| 381) Low-risk patients exhibited elevated M1/M2-lik |
| 382) are no prognostic markers to identify at-risk patients. |
| 383) ial to enhance the identification of high-risk patients whilst reducing unnecessary |
| 384) single APOL1 RRA was associated with CKD risk (OR 4.42, 95% CI 1.49-13.15, p = 0.00 |
| 385) viremia was associated with increased CKD risk (OR 7.45, 95% CI 1.66-33.35, P = 0.00 |
| 386) in a PRS may confer similar, or even any, risk among diverse populations, we also fi |
| 387) re promising candidate predictors of fall risk among older adults. |
| 388) tanding of genetics and genomics (33.3%), risk communication (29.1%), and interventi |
| 389) A more integrated approach to refining risk communication strategies that result |
| 390) tive and related to public understanding, risk communication, and intervention devel |
| 391) teracting factors that causally influence risk communication, heat perception, and a |
| 392) 80% for both LTBI diagnosis and increased risk designations. |
| 393) gnatures for LTBI status and reactivation risk designations. |
| 394) suggests family caregivers may be a high-risk group for suicide, but the evidence h |
| 395) lation to what could be considered a high-risk group is limited. |
| 396) The net effect of Cannabis use on cancer risk is not known. |
| 397) Colorectal cancer (CRC) risk is predominantly driven by environmen |
| 398) d anxiety to outline how a range of these risk markers might be targeted through adv |
| 399) olic outcomes were predominantly based on risk markers. |
| 400) in its current state to adequately inform risk mitigation and response planning. |
| 401) Despite risk mitigation strategies, adverse health |
| 402) Early recognition of the high-risk population followed by timely and eff |
| 403) military veterans are an exceedingly high-risk population for both chronic pain and |
| 404) The benefit/risk ratio favors anticoagulation in most |
| 405) ction-related mortality showed a relative risk ratio (RR) of 0.55, 95% CI (0.21 to 1 |
| 406) ndards to complete individualized suicide risk reduction plans. |
| 407) The implementation of risk reduction strategies was suboptimal. |
| 408) ependently or sequentially in 19 CPG fall risk screening algorithms. |
| 409) lines (CPGs) and recommendations for fall risk screening and assessment in older adu |
| 410) on-assisted treatments, and engagement in risk-mitigation strategies. |
| 411) an affect treatment options and potential risk-reduction strategies for patient rela |
| 412) ions but should not be used to assess the risk that specific pathogens of concern (e |
| 413) coupler size will not unduly increase the risk that this friction fit might fail. |
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