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1  be overlooked as a potential contributor to ill health.
2 he pathophysiology of these common causes of ill health.
3 lth outcomes and might be a marker of future ill health.
4 listic health care for patients with chronic ill health.
5  Study that increased with age, obesity, and ill health.
6 particular is believed to reduce the risk of ill health.
7 e decreases with age, and is associated with ill health.
8 mine factors independently related to mental ill health.
9 sy does not appear to affect risk for mental ill health.
10 s for adulthood than childhood psychological ill health.
11 d to identify and address the root causes of ill health.
12 rsensitivity that increasingly cause chronic ill health.
13  be more than simply a marker for concurrent ill health.
14 eases as the most significant contributor to ill health.
15 curity is an important determinant of mental ill health.
16 tance as a pathway to social inequalities in ill health.
17 e waist circumferences have excess burden of ill health.
18  the factors that create a personal sense of ill health.
19 een reduced housing affordability and mental ill health.
20 mortality and the prevalence and severity of ill-health.
21 elp-seeking behaviors for symptoms of mental ill-health.
22  optimal help-seeking for symptoms of mental ill-health.
23 tay mentally healthy and recover from mental ill-health.
24 le with intellectual disabilities and mental ill-health.
25 le with intellectual disabilities and mental ill-health.
26 ty (body mass index, waist circumference) to ill health and physical disability in a cross-sectional
27 ntion targeted at smokers with severe mental ill health and to test methods of recruitment, randomisa
28 ckled (i) the spatial epidemiology of mental ill-health and (ii) the changing locational associations
29 contributes to a vicious cycle of increasing ill-health and deepening poverty.
30 mportant contributor to the global burden of ill-health and health inequality.
31 deficient consumers', especially those whose ill-health and/or poverty excludes them from the marketp
32 associated with such misfortunes as divorce, ill health, and being alone.
33 revalence of cardiovascular disease, overall ill health, and disability.
34 hree), strong for sexual risk taking, mental ill health, and problematic alcohol use (ORs of more tha
35 isorders), family conflict, parent-perceived ill health, and school problems/absenteeism.
36                        Rates and patterns of ill health are determined by factors such as socioeconom
37                    People with severe mental ill health are three times more likely to smoke but typi
38 le with intellectual disabilities and mental ill-health are poorly developed.
39      The 19th-century shift to understanding ill health as a result of specific diseases, increasingl
40 ed victims were more likely to suffer mental ill health as a result of violence than non-disabled vic
41 ng in importance relative to other causes of ill health as populations age, and as progress continues
42 olicies must therefore address the causes of ill health as well as those of premature mortality.
43 tive disorder (P<.05), whereas psychological ill health at ages 23, 33, and 42 years was associated w
44  against biological warfare agents and later ill health, but the risks of illness must be considered
45 ted with exposures originating from a single ill health care worker from Guangdong Province, China.
46 f war experienced an increase in symptomatic ill health, colloquially known as Gulf war syndrome.
47                                              Ill-health due to alcohol abuse is improving in some nat
48                                          The ill health effects have been extended to passive smoking
49 on the WHO's Projecting the Economic Cost of Ill-Health (EPIC) model, to project annual market econom
50 otects against problem behaviours and mental ill health (except dementia that occurs at a higher rate
51 unting for both length of life and levels of ill health experienced at different ages.
52 atterns of fossil-fuel use cause substantial ill-health from air pollution and occupational hazards.
53 oking is one of the leading risk factors for ill-health globally.
54 is, treatment and care of people with mental ill-health has come strongly from users, carers and prof
55 raft-versus-host disease that contributes to ill health in a significant minority of survivors.
56 ng and randomising people with severe mental ill health in a trial of this nature.
57 y cesarean delivery are at increased risk of ill health in childhood, but these studies have been una
58 e than women to the effects of psychological ill health in early adulthood on midlife disorders.
59 ent diabetes and obesity are major causes of ill health in industrial societies.
60  during gestation and infancy predisposes to ill health in later life.
61 ociation, comparing the prevalence of mental ill health in the United Kingdom before and after the go
62  may be underestimating the extent of mental ill health in urban communities.
63  is associated with loss of independence and ill-health in the elderly although the causes remain poo
64 edicine to identify and remove the causes of ill health, in contrast to the development of technologi
65                     In prospective analyses, ill health increased the risk of new-onset MDD at all ag
66                MDD also predicted subsequent ill health, independent of prior health problems (ORs =
67  association between physical inactivity and ill health is well documented, 60% of the population is
68 ical phenotypes, the major burden of genetic ill health lies in the more prevalent polygenic disorder
69 nal cooking using biomass is associated with ill health, local environmental degradation, and regiona
70                      Sexual and reproductive ill-health mostly affects women and adolescents.
71 Participants with fibromyalgia reported more ill health on condition-specific measures and the BRFSS
72  will be one of the most important causes of ill health overall.
73 number of adulthood reports of psychological ill health (P<.001).
74 risk associated with childhood psychological ill health persists for midlife psychological health.
75 d particularly for people with severe mental ill health should be tested in a fully powered randomise
76   Results Patients who reported a terminally ill health status had worse QOL (unstandardized coeffici
77 01) among patients who reported a terminally ill health status.
78      UK veterans of the Gulf War report more ill health than servicemen who were not deployed to the
79 ities also experience higher rates of mental ill health than the general population, but receive fewe
80 sabilities experience higher rates of mental ill health than the general population.
81 o served in the Gulf War report more current ill-health than those who were not deployed.
82 presentativeness that increased with age and ill health that I introduced into real and hypothetical
83  and internationally to reduce the burden of ill health that is a consequence of poverty.
84 ognized as having severe and enduring mental ill-health, the development of an evidence base for psyc
85 d specifically for people with severe mental ill health, to be delivered by mental health nurses and
86 ing Cessation Intervention for Severe Mental Ill Health Trial (SCIMITAR) is a pilot randomised contro
87                           Cross-sectionally, ill health was associated with increased risk of psychia
88 cing relative wellbeing in later life, or if ill health was construed as unrelated to alcohol consump
89  of enrollment, and no symptoms of cancer or ill-health were offered FDG-PET/CT scanning as a screeni
90 n-domestic violence, and of suffering mental ill health when victimized.
91                        Since associations of ill health with adverse events and exposures were found

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