Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 II, 5. 1. 1| food allergy because of the incomplete development of the enterocytes,
2 II, 5. 4. 4| systems that probably lead to incomplete and inconsistent estimates.
3 II, 5. 5. 3| autism rates comes from incomplete ascertainment in young age
4 II, 5. 7. 2| the period 1992-2005 are incomplete. Seven EU-15 Member States (
5 II, 5. 7. 2| a shorter period or with incomplete coverage of their country.
6 II, 6. 3. 7| European-level surveillance data are incomplete, but in the last 10 years
7 II, 8. 2. 1| condition of arrested or incomplete development of the mind,
8 II, 9 | community environment is very incomplete (Cordier, 1992; Cordier
9 II, 9. 1. 2| community environment is very incomplete (Cordier, 1992; Cordier
10 II, 9. 2. 3| However, these data are incomplete – a condition which may
11 III, 10. 2. 1| than smoking tobacco. An incomplete tobacco combustion that
12 III, 10. 2. 1| data on new HIV cases is incomplete and missing from countries
13 III, 10. 2. 4| this evidence base would be incomplete and misleading if genomic
14 III, 10. 3. 2| environmental exposures is incomplete. Increased consumption leads
15 III, 10. 4. 2| risk is inconclusive or incomplete in some way.~ ~The Precautionary
16 III, 10. 4. 2| is low. This is due to incomplete or inappropriate genome
17 III, 10. 4. 5| expenditures is largely incomplete for most countries (EEA,
18 III, 10. 4. 5| resulting from combustion of incomplete combustion, consumption