Sentences with phrase «which subsets of people»

«There are a lot of questions about how to implement it,» says Connie Celum, an HIV researcher at the University of Washington in Seattle, who led a large trial of the drug in East Africa and has begun studies to answer practical delivery questions, such as which subsets of people are at highest risk.

Not exact matches

I would imagine in urban areas like Toronto, Vancouver or Montreal, which have significant populations of recent immigrants, there's probably a significant subset of people who fled from countries where governments do all sorts of nasty things with the information they collect about their citizens and who aren't all that keen to provide such information here (you might say, «sure, but Canada's not Iran», to which the answer would be «exactly»).
One thing to take note of is that People's United has consistently been one of the most shorted bank stocks in its peer group, which implies that a subset of investors believe its shares will fall.
Plus, he notes that a subset of rock climbing called bouldering — in which climbers tackle boulders or short cliff faces measuring less than 3.5 meters high, without using safety ropes — is especially popular with younger people.
Such content can be found on the surface Web with which most people are familiar as well as the deep Web or the «dark Web,» the latter a subset of the unindexed deep Web that requires specialized software and algorithms to find and browse.
The late Andrew Cutler, author of Amalgam Illness: Diagnosis and Treatment56 and Hair Test Interpretation: Finding Hidden Toxicities57 noted that foods high in free thiol (which include legumes, dairy, the cabbage family and eggs) can provoke symptoms in a significant subset of mercury - affected people, in part by increasing plasma cysteine, which may rise in response to mercury and its biochemical effects.
Sadly, this small subset of the population has caused an enormous amount of damage to how people perceive Pit Bulls which has consequently led them to be some of the most highly euthanized dogs in shelters.
In Waiting to Be Found, Allié takes the mundane, the motions of city life, discarded items, and an ignored, forgotten subset of people forced to settle in places not designed to be inhabited, and captures their impermanent migrations by utilizing the ephemeral materials with which they engage.
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