Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 II, 5. 5. 1| suicide. Evidence for a causal association? J Epidemiol
2 II, 5. 15. 3| disorders are rare as the causal mutations occur rarely and
3 II, 5. 15. 3| 600 diseases for which the causal gene(s) is identified and
4 II, 9. 2. 3| thought to be an important causal factor in eating disorders.
5 III, 10. 1 | cognitive factors, may be in the causal pathway between these external
6 III, 10. 1 | interaction in order to identify causal factors, compare them and
7 III, 10. 1. 1| determinants and outcomes may be causal or non-causal, direct or
8 III, 10. 1. 1| disease and is not in the causal pathway between the two.
9 III, 10. 1. 1| modification is by definition a causal effect whereas interaction
10 III, 10. 1. 1| is still no evidence of a causal relationship. Other social,
11 III, 10. 2. 1| sufficiently demonstrate causal relationship between snuff
12 III, 10. 2. 1| in which alcohol plays a causal role. Alcohol-related harm
13 III, 10. 2. 4| tumor samples for rapid causal, prognostic, diagnostic,
14 III, 10. 3. 1| criteria for being considered causal. Thus, the overall evidence
15 III, 10. 3. 1| indications that there is a causal chain linking chronically
16 III, 10. 3. 2| surveillance and epidemiology, the causal relationships for all of
17 III, 10. 5. 2| in urban areas may be a causal factor (Paykel et al., 2000).
18 III, 10. 5. 2| the lack of services as a causal factor for increased morbidity
19 IV, 13. 5 | While age itself is not the causal factor of health care spending (