He said this week that one of the key areas the review will focus on would be about providing care for people in their own homes. |
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Too often courts and child welfare professionals are loath to make a judgment as to whether a parent can truly care for a child. |
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The remaining third of volunteers will receive standard care for lymphoedema including bandaging, exercise and massage. |
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Should the obligation to care for this terminal patient stand in the way of finding cures for the many patients who might suffer in the future? |
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The plan also includes a commitment to providing access to child care for lone parents entering employment. |
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People are invited to go along and learn how to care for boats and try rowing. |
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Since the mother is ill, she may not be able to care for her baby as she would if she were well. |
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We care for and look after all our customers especially the elderly and disabled. |
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Many obstacles are encountered when asking and answering questions about how to care for patients. |
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Hospitals, struggling to care for casualties, have been hit by looters stealing equipment, medicines and even beds. |
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They were rushed straight to intensive care for observation after the caesarean delivery. |
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The hospital and associated units provide obstetric care for a population of about 400 000 people. |
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It is rich in culture and scenery and could teach us Irish a thing or two about how we care for our environment. |
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Nurseries provide care for children aged from around six months up to five years old. |
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Several witnesses attested to the fact that the mother could adequately care for the children on her own. |
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It's the safety net for children whose parents cannot care for them, and for children without parents. |
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As for myself, I no longer care for chemical research, and science is a tabooed topic in my household. |
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She is destitute, begs and is near death almost for three days, until she comes upon a house, whose members take her in and care for her. |
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A liveried waiter comes across, bows obsequiously, and asks George if he would care for the salmon. |
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I refuse to hand over my country to a bunch of halfwits who can neither protect us or care for us. |
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When a parent dies, older children may be expected to take up paid employment and care for younger siblings. |
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I don't know how I'd get out if it wasn't for people like yourself that really care for old people like me. |
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The sanctuary will provide lifetime care for Federally owned or supported chimpanzees that are no longer needed for biomedical research. |
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They would care for them, and caress them, and nurse them, and pamper them. |
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Hospitals, clinics, nursing homes, sanitariums, and orphanages were all a part of the network of care for the immigrants. |
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Better understanding of this sarcoid inflammation is gradually leading to better care for the patient. |
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This age range is the hardest to find carers for as most people choose to provide foster care for babies and young children. |
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All the members of a laughter club meet each other with open minds and they care for each other. |
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Though she doesn't care for her spot as to the Gaya throne, she cares deeply for her people. |
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He says it is very rewarding to care for and nurse pets in the area, where he has worked for eight years. |
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As much as he did really care for her, at least he knew by now that she cared a tiny bit for him too. |
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And regardless of what happened with Jude, I know he cares about you and I can see that you care for him. |
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The others helped to rescue and care for their two guards and several other people injured in the crash. |
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Nurses who care for the elderly in York are to explain their role at a special meeting next month in the city. |
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My dream is to become a nurse so I can care for those who are so often are forgotten. |
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The doctor backed out of his contractual responsibility to provide out of hours care for his patients. |
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I didn't know it at the time, but he was under a psychiatrist's care for manic depression and several other mental illnesses. |
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He was one of the most respected generals because of his care for the men and his record as a fighter. |
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Jake, who was eight months old at the time, suffered heat burns rather than direct flame injuries and was in intensive care for two weeks. |
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Though we lead busy lives, we need to care for them, nurse them well and try to make them happy. |
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But they're also non-porous, easy to care for and highly resistant to stains. |
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The churches in major cities have developed a system of weekly visitation and diaconal care for members and friends. |
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I believe he does care for me, and pray that he wouldn't be just using me, as I lost my virginity to this man. |
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She is such a virago, so self-centred, and even self-indulgent that she seems to care for nothing except her own career. |
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To unpack this, I would add that the color of ITC Garamond makes it weak and spindly on the page, something we really don't care for today. |
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It is a promise of renewal, an assurance of our heavenly vine dresser's care for our spiritual vitality. |
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Helpers are generally young from previous broods that provide care for their parents' offspring. |
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The four brothers and their wives are all well known for their deep love and care for the father. |
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If you don't care for whole-wheat bread, sourdough is a good alternative because it's also sturdy and naturally low in fat. |
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He doesn't know what it is to work for a living or to have to budget his earnings or to care for other people. |
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She said that he had experienced a difficult upbringing and had been in care for much of his youth. |
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The current absence of evidence from randomised trials should not be used as an excuse for neglecting basic care for patients with stroke. |
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The mother may not be able to love or care for the child and it will be neglected during and after pregnancy. |
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For example, figure 3 depicts an orthopaedics unit reviewing its care for patients with fractured neck of femur. |
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I also didn't much care for the way she was giving me an unrequested sample of what it feels like to have a devil on your shoulder. |
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Such books are sold through small booksellers, who are not accountable to any sales laws and who do not care for business ethics. |
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The former included a second carer for 6 hours a day in addition to 24-hour care by one carer, with sleep-in care for 10 hours. |
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Maddy Jago is Chief Officer of the New Forest Committee, an umbrella organisation representing all the main bodies that care for the forest. |
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He banned birth control and left under-financed state institutions to care for the wave of abandoned children that followed. |
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House sparrows and starlings seem to not care for the design of the house but tree swallows, bluebirds, chickadees and wrens really like it. |
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A pet sitter is there to provide comfort, help, and care for your dog while you are away. |
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It's his job to groom and care for the prison's bloodhounds and weapons-sniffing dogs. |
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He lives at home with his parents helping his mother care for his father, who has a debilitating illness. |
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A family is characterized by the principles of care for all children, faithful monogamy and equal regard between husband and wife. |
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Mine. I promised to care for her, in sickness and in health, and she promised not to die again without ample warning. |
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One hundred eighty million years ago, a small, hairy animal resembling a shrew or a vole evolved a new way to care for her developing offspring. |
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These women also founded a home for the aged women of the church who were unable to care for themselves. |
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You may find that a style of shirt or trouser you don't care for actually looks good on you. |
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If these are cherished childhood memories for you, then you might not care for how they're treated here, no matter how tongue in cheek it all is. |
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Participants were randomized to receive usual care for pneumonia or early mobilization along with usual care. |
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It's a natural longing of the human heart to care for and cherish your child. |
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I used to care for neighbours horses when they went away on holiday and travel to shows with them to help out. |
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The biomedical model of illness, which has dominated health care for the past century, cannot fully explain many forms of illness. |
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Rutherford had vast learning, and yet he knew the need for shepherds to care for the Christ's sheep. |
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Second-home owners spend far above average on hiring someone to care for their properties. |
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We have high standards of care for our feline charges and provide full training for our volunteers within a friendly and supportive environment. |
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She was held in the highest regard and usually got whatever she wanted or needed to care for her charges. |
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In contrast, Ezekiel announces a new rule in which the shepherd will genuinely care for the sheep. |
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You have some genuine elected members who care for their community so perhaps take a leaf out of their book. |
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The council plans to care for eight children, aged between ten and 16, at the proposed new home. |
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The professional duty of care for architects is now well established by case law. |
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Critics say a common theme has been the failure to exercise a duty of care for its young charges and a failure to crack down on bullying. |
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That resulted in her losing complete control and the ability to care for the animals in her charge. |
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Providing care for older individuals suffering mental disabilities can exact an enormous psychological toll on family and loved ones. |
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Some high end or specialty contract wallcoverings need special care for perfect installation. |
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Besides, transporting animals on ocean voyages is a chancy proposition full of danger for the animals and those assigned to care for them. |
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Mammals are warm-blooded, furry, have erect stance, give birth to live young and care for them, and replace their teeth only once. |
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The blue acara is an easy fish to care for, and a suitable addition to community tanks of medium to large fish. |
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Women buy and sell in the markets, cook, wash, care for the pigs, and prepare offerings. |
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When a child is ill it should be accepted that fathers will need paid leave to help care for the child. |
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When Geoff Manning was given three beehives to care for as a young man he never imagined it would become a life-long passion. |
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Triacetate is an improved acetate fabric which doesn't melt as easier and is easier to care for. |
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When the quills begin to loosen, the bird removes them and is then ready to care for the new feathers. |
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Writers look to their quills, while painters care for horsehair and camel with as much care as palette and pigment. |
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In order to care for the patient, most families had to quit other activities. |
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These people turn out in all weathers at all hours to care for sick and vulnerable people across the city. |
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While they're out manning the picket lines, Billy is left home to care for his senile grandmother. |
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You're not really compassionate, what you feel is not care for another person but, in fact, a bit of self indulgent weepiness for yourself. |
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In 1965 the focus of care for elderly people was primarily on hospital care for acute illnesses and diseases. |
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The Bahima are cattle herders and the Bairu are farmers who also care for goats and sheep. |
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They should not only care for the welfare of the children, but should also have financial knowledge. |
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She was somewhat bewildered by the new feeling, but felt a duty to care for her fellow journeyer. |
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They were then flown to Japan, ostensibly because he needed emergency medical care for an abdominal problem. |
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This article explains how to start an indoor herb garden from plants or seed and how to properly care for it. |
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People merely obey arbitrary commands and orders, but they respond quickly and usually give extra effort for leaders who genuinely care for them. |
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At the risk of sounding like a reverse sexist, I don't particularly care for shopping, chick flicks or comparing beauty products. |
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On the negative side, I really didn't care for the helical magazine system. |
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I didn't care for its lack of heft, but those with smaller hands might find it appealing. |
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I don't really care for movies, nor do I follow TV shows, be they soap operas, sitcoms, variety shows, reality shows or what have you. |
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In the meantime a rota system came into operation whereby the children took turns to weed, water, and generally care for the seedling vegetables. |
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Not many appear to care for world prehistory wherever granite is available for quarrying. |
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The nursery will offer care for children from three months to five years at affordable prices. |
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In addition to providing objects and hiding food, some of the enrichment activities also help the keepers care for the animals. |
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He was kind to animals and ensured quality care for them while they were in his keeping. |
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Because the kennels and cattery are in our grounds, we are constantly on hand to care for the animals. |
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Few would impeach any society's humanistic obligation to care for those who actually bear the weight of battle. |
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In her speech, she paid tribute to volunteers who take time to care for people living with Aids. |
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When community care for the mentally ill was implemented in the early Nineties that too was seen as being a win-win situation. |
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This type of fellow does not care for tourists, takes his coffee black and wakes each morning in the dark without an alarm clock. |
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My father worked three jobs to care for his family and without fail he always made a point to be home for the family dinner. |
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Every day provides plenty of opportunities to witness to the life of Christ in me and to die to myself so that I can care for others! |
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He liked jazz, preferred informal dress, didn't much care for hunting and shooting, and was openly contemptuous of red carpets. |
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I typed a politely worded memo to his physicians, giving a bit of advice on how to care for him. |
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She has little care for anything and a mere flick of her finger will make the strongest of warriors tremble, wither and die. |
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It can save money by entrusting this care to health corporations, but does this guarantee the best care for these vulnerable people? |
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Sleep-deprived, worn-out adults can barely care for themselves, let alone an active, needy child. |
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But my mother was worried about how she would feed and care for four kids who could eat only kosher food. |
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To her that was a sign from Heaven that she had to care for the child the rest of her life. |
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Check the label and care for them according to the manufacturer's instructions. |
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You would have to experience the joy on their faces when they see that we really care for them. |
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Your plan should describe how to care for your child when he or she has an allergic reaction to food. |
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Less than one per cent of the substantiated cases required medical care for broken bones or head trauma. |
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This means the pups that her pack help care for may not all be fathered by the alpha male. |
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Once the young hatch, the female continues to care for them, although they are able to feed themselves almost immediately. |
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These poles and trees are to remind the heir that it is his obligation to care for the orphans. |
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After the chick hatches, both parents participate in its feeding and care for 6-7 months until it fledges and starts to fly. |
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Improving the quality of ambulatory care for patients with lung cancer is challenging. |
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Moore collaborates with cardiologists, neurologists, ophthalmologists and other health-care providers to care for repatriates. |
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As the baby-boomers enter their mid to late fifties the issue of how we care for the aged is never far from the news headlines. |
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His boss is a brutish oaf who barks orders and commands with little care for his employee's dignity. |
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My parents may watch a lot of television, but they don't care for the local news leading off with murders. |
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The association has been helping people living mainly in residential care for three years and has ambitious plans for expansion. |
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If adoption continues as an option of last resort, children will remain in the limbo of foster care for too long. |
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An innovative project aimed at providing accommodation to older people with dementia and respite care for long term carers has been launched. |
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In this species, fathers care for and hatch the eggs, while female penguins head out to sea to feed. |
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And yet we are told there is no money available for adequate home help care for the elderly or relieving respite care for the mentally disabled. |
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The service provides information on advocacy and lobbying, training and information, and also respite care for carers in the home. |
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There is space for 37 permanent residents and the centre offers day care and respite care for five people each day. |
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We have also been a haven for family carers, providing much-needed respite care for their loved one. |
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My learned colleague tells me they have been providing that care for 70 years. |
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Further, some may argue that annual leave provides a sufficient number of days for fathers to take leave to care for their children. |
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Also, synthetic wigs are easier to care for, as you don't need to restyle them every time you wash them. |
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Or maybe just bored out of your mind not listening to a lecture that you do not care for. |
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I worry that we overlook important considerations when we equate care for adults with care for children. |
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As Minister of Health he reorganized care for the mentally ill and for lepers, and in 1926 he became Minister of Internal Affairs. |
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He briefs us on the sticky subject of fakes and forgers, and offers sterling advice on how to care for a collection. |
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An old dear living on a council estate takes him in and teaches him to care for himself. |
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How to care for children, especially those in their teens, who can be very rebellious, revolting and resistant? |
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We care for the same reason that we love okapis, delight in the fossil evidence of trilobites, and mourn the passage of the dodo. |
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Many people did not care for the minimalist model, or for what could be represented as a silvertail scheme. |
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But in the summer, a light body oil is also necessary to care for sun-drenched skin. |
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She didn't much care for the idea but quickly bathed and scrubbed the dirt off of her body. |
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Few early-music specialists conduct Handel opera with more grace, rhythmic lilt, and care for style than Harry Bicket. |
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He couldn't do it, now, but he didn't care for his attention was ripped away just as quickly. |
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Lovely picture, though I don't care for the approach of winter that the orangey browns promise, I do love these colours. |
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For example, the duty to take reasonable care for the safety of road users requires that a motor vehicle be in a roadworthy condition. |
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Online users can find out how to care for houseplants or how to hang wallpaper. |
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Her parents are unable to care for her and the hospital she is temporarily staying in is poorly equipped. |
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She stopped everything to care for her mother and assumed the caregiver role in the domestic sphere. |
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She has promoted an integrated model of care for victims of trafficking for their rescue and reintegration. |
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The doctor gave the patient specific instructions on how to care for the wound. |
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The clinic provides free care for elderly and infirm people who lack health insurance. |
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They came on a mission of mercy to provide food and medical care for starving children. |
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Those who did so used their medical training not to care for patients, but to abet their abuse. |
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But even for children struggling to care for elderly parents on their own want to abide by tradition. |
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How did it come to be then that she would feel an affinity for Aurora and start to care for her? |
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But when she returned to Selma in 1962 to care for her aged mother, she lost that right. |
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What do we care for Marxism or monarchism, the resurrection of Holy Russia or the Idea of the Common Fate? |
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Those who care for their own security cannot ignore the danger of an arms race in the Middle East or East Asia. |
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We also have a growing body of biological research showing that fathers, like mothers, are hard-wired to care for children. |
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During his second bowl game, his grandfather had a heart attack, and he left to help care for him. |
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Ruseva told Bulgarian reporters that she would like to take Maria back and care for her, or at least get to know her. |
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The puppy was flown to Austria and then transported to Holland where another breeder was employed to care for him for six months, while he was in quarantine. |
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To alleviate this problem, some people care for wasp queens in winter. |
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Money is better off being spent to care for people in their own homes and in the community rather than being spent on hi-tech services and acute beds in hospitals. |
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Once a woman married, she was expected to leave her other commitments to care for the household and the community. |
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Despite government efforts, special inquiries, a Royal Commission, and rafts of good intentions, the problem of long term care for elderly people remains. |
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They might be funny old things to look at, yet they have a simple honesty that makes us like them, in the way that we care for a favourite rag doll or knitted teddy. |
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Private clinics have popped up in several provinces, offering quicker diagnostic care for those willing to pay hundreds of dollars to jump the queue. |
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During the city council's final session, council members criticized the current state of the Bali Hai pier and admonished the bureaucracy for their lack of care for the venue. |
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After 44 adventuresome years living and working in New York City, I returned to rural Clarksville, Tennessee, my hometown, to care for my ailing parents. |
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I resent it when I'm wronged and I'm protective of those I care for. |
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Thanks to the support of the public we are able to care for 11,500 stray and abandoned dogs through our network of 15 rehoming centres around the country. |
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Both salamanders and Hamilton's frogs care for eggs and young. |
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His care for well-defined blocks of color is almost lapidary, like the intricately wrought components of stained-glass windows or a jeweler's cloisonne. |
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They include meals on wheels, home help, day care, respite care for carers, and special assistance for those who are ill or who are about to leave hospital. |
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Liberia, the epicenter of the epidemic, was relying on just 50 doctors to care for the entire nation before the outbreak occurred. |
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They feel a responsibility to reverently care for aging parents. |
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He speaks of the discipline it takes to care for a baby and the overwhelming reward that comes at the end of every exhausting day. |
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I've been labelled anti-feminist for questioning how we care for babies. |
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Surrounded by rats with trains roaring by a few feet away, they managed to cook and sleep, care for pet dogs and cats and even be good neighbours. |
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It has always been the case that churches, synagogues and mosques have fostered compassionate care for the unfortunate. |
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We should have institutions and asylums where we can put those people and care for them, and where they are protected from society and society is protected from them. |
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We remain interested in taking it over as a community-owned facility so we can more appropriately care for it but there is no way we can pay big sum of money for it. |
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I have found that people in developing countries do not take their medical care for granted and really appreciate the care that we give to their children. |
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Yesterday he said health bosses were right to push ahead with the reforms and accused those opposing the plans of blocking better care for the people of the city. |
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Some zoos are partnering with sanctuaries that provide lifetime care for their surplus animals, says Hutchins, and others are developing holding space for them. |
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He who cares even for the sparrows will certainly care for us. |
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Our legislators passed laws regarding consent and record keeping to ensure high standards of quality and care for Hoosier women. |
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For example, there was more corporal discipline in all the schools back then, less medical care for the average family, poorer housing in general and so on. |
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He manured his arable land meticulously and liberally, offering to care for his neighbours' cattle free of charge over the winter months in order to guarantee his supply. |
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She has recently returned home to care for her terminally ill mother. |
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The husband submits that the marriage was not a traditional one wherein the wife sacrificed her career in order to stay at home to care for children. |
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Although it sounds like a madcap, screwball comedy, this film is a very touching drama about what lengths a young man will go to protect and care for his mother. |
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He and the father had known each other all their lives and he had helped to care for her, giving her lifts, washing her hair and later on, bathing her. |
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As a health board with responsibility for the delivery of health care for 400,000 people in the south east, it behoves us to make our position crystal clear. |
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A year later, he left the priesthood completely to help lev Glendon care for their son, who has Down Syndrome. |
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The law with respect to the services of a third party who provides voluntary care for a tortiously injured plaintiff has developed somewhat erratically in England. |
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Traumatised employees and relatively small financial losses are traded off against the greater expense of added security and extended care for staff. |
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I lovingly ministered care for my friend in his time of need. |
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But when she returns home to care for an ailing relative, he breaks the engagement and marries someone else. |
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Phyllis, who was a nurse, went down to Mississippi to provide medical care for people like Joan. |
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We must provide more doctors, nurses and hospital beds, more NHS dentists, free personal care for the elderly and free prescriptions, eye tests and dental checks for all. |
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The dispute blew up in September 2002 when he, then 63, stated that as a single practitioner he was unable to provide out of hours care for his patients. |
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The first orphan asylum in the United States was established in 1729 by Ursuline nuns to care for children orphaned in massacres by Native Americans at Natchez, Mississippi. |
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Mental health treatment could potentially benefit patients and managed care companies by reducing the costs of care for those who are high utilizers. |
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Her care for children led to her being nicknamed Auntie Joan. |
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The host is so well fooled by the externa that even male hosts, which would never have carried eggs or young in a brood pouch, care for the externa as if they were females. |
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Our members care for the most vulnerable people in our community. |
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The co-operative breeding system of callitrichids appears to be unique amongst primates, and serves to help the breeding female care for the offspring. |
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Furthermore, because these patients are not registered, capitation payments to primary care trusts may be reduced leading to a loss of health care for local people. |
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Consider the parent who has the misfortune of having to care for a critically injured child over a long period as a result of a careless driving incident. |
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The money will help fund a project in Borneo to care for orphaned orangs. |
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A couple who ran a nursing home in North Yorkshire have been struck off the professional register for failing to provide adequate care for a vulnerable patient. |
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Some people who want to help but overextend themselves might not get in trouble if there were financial assistance to properly care for and house these abandoned animals. |
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Kilpatrick tried a similar approach, focusing on health care for veterans. |
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Barry Troutman, director of education for the Professional Lawn Care Association, agrees about the simplicity of care for reel mowers. |
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Dentist, family, and case manager perspectives on dental care for individuals with developmental disabilities in Kansas. |
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Father Nugent, later the Rt Reverend Monsignor Nugent, set up ragged schools and orphanages to care for the children. |
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These accessories help provide skin care for the peristomal region, prevent leakage of the ostomy bag contents, and deodorize the contents. |
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As mentioned previously, Isabella had little care for personal bribes or favours. |
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Living in an extended family provides constant care for children and support for other members of the family as well. |
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The Russian Constitution guarantees free, universal health care for all its citizens. |
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He also restored 82 different temples to display his care for the Roman pantheon of deities. |
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The word herd, as a noun, can also refer to one who controls, possesses and has care for such groups of animals when they are domesticated. |
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Mrs. Dingley and Mrs. Johnson say, truly they don't care for your wife's company, though they like your wine. |
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It does not provide any protection to these eggs or care for the offspring. |
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Another widespread trait among modern birds is parental care for young after hatching. |
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Caress Pillows by Whiting. REG. 10.00 ea. Fluffy, bouncebackable polyester pillows. Machine washable and easy to care for. |
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The shortage of oxygen left him with dyskinetic cerebral palsy and brain damage, requiring extensive care for the rest of his life. |
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Medical care for slaves was limited in terms of the medical knowledge available to anyone. |
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In obligate monogamy, both parents care for the offspring and play an important part in their survival. |
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Each clan was expected to care for its own, including orphans and the elderly, from birth to death. |
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Predeposit autologous donations have become the standard of care for many elective surgery procedures. |
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This led to the creation of the second Geneva Convention in 1906, which gave protection and care for shipwrecked soldiers in armed conflict. |
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Females give birth every four to twenty years, and care for the calves for more than a decade. |
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I was in intensive care for five days, hooked up to an anticoagulant drip. |
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Most curling clubs have an ice maker whose main job is to care for the ice. |
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The program is intended to provide medical care for elderly people. |
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He had been cared for by his daughter Helen who had resigned her job to care for her father and mother. |
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Did I care for what is termed reputation, it is by other circumstances that I should be dishonoured. |
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The couple were involved incharity work for the Kyrenia Animal Rescue, which works with the RSPCA to care for animals in Cyprus. |
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Kirkwood Hospice provides care for the terminally ill, and is dependent on donations and charitable gifts. |
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New sites are rarely added to the collection as other charities and institutions are now encouraged to care for them and open them to the public. |
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Ursula became the composer's muse, helper and London companion, and later helped him care for his ailing wife. |
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In 2003, Rowling took part in a campaign to establish a national standard of care for MS sufferers. |
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The charity hopes to replace its ageing hospice in Warwick Road, Solihull, with a nearby building to modernise care for the terminally ill. |
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In addition to that, he always lived frugally and seemed unable to care for himself properly. |
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When the alcohol causes her husband's ultimate decline, she returns to care for him in total abnegation until his death. |
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Municipalities seek that care for youth recognizable, closer and less bureaucratically organized. |
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Medicare is a monopsonist in the market for medical care for those age 65 and over, as well as for individuals with end stage renal disease. |
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During the worst of the sickness, only six or seven of the group were able to feed and care for the rest. |
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In the days leading up to Mother's Day on May 10, the foundation will focus on the importance of moms who care for children with brain tumors. |
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It is the standard of care for abortion providers to perform sonograms on patients, but many do not show those sonograms to the women. |
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A boom in the number of foals bred has meant that there is not adequate resources to care for unwanted horses. |
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There he served as a medical monitor for space flights and provided medical care for the astronauts and their families. |
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Still, while most Japanese may not care for the meat, many object to calls to stop whaling. |
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They provided care for many recipients and allegedly gave then kickbacks for signing the time sheets, Baker said. |
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Madiba prioritised all aspects of child development and in particular wanted to improve the quality of health care for children. |
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It may also mean changes for the nation's thousands of safety net providers, who regularly care for such patients. |
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Kate is impressed by their dignity and their tirelessness and the way they care for each other. |
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Several days later he was hospitalized and required care for multilobar pneumonia and acute respiratory distress syndrome. |
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He further noted that the American Academy of Pediatrics had made the standards of care for neonates at risk for ROP clear. |
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General Dannatt, the head of the Army, seems to care for his squaddies and their under-manning of equipment etc. |
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We consider anyone who has a genuine passion to support and care for people with learning disabilities. |
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Local Characteristics tables for the topics of health and unpaid care for Output Areas. |
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Langer and Rodin also gave each person in the first group a houseplant to care for. |
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An English teacher since 1967, I retired in 2003 in order to care for, less stressfully, my disabled daughter. |
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The California Division of Workers' Compensation today released a study on access to medical care for injured workers. |
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Shows why we need to vote Yes and get away from these no-good Con-Dems and Labour, who don't care for Scotland. |
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Most importantly, he appointed itinerant, unordained evangelists to travel and preach as he did and to care for these groups of people. |
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Most importantly, Wesley appointed itinerant evangelists to travel and preach as he did and to care for these groups of people. |
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Frail patients stayed in hospital longer than necessary due to lack of care for them in the community. |
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The mutant can be easily distinguished from wild type by the naked eye and requires no extra care for maintenance in the laboratory. |
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Are they foresightedly worsening the present family condition in attempting to secure surviving children to care for them decades later? |
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In a review of integrated HIV care for cooccurring substance abuse disorders and mental disorders, Soto et al. |
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India has become an international leader for surrogacy and one of the main destinations for cross-border fertility care for Europeans. |
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If your fella is prepared to wipe his willie after widdling just to keep you happy, then he must care for you a great deal. |
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As time progressed, there was an increase in care for the wounded as hospitals appeared. |
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Due to attack there was a need for specialized medical care for these armies in order to keep them in operational status. |
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