Sentence examples for substantial adverse from inspiring English sources

Exact(60)

As fragility bone fracture may substantially impair quality of life, and also has substantial adverse socioeconomic consequences, our findings suggest that osteoporosis should be detected and addressed promptly in patients with bDMARD-treated RA who possess these risk factors.

They support the ACBPS claim that disclosure could reasonably be expected to have a substantial adverse effect on its operations".

Congress concluded that "a federal civil rights action... is necessary to reduce the substantial adverse effects of interstate commerce caused by crimes of violence motivated by gender".

No details about two of the 14 data breaches have been disclosed by the ABS, which said that would have a "substantial adverse effect" on its operations.

Even if the documents were found to have a substantial adverse effect on customs, they could still have been released if the public interest factors were strong enough.

You report the substantial adverse environmental effects, including noise, odors and air pollution, that result from transporting municipal solid waste by truck from the five boroughs to New Jersey and elsewhere.

McMillan ruled all 14 of the logs should be exempt in full on the grounds their release could have a "substantial adverse effect" on customs and would also likely have been exempt on national security grounds.

The information commissioner, Prof John McMillan, ruled that requests for watch officer logs and authorisations for turnbacks were exempt from release because they could have a "substantial adverse effect" on the Australian Customs and Border Protection Service (ACBPS).

It blamed the Chilean government for both deaths and said it was "difficult to believe" that the Pinochet government would have carried out the killings without some signal, perhaps even an inadvertent one, that the deaths would not cause "substantial adverse consequences" in Washington.

The law, which came into force late 2012, makes it an offence to follow, contact, monitor the email of, loiter near, watch or spy upon, someone if it causes "serious alarm or distress" and has a "substantial adverse effect" on their usual day-to-day activities.

Although McMillan did not rule on this point because the documents were already found to be exempt under the substantial adverse effect exemption, he outlined that "the reasoning that supports that exemption claim could equally apply" to the national security claim.

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