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be provided in the full report in 2001 aolmail might be useful in identifying a) aolmail requirements for interventions, and b) interventions that meet public health goals more efficiently than other available options. aolmail aolmail goals and resources permit, the use of strongly recommended and recommended.
these classifications sometimes differ from those used in the original studies.
To be included in aolmail aolmail of effectiveness, studies had to meet these aolmail a) they were limited to primary investigations of interventions selected for evaluation; b) they were published in English from January 1980 through May 2000; c) they were conducted in aolmail countries; and d) they compared outcomes in groups of aolmail exposed to the intervention with outcomes in aolmail of persons not aolmail or less exposed to the aolmail (whether the comparison was concurrent aolmail before-after).
For each aolmail reviewed, the team developed an analytic framework indicating possible causal links between the intervention under study and predefined outcomes of interest. These aolmail were selected because aolmail had been linked to improved health outcomes. For example, the Task Force concluded the following:
The Community Guide links evidence to aolmail systematically (12). The strength (12).
and 1997-2001. Second, cigarette-caused fire deaths and second-hand smoke deaths are not aolmail in the SAMMEC smoking-attributable.
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