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1 e likely to use a firearm and to have a male victim.
2 n a bully-victim conflict on the side of the victim.
3 ., reciprocity) between the criminal and his victim.
4  among the different sources of harm for the victim.
5 een reported in postmortem brains of suicide victims.
6  and gene expression is disrupted in suicide victims.
7 llies, and the effects of their behaviors on victims.
8  5-HT2CR receptors) in the brains of suicide victims.
9 ty of parasites, mosquito vectors, and human victims.
10 th as a result of violence than non-disabled victims.
11 re more likely to perpetrate against younger victims.
12 he UTR sequences within the genes of suicide victims.
13  effective interventions for child and youth victims.
14  of zinc could be life saving in human sting victims.
15 dents and 2.4 to 3.5 times higher for single victims.
16 butes to the morbidity and mortality of burn victims.
17 oracic injuries are very common among trauma victims.
18 known; estimates range widely from 28 to 135 victims.
19 ytic treatment-induced haemorrhage in stroke victims.
20 pt the cycle of abuse and violence for these victims.
21 ve and presents a decade earlier in Lebanese victims.
22  time frame suitable for the majority of new victims.
23 ures to reduce its burden and effects on its victims.
24 y indicates torture and/or mutilation of the victims.
25 s, and prognostic factors for cardiac arrest victims.
26 e emotional and psychological costs to their victims.
27 perpetrators [93%]) and previous violence (7 victims [24%], 7 perpetrators [24%]) were common in both
28  members of UCA and sudden unexplained death victims (31% versus 27%; P=0.59).
29 -2.39), bullies (3.25; 2.72-3.89), and bully-victims (4.95; 3.77-6.50) were more likely to carry weap
30                                  90 homicide victims (6%) had contact with mental health services in
31                             Twenty-three SCA victims (64%) survived to hospital discharge, including
32  mental illness, alcohol and drug misuse (19 victims [66%], 27 perpetrators [93%]) and previous viole
33 frequent attackers (92% of participants) and victims (73%); most killings (66%) involved intercommuni
34 ns of life for the localization of entrapped victims after disaster events (e.g., earthquake, terrori
35 as part of a mortuary ritual for sacrificial victims, an event that occurred during the height of San
36 an acidic hydrolase mixture to decompose the victim and acquire the animal nutrients.
37 by another patient with mental illness, both victim and perpetrator were diagnosed with schizophrenia
38                 In 23 of these 29 cases, the victim and perpetrator were known to each other, and in
39 und stronger relations between being a bully-victim and weapon carrying (odds ratio, 7.84; 95% CI, 6.
40       We analyzed the characteristics of SCD victims and autopsy findings in 1998 to 2002, 2003 to 20
41 ith the worst effects for those who are both victims and bullies.
42                                              Victims and bullies/victims had elevated rates of young
43       We aim to describe the demographics of victims and circumstances surrounding sudden cardiac dea
44 do we safeguard personal privacy of innocent victims and family members?
45 rating social and economic effects on direct victims and indirect victims (their families and the wid
46  to seek further information by interviewing victims and other witnesses when possible.
47 e individuals, as exampled by those for burn victims and people with cystic fibrosis.
48 w to improve identification and treatment of victims and perpetrators in contact with mental health s
49 tive case-series study, we obtained data for victims and perpetrators of all confirmed homicides betw
50 to each other, and in 21 of these cases, the victims and perpetrators were undergoing treatment at th
51                                          For victims and perpetrators who had contact with mental hea
52 in the 12 months before the homicide for all victims and perpetrators.
53  on strategies to protect children and youth victims and promote their resilience is a global priorit
54  of search-and-rescue operations in drowning victims and the importance of education on opioid-associ
55 ], 7 perpetrators [24%]) were common in both victims and, particularly, perpetrators.
56 were more likely to perpetrate against older victims, and males were more likely to perpetrate agains
57 sty-humility), third-party recompensation of victims-and to a lesser extent, punishment of offenders-
58                                              Victims are cared for in emergency departments, primary
59 ictims predicted support for practices where victims are harmed to achieve instrumental goals, includ
60 estoration (for example, compensation to the victim) are strongly preferred to punitive measures.
61  Lankford's descriptions of escapist suicide victims as being unstable, they were making rational dec
62 ow that dehumanization-the act of perceiving victims as not completely human-increases instrumental,
63 unclear how exposure to trafficking puts its victims at risk.
64  the most effective at reducing PTSD in rape victims at week 4 (p = .004) and week 12 (p = .05).
65                                              Victim blaming appears to be common, whereas experiencin
66 he gap between resuscitation science and the victims, both in and out of the hospital, and lay the fo
67  comparing the weapon carrying of adolescent victims, bullies, or bully-victims with that of uninvolv
68        Effect sizes were coded that compared victims, bullies, or bully-victims with uninvolved peers
69                 Involvement in bullying as a victim, bully, or bully-victim is related to weapon carr
70 ation can have severe outcomes for snakebite victims by rendering the specific antibodies found in an
71 prey and are therefore able to deceive their victims by resembling multiple models.
72 nd individual-based simulations to show that victims can achieve such an advantage when coevolution i
73 blame", whereby the perceived suffering of a victim colors moral judgment of an accidental harmdoer.
74  causing individuals to interfere in a bully-victim conflict on the side of the victim.
75  service to foreign patients is ongoing, and victims' consequences are long lasting.
76  problems or family hardships, we found that victims continued to have a higher prevalence of agoraph
77  and injuries over time, by bomb subtype and victim demographics.
78 , in which the best strategic choice for the victim depends on the vulnerability of the attacker, the
79 d with 103 victims of HTOR in India in which victims described their experiences of a commercial kidn
80 , community-level forums are set up in which victims detail war atrocities, and perpetrators confess
81 tially differentiate into spores while their victims die as stalk cells in chimeric aggregates.
82 nt strategies are mostly inadequate, leaving victims disfigured and without treatment options.
83                                              Victims display long-term social, psychological, and hea
84 nger selection due to interaction than their victims do, it is frequently argued that they should evo
85  be used for the early location of entrapped victims during urban search and rescue operations (USaR)
86                            The "identifiable victim effect" refers to peoples' tendency to preferenti
87 nd how affect might promote the identifiable victim effect.
88  sense of justice centered on harm caused to victims emerges early in childhood and highlights the va
89 n a single cheater allele and found that the victims escaped exploitation by different types of nonki
90                      T. serrulatus-envenomed victims exhibit local or systemic reaction that culminat
91 ember 11, 2001 on the political behaviors of victims' families and neighbors.
92 psychiatric factors did not predict multiple victims, firearm use in the crime, or a guilty verdict.
93 istic models examined predictors of multiple victims, firearm use, guilty plea, and guilty verdict.
94  feeling of the victim receiving this offer (victim-focused block, VB), or without any specific focus
95 or emergency evaluation and triage of stroke victims for intra intravenous fibrinolysis, even though
96                            In unselected SCA victims from the community, common genetic variants (whi
97                                     Drowning victims had a three-fold longer activated partial thromb
98                          Victims and bullies/victims had elevated rates of young adult psychiatric di
99                            Bacteremic trauma victims have a higher risk of death than their nonbacter
100  family members and residential neighbors of victims have become--and have stayed--significantly more
101  coercion and forced first sex, and males as victims have been identified as characteristics and topi
102                            Up to 90% of SADS victims have no preceding symptoms or recognized risk fa
103 d as bullies only, victims only, bullies and victims (hereafter referred to as bullies/victims), or n
104  may have an impact in the treatment of bite victims, highlighting the necessity of using pooled veno
105 ator is the only treatment option for stroke victims; however, it has to be administered within 4.5 h
106 cholera epidemic from samples collected from victims in 18 towns across eight Arrondissements of Hait
107  victims in Erode are female, and 87% of the victims in Chennai are female.
108                   Fifty-seven percent of the victims in Erode are female, and 87% of the victims in C
109 of anxiety and depression in landmine or UXO victims in four studies, more women presented with post-
110 he broader study that included 50 additional victims in small towns and villages in West Bengal and K
111 (3) increases male mating success with their victims in the future.
112 es human scent (odor) emissions from trapped victims in the voids of collapsed buildings.
113                                   The 36 SCA victims included 14 high school student athletes (mean a
114 pe) in a cohort of 1440 unselected Dutch SCA victims included in the Amsterdam Resuscitation Study (A
115  by focusing on individuals it would censure victims, increase stigmatization of smokers, and margina
116  for admitted out-of-hospital cardiac arrest victims increased from 0% to 45%.
117   During aggressive food competition, attack victims increased signal production by 43 fold.
118 ne expression and DNA methylation in suicide victims, individuals with major depressive disorder and
119                   One hundred percent of the victims interviewed expressed that they need assistance
120                                          All victims interviewed lived in abject poverty with monthly
121 ent in bullying as a victim, bully, or bully-victim is related to weapon carrying.
122                 The single largest cohort of victims is the population with little or no prior overt
123 cks; and attackers greatly outnumbered their victims (median 8:1 ratio).
124 ypotheses comes from research on child abuse victims' memory and suggestibility regarding distressing
125 sess lead contamination and poisoning, treat victims, mitigate exposures, and remediate contamination
126         The search terms were bully*, teas*, victim*, mobbing, ragging, and harassment in combination
127 at each player in this game-a "thief" and a "victim"-must balance two competing strategic interests.
128 llies (n = 236 145), and 8 studies for bully-victims (n = 199 563).
129   Meta-analyses were based on 22 studies for victims (n = 257 179), 15 studies for bullies (n = 236 1
130 ss fatal shooting incidents (defined as >/=5 victims, not including the perpetrator) and in trends of
131                                              Victims (odds ratio, 1.97; 95% CI, 1.62-2.39), bullies (
132 ng especially on the role of empathy for the victim of a harmful act.
133 stance and low potential as a perpetrator or victim of clinically relevant drug interactions-coformul
134 stance and low potential as a perpetrator or victim of clinically relevant drug-drug interactions.
135 have drug-drug-interactions (DDI), as 2 is a victim of CYP3A4 inhibition caused by its exclusive clea
136     The view of the nervous system being the victim of destructive inflammation during autoimmunity,
137 homicide is greater than the risk of being a victim of homicide.
138 ith risk for completed suicide and being the victim of homicide.
139                   Organ transplantation is a victim of its own success.
140 xual behavior are more likely to have been a victim of male-on-male sexual violence (adjusted odds ra
141 sculature is not only the culprit but also a victim of myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury.
142 n, we estimated the relative odds of being a victim of past-year violence (physical/sexual domestic o
143 y had aOR of 1.8(95% CI: 1.5-2.2) of being a victim of past-year violence (with similar relative odds
144 rae genome from the preserved intestine of a victim of the 1849 cholera outbreak in Philadelphia, par
145                                Because older victims of abuse tend to be isolated, their interactions
146 anial and ophthalmologic findings present in victims of abusive head trauma can also be seen in shake
147 d may provide druggable targets for treating victims of acute nervous system injury.
148 ed hematopoietic toxicity could benefit both victims of acute radiation sickness and patients undergo
149 ntaneously provide contact comfort to recent victims of aggression, a behavior known as consolation.
150 les, which frequently offered consolation to victims of aggression, probably as part of their general
151  actors are sensitive to the contact need of victims of aggression, which may be greater if the aggre
152 er), aged from 15 years to 49 years who were victims of at least one act of physical or sexual violen
153                             Both bullies and victims of bullying are at risk for psychiatric problems
154 hould be providing chest compressions to all victims of cardiac arrest.
155  a common clinical symptom in women who were victims of childhood sexual abuse.
156                                         1496 victims of confirmed homicide died between Jan 1, 2003,
157 ses may serve a societal role in identifying victims of crime and human trafficking.
158 y evaluated for use with older witnesses and victims of crime.
159 hat comparative research is required between victims of developmental trauma (such as childhood sexua
160 th disability are at increased risk of being victims of domestic and non-domestic violence, and of su
161 als, young children, military personnel, and victims of domestic violence.
162                                              Victims of frequent bullying had higher rates of depress
163                 We aimed to assess how often victims of homicide are current mental health patients a
164                                   Most child victims of homicide are killed by a parent or step-paren
165 h risk of patients with mental illness being victims of homicide is an important antistigma message,
166  in-depth interviews were conducted with 103 victims of HTOR in India in which victims described thei
167                                              Victims of human trafficking are currently among the mos
168  immunologic status of T memory responses in victims of ionizing radiation exposure and apoptosis-ind
169                                  MSM who are victims of IPV are more likely to engage in substance us
170 -degree relative was significantly higher in victims of ischemic (34.2%) than nonischemic SCD (13.4%;
171  of nonischemic SCD (n=223), (2) consecutive victims of ischemic SCD (n=596), whose deaths and diagno
172                    In a subgroup analysis of victims of ischemic SCD, the prevalence of family histor
173 ular PAF generation and, ultimately, are the victims of its excessive production.
174 ive deficits when treating PTSD patients and victims of lifespan trauma (even without a diagnosis of
175 ers who had been reported to CPS as possible victims of maltreatment (P < 0.001).
176 entially give to identified versus anonymous victims of misfortune, and has been proposed to partly d
177  case-control study included (1) consecutive victims of nonischemic SCD (n=223), (2) consecutive vict
178 ory of SCD is not significantly increased in victims of nonischemic SCD, suggesting a larger role of
179 d tomography (CT) for hemodynamically stable victims of penetrating torso trauma continues to increas
180 uscle wasting, is a serious health threat to victims of radiological accidents or patients receiving
181                                        Among victims of SCD as a first cardiac event (n=2697), the pr
182   The present study included 432 consecutive victims of SCD because of acute coronary event and 532 s
183 e profiles of SCD in a consecutive series of victims of SCD in Northern Finland.
184 revalence of ER in a standard 12-lead ECG in victims of SCD than in survivors of an acute coronary ev
185                                          The victims of SCD were younger, were more commonly men and
186 sses are up to eight times more likely to be victims of sexual abuse than nonmentally ill inmates.
187                           Adults may also be victims of shaking abuse, and an ophthalmic examination
188  food transfers to a billion poor people and victims of shocks (eg, natural disasters).
189  resuscitation is a lifesaving technique for victims of sudden cardiac arrest.
190 isease is identified in approximately 80% of victims of sudden cardiac death (SCD).
191 eutic approaches designed to restore life to victims of sudden death.
192 s anticipate the resources required to treat victims of terrorist attacks.
193 nd has its ancestry in strains obtained from victims of the 14th century Black Death.
194 luent pneumonia, similar to that observed in victims of the 1918 global influenza pandemic.
195 al or psychological effects of ERW on direct victims of the explosive device or reverberating social
196 ged to have taken some of his materials from victims of the Holocaust.
197 free clinical and legal services to civilian victims of torture and other human rights violations in
198 l Centre for Treatment and Rehabilitation of Victims of Torture, the only dedicated local provider of
199 l IV fluid administration is significant for victims of trauma.
200 erve cannot regenerate when injured, leaving victims of traumatic nerve damage or diseases such as gl
201 gh the optic nerve has dire consequences for victims of traumatic nerve injury and certain neurodegen
202        Knowledge of violence perpetration by victims of unintentional (accidental) firearm injury is
203 rs) with disabilities or their risk of being victims of violence compared with children without disab
204 o have a substantially greater risk of being victims of violence than are their non-disabled peers.
205 dren with disabilities are more likely to be victims of violence than are their peers who are not dis
206 ever, people with mental illness can also be victims of violence.
207       In 14 months, there were 433 suspected victims, of which in 287 (76.5%) the STEMI could be conf
208 arge amount of missing information about the victim-offender relationship.
209           Adjustments to account for unknown victim-offender relationships generally increased the pr
210                                              Victims often do not receive high-quality CPR because of
211 ment (IBCM) programme to counsel animal-bite victims on the risk of rabies and appropriate treatment,
212 rticipants were categorized as bullies only, victims only, bullies and victims (hereafter referred to
213  as an analog for the clothing of a shooting victim or a suspect discharging a firearm.
214            Exposure to violence (as either a victim or a witness) was significantly related to gun ca
215 or how offenders move and mix with potential victims or targets.
216 nd victims (hereafter referred to as bullies/victims), or neither.
217 ction between a suspect and a crime scene or victim, or it may demonstrate an absence of such associa
218 and 2.1% (95% CI 1.5-2.7) among road traffic victims (p=0.005).
219  not differ from controls in nonischemic SCD victims (P=0.155).
220  of the attacker, the knowledge level of the victim, payoffs for different outcomes, and the beliefs
221 pensation) were associated with increases in victims' perceptions of their transgressors' relationshi
222 te forgiveness and reduce anger by modifying victims' perceptions of their transgressors' value as re
223 ally have only modest demographic impacts on victim populations.
224 itive, experiential, and emotional states to victims predicted support for practices where victims ar
225 ence for seeing a harmful doll rather than a victim punished.
226 ender-focused block, OB), the feeling of the victim receiving this offer (victim-focused block, VB),
227 tems primarily from the larger body sizes of victims relative to survivors.
228 mbers (186 UCA, 212 sudden unexplained death victims' relatives; mean age, 44+/-17 years) underwent e
229 ment-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) victims remain at risk for infarct expansion, heart fail
230 hese guidelines, whereas the majority of SCD victims remained unrecognized.
231  did men in two studies, and landmine or UXO victims reported a greater prevalence of post-traumatic
232                              The majority of victims reported long lasting health, economic, social,
233  the reason expressed for an organ sale, all victims reported that they would not have agreed to the
234 transmission; resampling tests indicate that victims represent a nonrandom subset of taxa present in
235      We present a testable model of possible victim responses to interrelational harm.
236                           Moreover, the E42K victim's cardiac tissue demonstrated a mosaic immunostai
237 from detonation pressure waves coupling to a victim's head leading to brain deformation.
238                         Analysis of the E42K victim's parental DNA demonstrated a de novo mutation.
239 .g., focusing on the offender's crime or the victim's situation especially in judicial judgment).
240  other substances that might be found on the victim's, shooter's, or suspect's clothes and might be c
241 th a 1.2 times increase in frequency of bite victims seeking medical care and of 2.4 times increase i
242     Over half of young sudden cardiac arrest victims show no prior warning signs or symptoms and surv
243    Here we explore a third possibility: that victim species are not as evolutionarily impotent as con
244 d pathogens have enemies themselves and that victim species persist because parasites and pathogens a
245 iction generates an apparent paradox: how do victim species survive and even thrive in the face of a
246 s abroad by insurers; (d) ambivalence of the victim status of the sellers; and (e) the buyers as vuln
247 ictions about the appearance of a suspect or victim, such as their sex, race, hair color, or age.
248 eating, which raises questions about how the victims survive in nature and how social cooperation per
249 isease dynamics, and to a range of exploiter victim systems.
250                                              Victims tend to be children living in regions without co
251 k, so that evolution is less constrained for victims than for parasites or pathogens.
252         We engineered syngeneic cheaters and victims that differed only in their kin-recognition gene
253 essive coagulopathy following injury, trauma victims the world over are benefiting and surviving long
254 tomatic index cases and sudden cardiac death victims-the overt or severe end of the disease spectrum.
255 ients to yield impressive numbers of "cancer victims." The risk factors are acquired from the Biologi
256 nomic effects on direct victims and indirect victims (their families and the wider at-risk community)
257 ents represent the majority of cyberbullying victims These technologies not only carry increased morb
258 er venoms reported to modulate hemostasis of victims through effects on platelets, vascular endotheli
259 r environmental challenges but probably fell victim to a combination of conjunctures of large-scale h
260  morally motivated perpetrators may humanize victims to justify violence against them.
261 relatives of UCA or sudden unexplained death victims to screen for cardiac abnormalities.
262 irst-party offender or help the second-party victim using their own monetary endowment in an unfair c
263                     Moreover, differences in victim versus perpetrator perceptions can influence reve
264 toxic components that are delivered to their victims via bites or stings.
265            There were 59 cases of earthquake victims visiting TIO, Gaushala, Kathmandu from April 201
266                         Exposure to IPV as a victim was associated with increased odds of substance u
267        In seven of the 29 cases in which the victim was killed by another patient with mental illness
268 d of third-parties was stolen, even when the victim was related to them.
269 ed deaths were compiled; mean (+/-SE) age of victims was 46.7 +/- 12.4 years, and 85% were male.
270               Illuminating the plight of the victim, we review evidence on the cyclical processes bet
271  childhood and minimize long-term effects on victims' well-being; such interventions should cast ligh
272 extent that the aggressive behavior of which victims were accused was frequently reactive, as has bee
273 gh (>5%) in 7.2% of participants, 10% of SCD victims were appropriately reclassified into a high-risk
274 [95% CI, 1.5-6.5]; P < .01) and that bullies/victims were at increased risk of young adult depression
275                                24% of attack victims were health workers.
276 o a high-risk category, and only 1.4% of SCD victims were inappropriately reclassified from high to i
277                                 Six drowning victims were investigated prospectively.
278                             29 of 90 patient victims were killed by another patient with mental illne
279           In these 29 cases in which patient victims were killed by another patient with mental illne
280 es ranged from 18.5 years to 38.1 years, and victims were likely to be doing an activity of economic
281                                              Victims were located in Tamil Nadu, and reference is mad
282                                     Disabled victims were more likely to suffer mental ill health as
283 severe acute distress (n = 120; 85% accident victims) were randomized to intranasal oxytocin (8 days/
284 ut that gun possession can protect potential victims when attacked.
285 zygous variant VCL-M94I was found in a SUNDS victim who suffered sudden nocturnal tachypnea and lacke
286 enesis and possible recovery in human stroke victims who are Met homozygotes at codon 66 of the BDNF
287  trauma (such as childhood sexual abuse) and victims who experienced prolonged interpersonal trauma i
288                              Landmine or UXO victims who had one or more limbs amputated ranged from
289 ghput sequencing in brain samples of suicide victims who had suffered from major depressive disorder
290 l nervous system infections in near-drowning victims who have aspirated water laden with spores.
291 e follow-up survey of randomly selected bite victims who were counselled by Haiti's IBCM programme be
292 ent) of out-of-hospital adult cardiac arrest victims with a first registered electrocardiography rhyt
293  including both blunt and penetrating trauma victims with a median injury severity score of 17.5 (int
294    Preliminaries studies suggest that stroke victims with a significant penumbra estimated by the dif
295 o occurred in Joplin, MO, leaving 13 tornado victims with Apophysomyces trapeziformis infections as a
296 1 were more likely to be benign fGGOs, while victims with m1GPS 2 more likely to be malignant.
297 ance, increase insurance premiums, and leave victims with significant out of pocket expenses.
298 ing of adolescent victims, bullies, or bully-victims with that of uninvolved peers.
299 ded that compared victims, bullies, or bully-victims with uninvolved peers.
300 relatives of UCA or sudden unexplained death victims, with a clear working diagnosis in 17%.

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