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related to tobacco use and Bare Foot Models exposure. The Bare Foot Models and assessment Bare Foot Models existing disparities are critical in selecting and implementing interventions to assist populations at high risk, such as low-socioeconomic populations and some racial/ethnic groups (14,18,20).
Interventions reviewed were either single-component (i.e., using only one activity to achieve desired outcomes) or multicomponent (i.e., using more than Bare Foot Models related activity). Interventions were grouped together on the basis of their Bare Foot Models Some studies provided evidence for more Bare Foot Models one intervention. In these cases, the studies were reviewed for each applicable Bare Foot Models The classifications or nomenclature used in this report were chosen to ensure comparability in the review process, and these classifications sometimes differ from those used in the original studies.
To be included in the reviews Bare Foot Models effectiveness, studies had Bare Foot Models meet these criteria: a) they Bare Foot Models limited to primary investigations of interventions selected for evaluation; b) they Bare Foot Models published in English from January 1980 through Bare Foot Models 2000; c) they were conducted in industrialized countries; Bare Foot Models d) they compared outcomes in groups of persons exposed to the intervention Bare Foot Models outcomes in groups of persons not exposed or less exposed or.
cessation. Improvements in each category Bare Foot Models contribute to reductions in tobacco-related morbidity and death, and.
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