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1 tus of "pupille de la Nation" (orphan of the Nation).
2 final consumption of goods and services in a nation).
3 ts outcome of waitlisted OLT patients in the nation.
4 of newborn screening for SCID in the Navajo Nation.
5 mproving health outcomes and the health of a nation.
6 consumer products and materials of the host nation.
7 orts from the USA, the world's largest donor nation.
8 ing the complete intellectual capital of the nation.
9 the habitability of low-lying Pacific island nations.
10 thalmologists-in-training from middle-income nations.
11 which appears to be rising in some developed nations.
12 average of $400 for 19 other industrialized nations.
13 inations but not by spatial distance between nations.
14 mpared with less than 18% in other reporting nations.
15 he population, particularly among developing nations.
16 ing culturally relevant research with Tribal nations.
17 llution control measures implemented by both nations.
18 dent in recent years in the developing Asian nations.
19 emia-related CVD in developed and developing nations.
20 activities licensed at Longqi by the United Nations.
21 have influenced policies and reforms in many nations.
22 MS are likely to be encountered in developed nations.
23 poorest individuals in impoverished tropical nations.
24 e population was mostly derived from Western nations.
25 t of shigellosis epidemiology in high-income nations.
26 every major cause of mortality in developed nations.
27 erature concerning CSA in non-industrialized nations.
28 tion between 1990 and 2010 for 21 developing nations.
29 considered a zoonotic infection in developed nations.
30 liver disease, a major epidemic in developed nations.
31 lder admitted to hospital and in high-income nations.
32 indication for transplantation in developed nations.
33 f thousands of deaths per year in developing nations.
34 ove the adaptive capacity of individual Arab nations.
35 lity, particularly in children in developing nations.
36 nal features are prevalent in industrialized nations.
37 ample products, technologies, households, or nations.
38 singly observed in girls living in developed nations.
39 with high fatality, especially in developing nations.
40 and economic problems that can affect entire nations.
41 onialism and its effects on the fragility of nations.
42 ons are particularly prevalent in developing nations.
43 capacity for clinical studies in developing nations.
46 emissions caused by the final consumption of nations (a.k.a. consumption-based accounting method), bu
47 efforts to evaluate direct GHG emissions of nations (a.k.a. production-based accounting method) and
49 aditional knowledge maintained by Indigenous nations about the relationships between people and the n
50 ties, geographic distribution, and number of nations affected, highlights the need for safe, effectiv
53 erokee Nation, Chickasaw Nation, and Choctaw Nation) agreed to participate collectively in a national
55 mestic product on health care than any other nation and also has the most varied health care financin
57 sion quotas based on cumulative emissions of nations and designing policies for shared responsibiliti
58 ement systems by species of 28 major fishing nations and examined influences of economic, geographic,
61 ve sedentary time is ubiquitous in developed nations and is associated with deleterious health outcom
63 s could increase food security in developing nations and preserve much of Earth's remaining biodivers
65 ions enabled by primary inputs of individual nations and sectors (a.k.a. income-based accounting meth
67 dicates the need for collective action among nations and states to avoid cumulative, far-reaching imp
70 ons caused by the production activities of a nation), and consumption (meaning both direct and indire
71 ee Shawnee Tribe, Cherokee Nation, Chickasaw Nation, and Choctaw Nation) agreed to participate collec
72 approaches to shale gas governance in other nations, and consider new governance initiatives and opt
73 population is estimated to be 1% in Western nations, and there is growing evidence for underdiagnosi
74 ion is a leading cause of death in developed nations, and there remains a need for cardiac therapeuti
77 al impacts of NRDs in low- and middle-income nations are associated with increased intake in animal p
78 ared with average diets, NRDs in high-income nations are associated with reductions in GHG, eutrophic
81 e this goal, an increasing number of Western nations are reorganizing their after-hours primary care
82 ime since and manner of acquisition, for the nation as a whole and separately in states with and with
83 Extrapolation of data from 13 WWTPs to the nation as a whole suggests annual discharges on the orde
84 ccine both for individual states and for the nation as a whole, we developed a model of HPV transmiss
85 estock, and human population from the United Nations as well as literature sources, we develop a seri
86 used to model the relative vulnerability of nations at the global scale to predicted climate and pop
87 ents for plant-level carbon emissions in 161 nations based on data from 19,941 fossil-fuel burning po
88 calculate atmospheric mercury footprints of nations based on upstream production (meaning direct emi
89 isease appeared to be contained in developed nations by the end of the last century, recent outbreaks
91 c health reasons and supplied through United Nations centralized mechanisms be licensed by the nation
92 th Service, Absentee Shawnee Tribe, Cherokee Nation, Chickasaw Nation, and Choctaw Nation) agreed to
93 neumococcal carriage and disease from Navajo Nation children and adults collected before and after th
97 he current World Health Organization/ United Nations Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF) system that c
99 used in the article was obtained from United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and World Health Organi
100 , World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) regional offices, and n
101 xemplary partnership between the WHO, United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), and other partners and
104 turers, World Health Organization and United Nations Children's Fund regional offices, and national g
106 come; they were more likely to live in First Nations communities and were more likely to be bottle-fe
107 orical records of descendant Tsimshian First Nations communities from the Prince Rupert Harbour regio
108 e water embedded in the goods and services a nation consumed and imported on a per capita basis incre
110 nant women treatment with praziquantel, many nations continue to withhold treatment, awaiting data fr
112 rgets, strategic goals defined by the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), addres
118 missions from the production activities of a nation), downstream production (meaning both direct and
121 me-based GHG emissions of resource-exporting nations (e.g., Australia, Canada, and Russia) during 199
123 ves income-based GHG emissions of developing nations (e.g., China, Indonesia, India, and Brazil) duri
126 ure of this Paleolithic art make this United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organizatio
128 specific food balance sheets from the United Nations FAO provided the only available global dietary e
129 d and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the Malawi Ministry of Agriculture and Fo
130 d and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations [FAO Statistics Division Database (FAOSTAT)], th
131 by transplant program, DSA, region, and the nation for comparison, and can be shown by allocation or
133 Liver and lung cancer remain lethal in all nations: for both cancers, 5-year survival is below 20%
134 clusion in adaptation planning by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
135 cy of emissions data submitted to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
136 international negotiations within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change for both
137 luxes from aquatic surfaces under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change typically
140 aining Program in 2008, funded by the United Nations Fund for Population Activities, increasing the n
141 ta in resource rich developed and developing nations further showed improved hospital mortality with
142 e the 90-90-90 targets adopted by the United Nations General Assembly at the High-Level Meeting on En
144 est that one potential pathway to decreasing nations' greenhouse gas emissions could involve reducing
145 ompared with low-income nations, high-income nations had better diets based on healthy items (+2.5 po
146 d rising level of economic inequality in the nation has alarmed scholars, pundits, and elected offici
148 cupation by British Columbia's coastal First Nations has had the opposite effect, enhancing temperate
154 rates similar to those in the most developed nations in 2012, some have similar rates to those record
156 visual disability in many of the developing nations in Asia, Africa and the Middle East, ranking sec
158 eature was from industrial emissions by many nations in the 1980s and 1990s, with the largest contrib
160 we suggest principles that could guide other nations in the development of similar cancer programmes.
161 struction is expected to occur in developing nations, including many regions that sustain exceptional
162 es continue and are mirrored in less wealthy nations, increased efforts are needed to tackle these ma
163 monitoring approach called for by the United Nations Intergovernmental Technical Panel on Soils.
164 e micronutrient antenatal supplement [United Nations International Multiple Micronutrient Preparation
165 Food Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations/International Network of Food Data Systems (FAO/
166 cies, neurons, words, computers, and trading nations-into two distinct regimes of high and low feedba
167 eases, such as Crohn's disease, in developed nations is associated with changes to the microbial envi
169 unting for greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of nations is essential to understanding their importance t
170 isis, particularly in low- and middle-income nations lacking the infrastructure to develop and implem
171 on are high (7%) compared to the rest of the nation (<1%), suggesting a need to identify clinical poi
173 ssembly Resolution in 2010 calling on United Nations member states to strengthen prevention of congen
174 able Development Goals are adopted by United Nations member states, children with congenital disorder
176 enable us to achieve and sustain the United Nations moral and legal mandate for child health and ful
177 This paper presents findings from the United Nations Multi-country Study on Men and Violence in Asia
179 A cross-national study, 49 samples in 38 nations (n = 4,344), investigates whether national peace
183 n (n = 684) color from Cape Verde, an island nation off West Africa that is home to individuals with
184 hs, and casualties) to partners, WHO, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affa
185 face-to-face meeting was held at the United Nations Office in Geneva and a simplification process of
187 ruct the distribution of wealth of an entire nation or to infer the asset distribution of microregion
189 ibutor to sustainable food security for many nations, particularly in low-income areas and marginal h
190 e incidence and age at onset within the same nation point to a potentially preventable nature of hear
191 on described thus far in only a single First Nations population and causes intrauterine growth restri
193 ization data and population data from United Nations Population Department (UNPD) to estimate the pre
194 are our projections to those from the United Nations' Probabilistic Population Projections, which use
197 e World Health Organization and Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS proposed reaching 80% MC cov
199 2015 guidelines and meeting the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS "90-90-90" ART targets.
202 HIV burden, as proposed by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) and the United St
203 lls/microL were estimated using Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) country estimates
206 oaches are required to meet the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) target of diagnos
207 ecause of these challenges, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), in partnership w
209 e, with our ability to meet the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS 90-90-90 treatment targets
212 reflecting CVD premature mortality if United Nations risk factor targets are achieved in the year 202
215 he unsanitary conditions that existed in the nation's capital during most of the nineteenth century.
217 visory panels have urged that changes to the nation's energy system be based on a decision-making fra
218 onomic growth and job creation to tackle the nation's extreme poverty, the Nicaraguan government awar
220 One year following implementation of the nation's first large SSB tax, prices of SSBs increased i
223 a proactive policy that has transformed the nation's food security, yet irreconcilable differences e
224 ed by robust debate and discussion about the nation's future; national legislation governing cardinal
225 y directions were identified as vital to the nation's health and fiscal future, including 4 action pr
229 n support by voters exists for enhancing our nation's investments in children's health and well-being
230 life planning could substantially reduce the nation's kidney waiting list while providing many more d
231 Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is the nation's largest care provider for hepatitis C virus (HC
236 arch workforce does not currently mirror the nation's population demographically, despite numerous at
237 ial mapping to enumerate the percentage of a nation's population living within 2 h of a surgeon and t
239 tal quality in a significant fraction of the nation's streams reaching far beyond their city boundari
246 pments, scientists and stakeholders from all nations should cooperate to take advantage of this histo
250 : the network of trade and alliances between nation states, and the email and co-commit networks betw
251 ronmental factors on lung growth in emerging nations such as India, which must be taken into account
254 ge will be critical for achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and, conversely, e
255 onvention on Biological Diversity and United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, but success to da
261 is of the disease, especially in non-Western nations that were traditionally believed to be unaffecte
263 charitable organisations in five high-income nations (the USA, the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zea
264 ional age in southwestern USA, on the Navajo Nation, the White Mountain Apache reservation, and the S
265 topics as e.g., the causes of the wealth of nations, the benefits or drawbacks of markets and intern
266 program scale-back strategies in 2 recipient nations, the Republic of South Africa (RSA) and Cote d'I
269 emic, spreading from affluent industrialized nations to the emerging economies of Asia, Latin America
271 cused regulatory efforts coupled with United Nations (UN) leadership to build international consensus
272 rae to Haiti during the deployment of United Nations (UN) peacekeepers in 2010 resulted in one of the
274 ome fortified with phosphorus to meet United Nations (UN) specifications, but to our knowledge no stu
276 e: for example, in 2025, assuming the United Nations (UN)-high rather than UN-low population scenario
277 ntake among the populations of the different nations under the two scenarios (ambient and elevated CO
278 ty and mortality in developing and developed nations, underscoring the need for HPV vaccination progr
279 o supplementation with the UNICEF/WHO/United Nations University multiple micronutrient preparation (U
281 capita water consumption accounts across the nations were much less sensitive to food consumption pat
283 proved when compared to other industrialised nations, while at the same time, diet-related non-commun
285 he implications for densely populated island nations, whose livelihoods depend on ecosystem services,
286 D) and death in a register-based prospective nation-wide cohort (n = 3,432,153) with up to 12 years o
289 A cross-sectional and cohort study of a nation-wide long-term registry of children with AD enrol
290 udy of AMA incidence was conducted through a nation-wide network of 63 French immunology laboratories
291 work allowing for the first time to quantify nation-wide risks and their age- and sex-dependence for
292 pilot project, after SCREEN (2004-2008), and nation-wide skin cancer screening (2008-2010)) to a refe
294 ment of Surgical Need survey and conducted a nation-wide, cross-sectional survey of Uganda to quantif
296 done by piped water infrastructure across 33 nations with developed and developing economies that hav
300 y increased in industrialized and developing nations, yet the population structure and virulence prof
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