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The phrase "at at risk" is not correct in English.
Did you mean "at risk"? You can use "at risk" to describe someone or something that is in danger or vulnerable to harm or loss.
Example: "The community is at risk of flooding due to the heavy rainfall."
Alternatives: "in danger" or "vulnerable to harm".
Exact(5)
Primary prevention of CHD through lifestyle advice has sometimes yielded modest results although, for example, behavioural interventions targeted at "at risk" patients have produced encouraging findings.
Primary prevention of CHD through lifestyle advice has sometimes yielded modest results[ 11] although, for example, behavioural interventions targeted at "at risk" patients have produced encouraging findings[ 12].
This evidence suggests that a family history approach, targeted at "at risk" individuals and those requesting CHD assessment, could motivate lifestyle change.
In this case-control study, NT-proBNP levels in patients with PAH (group 1) were compared with those of patients considered at "at risk" of PAH (group 2), ILD patients (group 3), and SSc controls (group 4) by using analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Bonferroni multiple test comparison correction.
Microdialysis in the neonatal intensive care unit is a new approach to continuous monitoring of newborn patients who are at at risk from hypoglycemia (a commonly encountered problem in neonatal intensive care).
Similar(55)
Meanwhile, a reduction in family history-related associations with altered white matter microstructure by late-adolescence is encouraging for future prevention work targeted at at-risk youth.
This study investigated the effectiveness of a targeted intervention program aimed at at-risk adolescents in a randomized clinical trial design (N = 107).
Not so: The English Car Company is involved in a number of charities and regularly hosts children from needy families at at-risk communities to give them what he got as a boy: a ride that offers an aspirational glimpse of a better future.
National survey data suggest that 20% of Australians (24% of males and 17% of females) consume alcohol at at-risk or high risk levels [ 36].
This should be taken into account when interventions aimed at at-risk families identified by maternal heavy alcohol use are planned and conducted.
Optimally, policy makers need to construct comprehensive, socially-just policy, combining interventions aimed specifically at at-risk individuals and groups (such as 'Feeding Our Futures') with those which are broader-ranging and supportive (such as fiscal changes).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com