantly higher rates of comorbidity when in detention (odds ratio, 1.3; 95% CI, 1.0-1.7), males had
42        Tuberculosis controllers sought civil detention of 15 patients.
43                         Our findings suggest detention of asylum seekers exacerbates psychological sy
44 ncluding police use of drug-user registries, detention of drug users in centres offering no evidence-
45 ed a new civil detention process and allowed detention of noninfectious but persistently nonadherent
46 poorly spliced introns, resulting in nuclear detention of partially spliced transcripts, which may be
47                                              Detention of people who use drugs into compulsory drug d
48 e of the criminalisation of drug use and the detention of people who use drugs.
49                           Twelve years after detention, only 21.9% of males and 54.7% of females had
50    Tuberculosis controllers sought the civil detention or arrest of 67 patients during the study peri
51 were significantly correlated with length of detention (p=0.004, 0.017, and 0.019, respectively).
52 long-term outcomes of delinquent youth after detention, participants were interviewed in detention be
53 ead with historical (past violence, juvenile detention, physical abuse, parental arrest record), clin
54                Kidnappings and extrajudicial detentions, physical assaults, death threats, physical t
55  (DEA)] in five types of SCM (wet ponds, dry detention ponds, dry extended detention, infiltration ba
56      In 1993, California created a new civil detention process and allowed detention of noninfectious
57 ates of comorbidity decreased in youth after detention, rates remained substantial and were higher th
58            Incarcerated adolescents' time in detention represents a rare opportunity to provide care
59  medical health screening within 24 hours of detention, there are many lacking areas.
60 uity of prevention, care, and treatment upon detention, throughout imprisonment, and upon release.
61                         The median length of detention was 3 weeks for infectious patients and 28 wee
62         In 10 cases, both civil and criminal detention were attempted.
63                             Five years after detention, when participants were 14 to 24 years old, al

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