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1             Instead, they show reductions in health risk behaviors.
2 nce are more likely to exhibit other serious health risk behaviors.
3 t their understanding of, and engagement in, health risk behaviors.
4 ely - and perhaps more likely - to engage in health risk behaviors.
5 alyses assessed associations between TDV and health-risk behaviors.
6  recommends that physicians assess patients' health risk behaviors, addressing those needing modifica
7 d is largely due to the higher prevalence of health risk behaviors among those with lower levels of e
8  are useful in determining associations with health-risk behaviors among youth exposed to these diffe
9 ational interviewing as a method to decrease health-risk behaviors and increase adherence to treatmen
10  behavior are likely to engage in additional health risk behaviors, and as the number of risk behavio
11 onal choices, work performance, delinquency, health risk behaviors, and income).
12 ctory group reported greater burden and more health risk behaviors at all time points; patients tende
13 rimary information source about adolescents' health risk behaviors, but adolescents may not report th
14 ndary to alterations in the stress system or health-risk behaviors, but rather a primary effect of ea
15 ty of technologic modalities that screen for health-risk behaviors, educate patients about chronic di
16 eased activation markers, neither stress nor health-risk behaviors explained the observed group diffe
17 g all income groups, physician discussion of health risk behaviors fell far short of the universal ri
18 group experienced significant improvement in health risk behaviors following the death of their spous
19 tion versus (2) a high concomitant burden of health risk behaviors (HRBs) is unclear.
20          Although reducing the prevalence of health risk behaviors in low-income populations is an im
21 presence of underlying chronic conditions or health risk behaviors in most deaths.
22 est that screening for CVD risk and reducing health risk behaviors in trauma-exposed women may be pro
23 care needs (SHCN) are uniquely vulnerable to health risk behaviors including smoking, alcohol and ill
24  connectedness were protective against every health risk behavior measure except history of pregnancy
25 evement were associated with lower levels of health risk behaviors; parental disapproval of early sex
26 ided data about demographic characteristics, health risk behavior participation, child self-esteem, c
27  to discern differences in the prevalence of health risk behaviors, physician discussion of these beh
28 sociated with HIV infection as identified by health risk behavior screening questionnaire.
29 dolescents participated in an average of 3.7 health-risk behaviors (SD=2.0), primarily those that lea
30 ions targeting psychological functioning and health risk behaviors seem warranted.
31 An 11-item questionnaire assessing subjects' health risk behaviors, sexual beliefs, sexual risk behav
32   Physician counseling of patients regarding health risk behaviors should be greatly improved if the
33 Time 2, being diagnosed with lung cancer and health risk behaviors (smoking, insufficient physical ac
34                                         When health risk behaviors were considered, the risk of dying
35 existing traditional stroke risk factors and health risk behaviors were identified among acute ischem
36                                          All health-risk behaviors were most prevalent among students
37 rs old report curiosity and participation in health-risk behaviors, yet most studies focus upon adole

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