• The American public's attitudes about the historic impeachment process unfolding in Washington, evaluated by a series of Gallup polls conducted this past week, can be summarized succinctly: He's guilty, but don't impeach him. (gallup.com)
  • Drexel psychologists studied the public's attitudes toward brain stimulation. (drexel.edu)
  • The survey, commissioned by Moderna Biotech Singapore and the Asia Pacific Immunization Coalition (APIC), polled 1,219 adults on their attitudes, knowledge and behaviours around COVID-19. (channelnewsasia.com)
  • survey, which polled 1,219 adults on their attitudes, knowledge and behaviours around the pandemic. (channelnewsasia.com)
  • By identifying the extent of child exposure to passive smoking and gaining an understanding of the behaviours, attitudes and awareness of the parents can help in developing the latest health promotion strategies for protecting our children. (who.int)
  • Parents of 3 year old children in Iceland completed a questionnaire which examined child exposure to Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS), as well as parental attitudes, awareness and behaviours towards smoking. (who.int)
  • Shifting from pandemic to endemic … it's really just changing the label. (channelnewsasia.com)
  • Will the coronavirus pandemic change public attitudes to migration? (newstatesman.com)
  • Traffic deaths have risen ever since COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns eased in 2020 as people returned to work and started taking more road trips. (fox32chicago.com)
  • The study, "Hazardous Waits: CPSC Lets Crucial Time Pass Before Warning Public About Dangerous Products," covers 46 cases since 2002 in which the CPSC fined manufacturers for failing to adhere to the law requiring prompt reporting. (citizen.org)
  • Last year, 144 inmates in 25 states were given the death penalty, which is not only 24 fewer than in 2002 but less than half the average of 297 between 1994 and 2000. (jurist.org)
  • No one believed me" is a quote from Merri Utami, who was sentenced to death for drug trafficking in Indonesia in 2002. (worldcoalition.org)
  • It was the highest number of first-quarter traffic deaths since 2002. (fox32chicago.com)
  • But differences in the way the media have covered their cannabis use portend a major shift in public attitudes about the drug, as well as a troubling reminder of the racism that still largely prevents us from seeing drugs as a health issue. (time.com)
  • Rust-Tierney's record on human rights advocacy includes facilitating the development and implementation of a national strategy against capital punishment in the United States using strategic communication and policy advocacy to change attitudes and shift public opinion. (georgetown.edu)
  • If we want to change how people who use drugs are treated, we need to shift perceptions. (globalcommissionondrugs.org)
  • Attorney General William Barr ordered the Bureau of Prisons in July to adopt a change to the lethal injection rules for federal executions, switching from the combination of three drugs that has led to botched state executions in the past, to a single drug - pentobarbital, a barbiturate or sedative. (euronews.com)
  • But Federal District Court Judge Tanya S. Chutkan put a hold on those plans, ruling that they violated the Federal Death Penalty Act of 1994, which directs that federal executions must be carried out "in the manner prescribed by the law of the state" in which the death penalty was imposed. (euronews.com)
  • In seeking to resume executions of federal death row inmates, Francisco said the Justice Department was "acting on behalf of the public and the victims" to enforce death sentences handed down by juries. (euronews.com)
  • Death penalty opponents feel the report shows the public's wariness of executions in light of how the punishment is administered how it is sometimes employed against wrongfully convicted people. (jurist.org)
  • 2021 saw a worrying rise in executions and death sentences as some of the world's most prolific executioners returned to business as usual and courts were unshackled from Covid-19 restrictions, Amnesty International said today in its annual review of the death penalty. (worldcoalition.org)
  • Its survey showed 60 percent say life without parole "is the better penalty," while 36 percent favored the death penalty. (euronews.com)
  • The opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. (cdc.gov)
  • DOCUMENTATION FILE ONLY ACKNOWLEDGEMENT U.S. Department of Health and Human Resources Public Health Service Centers for Disease Control National Center for Health Statistics Hyattsville, Maryland July 1990 DHHS Publication No. (PHS) 90-1213 National Center for Health Statistics Manning Feinleib, M.D., Dr. P.H., Director Robert A. Israel, Deputy Director Jacob J. Feldman, Ph.D., Assoc. Director for Analysis and Epidemiology Gail F. Fisher, Ph.D., Assoc. Dir. (cdc.gov)
  • Proposed strategies to enhance cervical cancer screening were: sensitization of the population, recruitment of more competent staff, testing centers should be located closed to the target population, less embarrassing screening methods should be used, health care workers should demonstrate positive attitudes during care, female staff should manage the screening units, screening cost should be subsidized. (who.int)
  • Can Hollywood Change Attitudes About Addiction and Mental Health? (chcf.org)
  • As the US struggles with an opioid overdose crisis that kills more than 130 people per day , entertainment media provide opportunities to reach the general public with crucial health messages. (chcf.org)
  • The project offers a unique opportunity for researchers to track how the state's changing cannabis laws are impacting public health. (drexel.edu)
  • You would have to hire an army of public health workers to track and test all of those people that members of Congress might infect, not to mention their staffs and other Capitol workers. (politico.com)
  • From a public health point of view, this is not mostly about protecting members of Congress," Alexander said. (politico.com)
  • How Should Public Health Officials Respond When Important Local Rituals Increase Risk of Contagion? (ama-assn.org)
  • Mass incarceration of the poor, corruption, human rights abuses, public health crises and violence caused by the Drug War have been exhaustingly documented all over the world. (nacla.org)
  • And although there is improved language on human rights, gender, and public health, the document fails to acknowledge that around the globe, drug policy is changing rapidly. (nacla.org)
  • Russia, for example, the only member of the Security Council opposing public health approaches to drugs, objected to any incorporation of harm reduction language in the outcome document, in opposition to UN agencies like the World Health Organization (WHO). (nacla.org)
  • The domino effect has also intensified the public health crisis surrounding HIV/AIDS in Africa. (yahoo.com)
  • This alarming trend not only undermines basic human rights but also poses significant risks to public health, social cohesion, and regional stability. (yahoo.com)
  • Reducing human and poultry contact is a key prevention strategy, and the Thai Ministry of Public Health has pursued an aggressive campaign to educate the Thai population on avian influenza and its prevention. (cdc.gov)
  • During the outbreak, the Ministry of Public Health disseminated health messages on avian influenza to the public and healthcare professionals through several different types of media ( Table A1 ). (cdc.gov)
  • Only 2 (1%) respondents had seen the Ministry of Public Health Web site on avian influenza. (cdc.gov)
  • Chronic Disease: Public Health Research, Practice, and Policy on publishing its inaugural issue and to commend its efforts in bringing together diverse audiences in the public health community to address chronic disease pre- vention. (cdc.gov)
  • Preventing Chronic Disease offers a unique forum for sharing influential, successful, and inno- vative resources to improve public health. (cdc.gov)
  • Work has progressed under the related action plan on key priorities, most notably work led by Public Health and Adult Social Care, but also vital areas including: Parks, Sports, Libraries Museums and cultural organisations in the city. (who.int)
  • That's 25 years of promoting public health research, evidence-based programs, policies, and strategies that improve the health and safety of all women and girls. (cdc.gov)
  • [i] It provided an overview of public health surveillance and data programs at CDC that address women's health. (cdc.gov)
  • MCHEP has assigned more than 35 senior CDC epidemiologists focused on maternal child health epidemiology capacity building and applied research to 20 states, and 6 other public health agencies and organizations. (cdc.gov)
  • We use these data to identify women and infants at high risk for health problems, to monitor changes in health status, and to measure progress towards goals in improving the health of mothers and infants. (cdc.gov)
  • They must recognize the possibility of having to align medical staff to the changing demand for healthcare services under conditions of health uncertainty. (bvsalud.org)
  • NCHS releases public-use data files for elementary units (persons, events, or health facilities, and services) in a manner that will not in any way compromise the confidentiality guaranteed the respondents who supplied the original data. (cdc.gov)
  • 5School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, United States of America. (who.int)
  • poor attitude of health personnel. (who.int)
  • 150 J. Public Health Epidemiol. (who.int)
  • University, along with the Research Centre of the University of Akureyri and the Stockholm Centre of Public Health (Karolinska Institute). (who.int)
  • in Public Health and Education at Reykjavík University, Iceland. (who.int)
  • Public Health Emergency of International Concern on ( 7 ). (who.int)
  • Public Health, 97(8):1401-1402. (who.int)
  • BMC Public Health, 7:106. (who.int)
  • Am J Public Health, Community Health, 56(1):66-71. (who.int)
  • This document is provided by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) ONLY as an historical reference for the public health community. (cdc.gov)
  • In 1980, Congress created the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) to implement health-related sections of laws that protect the public from hazardous wastes and environmental spills of hazardous substances. (cdc.gov)
  • The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA), commonly known as the Superfund Act, designated ATSDR as the lead agency within the U.S. Public Health Service to help prevent or reduce further exposure to hazardous substances and the adverse health effects that might result from such exposures, and to expand the knowledge base about such effects. (cdc.gov)
  • HSEES called on state health departments to collect information on the public health consequences of acute hazardous substance incidents. (cdc.gov)
  • A threatened release is an imminent release that did not occur but caused a public health action, such as an evacuation. (cdc.gov)
  • ongoing, systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of health data essential to the planning, implementation, and evaluation of public health practice, closely integrated with the timely dissemination of these data to those who need to know. (cdc.gov)
  • PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This review discusses climate change-related impacts on asthma and allergic-immunologic disease, relevant US public health efforts, and healthcare professional resources. (cdc.gov)
  • Public health efforts include implementing a national strategic framework to help communities track, prevent, and respond to climate change-related health threats. (cdc.gov)
  • Healthcare professionals can use resources or tools to help patients with asthma and allergic-immunologic disease prevent climate change-related health impacts. (cdc.gov)
  • Climate change can affect people with asthma and allergic-immunologic disease and exacerbate health disparities. (cdc.gov)
  • Resources and tools are available to help prevent climate change-related health impacts at the community and individual level. (cdc.gov)
  • JAMA published an entire issue on violence as a public health issue in 1991. (medscape.com)
  • Health in a changing global environment. (who.int)
  • Advances in medical care and technology have blurred the boundaries between life-and-death and have challenged our expectations about how Americans should experience the end of life. (hhs.gov)
  • 1 Chronic illnesses, including cancer, organ system failure (primarily heart, lung, liver and kidney failure), dementia, and stroke are now the leading causes of death for Americans and few die suddenly. (hhs.gov)
  • A group of Utah attorneys, advocates and state staff have spent the last year studying the state's death penalty. (sltrib.com)
  • Legislation for smoke-free workplaces and Smoking in the home: changing attitudes exposure than urine cotinine? (who.int)
  • RECENT FINDINGS: Climate change can impact people with asthma and allergic-immunologic disease through various pathways, including increased exposure to asthma triggers (e.g., aeroallergens, ground-level ozone). (cdc.gov)
  • In 2017, seven people in India had been executed , as per the Supreme Court, while in 2018, 162 people were sentenced to death by trial courts in India. (epw.in)
  • Utah currently has over 60 aggravating factors in the homicide law that allow prosecutors to seek the death penalty - and state lawmakers are contemplating adding even more. (sltrib.com)
  • Capital punishment also persists in Japan because it performs welcome functions for politicians, prosecutors, media, and the public. (worldcoalition.org)
  • A recent poll by researcher Craig Haney, a Professor of Psychology at the University of California - Santa Cruz, has found that a "strong majority" of Florida respondents prefer life without parole to the death penalty for people convicted of murder, even as many harbor continuing misconceptions about capital punishment that would predispose them to support the death penalty. (deathpenaltyinfo.org)
  • Haney said asking people simply if they support the death penalty is inadequate because "[t]hat question offers a limited and often flawed snapshot of voter attitudes, capturing only abstract support or opposition, but failing to expose strong preferences and deeper pragmatic thinking. (deathpenaltyinfo.org)
  • The go-to polling question, 'Do you support the death penalty? (deathpenaltyinfo.org)
  • Two polls showed Utahns support the death penalty, while two others showed less support for execution in favor of life-without-parole sentences. (sltrib.com)
  • In 2016, the Mom team collaborated with former US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek H. Murthy to create a public service advertisement about addiction and drug overdose deaths . (chcf.org)
  • Utah legislators came close to outlawing the death penalty in 2016 - but the bill never reached the House floor before the midnight deadline on the last night of session. (sltrib.com)
  • At the March 2016 CND meetings in Vienna fierce debate raged over proportionality of sentences, alternative development, indigenous rights, access to controlled medicines, the death penalty, and UN system-wide coherence, triggering concern that countries would scrap their commitment to the document before it ever got near the General Assembly. (nacla.org)
  • No wonder there were a record 3,744 drug-related deaths in England and Wales in 2016. (globalcommissionondrugs.org)
  • The messages we are exposed to through shows and movies can profoundly affect our knowledge, attitudes, and even behavior. (chcf.org)
  • Results suggest that public education campaigns have been effective in reaching those at greatest risk, although some high-risk behavior continues. (cdc.gov)
  • 2019). According prevention, infuence social norms, and facilitate behavior to The Global Cancer Observatory (2021), cervical change among selected individuals or sub-populations to cancer is the second most prevalent cancer among prevent cervical cancer (Abraham et. (who.int)
  • Having such a strong belief in something and then dramatically changing how you think, is a very significant event. (ipl.org)
  • Suddenly, John Howard's Thursday speech announcing the new tasks Australia's forces are to undertake in Iraq would have been dramatically changed. (theage.com.au)
  • Comparing India to other countries without robust democracies, Bora argues that the death penalty is not a provision that democratic countries ought to have. (epw.in)
  • The death penalty is not justice. (talkleft.com)
  • To assess the effectiveness of the campaign, we carried out a survey of knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding avian influenza in rural Thailand. (cdc.gov)
  • A questionnaire was designed to assess knowledge, attitude, and practices before and after the interviewee had heard about avian influenza. (cdc.gov)
  • The Government gave its opening statement today in the death penalty trial of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. (talkleft.com)
  • In Haney's survey of more than 500 jury-eligible respondents who were asked to choose between Florida's statutorily available sentencing options, 57% chose life without parole, while 43% chose the death penalty, as the appropriate punishment for a person convicted of murder. (deathpenaltyinfo.org)
  • Dr. Haney found that Floridians held two common misconceptions about the death penalty that affected their views on the issue: 68.9% mistakenly believed that the death penalty was cheaper than life without parole, and 40.2% mistakenly believed that people sentenced to life without parole would be released from prison. (deathpenaltyinfo.org)
  • Legislative analysts in 2012 estimated that a death sentence and decades of appeals costs $1.6 million more than a life-without-parole sentence. (sltrib.com)
  • All of those estimates, the CCJJ report says, concluded that a life-without-parole sentence costs less than a death sentence. (sltrib.com)
  • Nonetheless, the fact that metabolites of the cannabis were found in Martin's blood made national headlines when it was first made public. (time.com)
  • There also is considerable skepticism that people in the Middle East will benefit from the protests and calls for change: 45% say these actions will not lead to lasting improvements for the people living in these countries while 37% say they will lead to lasting improvements. (pewresearch.org)
  • In early April, the public was split over whether the protests and calls for change would lead to lasting improvements for people in the region (42% will lead to lasting improvements, 43% will not). (pewresearch.org)
  • The UNGASS meetings got off to a bad start for non-government organizations, community organizations and the general public. (nacla.org)
  • Last year the CICIG and Public Ministry sought investigate Morales in the case of illicit campaign financing, as he was secretary general of the FCN-Nación party at the time of the campaign. (blogspot.com)
  • While historians and students may find the Homestead's cemetery to be a great research source, the general public also enjoys El Campo Santo in a variety of ways. (aaslh.org)
  • Because of their greater knowledge of and better access to lethal means, physicians not suprisingly have a higher suicide completion rate than the general public. (medscape.com)
  • Predicted deaths were in agreement with the observed deaths following HIV infection and AIDS. (who.int)
  • The Weibull model will be applied for future projections of deaths from HIV/AIDS. (who.int)
  • Further, the laws concerning the scope of free speech protections under the Human Rights Act 1998 in the context of public order legislation are not easily navigated. (christiantoday.com)
  • In the long term, policymakers should consider alternative ways of delivering healthcare services to the public regularly and during crisis without losing sight of their budgetary consequences. (bvsalud.org)
  • Climate change-related disasters (e.g., wildfires, floods) disrupting healthcare access can complicate management of any allergic-immunologic disease. (cdc.gov)
  • Criminal justice reforms groups have said another push to end capital punishment in Utah is likely during this legislative session - though a bill to abolish it has not yet been public. (sltrib.com)
  • Rust-Tierney has more than 30 years of experience in federal legislative and executive branch advocacy on civil and human rights and spent the last 16 years as executive director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty . (georgetown.edu)
  • The latest national survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, conducted May 25-30 among 1,509 adults, finds that the public continues to cast a wary eye on the turmoil sweeping the Middle East. (pewresearch.org)
  • And amongst the vulnerable, it can still cause severe (illness), and even deaths. (channelnewsasia.com)
  • Dr. Haney's research also found that a majority of Floridians oppose the death penalty for defendants with serious mental illness, do not believe the death penalty is a deterrent, and agree that most religious opinion opposes capital punishment. (deathpenaltyinfo.org)
  • The underlying causes of these deaths are often risk fac- tors that can be successfully modified years before they ultimately contribute to illness and death. (cdc.gov)
  • Gallup said it was the first time that a majority supported life over the death penalty since it began asking the question in 1985. (euronews.com)
  • This is significantly lower than the attention levels Gallup has measured for other major news events, such as the death of Princess Diana and the UPS strike. (gallup.com)
  • Public Citizen advocates for ordinary people by taking on corporate interests and their cronies in government. (citizen.org)
  • Public Citizen advocates Medicare for All, stronger oversight of dangerous doctors and safe clinical trials. (citizen.org)
  • The Drinan Chair was established in 2006 in honor of Professor Robert F. Drinan, S.J. Drinan, who served on the Georgetown Law faculty from 1981 until his death in 2007, and was also a priest, scholar, lawyer, politician, activist, ethicist and one of the nation's leading advocates for international human rights. (georgetown.edu)
  • Though India is not among the countries that have the highest number of death sentences in recent years, according to a BBC report based on the National Law School, Delhi, and Amnesty International data suggests that the number has been rising. (epw.in)
  • Such cases can result in punishments of 25 years to life, life in prison without the possibility of parole, or death. (sltrib.com)
  • These opinions are little changed from recent years. (pewresearch.org)
  • People just don't understand what she stood for 25 years ago, and people don't change their attitude," Lowry said of Beasley. (freebeacon.com)
  • DEAR ALL ON YOU: After 40 years you are not going to change your husband, so appreciate the things he does do. (uexpress.com)
  • U.S. traffic deaths, once in decline, have continued to climb over the past couple of years and hit a two-decade high in early 2022. (fox32chicago.com)
  • In the Netherlands, accidents like these are followed by intense investigations, street redesign, and criminal prosecution on a level wholly different from Boston, where a slew of bike fatalities in recent years have prompted modest on-street changes and police crackdowns on bicyclists running red lights. (bicyclelaw.com)
  • The immense dedication of resources reflects a wider attitude in the Netherlands, experts say, that bike accidents are a preventable public danger. (bicyclelaw.com)
  • Legislators are currently considering a bill requesting that legislative auditors conduct a more in-depth study of death penalty costs in Utah to determine whether it's cheaper to instead give a prisoner a life sentence. (sltrib.com)
  • The rationale that the death penalty acts as a deterrent, especially in cases of rape, is flawed because it fixates on retribution rather than rehabilitation. (epw.in)
  • In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls. (gallup.com)
  • We recommend further studies to compare COVID-19 acceptability among HCWs in the public and private sectors in Yemen. (who.int)
  • Public vaccine development and manufacture and ensure acceptability of COVID-19 vaccination depends on the equitable access for all countries ( 3 ). (who.int)
  • JURIST] The US Justice Department is reporting that the number of people sentenced to death in the United States reached a 30-year low in 2003. (jurist.org)
  • In their article, they have tried to make a case for the abolition of the death penalty in India, saying that the primary reason that it continues to exist is because there is still a belief that the death penalty will serve as a deterrant. (epw.in)
  • In addition, when Floridians were given the option of diverting the $1 million per case currently spent on the death penalty to investigate unsolved rapes and murders, only one quarter still supported capital punishment. (deathpenaltyinfo.org)
  • The group did not make any recommendations or proposed changes to Utah's current capital punishment system. (sltrib.com)
  • This report should give pause to anyone who thought that because capital punishment is so rarely used in Utah that the cost of maintaining a death penalty would be negligible," director Kevin Greene said in a statement. (sltrib.com)
  • At a recent legislative hearing, some expressed concern that Utah may have too many crimes that qualify for the death penalty , and that an appeals court could torpedo the capital punishment law for being too broad. (sltrib.com)
  • Even though over two-thirds of the countries over the world have done away with the death penalty, India has not called for the abolition of capital punishment. (epw.in)
  • Rust-Tierney recalled Drinan's work against the death penalty, including in 1973 when President Nixon called on Congress to reinstate the death penalty after the Supreme Court ruled capital punishment unconstitutional as applied. (georgetown.edu)
  • Even as officials at the city's hospital urged COVID-19 restrictions, 356 people signed a letter to the local paper vowing their opposition to being "forced to cover our mouths in public. (wkar.org)
  • Howard's 'reluctance to see Australia as having any responsibility for this death contrasts with the rhetorical positions he was putting about the support for the Iraqi people', White says. (theage.com.au)
  • Father Drinan was among the first people I met when I began my work against the death penalty at the ACLU. (georgetown.edu)
  • Sato and Bacon also demonstrate that people have a relatively low level of 'psychological ownership' when it comes to the future of the death penalty: the majority think that the government and experts should decide. (worldcoalition.org)
  • Even taking into account the fact that many more people use alcohol in the UK than they do MDMA, there were still proportionally four times as many deaths from alcohol than from MDMA. (globalcommissionondrugs.org)
  • The lives of people who use drugs mean death, prison, disease, stigma and discrimination, lack of access to treatment and employment, destroyed families, and children taken away. (drogriporter.hu)
  • All cultures consist of people, all of whom have minds that can change. (medscape.com)
  • The Pennsylvania ruling, and a similar ruling in Louisiana, may introduce the most significant changes to the American funeral industry since the since the Federal Trade Commission began regulating funeral services in 1984, says Todd Van Beck, a longtime funeral director and industry expert. (stateline.org)
  • Advocacy groups and others would also benefit from knowing whether-and to what degree-American attitudes are contingent on such aspects of drone warfare. (justsecurity.org)
  • A poll conducted by the Associated Press and the GfK Group in the wake of that tragedy brings us much closer to an understanding of American attitudes that policymakers and others seek. (justsecurity.org)
  • Two of the accused had filed curative petitions to plea against the death penalty, however, these have been dismissed by the Supreme Court on 14 January 2020. (epw.in)
  • Traffic deaths rose 10.5% last year over 2020, the largest percentage increase since NHTSA began its fatality data collection in 1975. (fox32chicago.com)
  • Another factor may be public perceptions about terrorism. (time.com)
  • Dr. Haney argues that it is important in public opinion research to offer respondents the actual policy choices available to them, rather than asking more theoretical questions. (deathpenaltyinfo.org)
  • The Public Opinion Myth. (worldcoalition.org)
  • In this report, Mai Sato and Paul Bacon go beyond the simple results of opinion polls conducted recently by the Japanese government, which show very high levels of support for the death penalty. (worldcoalition.org)
  • The Member of the Global Commission on Drug Policy urges Governments and opinion leaders to treat drugs seriously and provide the public with reliable information. (globalcommissionondrugs.org)
  • Big changes could be in store funeral directors now that a federal judge in Pennsylvania has ordered the state to rewrite its funeral regulations. (stateline.org)
  • When he couldn't find one, he did the next best thing: He partnered with a licensed funeral director who was willing to change her name to Jefferson. (stateline.org)
  • Death as a taboo topic has led to the suppression or downsizing of funeral rites which involve the disappearance of public mourning. (bvsalud.org)
  • No possibility of change, either for the condemned, or for the rest of us. (talkleft.com)
  • At the time, she is still mourning the death of her young daughter, Chloe, who died from bacterial meningitis at age six. (wikipedia.org)
  • In this paper we aim to address the relationship between memorial tattoos, the changes in attitudes and collective representations of death and the singular invention of new rites of mourning. (bvsalud.org)
  • An act that brings back the public mourning. (bvsalud.org)
  • Changing a town's attitudes about death, grief, and the care of the dying. (jewish-funerals.org)
  • It changed by Elie now taking care of his dad instead of the other way around. (ipl.org)
  • The Government knows the public doesn't care so much. (theage.com.au)
  • Boston is growing and changing rapidly, with population and job-growth both on the rise. (livablestreets.info)
  • LivableStreets provides support to these projects by writing comment letters, activating community support at public meetings, and collaborating with municipalities and agencies. (livablestreets.info)
  • P.S. Consider asking your husband what he would do in the case of your sudden death. (uexpress.com)
  • You mentioned not just the tragedy of Diana's death, but family fissures made plain today. (wfae.org)
  • This is not to diminish the tragedy of each of these deaths but simply to point out that the way the media and the public react to them is drastically different. (globalcommissionondrugs.org)
  • Back then, the coalition successfully campaigned against the criminalisation of insulting speech in section 5 of the Public Order Act 1986, which made it an offence to use 'threatening, insulting or abusive' words or behaviour. (christiantoday.com)
  • In the main, the alcohol field welcomed it though a number expressed disquiet at changes that were made to the original text presumably at the behest of the alcohol industry. (ias.org.uk)
  • In contrast, hardly any of the 8,697 deaths linked to alcohol in the same year made the headlines. (globalcommissionondrugs.org)
  • Data from NCHS are made available to the public in a number of individual reports and publication series, special tabulations, data releases, and through electronic media including data diskettes and an extensive set of public-use data files. (cdc.gov)
  • To view changes that have been made to the source record, or for additional information about this trial, click on the URL below to go to the source record in the primary register. (who.int)
  • But a group called Utah Conservatives Concerned about the Death Penalty said the report shows that a significant amount of money has been spent seeking death sentences without much in return. (sltrib.com)
  • Boston is a thriving, changing city with significant physical and social challenges. (livablestreets.info)