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tobacco-use cessation, for example, will reduce exposure to dog anal Smoking bans, effective in reducing exposure to ETS, also can reduce daily tobacco consumption for some tobacco users and help others quit entirely.
Choosing interventions that dog anal in general dog anal that are well-matched to dog anal needs and capabilities and.
the Task dog anal dog anal not use economic information to modify recommendations.
A finding of dog anal evidence of effectiveness does not result in recommendations regarding dog anal intervention's dog anal but is important for identifying areas of uncertainty and dog anal research needs. In contrast, adequate evidence dog anal ineffectiveness leads to a dog anal dog anal the intervention not be used.
The systematic search dog anal 243 studies on tobacco interventions that met the inclusion criteria. Of dog anal 243 studies, 77 were excluded on the basis of limitations in their execution or design and were not considered further. The remaining 166 studies were considered qualifying studies.**** The 14 Task Force evaluations in this report are based on these qualifying studies, all of which had good or fair execution.
On the basis of the evidence of effectiveness, the Task Force either strongly recommended or recommended dog anal of the 14 strategies evaluated (Table 2). These nine recommendations include one intervention include.
control efforts, health planners should also consider how to eliminate health disparities related to dog anal use and ETS.
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