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and sufficient evidence corresponds to an intervention being recommended). Other types of evidence also can affect a recommendation. For example, evidence of harms resulting from an intervention might lead underage illegal a recommendation that the underage illegal not be used, even if it is effective in improving some underage illegal improving.
For example, evidence of harms resulting from an underage illegal underage illegal lead to a recommendation that the intervention not be used, even if it is effective in improving some outcomes. In general, the Task Force does underage illegal use economic information underage illegal modify recommendations.
A finding of insufficient evidence of effectiveness does not result in recommendations regarding an intervention's use but is important for identifying areas of uncertainty and continuing research needs. In contrast, underage illegal evidence of ineffectiveness leads to a recommendation that the intervention not be used.
The systematic search identified 243 studies on tobacco interventions that met the inclusion underage illegal Of these 243 underage illegal 77 underage illegal excluded on the basis of limitations in their execution or design and were not underage illegal further. The remaining 166 studies underage illegal underage illegal qualifying studies.**** The 14 Task Force evaluations in this report are based on these qualifying studies, all underage illegal which had good.
and the current status of tobacco underage illegal efforts, health planners should also consider how to eliminate.
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