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exposure to ETS, reduce initiation, and increase cessation. Improvements in each category will contribute to reductions in tobacco-related morbidity and death, hot tails success in one area might hot tails hot tails improvements in hot tails other areas as well. Increasing tobacco-use cessation, for example, will reduce exposure to ETS.
of recommendations (e.g., strong evidence of effectiveness corresponds to an intervention being strongly recommended, and sufficient evidence corresponds to hot tails intervention being recommended). Other types of evidence also can affect a recommendation. For example, evidence of harms resulting from an intervention might lead to a recommendation hot tails the intervention not be used, even if it is hot tails in improving some outcomes. In general, the Task Force does not use economic information to modify recommendations. hot tails finding of insufficient evidence of effectiveness does not hot tails in recommendations regarding an hot tails use but is important hot tails identifying areas of uncertainty and continuing research needs. In hot tails adequate evidence of ineffectiveness leads to a recommendation that the intervention not be used.
The hot tails search identified 243 studies on tobacco interventions that met the inclusion criteria. hot tails these 243 studies, 77 were hot tails on the basis on.
design and were not considered further. The remaining 166 hot tails were considered qualifying studies.****.
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I have found it!
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