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Knowledge and Attitude Toward Hemoglobinopathy Premarital Screening Program Among Students of Health Colleges at Qassim University. [PDF]

open access: yesCureus
Almutairi G   +9 more
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COUSIN MARRIAGES

2015
Juxtaposing contributions from geneticists and anthropologists, this volume provides a contemporary overview of cousin marriage and what is happening at the interface of public policy, the management of genetic risk and changing cultural practices in the Middle East and in multi-ethnic Europe.
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Cousin Marriages and Schizophrenia in Saudi Arabia

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1987
The rate and degree of consanguinity in the parents of 143 schizophrenics who satisfied the DSM-III diagnostic criteria, was compared in the same number of controls matched for age, sex and socioeconomic class. A family history of disorders suggestive of schizophrenia in the offspring of consanguineous parents who were schizophrenic, was compared with ...
K, Chaleby, T A, Tuma
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First-Cousin Marriages and Psychiatric Morbidity

The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 1984
In a study of first-cousin marriages among the parents of a group of randomly selected schizophrenic and affective disorder patients, there was a significant number of such marriages in the schizophrenic group.
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Kissing cousins: Frequencies of cousin types in “Nebraska” Amish marriages

Biodemography and Social Biology, 1985
Abstract One hundred and ninety current “Nebraska” Amish marriages are analyzed to determine if statistical frequencies of types of cousin marriage conform to cultural rules for marriage. The Nebraska Amish (so named because a bishop from Nebraska organized the group) are located in Central Pennsylvania.
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Cousin Marriage in Victorian England

Journal of Family History, 1986
Cousin marriage, a common practice among preindustrial propertied classes and usually arranged by the families for economic reasons, continued as a marriage pattern among middle-class Victorians, for whom individual choice based on romantic love was the appropriate criterion for the selection of a marriage partner.
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Cousin Marriage Is Not Choice: Muslim Marriage and Underdevelopment

AEA Papers and Proceedings, 2018
According to classical Muslim marriage law, a woman needs her guardian's (viz. father's) consent to marry. However, the resulting marriage payment, the mahr, is hers. This split bill may lie behind the high rates of consanguineous marriage in the Muslim world, where country estimates range from 20 to 60 percent. Cousin marriage can stem from a form of
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