Sentences with phrase «more cumulative exposure»

First, we experience more cumulative exposure to the things that mess with DNA in ways that can lead to malignant growth: sunlight, radiation, environmental toxins and noxious by - products of metabolism.

Not exact matches

The effects of repeated exposure to UV rays from tanning beds are cumulative, so the more often kids use them, the more likely they are to develop skin cancer.
In a large population - based study of randomly selected participants in Germany, researchers found that mild cognitive impairment (MCI) occurred significantly more often in individuals diagnosed with a lower ankle brachial index (ABI), which is a marker of generalized atherosclerosis and thus cumulative exposure to cardiovascular risk factors during lifetime.
The findings of the studythe first to measure cumulative exposure to environmental hazards of all kinds in the stateare dramatic: communities in which people of color make up at least 15 percent of the population average more than four times the number of hazardous waste sites, compared with communities having less than 5 percent people of color.
We do not have a direct measure of the cumulative exposure students have had to theater, but it is reasonable to assume that students who are more interested in live theater have also had more exposure to it.
And the cumulative effect here is that you can pull in more exposure for your book.
The All Asset and All Authority strategies have provided attractive cumulative returns since January 2016, when market conditions became more supportive of tactically elevated exposure to select «Third Pillar» assets (inflation - linked investments, high yield bonds, emerging market (EM) assets).
It is possible that there is more than one but for cause (the cumulative exposure from two or more employers was necessary for the injury; without either exposure the accident would not have happened), but the plaintiff is defeated against anyone due to a point the finger defence, so, if she can show but - for negligent causation against the group, she can recover).
Cumulative or chronic exposure to violence was most clearly associated with asthma risk, consistent with the notion that stress beginning in infancy may sensitize children to later stress and more adverse consequences.
I guess children who have a number of risk factors, and particularly if those are either severe or sustained over time, are much more at risk of poor developmental outcomes than those children who might have exposure to one or two risks, which are either short or intermittent, but there's not that sense of cumulative risk.
Within these trajectories, certain subgroups of children are more at risk due to exposure to multiple, cumulative, and prolonged environmental or genetic risk factors, such as poor attachment, maternal depression, and poverty.
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