• Pablo De Greiff, Special Rapporteur on the promotion of truth, justice, reparation and guarantees of non-recurrence, said that the effectiveness of cultural interventions relied on whether they made victims visible and added that they had to give a better understanding on causes of human rights violations and help remembering debts to victims. (ohchr.org)
  • How diversifying our economy could help prevent a recurrence of the historic "boom-and-bust" cycle caused by an overreliance on too narrow an array of economic assets. (jamesmadison.org)
  • They want to prevent a recurrence of a massive scandal that resulted in the federal prosecution of more than a dozen UAW leaders from 2017 to 2022 . (philstockworld.com)
  • Although we have first order slip rate information, and there historic recorded events up to Ms 7.8 in 1949, timing of events along each of the main faults in the system is unknown, nor is recurrence intervals nor how these faults in the MFS interact. (scec.org)
  • Recurrence intervals of major paleotsuanmis as calibrated by historic tsunami deposits in three localities: Port Alberni, Cannon Beach, and Crescent City, along the Cascadia margin, Canada and USA. (pdx.edu)
  • We demonstrate for the first time a high correlation between water level changes and the recorded recurrence intervals of historical earthquakes. (copernicus.org)
  • G.W. Trompf, in his book The Idea of Historical Recurrence in Western Thought, traces historically recurring patterns of political thought and behavior in the west since antiquity. (wikipedia.org)
  • If they are historically appropriate and compatible with the historic property, soft barriers in the form of low, possibly thorny, shrubs and bushes or other forms of landscaping and planting may be effective deterrents.Such plantings can make it difficult to reach the property by any route other than the approved secure one. (oldhouseweb.com)
  • Usually when you are prescribed a course of medication, even if the drugs are not so pleasant themselves, and even if they possibly have some side effects, it's usually better is to take the whole course of medicine, the first time it's prescribed, than to stop taking the medicine early and wish a recurrence of the underlying infection. (yahoo.com)
  • Brexit will be remembered as a "historic economic error", which damaged the UK economy and has helped to drive inflation higher, according to the former US treasury secretary Larry Summers. (yahoo.com)
  • Brexit was a "historic economic error" which has helped fuel high inflation in the UK, the former US Treasury chief Larry Summers has said. (thefloridabusinessreview.com)
  • Methods From a ten-year historic cohort in our teaching hospital, we identified 208 patients with pelvic recurrence of cervical cancer. (bmj.com)
  • Patients and Methods: The study included 2,508 women who were at-risk for oral cleft recurrence and randomized into two folic acid supplementation groups: 0.4 and 4 mg per day before pregnancy and throughout the first trimester. (rti.org)
  • After 191 iDFS events (107 in patients taking aspirin and 84 in patients taking placebo) and a median follow-up of 20 months, the study was closed early because the data showed it was unlikely that aspirin would be helpful in preventing breast cancer recurrence. (alamobreastcancer.org)
  • We compared fistula-free survival and post-recurrence survival in patients who had received, or not received, low dose (metronomic) metronidazole. (bmj.com)
  • The recurrence rates in the two folic acid groups both separately and combined were significantly different from the 6.3% historic recurrence rate post the folic acid fortification program for this population (p = 0.0009 when combining the two folic acid groups). (rti.org)
  • Brexit will be remembered as a historic economic error that reduced the competitiveness of the UK economy, put downward pressure on the pound and upward pressure on prices, limited import goods and limited in some ways the supply of labour," he said. (thefloridabusinessreview.com)
  • A historic relapse control derived from a cohort of soldiers who served in the same area of Papua was applied to estimate risk of relapse among randomized treatment groups. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Previous observational studies and cardiovascular disease trials have suggested regular aspirin users had improved breast cancer survival and decreased risk of metastatic cancer of any kind.1,2 This is the first randomized placebo-controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of aspirin in preventing breast cancer recurrence among breast cancer survivors. (alamobreastcancer.org)
  • Although inflammation may still play a role in cancer progression, aspirin is not recommended for prevention of breast cancer recurrence," said lead author Wendy Y. Chen, MD, MPH, medical oncologist at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute. (alamobreastcancer.org)
  • Fear of recurrence tends to grow over the first year and 6 months after breast cancer surgery in younger women, according to a recent study. (lbbc.org)
  • Researchers on this study surveyed women living with a history of breast cancer to see how factors like age and optimism influence fear of recurrence over time. (lbbc.org)
  • [ 1 ] The prognosis and recurrence rate associated with hemangiomas is related to the size and degree of soft tissue involvement. (medscape.com)
  • Diffuse lesions are reported to be associated with a higher recurrence rate. (medscape.com)
  • The rate of cleft lip with palate recurrence was 2.9% in the 0.4 mg group and 0.8% in the 4 mg group. (rti.org)
  • However, the results are suggestive of a decrease in oral cleft recurrence compared to the historic recurrence rate. (rti.org)
  • Compared to the cumulative influenza-associated hospitalization rate during the H1N1 pandemic year of 2009-2010 from our historic FluSurv-NET data in blue. (cdc.gov)
  • Earlier research shows that fear of recurrence may be stable or lessen as time goes by, depending on the type of cancer, form of treatment, and timing of the study. (lbbc.org)
  • The historical changing shades, shapes, and meanings of negative conceptual images of Jews, the recurrences of original stereotypes and prejudices and their shifting significance on the one hand, and the overlapping of new expressions at the meaning-making level on the other, provide a fertile field for its analysis. (diariojudio.com)
  • Negative feelings may include sadness and fear of recurrence , or fear that the cancer will return. (lbbc.org)
  • Hypothetically, in the extreme, the concept of historic recurrence assumes the form of the Doctrine of Eternal Recurrence, which has been written about in various forms since antiquity and was described in the 19th century by Heinrich Heine and Friedrich Nietzsche. (wikipedia.org)
  • We must devise plans that will not merely alleviate the ills of today, but will prevent, as far as it is humanly possible to do so, their recurrence in the future. (francesperkinscenter.org)
  • A RCT is still needed to identify the effect of folic acid on oral cleft recurrence given these suggestive results and the supportive results from previous interventional and observational studies, and the study offers suggestions for such future studies. (rti.org)
  • Looking at the results from the LOT-R survey, which measured participant's outlook on the future, the researchers found that optimistic participants experienced lower levels of fear of recurrence than those who were less optimistic. (lbbc.org)
  • Researchers suggest future studies look at possible ways doctors can help people who struggle with fear of recurrence, and the role setting realistic expectations may play in that effort. (lbbc.org)
  • Despite recurrences of drought and other extreme weather events, Oklahomans today enjoy a wide variety of fresh, healthy food and drinking water. (ok.gov)
  • Historic recurrences of the "striking-similarity" type can sometimes induce a sense of "convergence", "resonance" or déjà vu. (wikipedia.org)
  • The peak flows at 33 streamgages exceeded the 1-percent annual exceedance probability (100-year recurrence interval), and 19 of these exceeded the 0.2-percent annual exceedance probability (500-year recurrence interval). (usgs.gov)
  • Wine-lovers from all over flock to Granbury year-round for tastes of local wine in the area, and the Wine Walk is a special event in itself where dozens of wineries head to the Historic Granbury Square. (visitgranbury.com)
  • and a trend to improved post-recurrence survival. (bmj.com)
  • Age, experiencing physical symptoms and optimism have been found to affect fear of recurrence the most. (lbbc.org)
  • No malaria transmission occurred at the study site and P. vivax recurrences in the 12 months following therapy were classified as relapses. (biomedcentral.com)
  • All participants experienced fear of recurrence during the first 6 months after surgery. (lbbc.org)
  • But fear of recurrence worsened in younger women 6 months after surgery. (lbbc.org)
  • Fear of recurrence was still growing in younger women at 18 months, showing more fear than they had right after surgery and at 6 months. (lbbc.org)
  • Results: The oral cleft recurrence rates were 2.9% and 2.5% in the 0.4 and 4 mg groups, respectively. (rti.org)
  • The most recent French military interventions in Côte d'Ivoire, Libya, and Mali demonstrate its stabilizing and destabilizing qualities and also illustrate deterrence - in deterring violent extremists from destabilizing the region - and recurrence - in intervening for the purposes of maintaining French influence and protecting its historic privileges. (young-diplomats.com)
  • its recurrences and transformations appear differentially over global interconnected realms, mediated by shared regional traits and distinct local configurations. (diariojudio.com)
  • The logic for doing so was a combination of recurrence - to maintain its status as a global power and hegemonic presence in francophone Africa - and deterrence - to keep threats out of this region. (young-diplomats.com)
  • A central and historic responsibility for the World Health Organization (WHO) has been the management of the global regime for the control of the international spread of disease. (who.int)
  • The concept of historic recurrence has variously been applied to overall human history (e.g., to the rises and falls of empires), to repetitive patterns in the history of a given polity, and to any two specific events which bear a striking similarity. (wikipedia.org)
  • Other minor cases of recurrence thinking," he writes, "include the isolation of any two specific events which bear a very striking similarity [his emphasis], and the preoccupation with parallelism [his emphasis], that is, with resemblances, both general and precise, between separate sets of historical phenomena. (wikipedia.org)
  • Conclusions: The study is the first double-blinded randomized clinical trial (RCT) to study the effect of high dosage folic acid supplementation on isolated oral cleft recurrence. (rti.org)
  • the modeling stage, in which historic data are lance systems and should be a part of their evaluation. (cdc.gov)