Coverage
in sentence
674 examples of Coverage in a sentence
Latin America and Southeast Asia have rapidly increased coverage, but at the current rate of progress in Africa, 50% of women will still deliver without skilled care in the year 2015.
The additional cost of maintaining essential newborn health interventions at 90%
coverage
in the 75 countries with the highest mortality is estimated to be a mere $4.1billion per year.
Kalanick, who declared in 2012, “I like pissing people off,” was the most directly responsible for these decisions, and recent news
coverage
of Uber has rightly held him up as a poster child for leadership gone wrong.
Initiatives like free universal pre-kindergarten, higher taxes on health-damaging substances, and broader vaccination
coverage
would probably do much more than precision medicine to enhance public health over the coming decades.
It can be combined with a system of measured, limited help in the sense of partial
coverage
of investors against a country’s insolvency.
While journalists in South Korea used this survey to demand reforms to improve English instruction in their country’s schools, the same survey hardly received any
coverage
in Japan.
But, at the same time, another legislative proposal was put forward to liberalize abortion laws, introduce sex education into schools, and guarantee insurance
coverage
of contraceptives.
They must expand into other avenues of appeal: public hearings, welfare lawsuits, enhanced media coverage, and other voluntary activities.
Fortunately, the information and communications technology revolution and the spread of broadband
coverage
nearly everywhere can quickly make such time lags a thing of the past.
But now, after years of investments, digital empowerment is underway, owing to a confluence of factors, including growing network coverage, more capable devices, and an expanding catalogue of applications.
Broadcast studios have been raided repeatedly, and the government regularly censors
coverage
of security operations in the country’s Kurdish regions.
The new mood of global economic regime change was captured in the official photograph that was widely used in
coverage
of the most successful of the G-20 summits, held in London in April 2009.
But media
coverage
has failed to look far enough into the future, and to comprehend the full extent of the changes that will be wrought by new forms of electronic money, as people and businesses invent new ways of doing business.
Inevitably, their
coverage
reflects enormous pressure to please the base – their advertisers or investors – or at least to avoid giving offense.
Financial re-regulation should and will emphasize capital, reserve, and margin requirements; limiting systemic risk buildup by constraining leverage; eliminating fragmented and incomplete regulatory
coverage
and regulatory arbitrage (a huge challenge internationally); and a focus on transparency.
The Japanese media’s
coverage
of the visit was overwhelmingly negative, and it was remembered as a public-relations disaster.
The lack of consensus on the magnitude of the problem, and gaps in legislative coverage, only serves to deepen the holes into which vulnerable populations stumble while attempting to make a living through artisanal e-waste mining.
Equally important, telecommunications reforms will expand coverage, lower consumer prices, and improve the quality of services.
While other US policies and tweets by President Donald Trump get far more coverage, the current administration’s rejection of free trade could be the biggest tragedy.
Such
coverage
also tends to individualize and psychologize social pathologies – another deep-seated American trait, and one reinforced by the lone-cowboy frontier ethos that is central to US mythology (and to gun mythology).
But little US
coverage
following a gun massacre assesses the impact of America’s health-care system, which is unaffordable to many, especially for those with mental-health problems.
For example, global
coverage
for the Hib vaccine is 72%, but only about 44% of the world’s children receive the complete course of the pneumococcal vaccine.
When Bloomberg and the New York Times published details about top leaders’ families (including Xi’s) who had their snouts deep in the trough, both came under severe official attack and were forced to curtail their China
coverage
rapidly.
RANKING WORLD INVESTMENTS1.Micronutrient supplements for children (vitamin A and zinc)2.The Doha development agenda3.Micronutrient fortification (iron and salt iodization)4.Expanded immunization
coverage
for children5.Improving agricultural technology6.De-worming and other school-based nutrition programs7.Lowering the price of schooling8.Increasing and improving girls’ education by paying mothers to send them to school9.Community-based nutrition promotion10.
Pumps and wells to improve water
coverage
in rural areas17.
The only business
coverage
tends to focus on the financial impact caused by the disruption of transport links such as the port of Calais.
Moreover, talk of disease “eradication” is unparalleled as a means to command funding, engage the attention of politicians, and garner positive media
coverage.
Big Brother, Tibet, and the Sichuan EarthquakeShanghai – Tight media control of the unrest in Tibet has been followed by what, to some, looks like far more open
coverage
of the devastating earthquake in Sichuan province.
Much to the consternation of the Western media, Chinese people worldwide lashed out against its allegedly biased
coverage
of the Tibetan riot.
Western reporting, once commended for its veracity, now seems discredited across China, although sympathetic
coverage
of the loss of life in Sichuan may have redeemed the Western media somewhat.
Back
Next
Related words
Health
Media
Universal
Their
Insurance
Countries
Which
People
Other
About
World
Global
While
Would
Public
Press
Country
Access
Immunization
Government