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The phrase "similar implications" is correct and commonly used in written English
It is typically used to describe the effects or consequences of a certain action, event, or situation. It is often used in comparison to other similar actions or events. Example: The new tax policy has similar implications for both small businesses and corporations. Both will see an increase in their tax rates and may have to make adjustments to their budget.
Exact(42)
The abortion issue has similar implications, though most Catholics I know regard this as a more complex ethical issue than contraception.
Yet the centralised, easily transmittable nature of electronic data – often cloud-based, unencrypted, and accessed via "bring-your-own" devices belonging to employees – could make it easy for it to find its way into unforeseen places in future, with similar implications for student privacy as those raised for patients by the use of electronic health records.
The debate over the word "torture," he said, has similar implications to the one Mr. Shane described with assassination".The word torture, aside from its common sense meaning, has specific legal meaning and ramifications," Mr. Corbett said".Part of the debate is on that very point".
Similar implications are raised by brain printers.
Similar implications seem to apply for obesity health concerns.
Rapid turnovers in the design of mousetraps and software have similar implications (though lacking the life-threatening element inherent in skateboards).
Similar(18)
We obtain a similar implication in the case where (J_{alpha _{0}} v,u >0).
Gerald Clore's contribution there takes the view that emotion is (as a conceptual matter) conscious; "feeling" is used with a similar implication by Damasio (1999, 2003) and now by Berridge and his collaborators.
A previous review provided a similar implication.
Another possibility, with similar policy implications, is that an overconcentration of immigrants in a few key cities may be harming the economic prospects of immigrants.
This claim of extensional equivalence for different consequentialist views was not new; T.H. Green, F.H. Bradley, and McTaggart had all suggested that hedonism and ideal consequentialism have similar practical implications.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com