[PDF] Top 20 Risco de lesões de saúde oral em atletas portugueses
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Volume 24 - Article 29 | Pages 719–748
... The basic idea of MAPLES is to make use of standard longitudinal demographic surveys, such as Demographic and Health Surveys, Fertility and Family Surveys or Generation and Gender Surv[r] ... See full document
41
Volume 29 - Article 29 | Pages 797–816
... Table 2 presents the results of the four piecewise exponential regression models. The table shows the estimated relative risks for each group compared to the reference category for each independent variable. The first ... See full document
50
Volume 12 - Article 2 | Pages 29–50
... As illustrated in Table 2, only 34.4 percent of the women gave an indication that they can reject sexual intercourse from their husbands if and when they so desire, while the remaining majority (65.6 percent) believed it ... See full document
10
Volume 21 - Article 24 | Pages 719–758
... divorces granted in the United States are available from Jacobson (1959: Table 42) or Plateris (1973: Table 1) but not their distribution by duration. So, for the period 1933 – 1948, Preston and McDonald (1979) employed ... See full document
45
Volume 29 - Article 24 | Pages 641–662
... As a source of such data, we are working with the Young Women’s Project (YWP; Fortenberry et al. 2002), an extensive longitudinal study that tracked the manifestations of mate choice decisions in terms of relationships, ... See full document
79
Volume 32 - Article 29 | Pages 827–834
... Explicit decompositions of chronological age groups into remaining lifespan classes is, to our knowledge, only found in Brouard (1986), who redistributed population pyramids by remaining[r] ... See full document
8
Volume 32 - Article 2 | Pages 29–74
... The estimated coefficient for the earliest years covered is, unexpectedly, weakly negative (Figure 1). There are several possible explanations for this. The weak ass[r] ... See full document
17
Volume 30 - Article 29 | Pages 853–886
... Bean, Mineau, and Anderton demonstrate the importance of geographic fertility differentials within Utah, so we also control for the woman‟s birth along the more densely populated Wasatch Front (Utah, Salt Lake, Weber, ... See full document
688
Volume 4 - Article 2 | Pages 29–96
... The lack of significant differences in disruption risks between housewives and employed women who work full time or part time can be related to the limited influence of women’s work stra[r] ... See full document
26
Volume 22 - Article 29 | Pages 933–964
... over 29 for men in the Netherlands, Austria, Slovenia, Finland, and Norway; over 25 among women in most Western European countries, and under 25 among women in most Eastern European countries) (Eurostat ... See full document
20
Volume 17 - Article 29 | Pages 859–896
... Compared to the respective levels in the countries of origin, the share of extra-marital births at the total number of births of immigrant women to West Germany is higher, [r] ... See full document
277
Volume 19 - Article 29 | Pages 1145–1178
... Within the past decade, more highly educated women have begun to postpone first births, while women with less than college education have maintained the previous age patter[r] ... See full document
94
Volume 20 - Article 29 | Pages 721–730
... In particular, the correlation of e † with the other measures is never less than 0.952, according to our calculations based on 5830 period life tables from 1840 to 2007 available from th[r] ... See full document
80
Volume 23 - Article 29 | Pages 807–846
... We predicted that unemployment duration would affect the timing of motherhood positively for women in East Germany with both high and low levels of education.. The data confirmed our [r] ... See full document
12
Volume 21 - Article 29 | Pages 879–884
... In any case, (9a) indicates that remaining life expectancy will rise, stay constant or fall depending on whether the force of mortality exceeds, equals, or is less than the inverse of re[r] ... See full document
29
Volume 31 - Article 29 | Pages 889–912
... Variables that have a confirmed influence on stillbirth risk, such as weight at birth, duration of gestation, mother’s age, limited schooling, etc., express that in[r] ... See full document
122
Volume 39 - Article 29 | Pages 835–854
... In model 1, we regress migration against educational attainment classified into four levels – less than primary, primary, secondary, and tertiary education – based on the International S[r] ... See full document
731
Volume 22 - Article 2 | Pages 29–62
... Furthermore, despite their similarity in educational attainment and in the process of development with women in the Mazandarani-predominated region, including these factors in the anal[r] ... See full document
12
Volume 40 - Article 29 | Pages 835–864
... LAMBdA estimates have been adjusted for relative completeness and age misreporting (Beltrán-Sánchez et al. More specifically, the life tables available in LAMBdA have been const[r] ... See full document
23
Volume 36 - Article 29 | Pages 851–862
... According to Catholic precepts, religious marriages are indissoluble, and Italy is characterized by a Catholic religious monopoly, with an anomalously high level of religious attendance [r] ... See full document
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