bold = Main text
Part, Chapter, Paragraph grey = Comment text
1 I, 2,4 | animals, with a certified health status, is under way.(39)
2 II, 1,8 | survival or to improve his health; the obvious starting point
3 II, 1,12 | of xenotransplantation: health risk. We shall discuss this
4 II, 1,12(63)| Pont. Counc. Past. Assist. Health Care Workers., Charter for
5 II, 1,12(63)| Care Workers., Charter for Health Care Workers (1995), nn.
6 II, 2,12(64)| University Press 2000; U.S. Dpt. Health & Human Services, Food and
7 II, 2,13 | The Health Risk ~13. As previously
8 II, 2,13 | xenotransplantation is that of the health risk involved in such procedures.
9 II, 2,15 | the pursuit of improving health by means of certain types
10 II, 2,16 | choices concerning his own health. ~
11 II, 2,16(70)| xenotransplantation, Med Health Care Philos 2001, 4(1):
12 II, 2,17 | Allocation of Health Care Resources ~17. Xenotransplantation
13 II, 2,17 | requiring a great outlay of both health care resources and economic
14 II, 2,17 | balance, the huge amount of health care resources used in this
15 II, 2,18 | equitable access to the health care they may be needed,
16 II, 3,19 | supervised by the competent health care authorities. ~The results
17 II, 3,21 | hand it must watch over the health of the citizens involved
18 II, 3,21(74)| the Council of Europe, the Health Council of the Netherlands,
19 II, 3,21(74)| the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Committee
20 II, 3,21(74)| Agency for the Security of Health Products and of the Ministry
21 II, 3,21(74)| Products and of the Ministry of Health. In Germany, the German
22 II, 3,21(74)| xenotransplantation. In Canada "Health Canada' has the authority
23 II, 3,21 | Cantarovich ~(transplantation, health care policies) ~Coordinator
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