Sentences with phrase «further economic burden»

The Huffington Post reported that despite tough economic times and tightened household budgets, families must invest in life insurance to prevent further economic burden on surviving loved ones in the event of a death.
With the management of type 2 diabetes and its risk factors (such as obesity and physical inactivity) being simpler and cheaper than treating complications of later stage disease, the researchers note that prevention of disease onset and complications will be crucial to improve health and avoid further economic burden.

Not exact matches

Improvements in diagnostic capabilities and disease management are essential to furthering patient care and reducing the associated economic burden.
While this study indicates that the economic and disease burdens of dengue in India are hundreds of times greater than estimates based entirely on official reports, further studies are needed to garner additional detail.
The consensus seems to be that the bailout is probably sufficient to keep the Greek debt crisis from spreading to other debt - burdened countries, including Portugal and Spain, but it doesn't go nearly far enough to address Europe's underlying economic problems.
If our economic recovery is still far from now, then it would put more burden on our fiscal deficit, which would result in bond yields going up & bond prices going down.
Student debt burdens are weighing on the economic fortunes of younger Americans, as households headed by young adults owing student debt lag far behind their peers in terms of wealth accumulation, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis of government data.
Whereas, if left unaddressed, the consequences of a changing climate have the potential to adversely impact all Americans, hitting vulnerable populations hardest, harming productivity in key economic sectors such as construction, agriculture, and tourism, saddling future generations with costly economic and environmental burdens, and imposing additional costs on State and Federal budgets that will further add to the long - term fiscal challenges that we face as a Nation;
The economic uniqueness of the climate - change problem is not just that today's decisions have difficult - to - reverse impacts that will be felt very far out into the future, thereby straining the concept of time discounting and placing a heavy burden on the choice of an interest rate.
Additional burdens such as carbon tax increases are further reducing economic viability.»
To the extent that an economic rationale lies behind the U.S. rejection of the Kyoto Protocol, it comes from estimates that the U.S. will bear a disproportionate share of the burden of adjustment and that the costs to the U.S. of the Kyoto Protocol far outweigh the benefits.
Determining the effects of climate change on infectious diseases is complex because of confounding contributions of economic development and land use, changing ecosystems, international travel, and commerce.38 Currently, climate warming has been identified as contributing to the northern expansion of Lyme disease in North America39 and has been projected to increase the burden of child diarrheal illness, particularly in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.40 Concern has also been raised for climate links to emerging infections, including coccidioidomycosis41 and amoebic meningoencephalitis.42 Further investigation into climactic influence on infectious diseases is needed.
However, to mitigate the economic burden engendered by the proposed doubling, the abolition of the CST was also suggested — with its seven judges expected to move to the GC — and a gradual implementation of the reforms, with an initial increase of 12 judges in 2015; a further increase of 7 in 2016 following the dissolution of the CST and the transfer of its case - load to the General Court; and finally, a last set of 9 additional judges to be appointed in 2019.
This is of course far from the truth with legal aid practitioners working at rates and returns which place substantial economic burden on them to maintain practice.
A further limit to NTRB's capacity to leverage economic opportunities is the high burden of work associated with the future act regime.
Panelists agreed that the pendulum on mortgage credit has swung too far in the other direction after the recent housing downturn and is putting an unnecessary burden on creditworthy consumers, impeding the economic and housing market recoveries.
A panel of industry experts told several thousand Realtors ® gathered at a special symposium that the pendulum on mortgage credit has swung too far in the other direction after the recent housing downturn and is putting an unnecessary burden on creditworthy consumers, impeding the economic and housing market recoveries.
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