Part,  Chapter, Paragraph

 1    I,     2.  8    |           the different production stages. However, a holistic view
 2   II,     5.  3.  3|           distribution of clinical stages and cannot be used as representative
 3   II,     5.  5.  2|          and many are in the early stages and have not yet been diagnosed.
 4   II,     5.  5.  2|           of dementia or different stages of the disease. This is
 5   II,     5.  5.  2|            process and in the last stages and their right to have
 6   II,     5.  5.  3|          benign cases in the early stages of MS is difficult and there
 7   II,     5.  5.  3|     planning: patients in advanced stages of PD cause higher healthcare
 8   II,     5.  5.  3|         than patients in the early stages of the disease (Findley
 9   II,     5.  5.  3|        Yahr 1967), which allocates stages from I to V to indicate
10   II,     5.  5.  3|        underestimation of advanced stages of the disease (Evers and
11   II,     5.  5.  3|           5.5.3.6.3). In the early stages of PD (HY I) average cost
12   II,     5.  5.  3|           times higher in advanced stages of PD compared to the early
13   II,     5.  5.  3|           PD compared to the early stages of the disease. A similar
14   II,     5.  5.  3|            decrease of costs in HY stages IV and V has been reported,
15   II,     5.  7.  1|      disease is categorized into 5 stages of increasing severity.
16   II,     5.  7.  2|          on the prevalence of CKD (stages 1-5) in EU countries were
17   II,     5.  7.  2|         few years. These different stages of development of renal
18   II,     5.  7.  3|           for progression from CKD stages 3 or 4 to ESRD in US white
19   II,     5.  7.  3|           Indeed the prevalence of stages 3-5 CKD was 1.3 to 1.5 times
20   II,     5.  7.  3|           The prevalence of CKD by stages (as defined in Tables 5.
21   II,     5.  7.  3|          Countries~ ~Prevalence of stages 3-5 CKD - i.e. the stages
22   II,     5.  7.  3|          stages 3-5 CKD - i.e. the stages showing a higher risk for
23   II,     5.  7.  3|        Figure 5.7.3. Prevalence of stages 3-5 of chronic kidney disease
24   II,     5.  7.  3|         age specific prevalence of stages 3-5 of chronic kidney disease
25   II,     5.  7.  3|            while the prevalence of stages 3-5 remained almost unmodified
26   II,     5.  7.  4|            ESRD and differences in stages of economic development
27   II,     5.  7.  5|        kidney disease in its early stages.~· The Ministry of Health
28   II,     5.  8.  3|        prevalence of COPD severity stages, as defined in the GOLD
29   II,     5.  8.  3|    Prevalence of the GOLD severity stages* for the countries participating
30   II,     5.  8.  4|              2.5 and 1.1% for GOLD stages I and II+, respectively (
31   II,     5.  8.  5|         progression to more severe stages. Main actions should focus
32   II,     5.  8.  7|           adults according to GOLD stages. Thorax 2004; 59: 120125.~ ~
33   II,     5.  9.  2|         and was carried out in two stages including more than 18,000
34   II,     8.  2.  1|     available to them at different stages of the lifecourse are apparent
35   II,     9.  2.  6|      children’s lives at different stages of development varies. The
36   II,     9.  3.  1|          sentinel marker for early stages of cardio-vascular disease
37   II,     9.  4.  5|            expectations during the stages of a person’s life. People
38  III,    10.  2.  1|         There are four distinctive stages of tobacco consumption prevalence
39  III,    10.  2.  1|           epidemic is at different stages in different European countries.
40  III,    10.  2.  1|         the tobacco epidemic, four stages can be distinguished (Cavelaars
41  III,    10.  2.  1|       reflect the tobacco epidemic stages.~Social gradients in smoking
42  III,    10.  2.  1|          to their lifestyles, life stages and life conditions. Oral
43  III,    10.  2.  5|         exposure during early life stages for later development of
44  III,    10.  3.  2|       environment at all lifecycle stages form extraction, production
45  III,    10.  3.  2|         exposure during early life stages for a later development
46  III,    10.  4.  1|          the region are at various stages of accession or association
47  III,    10.  4.  2|           obligations covering all stages of food/feed production
48  III,    10.  4.  2| involvement of stakeholders at all stages in the development of food
49  III,    10.  4.  2|          business operators at all stages of production, processing
50  III,    10.  4.  2|        processing and distribution stages of the food chain.~ ~Thus,
51  III,    10.  4.  2|            activities covering all stages of production, processing
52  III,    10.  4.  2|   legislation are fulfilled at all stages of production, processing
53   IV,    12.  5    |         they may reflect different stages of health transitions as