Results 131 to 140 of about 1,821,326 (334)
Social Deprivation and Exclusion of Immigrants in Germany [PDF]
This paper aims at providing empirical evidence on social exclusion of immigrants in Germany. We demonstrate that when using a conventional definition of the social inclusion index typically applied in the literature, immigrants appear to experience a ...
John P. Haisken-DeNew, Mathias Sinning
core
Strength through diversity: how cancers thrive when clones cooperate
Intratumor heterogeneity can offer direct benefits to the tumor through cooperation between different clones. In this review, Kuiken et al. discuss existing evidence for clonal cooperativity to identify overarching principles, and highlight how novel technological developments could address remaining open questions.
Marije C. Kuiken +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Comfortably Numb? Nonverbal Reactions to Social Exclusion
Juliëtte Schaafsma +5 more
openalex +2 more sources
Social Exclusion and the Future of Cities [PDF]
In both Britain and the United States, people have been moving away from the inner cities to suburban developments, often leaving behind concentrations of poverty and decaying neighbourhoods. Anne Power's paper focuses on the British situation.
Anne Power, William Julius Wilson
core
Next‐generation proteomics improves lung cancer risk prediction
This is one of very few studies that used prediagnostic blood samples from participants of two large population‐based cohorts. We identified, evaluated, and validated an innovative protein marker model that outperformed an established risk prediction model and criteria employed by low‐dose computed tomography in lung cancer screening trials.
Megha Bhardwaj +4 more
wiley +1 more source
From Social Exclusion to Child-Inclusive Policies: Toward an Ecological Model of Child Participation [PDF]
Ṭali Gal
openalex
Monitoring circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) in patients with operable breast cancer can reveal disease relapse earlier than radiology in a subset of patients. The failure to detect ctDNA in some patients with recurrent disease suggests that ctDNA could serve as a supplement to other monitoring approaches.
Kristin Løge Aanestad +35 more
wiley +1 more source
Despite technological advances are increasingly signifi cant and were followed by mil-lions of people, there is still a large number of individuals who lack access to basic technolo-gies, and so little to their innovations.
Marco Antônio Pereira Araújo
doaj
Unemployment and conditional welfare: Exclusion and belonging in immigrant women's discourse on being long‐term dependent on social assistance [PDF]
Disa Bergnéhr
openalex +1 more source
The cancer problem is increasing globally with projections up to the year 2050 showing unfavourable outcomes in terms of incidence and cancer‐related deaths. The main challenges are prevention, improved therapeutics resulting in increased cure rates and enhanced health‐related quality of life.
Ulrik Ringborg +43 more
wiley +1 more source

