Sentence examples for of increased risks from inspiring English sources

Exact(60)

Then, after it was on the market, some researchers found hints of increased risks for heart attacks, the major killer in diabetes.

An S&P analyst, Frank Gill, said the move "reflects our view of increased risks to the government's credit-worthiness".

This study showed a general lack of increased risks between a range of agriculture pesticide exposures near women's residences and various preeclampsia phenotypes.

In recognition of increased risks in Iraq, the government has raised the compensation for soldiers killed in action from 70m yen (£365,00) to 100m yen.

The Women's Health Initiative findings of increased risks of heart disease, breast cancer, strokes and gallbladder disease unleashed all kinds of advice about alternatives to the popular hormone combination known as Prempro.

Threats posed by climate change call for an adaptive approach to surface water quality regulation: tightening pollution limits in the face of increased risks, accounting for region-specific impacts, and building flexibility into the regulatory process.

Pregnancy during graduate school could make sense for many women, and, if studies correlating a variety of increased risks with maternal (and paternal) age are correct, encouraging couples to have children younger could have broad benefits.

The findings of increased risks for sleep problems in both children with autism and their unaffected sibling suggest that parenting counseling should be included in intervention of sleep problems in children with autism and their siblings.

Friends of the Earth is campaigning for Flood Re to ensure the evidence of increased risks generated by climate change are explicitly factored into the scheme and is concerned that the government has excluded consideration of existing and future climate change impacts from the design of the scheme.

A decade of data documenting live births in the United States links babies of older fathers with a variety of increased risks at birth, including low birth weight and seizures, according to a new study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine.

Conclusion: Although a definition of macrosomia as >4000 g (grade 1) may be useful for the identification of increased risks of labor and newborn complications, >4500 g (grade 2) may be more predictive of neonatal morbidity, and >5000 g (grade 3) may be a better indicator of infant mortality risk.

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