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The phrase "a single causes of" is not correct in English.
It should be "a single cause of." You can use the corrected phrase when referring to one specific reason or factor contributing to a situation or outcome.
Example: "The study identified a single cause of the decline in bee populations."
Alternatives: "one reason for" or "a sole factor in".
Exact(1)
A few studies focus on spending for a single causes of illness and use regression-based methods to distribute spending across multiple diagnoses [4, 10 12].
Similar(59)
When two or more codes were reported in a single cause-of-death variable, separated by a space or a symbol, both of them contributed to the analysis.
"There may not have been a single cause of Neanderthal extinction," said Stringer.
Each doctor had the chance to put a story together to figure out a single cause of this man's many and apparently unrelated symptoms.
In Nixzmary's case, Dr. Wetli said, there was clearly a single cause of death: a massive bruising on her brain, or subdural hematoma, inflicted by smashing her head into a stationary object sometime not long before her death.
Mr. Gensler and Mary L. Schapiro, the chairwoman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, both emphasized on Tuesday that their agencies' investigations had not yet settled on a single cause of Thursday's volatile trading and that numerous factors could have contributed.
This is clearly parallel to the argument against Īśvara as a single cause of all things.
Case series are usually single institution experiences of diagnosis and management of a single cause of sudden and severe headache.
Anyhow, it was impossible to identify a single cause of the ASA syndrome seen in the present case.
Levchin said that, while there isn't a single cause of this innovation slow-down, they have both mutually come to the conclusion that the overall risk-taking culture has declined.
One of the major challenges in measuring spending for a cause of illness is allocating spending for a health care event to a single cause of illness when comorbidities are present [1].
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com