Exact(4)
"This is in the best interests of patients and NHS staff and allows problems to be confronted and addressed quickly".
"But not least of the problems to be confronted is the prospect of sudden wealth, which certainly has not necessarily proved beneficial to other societies," said Mr. Rosing.
Fukuyama is perfectly right to urge that these encrustations be stripped off; and reform of lobbying and campaign finance wouldn't hurt either (though there are deeper problems to be confronted as well: the breakdown of party discipline and the erosion of seniority).
"But we've also learned that the problems to be confronted are growing, not diminishing".
Similar(56)
But it has, and this is the initial problem to be confronted by those concerned about the future of the two terminals at Kennedy.
Indeed, India's distemper over the growing American cooperation with Pakistan presents another problem to be confronted by the Bush administration.
This is not the only problem to be confronted.
The principal problem to be confronted is in isolating the object of study.
Similar problems have to be confronted when trying to define Oral Health-Related Quality of Life (OHRQoL) issues.
A friend who transplanted to Manhattan some 20 years ago once casually remarked to me apropos the skyline of her native city, "It's as dull as ditchwater" – and one of the problems that has to be confronted squarely by critics of London's latest form of capital instantiation is that it's far from being ditchwater.
There are a lot of political problems that need to be confronted.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com