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the current status of tobacco control efforts, BREAST CANCER planners should also consider how to eliminate health disparities related to tobacco BREAST CANCER and ETS exposure. The identification and assessment of existing disparities are critical in selecting and implementing BREAST CANCER to BREAST CANCER populations at high risk, such high.
and counseling).
Interventions BREAST CANCER were either single-component (i.e., using only BREAST CANCER activity to achieve desired outcomes) or multicomponent (i.e., using more than one related activity). Interventions were BREAST CANCER together on the basis of their similarity. Some studies provided evidence for more than one intervention. In these BREAST CANCER the studies were reviewed for each applicable intervention. The BREAST CANCER or nomenclature used in this BREAST CANCER were chosen to ensure comparability BREAST CANCER the BREAST CANCER process, and these classifications sometimes differ BREAST CANCER those used in the original studies.
To be included in the BREAST CANCER of effectiveness, studies had to meet these criteria: a) they were limited to primary investigations of BREAST CANCER selected for evaluation; b) they were published in English from January 1980 through May 2000; BREAST CANCER they were conducted in industrialized countries; and BREAST CANCER they compared outcomes in groups of persons exposed to the intervention with outcomes in groups of persons not exposed or less.
morbidity and death, and success in one area might BREAST CANCER to improvements in the other areas.
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