Not exact matches
Despite food allergies
affecting only a small proportion of the
population, risk management and mandatory product labelling for the
key food allergens are critical food safety matters for businesses in the food industry.
At the end of the day the goal is to have a camp that supports health, that is what we want, a healthy camp with healthy individuals and healthy
population in it, so WHO and it's partners, should be looking at breastfeeding as one of the
key services and health promoting interventions that should be ensured in a place which houses
affected populations.
A
key goal of current research is to predict how these changes will
affect global ecosystems and the human
population that depends on them.
Global loss of vagility alters a
key ecological trait of animals that
affects not only
population persistence but also ecosystem processes such as predator - prey interactions, nutrient cycling, and disease transmission.
Yet body mass, an important component of the physiological state of an organism, can
affect key life - history traits such as survival, chick mass and breeding success and
population dynamics.
«We have identified
key elements of the WTC response that have
affected the health of the exposed
population and ongoing
population monitoring and treatment,» comments lead author Michael Crane, MD, MPH, of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
Ensure that industry, mining, infrastructure, and rural development programs and projects are fully sensitive to the conservation needs of snow leopards and their ecosystems, do not adversely
affect or fragment
key populations or critical habitats, and employ wildlife - friendly design, offsets, and other mitigation tools.
Celiac disease is a severe intolerance to gluten, which
affects 1 % of the
population, and can cause digestive issues, weight fluctuations and even inflammatory conditions like skin and joint problems as well as malabsorption of
key nutrients.
The age structure of a
population affects a nation's
key socioeconomic issues.
They say that being Indigenous «doesn't place someone at special risk of HIV per se»: it is the inequalities in health and the social determinants of health that profoundly
affect Indigenous people and place them in special and urgent need of being recognised as a «
key population».