Part,  Chapter, Paragraph

 1    I,     2. 10.  2|        molecules and DNA, with an external magnetic field directing
 2   II,     4.  2    |          prevalence. Mortality by external causes (causes 10, 11 and
 3   II,     5.  5.  1|           years of life lost from external cause, including intentional
 4   II,     5.  8.  2|              lung diseases due to external agents ( J6 )~J44.0~ ~Chronic
 5   II,     5. 11.  3|         of the skin to a range of external and internal factors. However,
 6   II,     7.  1    |     preventable by addressing the external causes of injuries such
 7   II,     7.  1    |  appropriate information on these external factors. Detailed injury
 8   II,     7.  2.  1|     certain other consequences of external causes ~ (S00-T98).~- Chapter
 9   II,     7.  2.  1|           S00-T98).~- Chapter XX: External causes of morbidity and
10   II,     7.  2.  1|   Supplementary Classification of external causes of injury and poisoning (
11   II,     7.  2.  1|       coding practices of certain external causes like long term consequences
12   II,     7.  2.  1|   International Classification of External Causes of Injuries~ ~ICECI
13   II,     7.  2.  1|           but rather includes the external causes and can be used as
14   II,     7.  2.  2|          EuroStat (information on external causes on accidents and
15   II,     7.  2.  6|       Information on the detailed external causes e.g. activity, type
16   II,     7.  3.  4|           about circumstances and external causes of road accidents
17   II,     7.  5    |       registers), surveillance of external causes like settings, activities,
18   II,     8.  2.  1|      these data vary in scope and external validity, and are typically
19   II,     9        |          is largely determined by external factors relating to adult
20   II,     9        | acceleration in decline caused by external factors can be reversible
21   II,     9.  2.  3|      operating effectively in the external environment including sport
22   II,     9.  4.  3|       common in the very old) and external causes. In men over 65,
23   II,     9.  4.  3|           in the very old), other external causes, diseases of the
24   II,     9.  4.  4|          is largely determined by external factors relating to adult
25   II,     9.  4.  4| acceleration in decline caused by external factors can be reversible
26  III,    10.  1    |         internal (endogenous) and external (exogenous) determinants.
27  III,    10.  1    |   determinants. Environmental and external factors contributing to
28  III,    10.  1    |      causal pathway between these external health determinants and
29  III,    10.  2.  1|      linked to alcohol, including external causes (e.g. violence, accidents),
30  III,    10.  3.  2|           needed in the fields of external emergency plans (elaboration
31  III,    10.  4.  2|           gather information from external sources.~ ~EFSA’s risk assessment
32  III,    10.  4.  2|         tested and rejected at EU external borders. In the first case,
33  III,    10.  4.  2|         tested and rejected at EU external borders. Annual reports
34  III,    10.  5.  3|          The employer may involve external experts, e.g. OSH services,
35   IV,    11.  1.  5|  accreditation, certification and external and self-assessment schemes,
36   IV,    11.  4    |         most institutions involve external peer-review in their quality
37   IV,    12.  4    |          funded up to 2008)~AIDCO~External aid for health~BEPA~Investing
38   IV,    12.  8    |      programmes using specific EU external programmes (TACIS and TAIEX)