Results 211 to 220 of about 3,479,376 (237)
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Population and Disease Control

The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1972
Calling population the most important health problem in the world (with nutrition 2nd tuberculosis 3rd and malaria 4th) the role of infant and child mortality in fertility is examined. Excess of births over deaths is greatest in poor countries which are expected to increase 66% by the year 2000.
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Patient Population Controls

Clinics in Laboratory Medicine, 2013
Quality control (QC) procedures incorporating patient means, or average of normals (AoN) algorithms, have been used in hematology laboratories and large reference laboratories for decades to monitor analytical processes during the periods between the testing of reference sample QC materials.
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Obstacles to Population Control

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1966
The word "obstacles" in the title given to me was well chosen, for the world is in the throes of a colossal obstacle race between production and reproduction, with the outcome dependent on its success in overcoming the obstacles that restrain the former and those that prevent restraint of the latter.
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AIDS and Population “Control”

Scientific American, 1994
Many people believe that the AIDS pandemic will end the population explosion especially in Africa where population growth is very high and poverty reigns. Africans make up 10 million of all 15 million HIV- infected persons worldwide. Yet the proposition that AIDS will sole population explosion does not stand up to reason. About 200 million people in
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Population Control Charts for Population Data

Journal for Healthcare Quality, 2007
Healthcare managers are beginning to collect full population data, rather than sample data, on some patient and performance measures. For example, hospitals and healthcare systems already gather and store comprehensive data on admissions, ambulatory encounters, and other procedures.
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China: population change and population control

GeoJournal, 1986
Since 1949 China's population has increased by 500 million and thereby grown at an average rate of 2 % per year. Annual growth rates have varied dramatically, falling from 3.3 % in 1963 to 1.2 % in 1979 and registering a population decline of 13.5 million in the famine years of 1960/61.
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Control of Population

BMJ, 1961
In the early years of this century it became obvious to demographers that the population of Western Europe was increasing only because of longer survival, and that if the continuing fall in the birth rate was not reversed a decline was inevitable. This prediction was most forcibly expressed by Spengler (1917), who saw in this "metaphysical turn towards
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Population Trends and Population Control

1966
THE POPULATION TRENDS most discussed nowadays are trends in the rate of population increase. This discussion is no exception. Banal as the subject may be, I am going to talk about trends in mortality and fertility, and in the rate of population increase.
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