Sentences with phrase «ill health effects from»

As things worsened, Ms. Dyke could not work or make proper use of her unit and started to suffer ill health effects from the noise and stress of having to live with the constant noise of a dance studio above her.
Dr. Jaminet assumes (incorrectly, according to Dr. Rosedale) that it is possible to suffer ill health effects from glucose being too low, i.e. «glucose deficiency.
Studies have not shown ill health effects from drinking seltzer or other plain sparkling waters.

Not exact matches

This is a mixed bag from a public policy standpoint: Increased marijuana use can have ill effects on the health of the population but the increased sales bring in more revenue for the government.
Babies have been given soy formulas from birth for many years with no known ill effects, and soy may well have health benefits overall.
They found that the participants suffered no ill effects from eating a diet that contained so much fruit and instead concluded that the diet had possible benefits for a number of health factors, including blood pressure, body weight, insulin levels and blood lipid levels.
Dr Matt Berriman, from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, said: «There are millions of people infected with whipworms worldwide, and this effects whole societies due to a general level of ill health.
You can count on your pet regaining their strength and health back from poor health, side effects of other treatment procedures, weather conditions and other ill effects that can affect its health.
In fact, it's likely dogs suffer even more ill effects from fluoride than people do, and they involve health issues far beyond neurological development issues.
The same thing that protects your dog from disease is what will protect them from the ill effects of vaccination: Radiant good health.
«There's no doubt that emotional forces like anger, resentment, desire for revenge, or fear of failure can have very unpleasant side effects, ranging from the destruction of personal relationships to ill health.
Indeed the latest IPCC report states: «At present the world - wide burden of human ill - health from climate change is relatively small compared with effects of other stressors and is not well quantified.»
This, and then following, a mere month later, Ms. Xiong's assertions and papering of an opinion that there are no ill health effects possible from industrial wind, specifically the Shirley project, where there has been an almost Biblical recording of human suffering.
One reference, «Infrasound Toxicological Summary November 2001, Infrasound, Brief Review of Toxicological Literature» (see Links), cited many studies into infrasound and health; most suggested that there were no ill - effects at levels below about 110dB, higher than levels detected from wind turbines.
However, the risk of ill health / death of ourselves and our children, from the effects of AGW on the planet's systems, is extremely high if we continue to burn fossil fuel or rely only on alternative energy to power our civilisation.
• to describe the lives of children in Ireland, in order to establish what is typical and normal as well as what is atypical and problematic; • to chart the development of children over time, in order to examine the progress and wellbeing of children at critical periods from birth to adulthood; • to identify the key factors that, independently of others, most help or hinder children's development; • to establish the effects of early childhood experiences on later life; • to map dimensions of variation in children's lives; • to identify the persistent adverse effects that lead to social disadvantage and exclusion, educational difficulties, ill health and deprivation; • to obtain children's views and opinions on their lives; • to provide a bank of data on the whole child; and to provide evidence for the creation of effective and responsive policies and services for children and families; • to provide evidence for the creation of effective and responsive policies and services for children and families.
Using data from the NLSY and structural equation models, we have constructed five latent factors (cognitive stimulation, parenting style, physical environment, child's ill health at birth, and ill health in childhood) and have allowed these factors, along with child care, to mediate the effects of poverty and other exogenous variables.
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