Sentences with phrase «often than cases»

As a result, auto injury cases with these problems tend to go to trial more often than cases where the plaintiff sought medical care immediately and continued to receive medical care in a consistent manner, in line with the recommendations of their medical providers.
As a result, these auto injury cases go to trial more often than cases without pre-existing injuries and treatment.
To assess this potential bias we examined whether cases with longer recall intervals might report fan use less often than cases interviewed closer to the date of infant death.

Not exact matches

However, it's often the case that the mistakes we make as children have fewer long - range effects than things we screw up we get older.
One could argue this is the best - case scenario, since lawmakers always have the option of creating new laws which lead to the promulgation of new regulations that are often worse than the ones before.
And as is so often the case with luxury goods, the business around it is far less savoury than the product.
But, as is often the case, my interview with Sam Yagan, OkCupid's co-founder and CEO, had more interesting tidbits than I could fit into the story.
The fact is, it is often less costly for them to purchase your goods, services or in some cases, acquire your entire company, than it is to allocate a team and develop a new product from scratch.
But as is often the case with politics — and business — better to watch what they do rather than what they say: Nintendo Canada GM and VP Ron Bertram told Canadian Business Online that the company was uninterested in gaming experiences that required the player to go online and buy additional content to complete a game.
More often than not, they just let you pass, and if they stop you, tell security you're planning on upgrading at the terminal (which in my case is always the truth).
On a $ 100,000 portfolio, 5 % or $ 5,000 in strategic cash should be plenty, especially if you trade less often than you receive dividends, which should be the case.
«I have been lucky that my condition has progressed more slowly than is often the case.
That's not universally the case, but in regards to medicine and health care, that's probably more often the case than not.»
Looking at your business this way allows us to say «Yes» more often than the bank — and your loan application, in many cases, could be approved within an hour and often have your funds delivered in 24 to 48 hours.
A judge set bond at $ 500,000 for Cruz and ordered a host of pretrial conditions more often seen in felony cases than misdemeanors.
This form of lending is concerning for three main reasons: Like storefront payday lending, auto - title lending carries a triple digit APR, has a short payback schedule, and relies on few underwriting standards; the loans are often for larger amounts than traditional storefront payday loans; and auto - title lending is inherently problematic because borrowers are using the titles to their automobiles as collateral, risking repossession in the case of default.
But more often than not, you find yourself in a grey area where there is not a strong case to do something, where all incoming data have to be evaluated on their merits and policy options weighed up.
It was frequently the case that celibacy was almost unknown and the average age of marriage for women was far lower than in western Europe, often close to the attainment of sexual maturity.
In some cases, renters may be able to purchase a home with less than 20 % in down payment, but those who do so will often be required to purchase mortgage insurance, increasing the cost of their payment.
Regarding complaints to human resources, Mr. Wilkins said: «We're not going to comment on individual cases, but cases are often more complicated than simply listening to one side of the story.»
To be fair, longer maturity bonds don't always have longer durations, but this is the case more often than not.
In most cases investors won't feel the full impact of this fee, as we are often able to access the same loans at higher interest rates than standard investors.
If this is the case, it is often better to just say no than for everyone to have a bad experience.
The average balances are also lower than the $ 100,000 or so SPIA premium that carriers and advisors often discuss as an average for SPIA cases that are actually placed.
It is more comfortable to be socially accepted than not, which is unfortunately also often the case for apostates.
This was the pattern of euthanasia's expansion in Holland — a movement for relief of unbearable suffering in terminal cases became a means of termination for those whose problems were often more existential, or psychological, than physical.
More often than not, particularly in the case of sexual assault, they're really used to mitigate and to minimize — almost as if the victim handles it «properly,» if the victim just forgives, all of the feelings are going to go away.
In most cases like this the victims, more than wanting justice (which is often impossible), just want to be heard so they can integrate their trauma into their lives and move on.
While I acknowledge your point that expressing such ire can sometimes make engagement more daunting for the accused, in cases such as this one the support it lends the silenced more often than not outweighs the additional burden it places on those doing the silencing.
As is often the case when it comes to morals, the Bible is more immoral than moral.
Plays are play, as Walter Ong observes, except for the playwright and perhaps some of the paying public.5 Moreover, while most would say that tennis and drama provide at least the occasion for play (even if some tennis players, for example, are not actually «playing»), the list of possible play activities is much broader than we often imagine, including much of life - more, in any case, than just tennis, reading, dancing, etc..
However, in a world formed by relativism, conscience is not well understood, and often becomes a case of listening to «my voice» rather than «the voice of God».
A merit of Wilkinson's book is that it allows the Faber - Newman relationship to be viewed more impartially than is often the case.
Often they believe (in some cases rightly) that the social stigma in state mental hospitals is greater than in private psychiatric hospitals.
In the case of the deep ecologists, Christians can recognize that in many instances a Christian environmental ethic — often called stewardship — has been shallow rather than deep.
In these cases it may be appropriate for, say, a teenage girl who made a mistake one night and was not fully informed by either her parents (due to their beliefs or whatever), or, as happens more often than people would like to admit, was coerced into it, to have the option of abortion available.
I can agree with Kelley that the government is often wrong in these church - state cases, more often wrong than the Supreme Court is willing to admit.
It may be that Kelley had «domestic issues», or «mental health» issues, or other factors (as is so often the case, real life stories are usually far more complex than the 24 hour / 24 second sound bite culture we live in) and that his expressions of hatred against Christianity were only secondary factors, if factors at all.
Nonetheless, many fundamentalist groups are more popular among women than among men, and women support these groups because they encourage men to take a more responsible role in heading families than is often the case in fragmented or changing social circumstances, and women often play powerful roles behind the scenes.
The theologian's task is more often to defend the text against a wrong claim to its authority rather than to affirm in some timeless and case - free way that it has authority.
If this be the case, then an understanding of the kingdom in three senses — the eternal, righteous rule of the sovereign God; the call to moral obedience in love; and an apocalyptic final consummation — seems less inconsistent in the thought of Jesus than they have often been assumed to be.
Often God is presented as such a vague, abstract reality - in many cases no more than a hypothesis - that the notion that such a God could be truly known and loved, let alone be our personal fulfilment, is risible.
With cases like this, more often than not the argument is that a misconception of a threat is not enough to warrant the same judgement as the threat itself.
I think the biggest disconnect I have with you Jeremy, is that often your experience seems to be entirely different than mine; so that what seems to you to be «typical» to «most churches» doesn't seem to be the case to me, and probably anything that I would guess is «typical» could be just as foreign to you.
This deficiency is strikingly apparent in the Supreme Court's church - state jurisprudence (where the landmark cases more often than not involve the family, children, and schools).
Those youth — more comfortable with television than with reading in many casesoften find themselves more at home in the new evangelical churches.
However, the monks in Celtic lands do seem to have had a greater awareness of the Creation as a revelation of God than has often been the case.
In the New Testament, the Greek word for hour, hora, is more often used in reference to kairos time than to cronos time: «The hour [hora] comes and now is when the true worshiper...» Hora is used in many gospel stories of mighty works to identify the moment of healing and in those cases it is usually translated «instantly.»
When poverty is chosen, when it is a voluntary status, undertaken for some moral or religious end, it is often a state of joy rather than of suffering, as in the case of Thoreau at Walden, the Peace Corps worker, or the inhabitant of a rural commune.
For myself, I do believe there are independent «things» which are'institution / s» which, if kept small and changed often, and devoid of power, are not necessarily a bad thing, but which, in the case of the church, has become far too large and been around in it's present form / s for far too long, with more power than is proper, and in many cases oppressing the people within its employ (not just those on the payroll but the volunteers as well).
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z