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1           Women reported much more emotional/economic abuse (past-year ranges 1.4%-5.7% for men and 4
2 terature related to quality of life, social, economic, academic, and occupational impacts.
3 mmercially motivated deforestation and other economic activities.
4 nvironmental data (related to food security, economic activity, and accessibility to facilities) and
5 alendar pattern, and Index of Relative Socio-Economic Advantage and Disadvantage for 3 age groups (<1
6                  A highly practical and step-economic alpha,beta-dehydrogenation of carboxylic acids
7 abolites in wastewater as a nonintrusive and economic alternative to urine analysis for estimating hu
8                             The inclusion of economic analyses in future studies would facilitate dec
9 tive when compared with StepUp, although the economic analyses indicated substantial uncertainty.
10                                              Economic analyses indicated that CAP plus EUC was domina
11                                              Economic analysis estimated the cost per appropriate scr
12                                         This economic analysis uses patient-level resource use and cl
13  child health, basic education and literacy, economic and community development, and peace and confli
14 ment efforts that can hasten recovery of the economic and cultural benefits of ecosystems degraded by
15 natural ecosystems through their ecological, economic and cultural services, such as nursery grounds
16 e physical appearance of five US cities with economic and demographic data and find three factors tha
17  immersed solid surfaces, leading to serious economic and ecological consequences for the maritime an
18 ts the European rabbit and has a significant economic and ecological negative impact.
19 ed biocatalysis is motivated by its numerous economic and environmental benefits.
20 erconnections may significantly increase the economic and environmental competitiveness of renewable
21  on chemical insecticides, resulting in high economic and environmental costs.
22 nual disease incidence to demographic, socio-economic and environmental factors.
23 (SWM) systems requires consideration of both economic and environmental impacts.
24 olence prevention interventions that combine economic and gender empowerment/relationship skills buil
25 ved in sedimentary deposits record long-term economic and industrial development via the expansion an
26  United States-countries that that differ in economic and inequity indicators.
27 development as measured by a series of socio-economic and infrastructural indicators, suggesting a st
28  considerations; e) technological nature; f) economic and policy studies; and g) implementation scien
29 e outpatient management, which has important economic and resource implications.
30 o conventional bentonite treatment which has economic and sensory impacts in the wine production proc
31 iagnosed and poorly treated despite its high economic and social costs.
32 l for serious health, as well as significant economic and social impacts.
33 ortant implications for our understanding of economic and social interactions in our society.
34 g patients' quality of life, and relieve the economic and societal burden due to variable drug respon
35 nd populations, sometimes resulting in large economic and societal impact.
36 merging product categories of high potential economic and societal significance.
37                             Connecting labor economics and evolutionary psychology is laudable, but m
38 th co-benefits of climate change mitigation; economics and finance; and political and broader engagem
39 of hypoxic extent because of its ecological, economic, and commercial fisheries impacts.
40 wing on in-depth interviews and demographic, economic, and employment data, as well as organizational
41 ed to be considered in plans to meet social, economic, and environmental targets.
42 -risk population and has important clinical, economic, and epidemiologic implications among patients
43                   We obtained epidemiologic, economic, and health utility parameter estimates from th
44 rn human behavior in a wide range of social, economic, and organizational activities.
45  for other taxonomic groups and with social, economic, and political considerations, provide a biolog
46 ue is central to choice theories in ecology, economics, and psychology, serving as an integrated deci
47 he findings have implications for education, economics, and public policy, and emphasize that the imp
48                Here we combined a behavioral economics approach with cocaine self-administration and
49                                   Behavioral economic approaches could increase uptake for colorectal
50 countries in the European Union and European Economic Area, and Switzerland.
51                                          The economic assessment of the technique showed that the ext
52 s recalcitrance which is a key technical and economic barrier to overcome to make cellulosic biofuels
53      We employed a within-session behavioral-economic (BE) procedure in rats to examine oxytocin as a
54                 Adulteration of milk to gain economic benefit is rampant.
55  established clinical practice, with a clear economic benefit.
56  white bread holds both increased health and economic benefits because of combined roles as soluble d
57 l compliance with the Forest Code offers few economic benefits.
58 ould have cultural, religious, and potential economic benefits.
59 s the highest death rate (>35%) and per-case economic burden ($3.3 million) of any foodborne pathogen
60  physical health (7,8) , translating to high economic burden (9) .
61 blic health challenge that causes widespread economic burden and remains largely unchecked by existin
62                     However, on average, the economic burden as percentage of GDP was larger in middl
63 HRV represents a substantial health care and economic burden for which there are no approved therapie
64 millions of cases of disease and significant economic burden in affected areas, no licensed vaccines
65 evalent infection globally and a substantial economic burden in developed countries.
66 amework can inform future estimations of the economic burden of dengue and generate demand for additi
67 t comprehensive framework for estimating the economic burden of dengue in any region, differentiated
68                  We estimate the full global economic burden of diabetes in adults aged 20-79 years i
69                                          The economic burden on households affected by tuberculosis t
70 ents' quality of life but also poses a major economic burden to the health care system.
71 d wild salmonids, constituting a significant economic burden.
72 ciated with an enormous medical, social, and economic burden.
73 y in the United States and results in a high economic burden.
74 to impose enormous morbidity, mortality, and economic burdens across the globe.
75  ecosystem services-are rarely considered in economic calculations, partly because there are few mark
76 ment for end-stage kidney disease is a major economic challenge and a public health concern worldwide
77  environmental, geographical, political, and economic challenges associated with energy and manufactu
78  is creating significant medical, social and economic challenges to current and future generations.
79 pose of illustrating their environmental and economic characteristics.
80 upted model-based behavior without affecting economic choice.
81              These observations suggest that economic choices reflect a context-dependent evaluation
82                                          The economic cleanup of wastewater continues to be an active
83 ll below the average of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development; ever-increasing t
84 ors do not, which could make flexible CCS an economic CO2 emission reduction strategy.
85  (idiosyncratic risk), but also from general economic conditions (systematic risk).
86 gical challenge of distinguishing effects of economic conditions on fetal health from effects of econ
87 c conditions on fetal health from effects of economic conditions on selection into live birth.
88 nd productivity and in turn, worldwide socio-economic conditions.
89 isease of domestic pigs that has significant economic consequences for the swine industry.
90 of swine which results in severe welfare and economic consequences in affected countries.
91                         Current clinical and economic consequences of cancer after kidney transplanta
92 ing, and the GTAP CGE model to calculate the economic consequences of yield shocks.
93 sert to avoid severe environmental and socio-economic consequences over the coming decades.
94  with wide-ranging and severe ecological and economic consequences.
95 ns), will have substantial public health and economic consequences.
96  often with negative environmental and socio-economic consequences.
97 y infectious diseases with public health and economic consequences.
98  it is well established that statistical and economic considerations are of vital importance when pla
99           As a consequence, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries ha
100                      We present an empirical economic cost analysis of the April 2016 switch from tri
101 s, these conditions are associated with high economic costs and drug resistance.
102 s sufficiently remote to minimize social and economic costs but sufficiently connected through sea cu
103  covariation between ecological benefits and economic costs influences agreement levels.
104 d be used to the extent required to minimize economic costs of disease in a given field in a given se
105                                              Economic costs per measles case were obtained from the l
106 sles cases in US children and the associated economic costs under scenarios of different levels of va
107 ents and the optimum dose needed to minimize economic costs.
108 ted with substantial patient, caregiver, and economic costs.
109                            The impact of the economic crisis in Greece on health was more nuanced tha
110 th negative consequences for the substantial economic, cultural, and ecosystem services these fish pr
111 listic, and empirically derived estimates of economic damage in the United States from climate change
112  central pressure better explains historical economic damages than does maximum wind speed.
113 in, and then, synthesized findings on health economic data identified from four recent systematic rev
114 ted coupled with the local climate and socio-economic data to evaluate ADL and its driving force.
115 differences in health, behavior, or impaired economic decisions are better explained by self-control.
116                                       During economic decisions, offer value cells in orbitofrontal c
117  leading models for the neural mechanisms of economic decisions.
118 re we present a theory of optimal coding for economic decisions.
119 ools located within areas of high social and economic deprivation in South Wales.
120 e strength of the evidence and the timing of economic deprivation.
121 stigated the relationship between subjective economic deterioration and housing damage due to the dis
122                                   Subjective economic deterioration and housing damage due to the dis
123          China is presently undergoing rapid economic development and unprecedented urbanization.
124                 Future population growth and economic development are forecasted to impose unpreceden
125 alls, underscoring the role of broadly based economic development in promoting child nutrition.
126 on implications of recent changes in China's economic development patterns and role in global trade i
127 re control in countries at varying levels of economic development.
128                                              Economic disadvantage and behavioral health problems may
129 ed the reductions in CVD mortality and socio-economic disparities in the US population potentially ac
130 olicies would significantly reduce CVD socio-economic disparities.
131                  Using a unit commitment and economic dispatch model, we find flexible CCS achieves m
132       This study examines the prevalence and economic effect of chronic conditions among survivors of
133 or, there has been no research examining the economic effects and additional carbon savings from incl
134       Little is known about the clinical and economic effects of initial vascular access choice.
135  for clinical outcomes afford scientific and economic efficiencies when investigating nutritional int
136 e to intervention and explains why combining economic empowerment of women and gender empowerment/rel
137 cribed by a network, with nodes representing economic entities and edges their interdependencies, whi
138 safe approach-seemingly ignoring research on economic/environmental benefits.
139 te respondents tended to overestimate racial economic equality in the past, Black respondents, on ave
140 s the widespread misperception of race-based economic equality in the United States.
141 ts overestimated progress toward Black-White economic equality, largely driven by estimates of greate
142 accuracy of Whites' estimates of Black-White economic equality, whereas encouraging Whites to anchor
143 unded optimism regarding societal race-based economic equality-a misperception that is likely to have
144 heir tendency to overestimate current racial economic equality.
145 ge, underestimated the degree of past racial economic equality.
146 NAHL, AMED, EMBASE, Cochrane Library and NHS Economic Evaluation Database, were searched for relevant
147                              We performed an economic evaluation of systematic Chagas disease screeni
148        For this real-world cost analysis and economic evaluation, we applied extensive primary cost a
149 have been the topic of numerous clinical and economic evaluations during the past 30 years.
150 m 1990 to January 2016, and studies included economic evaluations, asthma subjects and nonpharmacolog
151 ost), The Cochrane Library-Cochrane reviews, Economic evaluations, CENTRAL (Wiley), HMIC (Ovid), ASSI
152 l Appraisal Skills Programme tool for health economic evaluations.
153 his is of secondary importance to social and economic factors.
154 f environmental, biological, management, and economic factors.
155 r processing temperatures and to improve the economic feasibility of industrial biomass conversion.
156 vity, safe and secure data transmission, and economic feasibility.
157 omic importance, but reconciling their socio-economic features with the conservation and sustainabili
158 Impomoea batatas L.) is a globally important economic food crop with a potential of becoming a bioene
159 ic difficulty in performing AR research, and economic forces that are disincentives for the pursuit o
160    Recent applications include political and economic forecasting, evaluating nuclear safety, public
161 for the global risk model based on the World Economic Forum Global Risk Report.
162 st that economic policies aimed at expanding economic freedom may have inadvertently shifted risk to
163 e different prosocial motivations underlying economic game behaviours.
164 e outcomes of labor markets and experimental economic games in ways that are hard to explain via evol
165 ortant forms of social behaviour modelled in economic games.
166 r fishing nations and examined influences of economic, geographic, and fishery-related factors.
167 ies classification to define three major geo-economic groupings, namely European high-income countrie
168 narios of greenhouse gas emissions and socio-economic growth to estimate future exposure change takin
169 ficant threat to global health, security and economic growth, and combatting their emergence is a pub
170 otect biodiversity throughout Myanmar during economic growth.
171 ship between physical hazard and residential economic impact at a community level for the entire coun
172 disease for domestic pigs with a significant economic impact for the swine industry.
173                                          The economic impact of chronic conditions was similar among
174  raised concerns about affordability and the economic impact on society.
175 lated and societal impact', and (5) 'broader economic impact'.
176 get costs include market goods and services (economic impact), whereas externality costs include effe
177 h of stay) would have a significant positive economic impact.
178 ase in aquaculture, resulting in significant economic impact.
179 ts in 2000 to 2011 to determine clinical and economic impacts of cancer diagnosed within the first 3
180 ifficult to assess the average agronomic and economic impacts of the pollutant as well as to breed cr
181 ere, we provide evidence that hypoxia causes economic impacts on a major fishery.
182  associated with the greatest ecological and economic impacts.
183 us urticaria has considerable humanistic and economic impacts.
184                            Environmental and economic implications of such recycling strategies must
185                                          The economic implications of this is, however, unclear.
186 de and this has significant health and socio-economic implications.
187                                    Given the economic importance of fruit processing, this study aime
188  is falling behind, despite the societal and economic importance of these organisms.
189                   Fisheries have an enormous economic importance, but reconciling their socio-economi
190 nce of punishment in an experiment involving economic incentives and contrasted this with reward rela
191 gery at 14 designated hospitals, enforced by economic incentives and penalties.
192                                        While economic incentives have demonstrated success in improvi
193         Both mass media campaigns (MMCs) and economic incentives may increase F&V consumption.
194                We investigated the effect of economic incentives provided to caregivers of children a
195                                              Economic incentives to harvest a species usually diminis
196                               The Behavioral Economic Incentives to Improve Glycemic Control Among Ad
197  decreases in SSB consumption for each Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas (SEIFA) quintile.
198                          Direct evidence for economic indicators as predictors of election outcomes i
199 ation play an increasingly important role in economic inequality and elite formation in the United St
200                                              Economic inequality has been on the rise in the United S
201 ough the strikingly high and rising level of economic inequality in the nation has alarmed scholars,
202 lts were exposed to information about rising economic inequality in the United States (or control inf
203 ctive-the opportunity model of beliefs about economic inequality.
204  patterns of influence mimic the patterns of economic inequality.
205 s can be tackled with appropriate social and economic interventions.Health-related traits are known t
206 trolateral prefrontal cortex correlates with economic irrationality: reduced gray matter volume in th
207                     Conversely positing that economics is a primary barrier, we investigated, charact
208  mortality and CVD in countries at different economic levels.
209 ock are projected to decline 7.5 to 9.6%, an economic loss of from $9.7 to $12.6 billion.
210 can damage stored products and cause serious economic loss.
211  climate extremes, which are closely tied to economic losses and casualties, under 1.5 degrees C and
212 affecting swine species and provoking severe economic losses and health threats.
213  Middle East, where they lead to substantial economic losses and threaten livelihoods of farmers.
214 mestic and wild cattle responsible for major economic losses in dairy and beef industries throughout
215 rome in ruminants, which causes considerable economic losses in the livestock industry.
216 ent PEDV outbreaks have resulted in enormous economic losses to swine industries worldwide.
217 irulent PEDV strains have caused substantial economic losses worldwide.
218 s for humans and animals, as well as causing economic losses.
219 ar caffeine-containing beverage with immense economic, medicinal, and cultural importance.
220                                We enhance an economic model to include these impacts across household
221                                       In the economic model, the total Belgian population 18 years or
222                          Using an ecological-economic model, we investigated the effect of socio-econ
223 ught questions with the precision needed for economic modeling and the simplicity needed for lay resp
224                                 We found one economic modelling study for venom allergy which, despit
225 rios, extending the analysis beyond the agro-economic models included in previous comparisons.
226 g its large-scale manufacturing using green, economic, non-toxic solvents.
227 ss can reduce the complexity and improve the economics of lignocellulosic ethanol production by conso
228 s and processing technologies to improve the economics of lithium extraction and production from natu
229                                  Because the economics of water quality testing are poorly understood
230                              INTERPRETATION: Economic opportunities and protection from deportation f
231 hasizes climatic origins and underemphasizes economic origins of aggression.
232 ifetime Markov model to estimate the primary economic outcome of lifetime societal costs per quality-
233  postoperative complications on clinical and economic outcomes after major surgery.
234 d with favorable psychological, physical and economic outcomes in many longitudinal studies.
235 PFC) tracked the latent growth of cumulative economic outcomes.
236 s modified to evaluate the environmental and economic performance of a set of technologies to reduce
237 apital funds, while Brexit threatens overall economic performance.
238 usses the validity of these concerns from an economics perspective.
239 ebrate species, to control environmental and economic pests.
240 velopment of staghorn sumac as a sustainable economic plant for food and other industries.
241 cidence of the obesity epidemic suggest that economic policies aimed at expanding economic freedom ma
242  Neither the MMC nor the individual national economic policies would significantly reduce CVD socio-e
243                  This, combined with growing economic pressures and the ethical need to minimise the
244 obust to changing environmental, social, and economic pressures.
245        Recent advances in the application of economic principles to operant tasks in rodents have all
246 rticipants reported poor social integration, economic problems, worrying about family or friends over
247 ty-adjusted life-years and US$3.5 billion of economic productivity every year, which is comparable to
248 reers threatens the United States' continued economic progress.
249 cal burden on patients across all social and economic ranks.
250  of patients who switched to clopidogrel for economic reasons was 34.1% (n = 216) for prasugrel and 4
251 n in availability, cost, and prescription by economic region and type of site.
252 ely area of current research, because of its economic relevance as well as its huge ecological impact
253 nties, based on US Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service Urban Influence Codes.
254 eholds with high TB risk to strengthen their economic resilience (termed a "TB-sensitive" approach).
255 particularly on implementation, scaling, and economic returns, drawing mainly on experience in low- a
256 ue), and predicted reward variability (i.e., economic risk), are encoded distinctly.
257 th recent but increasing appreciation of the economic, social, and political underpinnings of health
258                                    The plant economic spectrum (PES) hypothesis predicts that leaf an
259 ggest the existence of a photosynthetic stem economic spectrum.
260                                   The 'plant economics spectrum' (PES) links biochemistry traits to t
261 tatistically indistinguishable from the leaf economics spectrum.
262 ips with analogous relationships in the leaf economics spectrum.
263 lity, financial risk, and, by extension, the economic stability and the sustainable use of natural re
264 ing due to age, sex, smoking, race and socio-economic status.
265  patterns of social ties affect individuals' economic status.
266  network, is highly correlated with personal economic status.
267 ful in maximizing the effects of large-scale economic stimulus policies.
268 c model, we investigated the effect of socio-economic strategies on fecundity of the Lao population w
269  health of diabetic patients during times of economic stress.
270                        We also summarize the economic studies that have investigated costs associated
271          The authors performed a prospective economic substudy alongside the PEGASUS-TIMI 54 (Prevent
272 functional food ingredients along with socio-economic sustainability.
273 xternality costs include effects outside the economic system (e.g., environmental impact).
274                                      Complex economic systems can often be described by a network, wi
275 nge of ecosystems and agricultural and socio-economic systems.
276 fectious diseases and financial contagion in economic systems.
277 o obtain cocaine as measured in a behavioral economics task, thereby linking tolerance to multiple fa
278  conclusion, CT-RFA is a relatively easy and economic technique for recurrent small HCC abutting the
279                           Spray drying is an economic technique to produce anthocyanin-based colorant
280 often conflict with elementary principles of economic theory and are often described as the consequen
281                                   Behavioral economic theory suggests that people make decisions base
282 ithm that uses the concept of "payoffs" from economic theory.
283 which may be required for the development of economic tin deposits, are marked by zircon Eu/Eu* value
284                The application of behavioral economics to healthcare settings parallels recent shifts
285  ozone reductions; (2) policy delay; and (3) economic valuation methods.
286 ent conversion of groundwater resources into economic value (m(3) GW/$) in this region, it relies pre
287 nd economical recycling strategy for Sn with economic value added that is held by the co-produced cle
288 f provisions, including many bees which have economic value as pollinators.
289 modity produced in the region, provides good economic value but also relies significantly less on the
290                                     When the economic value of the donated drugs was not included, th
291 the undeclared addition of a juice of lesser economic value to one of higher value (juice-to-juice de
292 turn ultimately impact commercial fisheries' economic value.
293 otential lost recreation days and associated economic value.
294 ittle information is available about the geo-economic variations in demographics, management, and out
295 n reaction (ORR) affects the performance and economic viability of fuel cells and sensors.
296 entific discoveries in shaping long-standing economic views of decision-making.
297 xes, loads discharged to surface waters, and economic waste-stream values.
298 acturing super-strong steels in a simple and economic way.
299  network level, which allows us to infer the economic well-being of individuals through a measure of
300 ped protocol is simple, straightforward, and economic with a broad range substrate scope.

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