Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 II, 5. 4. 2| and at each visit clinical measurements, procedures, and outcomes
2 II, 5. 4. 2| do not involve clinical measurements (e.g. hospital discharges),
3 II, 5. 4. 2| both in terms of individual measurements and coverage of the target
4 II, 5. 4. 4| range of important clinical measurements. An average of 20% smokers
5 II, 5. 4. 7| obesity, lifestyle, clinical measurements, diabetes complications);~·
6 II, 5. 5. 3| several studies were follow-up measurements of 5 or 10 years allowing
7 II, 5. 7. 5| condition, recent changes in the measurements of the kidney function and
8 II, 5. 14. 5| moving from simple morbidity measurements, or prevalence of specific
9 III, 10. 2. 1| identified and validated. Measurements taken over a number of decades
10 III, 10. 2. 1| indicated that self-reported measurements underestimate the true prevalence
11 III, 10. 2. 1| basis of anthropometric measurements of 4153 persons]. In Badania
12 III, 10. 3. 1| explicitly mention additional measurements and monitoring of workers
13 III, 10. 3. 1| inconsistencies in exposure measurements and the absence of other
14 III, 10. 3. 2| hypothesis is supported by measurements in rain, fog and dust. (
15 III, 10. 3. 2| There are longer series of measurements from some countries, e.g.
16 III, 10. 4. 1| to arrive to comparable measurements throughout the EU and provide
17 III, 10. 4. 2| endpoints are not accessible to measurements. An ad hoc scientific Colloquium
18 III, 10. 4. 5| land-filling lack direct exposure measurements of emitted gases (mainly
19 IV, 11. 6. 4| indicators could be expressed as measurements of survival or waiting time (