Part,  Chapter, Paragraph

 1    I,     2.  2    |   the same as in the USA and double that of Japan or China).
 2    I,     2.  5    |    period 1970-2000 and will double again before 2030;~ ~– The
 3   II,     5.  2.  3|    75-84 years stroke events double in both men and women: this
 4   II,     5.  5.  2|      today; this number will double every twenty years. Therefore
 5   II,     5.  5.  3|    the number will more than double by 2030 to results in 8.
 6   II,     5.  6.  3|    is projected to more than double from 2000 to 2050. This
 7   II,     5. 10.  2|     studies and particularly double blind placebo controlled),
 8   II,     5. 15.  3|     their children carry the double mutation which causes the
 9   II,     6.  3.  1| incidence levels that are in double or triple digits per million
10   II,     9.  3.  1|   year, a number expected to double by 2025.Rates of osteoporosis
11   II,     9.  3.  1|     number of sufferers will double by 2025 (Aytac et al. 1999).~ ~
12   II,     9.  4.  3|     aged 15 to 64) is set to double and reach 51% by 2050. Diabetes
13  III,    10.  2.  1|     among girls is likely to double the death toll from tobacco-related
14  III,    10.  3.  3| incidence levels that are in double or triple digits per million
15  III,    10.  4.  1|    evidence and concern over double counting~- No threshold
16   IV,    13.  7.  5|   threat to data quality, as double counting of events cannot