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1 North America from a more primitive Eurasian immigrant.
2 itial imperfect copying of local song by the immigrant.
3 82 patients (54.3%); 83.3% of all cases were immigrants.
4 g the relative abundance of residents versus immigrants.
5 n, crowding, unemployment, and percentage of immigrants.
6 th three researchers on their experiences as immigrants.
7 portation for a large number of undocumented immigrants.
8 epatitis B virus (HBV) particularly in Asian immigrants.
9 in Singapore is higher than first-generation immigrants.
10 on immigrants compared with first-generation immigrants.
11 e defined as "second-generation (or higher)" immigrants.
12 among relatively homogenous groups of recent immigrants.
13 -Hispanic blacks than for non-Hispanic black immigrants.
14 sizes of societies that provide and receive immigrants.
15 ng of BMI among racial/ethnic minorities and immigrants.
16 ons that cause societies to be attractive to immigrants.
17 s for most psychiatric disorders than Latino immigrants.
18 apidly increasing population of undocumented immigrants.
19 at provide driver's licenses to unauthorized immigrants.
20 ntified 20 139 HCV cases; 9% (N = 1821) were immigrants.
21 tcomes and improper use of health care among immigrants.
22 eportation to more than 780,000 unauthorized immigrants.
23 sorder and crime, and high concentrations of immigrants.
24 34-2.70); and higher vs. lower percentage of immigrants (109 of 386 [28.2%] vs. 79 of 385 [20.5%]; OR
26 ylaxis were identified: 89 among non-Western immigrants, 9 among Western immigrants and 955 among Dan
27 tural priming and practical implications for immigrant acculturation and second-language learning.
33 or chilly welcome, which potentially shapes immigrant and ethnic identities and inter-group relation
35 glutamine ZnT8-QA variants) differed between immigrant and Swedish patients due to different polymorp
36 956 cases of CRC were observed among 191,792 immigrants and 18,329 cases among 958,960 controls; the
37 Annual arrivals of approximately 400,000 immigrants and 50,000 to 70,000 refugees from overseas a
41 tatus (SES) areas with a large proportion of immigrants and clinics elsewhere in the Netherlands.
42 hospital attendance for anaphylaxis between immigrants and Danish-born including time- and age- tren
43 ians about screening tests to perform in new immigrants and help communities prepare for health probl
48 n for identifying tuberculosis in U.S.-bound immigrants and refugees and could reduce the number of t
49 e-positive TB cases diagnosed overseas among immigrants and refugees bound for the United States by t
51 e-positive TB cases diagnosed overseas among immigrants and refugees by the culture-based algorithm w
53 as diagnosed in the United States in 7.0% of immigrants and refugees with an overseas diagnosis of sm
54 screening for tuberculosis among U.S.-bound immigrants and refugees, along with follow-up evaluation
56 smaller than the fraction of immigrants, as immigrants and their descendants generally have lower re
59 reduce economic inequality and treatment of immigrants) and liberals acknowledged the relevant discr
60 877 cases of CRC were observed among 209,843 immigrants, and 16,517 cases among 1,049,215 controls; t
64 etween first-generation vs second-generation immigrants, and the spectrum differed according to wheth
66 that narrowly rejected and narrowly approved immigrant applicants are similar on all confounding char
67 thorized immigrants, but the fact that these immigrants are also parents to more than 4 million U.S.-
70 umber of representative biographies of these immigrants are briefly recounted to illustrate their las
72 from their valued families; (2) undocumented immigrants are frequently uninsured and fear of deportat
77 rkers, is often smaller than the fraction of immigrants, as immigrants and their descendants generall
78 protection from deportation for undocumented immigrants, as offered by DACA, could confer large menta
81 from conjoint and vignette analyses on which immigrant attributes generate support for naturalization
82 5% CIs]) were female sex (1.97 [1.64-2.37]), immigrant background (1.46 [1.21-1.77]), and full-time (
87 deport its estimated 11 million unauthorized immigrants, but the fact that these immigrants are also
91 ents of all participating children-not least immigrant children with non-Western backgrounds and chil
93 gin, although important, are attenuated when immigrants come to the United States, dominated by an En
94 applied to comorbid health problems in poor immigrant communities in high-income countries with limi
97 w that the most abundant bacteria within the immigrant community have a greater probability of coloni
98 e in actual donors belonging to the Romanian immigrant community was 2353 cases/100,000 donors (95% C
99 ttendances for anaphylaxis among non-Western immigrants compared to Danish-born; however this protect
100 8% vs 2.5%) were higher in second-generation immigrants compared with first-generation immigrants.
101 e risk of dying in intensive care for recent immigrants compared with long-standing residents varied
103 ted hospitalizations and in-hospital days in immigrants compared with nonimmigrants adjusted for age,
104 , neighborhood concentrated disadvantage and immigrant concentration emerged as significant ecologica
105 gest that earlier screening and treatment in immigrants could play an important role in preventing HC
108 hile long-standing residents were older than immigrant decedents (median [interquartile range] age, 7
110 onomic, and legal reasons that nondocumented immigrants deserve the same access to kidney transplanta
111 lence of Chagas disease among Latin American immigrants diagnosed with nonischemic cardiomyopathy in
114 s from a cohort of California-bound Filipino immigrants during 2001-2010 with subsequent TB reports.
118 late the effect that religion may have on an immigrant family's labor market opportunities because ot
121 nce of the gastropod Ctenopelta porifera, an immigrant from possibly more than 300 km away, and the d
125 B-related liver cancer occurs largely among immigrants from countries of high hepatitis B endemicity
126 rce populations, enabling recolonization via immigrants from distant sites with different species com
129 ever, if such adaptational lag has occurred, immigrants from historically warmer climates will outper
133 rate of neonatal ICU admission was higher in immigrants from South Asia (155.2/1,000), Africa (140.4/
134 In areas where there is a high number of immigrants from T. cruzi endemic countries, screening fo
136 ign-stock population provides one picture of immigrant geographies, whereas the patterns of concentra
137 We have previously shown that both thymic immigrants (graft to thymus pathway) and thymic emigrant
138 eater variation within the second-generation immigrant group than between first-generation vs second-
139 uses and amount of variation between various immigrant groups in the incidence of major cardiovascula
142 le (RR = 0.64; 95%CI: 0.48;0.85) non-Western immigrants had a significantly lower risk ratio of hospi
145 estimates for most of the past; and 2) the 'immigrant' haplotypes showing growth typical of most Eur
152 phic conditions - might limit the success of immigrants in a new location despite hospitable climatic
155 a among second-generation (or higher) Indian immigrants in Singapore is higher than first-generation
157 e high burden of HBV infection among African immigrants in the United States underscores a need for c
159 ease (CD) may affect 1.31% of Latin American immigrants in the United States, with >300 000 cases.
163 ency Medicaid use by recent and undocumented immigrants including patient characteristics, diagnoses,
164 residents, which makes it difficult for many immigrants, including children, to access the transplant
169 enotypes within populations, may be aided by immigrant inviability, especially when a long period sep
170 hough increased risk for schizophrenia among immigrants is well established, knowledge of the broader
172 ates of lifetime psychiatric disorders among immigrant Latino subjects, U.S-born Latino subjects, and
174 tyrrhine primates, or New World monkeys, are immigrant mammals whose fossil record comes from Tertiar
178 ajority pronunciation that is affected by an immigrant minority with a different vowel pronunciation
181 Policies or interventions focused only on immigrants of low social status may miss another group a
183 dependent selection will tend to favour rare immigrants over common residents, amplifying the effect
189 tion should be exercised in generalizing the immigrant paradox to all Latino groups and for all psych
190 exists regarding the generalizability of the immigrant paradox, i.e., that foreign nativity protects
194 on factor for the countries of origin of the immigrant physicians to provide a relative measure of th
195 rable populations, including LGBTQI persons, immigrants, physicians, prisoners, and families of patie
197 d, particularly in infants, adolescents, and immigrant population groups for whom there are limited d
199 anisms facilitate the enhanced enrichment of immigrant populations during disturbance: (i) the availa
201 intervention efforts in uninsured, minority, immigrant populations may be provided by videos and text
204 lf (6 million years), and comprises a mix of immigrant pre-adapted lineages and descendants from loca
207 y correlated with the local area fraction of immigrants (r = 0.72, P < .001), fraction of college gra
208 or, mediated by local proliferation of early immigrants rather than entrance of mature cells from the
211 ) occurred at general public health clinics; immigrant/refugee clinics (2,409; 6.4%) and correctional
212 tanding residents varied according to recent immigrant region of birth from 0.84 (95% CI, 0.74-0.95)
213 diverse background and intimate knowledge of immigrant-relating health care issues were performed.
215 as medical screening of 2,714,223 U.S.-bound immigrants, representing prevalences of 961 cases per 10
216 senting empirical evidence that variation in immigrant reproductive success is important for the main
217 and racial groups formed by recent waves of immigrants resonate with the dynamic nature of Blumer's
219 e proposal that heritage-culture cues hinder immigrants' second-language processing by priming first-
221 joint design, where respondents evaluate two immigrants side by side, comes closest to the behavioral
222 rtant factors in the context of reception of immigrants since they contribute to a warm or chilly wel
223 health and immigration databases to identify immigrant (since 1985) and long-standing resident cohort
227 nfounders (age, sex, income, and marital and immigrant status) and mediators (substance abuse comorbi
228 SV type 1, oral and genital herpes symptoms, immigrant status, and the interaction of immigrant statu
231 in Ambulatory Care Research Team (CANHEART) Immigrant study, a big data initiative, linking informat
232 hors examined downward mobility by comparing immigrants' subjective social status in their country of
233 patterns captured by IBD clustering include immigrants such as Scandinavians and French Canadians; g
234 esting with hydrological conditions, whereby immigrants tended to nest later, late nesters tended to
235 ay, the latter generating highly competitive immigrants that are the sole precursors of cytotoxic IEL
236 Despite many efforts, the nature of thymic immigrants that give rise to T cells has remained obscur
240 from shared diet or interactions, long-term immigrants to a community often harbored the most distin
241 cidence of cardiovascular events exist among immigrants to Canada from different ethnic backgrounds.
242 To examine end-of-life care provided to immigrants to Canada in the last 6 months of their life.
243 time by the Kaplan-Meier method and compared immigrants to controls in age and sex stratified strata
249 We aimed to compare the risk of CRC among immigrants to Ontario, Canada, to its general population
250 to high frequency has been the fecundity of immigrants to the northern community, whereas in the cen
252 lity in subjective social status among 3,056 immigrants to the United States and the odds of a major
253 pilot study was conducted with samples from immigrants to the United States that were screened for L
256 ly 1.3 million adult (aged >/=19 years), non-immigrant, urban Canadians in 30 cities who responded to
261 usted hazard ratio (HR) for CRC among female immigrants was 0.63 (95% CI 0.59, 0.67) during the first
264 the US-born group, in contrast, children of immigrants were at the highest risk (OR, 1.53; 95% CI, 1
267 Among decedents in Ontario, Canada, recent immigrants were significantly more likely to receive agg
268 he number of novel MHC alleles introduced by immigrants when there are multiple duplicated genes.
269 how states can facilitate the integration of immigrants while creating positive externalities for the
270 Singapore were defined as "first-generation" immigrants, while Indians born in Singapore were defined
277 in low SES areas with a large proportion of immigrants who spoke Dutch poorly supports its use in su
278 on rates appear to be driven by older age in immigrants who were more likely to have HCC at diagnosis
279 19-1.51), higher in children of Mexican-born immigrants who were raised in the United States (OR, 4.1
280 segregation studies have not examined black immigrants, who may benefit from social support and coun
281 e of 53 patients with CD, all Latin American immigrants, who underwent treatment with nifurtimox (8-1
282 ted children in industrialized countries are immigrants with a relatively low socioeconomic status (S
284 escribed among African-Americans and Haitian immigrants with advanced HIV disease, an early suggestio
289 mentation in non-Western vitamin D-deficient immigrants with prediabetes did not improve insulin sens
290 ween 1985 and 2015 were classified as recent immigrants, with subgroup analyses assessing the associa
293 roups were conducted with 62 Southeast Asian immigrant women and 23 individual in-depth interviews wi
294 Interpersonal communication gap between immigrant women and health care providers exists because
295 limited language and health literacy skills, immigrant women face numerous challenges in navigating t
296 anguage and literate skills, the majority of immigrant women had inadequate health literacy to manage
297 ratio [OR], 1.71; 95% CI, 1.47 to 2.00), and immigrant women had significantly lower odds (OR, 0.59;
299 themes concerning conditions that influenced immigrant women's use of health information and services
300 rs to be the dominant theme from research on immigrant youth, although that flexibility can be constr
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