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1 813 had been or were presently married (ever-married).
2 rn the location a couple moves to after they marry.
3 ltural norms that place pressures on sons to marry.
4 s jobs, higher wages, and are more likely to marry.
5 ls of antisocial behavior are more likely to marry.
6 oward antisocial behavior are more likely to marry.
7 wer probability that obese participants will marry.
8 rced or lifelong single, compared with being married.
9 faction among those respondents who remained married.
10 olar disorder, fewer children, and not being married.
11 ment of military personnel, many of whom are married.
12 , 58.8% of the participants were or had been married.
13 s and controls) were predominantly white and married.
14 ve lower education and income levels, and be married.
15 e distress from sexual dysfunction, and were married.
16 gh school educated, and 54.7% were currently married.
17 conditions, higher-grade disease, and being married.
18 6.7% and 37.0%, respectively) and previously married (11.4% and 27.1%, respectively) or never married
20 more likely than expected to have never been married (22.8% versus 15.4%; P < 0.0001) or to be divorc
22 2 [69.0%]), college educated (2953 [81.4%]), married (2751 [75.8%]), and had higher incomes (2011 [55
23 hey were predominantly female (270 [54.8%]), married (293 [59.4%]), and of low socioeconomic status (
24 fovir-exposed mothers were more likely to be married (31% vs 22%; P = .04) and to use boosted proteas
25 ge was 61 years; 29% were nonwhite; 50% were married; 32% had preserved ejection fraction; and median
27 -6.39 [95% CI -8.15 to -4.62]; p<0.0001) and married (4.46 [2.93-6.80]; p<0.0001), with shorter illne
28 e patients were white (95.4%), male (63.1%), married (47.9%), and 75 years or older (60.8%) and did n
30 ndard deviation: 2.8) years of age, 77% were married, 55% were retired, 23% were college graduates, a
34 as $49,000, and majorities were white (86%), married (60%), and urban (91%) and had local- or regiona
35 R, 1.23; 95% CI, 1.07 to 1.41), if they were married (63% v 54%; OR, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.10 to 1.44), and
38 (88%), 260 were non-Hispanic (93%), 210 were married (75%), and 201 were working full time (72%) at t
39 .8 vs. 27.2 years), white (84% vs. 59%), and married (85% vs. 67%) and to have >16 years of education
42 appearance of a heterosexual relationship by marrying a lesbian; or fulfilling family expectations by
43 We obtained singly scattered images by: (i) marrying adaptive optics to optical coherence tomography
44 West Africa has the highest proportion of married adolescents, and the highest adolescent childbir
45 ative data from a prospective cohort of ever-married adults aged 45 to 80 years (n=15,827) who were f
46 individuals, younger and previously or never married adults, those with lower education and income, a
47 gnificantly lower risks of mortality for men married after age 25 years compared with on time (ages 1
49 condition compared with the reference group (married, aged >50 years: OR, 2.3; 95% CI, 1.28-4.23; P =
50 n, significant predictors included not being married (aHR 2.90, 1.44-5.84, p=0.0030), having a spouse
51 was associated with being female, older, and married; an earlier age of onset of alcohol dependence;
52 eligible for the CHAMPION package if she was married and <50 years old, neither she nor her husband h
54 About fifty percent of participants were married and 284 (36.4 %) were educated up to secondary s
58 spouse with Alzheimer's disease, and 23 were married and living with a healthy, nondemented spouse.
60 less frequently obese, were more frequently married and recipients of a kidney transplant, more freq
61 erall CSS was 17.87 and 13.61 months for the married and unmarried patients, hazard ratio: 1.09 (95%
62 We obtained data from national surveys for married and unmarried women aged 15-49 years in regions
63 95% CI, 1.5-3.5] single vs married/living-as-married); and number of sexual partners (aOR 3.6 [95% CI
65 ividuals were widowed or abandoned, 79% were married, and 91% were parents with an average of two kid
68 - 2 years, 90% were white, 50% employed, 64% married, and their median household income was >or=$50,0
71 r (25.4% stillbirths, 15.3% live births) (vs married; AOR, 1.62 [95% CI, 1.15-2.27]); and plurality (
72 s, and support are urgently needed for women married as children, their husbands, and their families
78 ODS AND We identified 905 patients that were married at the time of incident HF diagnosis in Olmsted
79 f mothers were black and 999684 (65.1%) were married at time of birth, and the mean (SD) age for moth
80 r for adults currently divorced and widowed, married at young ages (< or =18 years), who accumulated
82 were married before age 18 years, 22.6% were married before age 16 years, and 2.6% were married befor
84 t predictors of TFV detection included being married, being older than 25 years of age, and being mul
88 her variables, such as more education, being married, black race, Hispanic/Latino ethnicity, health s
89 with men), widows/widowers, and those never married (both compared with married individuals) decline
92 insights, this work underscores the power of marrying classical statistical mechanics with quantum co
97 has matched the rise in contraceptive use by married couples in developing countries over recent deca
99 rphisms, we compare genetic similarity among married couples to noncoupled pairs in the population.
104 ier discontinuation, while Asian race, being married, earlier year at diagnosis, receipt of chemother
105 re likely than nondrivers to be male, white, married, employed, and more educated and to have higher
106 and income - and they were more likely to be married; even after adjusting for parental socioeconomic
108 fering lifestyles (e.g., divorced mother vs. married father), and 204 faculty compared same-gender ca
112 rning method for poly(A) motif prediction by marrying generative learning (hidden Markov models) and
113 on underlying psychiatric disorders and that marrying genetics and brain circuits with behavior is a
115 ite, were well-educated, were employed, were married, had less comorbidity, and had higher hematocrit
116 the multivariable model, we found that being married, having a primary diagnosis of emergency coronar
118 via ultrasonic force microscopy (UFM), which marries high spatial resolution and nanomechanical contr
119 ur knowledge, among the first of its kind to marry high precision and high throughput into a single e
120 age younger than 50 years, female sex, being married, higher tumor grade, and presence of colon tumor
121 de a younger average age, higher presence of married households, and lower educational levels than th
122 idities (HR, 0.89; 95% CI, 0.84-0.95), being married (HR, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.66-0.99), having private an
123 ptibility-Reykjavik Study who were living as married in 1978 (born in 1907-1935) and were either stil
127 HOD: In a population-based Swedish sample of married individuals (N=942,366), the authors examined th
128 of having a surgical condition compared with married individuals 21 to 35 years of age (reference gro
129 en more than they influence other women, and married individuals are the least susceptible to influen
130 and those never married (both compared with married individuals) declined faster, and non-Hispanic b
139 affiliated subjects were younger, less often married, less often had children, and had less contact w
143 nterval [CI], 1.8-5.7 for single compared to married/living as married), number of sexual partners (A
144 e to criteria accrual, whereas older age and married/living together were associated with long time t
145 status (aOR 2.3 [95% CI, 1.5-3.5] single vs married/living-as-married); and number of sexual partner
146 Model statements, white race, older age, and married marital status to be associated with higher adhe
147 ted different incidence patterns, with never married men and women accounting for over 65% of new inf
149 tivariate analysis showed that compared with married men or men living with someone, unmarried men (O
150 slowly than older women (P = .013), whereas married men returned to work much faster than married wo
151 y traits (family size and birth rate) in 269 married men who are members of a founder population of E
158 er ages at onset associated with never being married, more impaired social and occupational function,
159 is study were more likely to have never been married, more likely to be divorced, and more than twice
160 udy was conducted in a cohort of 1,388 newly married mothers of liveborn singletons who worked in tex
161 219,469) compared with less affected women (married mothers, single nonmothers, and married nonmothe
162 with awareness were region, older age, being married (MSM) or female (PWID), use of other services (P
166 nts who underwent PET were more likely to be married, nonblack, and younger than 80 years and to live
167 men (married mothers, single nonmothers, and married nonmothers of the same age range in 1997; n = 2,
168 and subsequent pregnancy losses in 388 newly married, nonsmoking, female textile workers in China bet
169 cy loss in a prospective cohort of 526 newly married, nonsmoking, female textile workers in China bet
170 kely among those who were male, younger, and married; not diagnosed with hepatic-pancreatic or lung c
171 5.7 for single compared to married/living as married), number of sexual partners (AOR, 2.4; 95% CI, 1
174 s that lead to homogamy (similar individuals marrying one another) has been a long-standing issue acr
175 We also used data on the HIV serostatus of married or cohabiting couples and non-cohabiting couples
176 osexual HIV transmission which occurs within married or cohabiting couples in these settings each yea
177 xual transmission of HIV which occurs within married or cohabiting couples in urban Zambia and Rwanda
178 male-to-male sex), HIV and ART status within married or cohabiting unions, and circumcision status.
179 cantly associated with smoking and not being married or cohabiting, but was similar across countries,
181 mCPR among women of reproductive age who are married or in a union grow from 51.0% (95% UI 48.5-53.4)
182 tion among women of reproductive age who are married or in a union in the focus countries of the FP20
183 mCPR among women of reproductive age who are married or in a union in the FP2020 focus countries was
184 number of women of reproductive age who are married or in a union who use modern methods increased b
185 o 2017 for women of reproductive age who are married or in a union would suggest that the 120 x 20 go
190 hey were enrolled in school grades 8-11, not married or pregnant, able to read, they and their parent
192 ge 55 to 64 years, non-Hispanic black, never married or widowed, one child or no children, unemployed
193 siding in the West, and those who were never married or widowed, separated, or divorced (all P<.05).
196 ation (OR, 4.9), prostatism (OR, 2.9), being married (OR, 2.3), and good health [OR, 3.0 American Soc
198 dds ratio [OR]: 1.88), patients who were not married (OR: 1.99), and patients who lived alone (OR: 2.
199 was less likely in stroke survivors who were married (OR=0.63; p<0.001), employed (OR=0.57; p=0.02) a
200 ants who were white, employed, cohabiting or married, or privately insured or who had prior intoleran
203 d a higher educational level (P=0.048), were married (P=0.043), and had poorer functional performance
205 sentative sample of 5362 singleton births to married parents in England, Scotland, and Wales, stratif
206 io-economic dimensions relative to births to married parents, but better outcomes relative to births
207 9; 95% CI, 1.59-2.49) than from homes with 2 married parents; and living with parents who had less th
212 hysical and psychological health outcomes of married/partnered patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA
217 es were to describe the health of spouses of married patients with HF, and examine whether the health
218 e, not eligible for Medicare-aged) patients, married patients, and after the introduction of rituxima
225 nducted a prospective cohort study of 18 555 married, premenopausal women without a history of infert
226 rs, benefit when their opposite-sex siblings marry relatives but not when their same-sex siblings do.
227 when their children or opposite-sex siblings marry relatives but suffer costs when they, their parent
228 Here we analyze the fitness consequences of marrying relatives among the Yanomamo from the Amazon.
229 were older than 18 years or 16-17 years and married, reported a male sex partner in Lilongwe, and in
230 ere older, less well educated, more recently married, reported heightened fears over their wife's wel
234 who live with children are more likely to be married, richer, better educated, more religious, and he
237 ded (82.4% response rate) and categorized as married, single, or other (separated/divorced/widowed).
238 a 0.36, 95% CI 0.15 to 0.56, p=0.00092), non-married status (5.6, 1.5 to 9.6, p=0.0074), longer durat
239 ic, OR = 0.72; 95% CI, 0.60-0.85; P < .001), married status (OR = 1.42; 95% CI, 1.30-1.57; P < .001),
244 Non-Hispanic blacks (v non-Hispanic whites), married survivors, survivors of breast cancer (v prostat
252 how chemogenomics approaches can be used to marry the wealth of existing receptor pharmacology data
253 combining it with computational approaches, marrying the coarse-grained experimental data with highe
255 iques from the microelectronics industry and marries these with the roll-to-roll processes from the p
261 y increased odds of hypertension for spouses married to someone with hypertension (odds ratio (OR) =
262 s also for those working with, bosses of, or married to such women, giving them a better feel for the
263 re most pronounced among caregivers who were married to the patient (P =.02 for depression), visited
264 e of 691 women (20-59 years of age and still married to their first husbands, those with the highest
266 o adjacent interlocked cages were covalently married together by intermolecular [2+2] cycloaddition i
267 was significant for MZ twins, such that the married twin engaged in less antisocial behavior followi
268 ntrol design uses the unmarried co-twin of a married twin to estimate what the married twin would hav
269 -twin of a married twin to estimate what the married twin would have looked like had he remained unma
271 78 (born in 1907-1935) and were either still married (unexposed cohort) or widowed (exposed cohort) a
272 ger age, male sex, white race, and not being married were associated with progression from nonuse to
273 rticipate in the labor force, had never been married, were divorced, or had a biological child were c
274 ults (mean age: 35.8 years; 72.6% women; 57% married) who were a random population drawn consecutivel
281 We restricted our analysis to presently married women (n=3510, 92% participation rate), who comp
283 g with someone, unmarried men (OR: 2.57) and married women (OR: 3.18), or living alone (male OR: 2.25
285 Multivariate analyses demonstrated that married women (P = 0.03) and those with joint deformitie
286 erval, 1.07-1.70) compared with continuously married women after adjusting for multiple risk factors.
287 In this cluster randomised trial, never-married women aged 13-22 years were recruited from 176 e
290 % UI 59 to 82) of abortions were obtained by married women in 2010-14 compared with 27% (18 to 41) ob
294 nal survey data were available for 81-98% of married women using and with unmet need for modern metho
296 cted in 2007 and 2008 were limited to 28,139 married women who provided IPV data and HIV test results
297 ephone interviews with an existing cohort of married women with RA (n = 411), and was examined accord
300 nally representative sample included 124,385 married women; analyses conducted in 2007 and 2008 were
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