Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 2. 1 | countries, while country-level historical studies exploring the role
2 II, 5. 1. 1| reflects the rather different historical patterns of smoking as compare
3 II, 5. 3. 4| reflects the rather different historical patterns of smoking compared
4 II, 5. 5. 3| of the North West Wales historical database) performed by Healy
5 II, 5. 5. 3| the prevalence of ASD in a historical perspective, is the fact
6 II, 5. 5. 3| space and time based on historical, clinical and paraclinical
7 II, 5. 5. 3| to the cross-sectional or historical design of most epidemiological
8 II, 5. 5. 3| scores cannot be assessed in historical or cross-sectional studies
9 II, 5. 9. 7| the hygiene hypothesis: historical perspective. J Laryngol
10 II, 5. 14. 3| sanitary conditions and historical cultural customs, but should
11 II, 6. 3. 3| of HIV but is solely of historical interest. HIV reporting
12 II, 6. 3. 4| high when compared with historical data. The predominant virus
13 II, 9. 1. 1| published regularly and historical series exist for many countries.~ ~
14 II, 9. 3. 1| relationship problems.~ ~Historical explanations for ED have
15 II, 9. 5. 1| life expectancy is low by historical standards (Cutler et al,
16 III, 10. 2. 1| a more stable period. By historical standards levels of drug
17 III, 10. 4. 2| Baltic Sea is affected by historical and current contamination
18 III, 10. 4. 2| findings which might indicate a historical problem, intelligence from
19 III, 10. 4. 5| in case of remediation of historical contamination, as many of
20 III, 10. 4. 5| expected to be concentrated on historical contamination.~ ~ ~Contaminated
21 III, 10. 5. 3| knowing each other. For merely historical reasons, occupational health
22 IV, 11. 5. 4| complex mix of cultural, historical and social factors combined
23 IV, 11. 6. 4| insurance systems) and may break historical patterns of politically
24 IV, 11. 6. 4| political negotiation or historical precedents.~ ~Resource allocation
25 IV, 11. 6. 4| Insurance revenue: Age, historical allocations,~and estimates
26 IV, 11. 6. 4| capitation. Allocation based on historical precedent and political
27 IV, 11. 6. 4| mortality (one third based on historical spend)~Latvia~State~SCHIA
28 IV, 11. 6. 4| TB, AIDS (84.5% based on historical spend)~Romania~42 District
29 IV, 12. 5 | set of criteria concerning historical and future data methodology