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1  second malignancy, medical complication, or external cause.
2 er, heart disease, other natural causes, and external causes.
3 ,418 from other natural causes, and 523 from external causes.
4 and exposed men lower mortality from overall external causes.
5 self-immolation when deaths were reported by external causes.
6 n may signal an increased risk of death from external causes.
7 athy, 226 to other natural causes, and 71 to external causes.
8 or no effect on deaths from other natural or external causes.
9 ese), 249 to other natural causes, and 75 to external causes.
10 natural causes (51.0; p<0.0001) but not from external causes (0.30; p=0.58).
11                       Of those who died from external causes, 75.2% had comorbid psychiatric disorder
12 ound excess vodka use among those dying from external causes (accident, suicide, violence) and eight
13        The authors analyzed death rates from external causes (accidents, injuries, homicides, etc.) f
14 , 2009, in Sweden for risks of all-cause and external-cause (accidents, suicide, homicide) mortality
15 s have shown an increased risk of death from external causes among men with hypertension.
16  and 95% confidence intervals for death from external causes among men with prehypertension, stage 1
17 ; weak for prostate cancer; and reversed for external causes among women.
18 st specific causes, except breast cancer and external causes among women.
19 ly 3000 persons aged 15 to 34 years dying of external causes and autopsied in forensic laboratories.
20 en between rates of death from endogenous or external causes and childhood cholesterol levels or syst
21  black and white, men and women, who died of external causes and underwent autopsy between June 1, 19
22  227 women 15 to 34 years of age who died of external causes and who had a favorable lipoprotein prof
23 ital abnormalities, acquired natural causes, external causes, and unexplained deaths.
24 ancer and death from cardiac, pulmonary, and external causes; and 0.05 for death from other excess ri
25 ce or progression of the original cancer and external causes but include the late effects of cancer t
26 e and composition of the clay minerals) and "external" (caused by a force external to the clay).
27 ars (25.2-25.8) for female patients, and for external-cause deaths was 40.2 years (40.0-40.3) and 40.
28                           Risk of death from external causes during the study period was 3.6 per 10,0
29 d non-fatal injuries than females across all external causes except for burns.
30 24, 95% confidence interval: 1.03, 1.49) and external causes (hazard ratio = 1.46, 95% confidence int
31 east cancer in women; and injuries and other external causes in men.
32 evaluate the risk of infant mortality due to external causes in multiples versus singletons in the Un
33 ted odds ratios (AORs) of premature death by external causes in patients with TBI compared with gener
34                         Given the absence of external causes in vitro, the interplay of structurally
35              The higher mortality rate from "external" causes in the Gulf cohort was principally due
36 r deaths due to injury, poisoning, and other external causes, in both men (7.89; 95% CI 6.40-9.37; I(
37 ase, 208 to other natural causes, and 217 to external causes; in the diabetic subjects, 106 of the de
38                 There were 3,910 deaths from external causes, including 2,313 unintentional injuries,
39 eristics, and injury characteristics such as external cause, intent, location, and body part affected
40 ary disease; moderate for colorectal cancer, external causes (men only), and stroke; weak for prostat
41 e and poisonings, and an overall increase in external cause mortality, those with less education saw
42 ers significantly improved the prediction of external-cause mortality, in addition to sociodemographi
43 ders were also an independent determinant of external-cause mortality, with population attributable f
44 seases (n = 26; 19.4%), and injury and other external causes (n = 22; 16.4%).
45                     Drowning was the leading external cause of injury death for all ages, and falls c
46 ng among children (aged </=18 years) with an External Cause of Injury for any of self inflicted injur
47  sex, age group, location (urban/rural), and external cause of injury, from 1 January 2006 to 31 Dece
48           Subgroup analysis was performed by external cause of TBI.
49        Furthermore, we specifically examined external causes of death (suicide, injury, or assault).
50 tify associations of blood pressure with all external causes of death and individual causes.
51            Reducing premature mortality from external causes of death should be a priority in epileps
52 nfant mortality, postneonatal mortality, and external causes of death.
53 e and mortality counts for all causes or non-external causes only, in periods ranging from Jan 1, 198
54 xcess mortality in heavier drinkers was from external causes or the eight disease groupings strongly
55 e at greater risk of infant mortality due to external causes, particularly between 2 and 7 months of
56 e often confounded with homophily and common external causes, recent work has used randomized experim
57 disease (RR = 1.39, 95% CI: 1.07, 1.82), and external causes (RR = 1.56, 95% CI: 1.21, 2.02).
58  increase the salience of sensations with an external cause, sensations that are predictable based on
59         No excess mortality was observed for external causes (SMR = 0.8).
60 3), ill-defined conditions (SMR = 2.26), and external causes (SMR = 1.35).
61 alence and risks of premature mortality from external causes such as suicide, accidents, and assaults
62  for deaths involving substance abuse and an external cause (such as suicides, accidents, and homicid
63 f death during the first year of life due to external causes, such as unintentional injury and homici
64 fect of plurality on infant mortality due to external causes was 1.64 (95% CI: 1.39, 1.97).
65                              Mortality from "external" causes was higher in the Gulf cohort (Gulf 254
66                      Risks of mortality from external causes were elevated, including for suicide (AO
67                         Infant deaths due to external causes were most likely to occur between 2 and
68 Causes of death other than suicide and other external causes were not associated with birth order.
69     Of those deaths, 15.8% (n=972) were from external causes, with high odds for non-vehicle accident

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