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Discover LudwigThe phrase "unequal exposure" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts discussing disparities in access to information, resources, or experiences among different groups or individuals. Example: "The study revealed that there was unequal exposure to educational resources among students from different socioeconomic backgrounds."
Exact(11)
Socioeconomic inequalities are associated with unequal exposure to social, economic, and environmental risk factors, which in turn contribute to health inequalities.
Inconsistency in definition and/or how to measure running pace such as subjectively reports of Ratings of Perceived Exertion (RPE), or objectively as speed in kilometers per hour (km/h) combined with unequal exposure to this variable between participants, may explain the obscurity related to the knowledge of this association.
Still, activists have connected the crisis to a pattern of minority communities facing unequal exposure to environmental health risks.
Due to the self-paced methodology employed, there was the possibility of the two experimental groups to receive unequal exposure to the visuomotor distortion employed.
In Machala, a relatively small and heterogeneous city, there was evidence of unequal exposure or unequal reporting of dengue.
Imbalances in cell fitness can arise due to transcriptional noise [ 38 ], unequal exposure to survival factors or stressors or upon random acquisition of mutations.
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Mr. Metzenbaum agreed that unequal television exposure was unfair but said Mr. Glenn had enjoyed a tax-supported "$3.5-billion-dollar 3.5-billion-dollar 3.5-billion-dollarrTV".
Unequal pre-radiation exposure 40-700 Gy) would lead to considerable different risks of late effects within the study population and distort results.
We have dicsussed the unequal impacts of exposure to indoor air pollution on women's health in relation to MDG 5, yet reliance on traditional cooking and heating practices has additional implications for female household members.
In addition, the unequal change of exposure level and the effect of mortality and incident diabetes risk factors by age-group may also explain this difference in the secular change of prevalence between age-groups.
The results of the previous analyses suggest that the unequal burden of exposure has not changed substantially across occupational groups since 1995, and that there is urgent need of delivering and evaluating the effects of specific interventions targeting workers at high risk of developing musculoskeletal disorders [ 2, 23– 25].
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com