Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 2. 4 | more effective prevention activities in various settings (at
2 I, 2. 4 | promotion and prevention activities over curative care, and
3 I, 2. 5 | finance; property and business activities including research and development;
4 I, 2. 5 | training in firm-specific activities) assumes an increasingly
5 I, 2. 8 | mechanisms. Many of these activities are under the responsibility
6 I, 2. 10. 3 | content systems.~ ~Other activities included are:~ ~The e-Ten
7 I, 2. 10. 3 | professionals and patients.~ ~Activities under the Research Framework
8 I, 2. 10. 4(14)| Summary of Community Customs Activities on Counterfeit & Piracy –
9 II, 4. 1 | disability measure: limitation in activities people usually do, for at
10 II, 4. 1 | hampered in their daily activities by these physical or mental
11 II, 5. 3. 7 | increases.~ ~European Union activities on cancer control plans~ ~
12 II, 5. 3. 7 | leadership for cancer control activities in Europe.~ ~
13 II, 5. 4. 2 | achieved by the Organised activities of the medical services
14 II, 5. 4. 6 | effective coordination of activities.~ ~ ~
15 II, 5. 5.Int | limitation in their daily life activities. More appropriate medical
16 II, 5. 5.Int(20)| Action for Mental Health. Activities co-funded from European
17 II, 5. 5.Int | which would link all these activities, does not yet exist at Community
18 II, 5. 5.Int(21)| development and demonstration activities (1998 to 2002), Decision
19 II, 5. 5.Int(21)| development and demonstration activities covering the period 2002-
20 II, 5. 5. 1 | and report all data.~ ~EU activities other than in the Public
21 II, 5. 5. 1 | Action for Mental Health. Activities co-funded from the European
22 II, 5. 5. 2 | to carry out daily life activities such as washing, preparing
23 II, 5. 5. 3 | effectiveness of programmes and activities, in order to guarantee that
24 II, 5. 5. 3 | guarantee that programmes and activities follow specified guidelines.~
25 II, 5. 5. 3 | intervention and prevention activities play an important role in
26 II, 5. 5. 3 | Commission should support activities to measure disordered eating
27 II, 5. 5. 3 | Key facts, figures and activities http df~There are different
28 II, 5. 5. 3 | a main focus of research activities.~A most recent publication
29 II, 5. 5. 3 | continue and enhance the activities of the WPA Open the Doors
30 II, 5. 5. 3 | driving and other daily life activities. However, psychosocial factors
31 II, 5. 5. 3 | to help patients in their activities of daily living.~ ~Figure
32 II, 5. 5. 3 | 5.3.5.8. Acronyms~ ~ADL~Activities of Daily Living~CDMS~Clinically
33 II, 5. 5. 3 | require assistance with activities of daily living, and after
34 II, 5. 5. 3 | research network. Its main activities were setting up a European
35 II, 5. 6. 3 | associated to limitations of activities and restricted participation (
36 II, 5. 6. 3 | which affected their daily activities and a quarter of all EU
37 II, 5. 6. 3 | squatting, intensive sports activities and certain physically demanding
38 II, 5. 6. 3 | joints, which limits related activities such as manual dexterity
39 II, 5. 6. 3 | life with limitation of activities and restriction of participation.
40 II, 5. 6. 3 | widespread pain. Strenuous activities as well as leisure pursuits
41 II, 5. 7. 5 | course of CKD. The only activities to inform the general population
42 II, 5. 9. 1 | as well as impairment in activities and social functioning (
43 II, 5. 10. 1 | occasions complicate everyday activities and can lead to social isolation
44 II, 5. 10. 2 | structures and biological activities, and established a database
45 II, 5. 14. 5 | education and prevention activities. Primary care services need
46 II, 5. 15. 4 | also directly linked to activities closely related to RD. This
47 II, 5. 15. 4 | Development and Demonstration Activities (2002-2006) has included
48 II, 6. 3. 3 | countries and in people whose activities place them at high risk
49 II, 6. 4. 4 | coordination – the ECDC~ ~The activities on surveillance, scientific
50 II, 7. 1 | work place and road, and by activities, such as sports or other
51 II, 7. 1 | sports or other leisure activities (WHO, 2005a).~ ~In contrast
52 II, 7. 3. 4 | leisure time and sports activities than in any other location.~ ~
53 II, 7. 4. 1 | of country programmes and activities that should contribute to
54 II, 7. 4. 4 | citizens participate in sport activities on a regular basis and the
55 II, 7. 4. 4 | admissions are due to sports activities (see Figure 7.14).This means
56 II, 7. 4. 4 | healthcare costs.~Sports activities that dominate the injury
57 II, 7. 4. 4 | reason for giving up sporting activities. Consequently, both strategies,
58 II, 7. 4. 4 | sport is diverse, covering activities and exercises for pre-school
59 II, 7. 4. 4 | education at school, organised activities in sports clubs, individually
60 II, 7. 4. 4 | individually organised leisure time activities, top athletics, and exercises
61 II, 7. 5 | sports or during leisure activities, suicide and self-harm.
62 II, 7. 5 | external causes like settings, activities, products and services (
63 II, 7. 6 | and during leisure time activities. The growing proportion
64 II, 7. 6 | sphere of home and leisure activities or of suicide and self-harm.
65 II, 8. 1. 1 | structure and function; (2) activities; and (3) participation.
66 II, 8. 1. 2 | to restrictions regarding activities in general. EU-SILC allows
67 II, 8. 1. 2 | each other.~ ~EUROSTAT’s activities in the European Statistical
68 II, 8. 1. 3 | working or other everyday activities. More than half of people
69 II, 8. 1. 3 | no restrictions in work activities. Considerable restrictions
70 II, 8. 1. 3 | limited in their everyday activities while the opposite appears
71 II, 8. 1. 3 | appears with respect to work activities. This difference may result
72 II, 8. 1. 5 | concentrate on encouraging activities, promoting access to quality
73 II, 8. 2. 1 | example, in communication or activities of daily living. Recent
74 II, 8. 2. 1 | functioning in everyday activities such as communication, self
75 II, 8. 2. 2 | faced by people in daily activities.~Visual impairment caused
76 II, 9 | deficit, arthritis, impaired activities of daily living, depression,
77 II, 9. 2. 3 | weight-gaining and muscle-enhancing activities (WHO/HSBC 2004). Self-assessment
78 II, 9. 2. 5 | adolescents; information activities related to under-age drinking;
79 II, 9. 2. 6 | on the ability to perform activities of daily living is a priority;~ ~·
80 II, 9. 3. 1 | opportunities for physical activities - leading to an almost sedentary
81 II, 9. 3. 3 | campaigns and many other activities. Strategies are not to focus
82 II, 9. 4. 2 | Ability to carry out various activities of daily living among people
83 II, 9. 4. 3 | limitation in their daily life activities.~ ~Depression is the major
84 II, 9. 4. 4 | deficit, arthritis, impaired activities of daily living, depression,
85 II, 9. 4. 5 | approach is to focus on the activities of caring by encouraging
86 II, 9. 4. 5 | the integration of care activities by interdisciplinary teams
87 II, 9. 5. 1 | roles, responsibilities, activities and norms about acceptable
88 II, 9. 5. 2 | ECHI build on the work and activities of previous programmes from
89 II, 9. 5. 3 | resourcing of extracurricular activities can have a male-sport bias.
90 II, 9. 5. 3 | have a male-sport bias. Activities are often targeted at elite
91 II, 9. 5. 3 | non-competitive or non-traditional activities. To demonstrate their masculinity,
92 II, 9. 5. 4 | increase violence prevention activities globally, regionally and
93 II, 9. 5. 4 | gender-related initiatives, some activities have also been dedicated
94 III, 10. 2. 1 | moods, times of the day or activities may present strong triggers
95 III, 10. 2. 1 | prevention and cessation activities, financed via action programmes
96 III, 10. 2. 1 | prevention and cessation activities.~Binding legal measures
97 III, 10. 2. 1 | economically viable alternative activities.~ ~By signing the Treaty,
98 III, 10. 2. 1 | generally set out a group of activities to be implemented and goals
99 III, 10. 2. 1 | are also mentioned as key activities for a better understanding
100 III, 10. 2. 1 | health-promoting school activities; (iii) for those countries
101 III, 10. 2. 1 | teachers to plan, do and review activities.~ ~Individuals can take
102 III, 10. 2. 1 | and involve a variety of activities (Strong et al, 2005).~ ~
103 III, 10. 2. 1 | includes normal daily life activities, such as brisk walking or
104 III, 10. 2. 1 | the organization of sport activities and the social dimension
105 III, 10. 2. 1 | active commuting or outdoor activities. It underlines that individual
106 III, 10. 2. 1 | likely to practise outdoor activities. At the same time, bone
107 III, 10. 2. 1 | broad range of areas and activities has to be considered. Food
108 III, 10. 2. 5 | possibilities for health promotion activities already during foetal life
109 III, 10. 2. 5 | Current health promotion activities tend to oversee the fundamental
110 III, 10. 3. 1 | it interferes with basic activities such as sleeping, resting,
111 III, 10. 3. 1 | planning and other related activities, it also requires Member
112 III, 10. 3. 1 | States to report on these activities to the European Commission.
113 III, 10. 3. 1 | strengthen their UVR protection activities. Good data are essential
114 III, 10. 3. 1 | essential to assess preventive activities and the identification of
115 III, 10. 3. 1 | latency. During outdoor activities, children should be protected
116 III, 10. 3. 2 | closely linked to industrial activities in the chemical industry,
117 III, 10. 3. 2 | has a significant range of activities related to chemicals; one
118 III, 10. 3. 2 | one of the major economic activities in SEE and the EECAA region,
119 III, 10. 3. 2 | installations and agricultural activities are regulated in the EU
120 III, 10. 3. 2 | from storage and processing activities in mining – the case of
121 III, 10. 3. 4 | urgent search and rescue activities together with the Ministry
122 III, 10. 4. 1 | and days with restricted activities for people suffering from
123 III, 10. 4. 1 | sources are linked to human activities and habits, such as smoking,
124 III, 10. 4. 1 | reducing demand for polluting activities.~Those policies can be strengthened
125 III, 10. 4. 1 | Reduced demand for polluting activities~· Air quality standards~·
126 III, 10. 4. 2 | legislation on monitoring activities are still applied. According
127 III, 10. 4. 2 | common strategy of control activities among Member States. The
128 III, 10. 4. 2 | the harmonised monitoring activities. The Food and Veterinary
129 III, 10. 4. 2 | acceleration in harmonization activities. Some concern horizontal
130 III, 10. 4. 2 | the results of the control activities on about 80.000 samples
131 III, 10. 4. 2 | main fields of scientific activities are:~· Providing scientific
132 III, 10. 4. 2 | official controls and other activities, including public communication
133 III, 10. 4. 2 | surveillance and other monitoring activities covering all stages of production,
134 III, 10. 4. 3 | fluoride. In addition, human activities cause water contamination
135 III, 10. 4. 5 | affected by human marine activities. The European Union is preparing
136 III, 10. 4. 5 | marine-related economic and social activities depend.~ ~References~European
137 III, 10. 4. 5 | 4.5.2.1. Overview of the activities causing soil contamination
138 III, 10. 4. 5 | potentially polluting activities are estimated to have occurred
139 III, 10. 4. 5 | by intensive construction activities following the re-unification
140 III, 10. 4. 5 | 10.4.5.2.5. Breakdown of activities causing local soil contamination
141 III, 10. 4. 5 | industrial and commercial activities causing soil contamination
142 III, 10. 4. 5 | countries, potentially polluting activities may have occurred at about
143 III, 10. 4. 5 | industrial and commercial activities, as well as the treatment
144 III, 10. 4. 5 | identified contaminating activities. In Bulgaria, the storage
145 III, 10. 4. 5 | covers more than 30 % of all activities. In the Former Yugoslav
146 III, 10. 4. 5 | been spent on remediation activities. However, this is relatively
147 III, 10. 4. 5 | provided to fund remediation activities. This is due to the limited
148 III, 10. 4. 5 | fact that a wide range of activities rely on soil and contribute
149 III, 10. 4. 5 | the Chernobyl accident. Activities to rectify this are only
150 III, 10. 4. 5 | available, site identification activities are generally in an advanced
151 III, 10. 4. 5 | investigations and remediation activities are generally progressing
152 III, 10. 4. 5 | communication and participatory activities in order to promote community
153 III, 10. 5. 1 | or stem from industrial activities or neighbourhood activities (
154 III, 10. 5. 1 | activities or neighbourhood activities (playing children, bars,
155 III, 10. 5. 1 | leisure, recreation and social activities is as important as the provision
156 III, 10. 5. 1 | social and recreational activities. There is evidence that
157 III, 10. 5. 1 | from exposure to industrial activities and fuel combustion in households.
158 III, 10. 5. 2 | dependency on agricultural activities and – in some areas – even
159 III, 10. 5. 3 | previous and current economic activities. E.g. in Belgium and Germany
160 III, 10. 5. 3 | finance; property and business activities including research and development;
161 III, 10. 5. 3 | training in firm-specific activities) assumes an increasingly
162 III, 10. 5. 3 | implementation of common activities. One aim of this chapter
163 III, 10. 5. 3 | setting for health promoting activities. This realisation led to
164 III, 10. 5. 3 | Health promotion and prevention activities must therefore take a multi-disciplinary
165 III, 10. 5. 3 | Commission has expanded its activities, in cooperation with the Euro k,
166 III, 10. 5. 3 | Health promotion and prevention activities must therefore also take
167 III, 10. 6. 1 | social networks and volunteer activities (Börsch-Supan et al., 2005).
168 III, 10. 6. 2 | more effective prevention activities in various settings (at
169 III, 10. 6. 2 | promotion and prevention activities over curative care, and
170 III, 10. 6. 2 | Local level~Having mentioned activities at European and national
171 III, 10. 6. 3 | public. The EUICS Consortium activities developed a new instrument,
172 IV, 11. 1. 3 | increasing costs to fund desired activities on the one hand, and a deficiency
173 IV, 11. 1. 5 | can enhance improvement activities; has clear effects on priority
174 IV, 11. 1. 6 | cost conscious, hospital activities more transparent, information
175 IV, 11. 2. 2 | across all policies and activities. The programme’s implementation
176 IV, 11. 2. 2 | practice; public health activities may be coordinated or funded
177 IV, 11. 2. 2 | and the costs for some activities, in particular occupational
178 IV, 11. 3. 2 | pricing and reimbursement activities, as increasingly seen in
179 IV, 11. 5. 1 | donation and transplantation activities within their borders.~On
180 IV, 11. 5. 3 | donation and transplantation activities~ ~In 2003 the European Commission
181 IV, 11. 5. 4 | donation and transplantation activities.~The different organisation
182 IV, 11. 5. 4 | starting point for cross-border activities in this field. The work
183 IV, 11. 5. 5 | start collaborative research activities at European level. TRIE
184 IV, 11. 5. 5 | relation to tissue banking activities required by the future European
185 IV, 11. 6. 4 | evidence of risk selection activities (van de Ven et al, 2003).
186 IV, 12. 1 | contribute to public health activities which seek to reduce the
187 IV, 12. 1 | of all union policies and activities” and to work with Member
188 IV, 12. 1 | was listed as one of many “activities” in Articles 3, where the
189 IV, 12. 1 | support and complement the activities of the Member States in
190 IV, 12. 1 | all Community policies and activities.~Community action, which
191 IV, 12. 1 | promote all the research activities deemed necessary by virtue
192 IV, 12. 2 | years, EU public health activities, also aimed at controlling
193 IV, 12. 2 | moods, times of the day, or activities may present strong triggers
194 IV, 12. 2 | prevention and cessation activities, financed via action programmes
195 IV, 12. 2 | prevention and cessation activities. Binding legal measures
196 IV, 12. 2 | economically viable alternative activities.~By signing the Treaty,
197 IV, 12. 4 | mechanisms for EU health activities~ ~There are several health
198 IV, 12. 4 | Vassiliou in 2008. Most health activities were then regrouped in a
199 IV, 12. 4 | and long-term care. These activities have been taken forward
200 IV, 12. 4 | SANCO with Health Research activities, with a budget of € 6 billion
201 IV, 12. 4 | europa.eu/information_society/activities/eten/index_en.htm); Competitiveness
202 IV, 12. 4 | europa.eu/information_society/activities/einclusion/research/aal/
203 IV, 12. 5 | description of the main activities and all reports from the
204 IV, 12. 5 | been set up to take forward activities on indicators, data and
205 IV, 12. 5 | of health information, of activities in relation to the following:
206 IV, 12. 5 | Indicators (ECHI). Current activities focus at the implementation
207 IV, 12. 8 | based on concrete health activities within the EU. Furthermore,
208 IV, 12. 9 | important to ensure synergy of activities and avoid overlapping when
209 IV, 12. 9 | IHR);~· development of aid activities related to poverty diseases;~
210 IV, 12. 10 | will result in information activities and a product development
211 IV, 12. 10 | youth. While the focus of activities is on smoking, other forms
212 IV, 12. 10 | supporting many non-smoking activities such as web-sites and internet-platforms
213 IV, 12. 10 | healthy” is supported by activities like “Healthy kindergarten
214 IV, 12. 10 | see www.rki.de).~ Selected activities:~National campaign “Exercise
215 IV, 12. 10 | targets and measures, many activities at national, federal state
216 IV, 12. 10 | laws, institutions, and activities concerning safety/risk.~
217 IV, 12. 10 | target of many national activities~ ~§ 20 Abs. 1 SGB V (Social
218 IV, 12. 10 | monitoring and reporting activities. It regularly publishes
219 IV, 12. 10 | water from the industrial activities are proposed. In this manner,
220 IV, 12. 10 | Regions (16.03.2006): work activities at risk in case of alcohol
221 IV, 12. 10 | Strategy~ ~WHO CINDI programme activities~ ~Interactions amongst determinants~
222 IV, 12. 10 | premises. Furthermore no other activities beyond smoking are allowed
223 IV, 12. 10 | agencies, whose tasks and activities have a direct impact on
224 IV, 12. 10 | government, “show how their activities can be incorporated to help
225 IV, 13.Acr | across all policies and activities. The programme’s implementation
226 IV, 13.Acr | practice; public health activities may be coordinated or funded
227 IV, 13.Acr | sectors; and costs for some activities, in particular occupational
228 IV, 13. 5 | in performing daily life activities compared to the younger
229 IV, 13. 5 | in performing daily life activities. Quantitative research on
230 IV, 13. 5 | more effective prevention activities in various settings (at
231 IV, 13. 5 | promotion and prevention activities over curative care and address
232 IV, 13. 5 | and long-term care. These activities have been taken forward
233 IV, 13. 6. 1 | reduced range of family activities and outings, by the need
234 IV, 13. 7. 1 | and implementing cluster activities in their territories. The
235 IV, 13. 7. 3 | research agenda. Research activities include health effects of
236 IV, 13. 8 | and explore the breadth of activities that this sector has to
237 IV, 13. 8 | policies, with a wide range of activities ranging from research, education,
238 IV, 13. 8 | policy makers. These are activities most common to NGOs working