Recurrence
in sentence
84 examples of Recurrence in a sentence
In particular, indefinite detention without trial needs to be addressed to avoid the
recurrence
of problems.
This
recurrence
rate demonstrates that many risks are not being properly managed or regulated, which is worrying, to say the least, especially given the harm that even a single serious accident can cause.
As Robert Schuman promised when he conceived the idea of a European Community, integration has prevented the
recurrence
of war between Germany and France.
How else to explain its efforts to rescind the 2010 Dodd-Frank regulatory reforms, designed to prevent a
recurrence?
Deng Xiaoping added them to the Chinese constitution after the Cultural Revolution, in order to prevent the
recurrence
of chaotic and brutal one-man rule.
This limited regional scenario (accounting for 0.04% of the total explosive power of today’s arsenals) recognizes the fallibility of nuclear deterrence, as well as the possible
recurrence
of the risk factors that led to the Cuban missile crisis, including miscalculation, miscommunication, military escalation, and, potentially, rogue commanders.
So one of the G20’s top priorities this year will be our work to prevent a
recurrence
of a global financial and economic crisis like that of 2008-2009, which stemmed from a myopic, debt-based growth model.
After a second or third episode, the risk of
recurrence
rises to 80-90%.
Early onset depression (before 20 years of age) is particularly associated with a significantly higher risk of relapse and
recurrence.
The problem with viewing antidepressants as the main method for preventing
recurrence
is that many people do not want to stay on medication for indefinite periods, and when the medication stops, the risk of becoming depressed again returns.
But the shelter that national markets provide is illusory: the only way to increase the resilience of financial markets and to ensure that
recurrence
of this kind of crisis becomes less likely is to build a regulatory framework that is commensurate with integrated markets.
In their excellent book Dollar and Yen , Ronald McKinnon and Kenici Ohno provide an answer: the
recurrence
of endaka fukyo , a "strong yen recession," which the authors attribute to a "strong yen syndrome" rooted in persistent trade frictions between the US and Japan.
With a growing number of cancer survivors, we need to understand better the twin processes of tumor dormancy and metastatic cancer
recurrence.
But without continued investment in CHWs, whose costs are modest compared to those of traditional health-care systems, it will be difficult for the international community and national governments to stop the spread – and prevent the
recurrence
– of Ebola and other devastating epidemics.
In its 2011 World Development Report, the World Bank belatedly recognized that “[t]o break the cycles of insecurity and reduce the risk of recurrence, national reformers and their international partners need to build the legitimate institutions that can provide….a
It has said that it will redouble its efforts to prevent the
recurrence
of such abductions.
Financial-market participants need to demonstrate that they understand their role in causing the crisis, and that they are willing to significantly contribute to preventing its
recurrence.
Research in Peru has shown that fortifying oral rehydration solution with two of the primary protective proteins in breast milk, lactoferrin and lysozyme, lessens the duration of diarrhea and reduces the rate of
recurrence.
Moreover, over the twelve-month follow-up period, the children who had received the rice-based solution had less than half the
recurrence
rate of diarrhea (8% versus 18% in the control sample).
But we want structured co-operation - meaning that some European states may press ahead in defense capacity - because we are not prepared to let the more cautious and hesitant dictate a
recurrence
of the Balkan tragedy of the 1990's, when Europeans couldn't act and Americans wouldn't (for a while).
A new Peace-building Commission was also created to coordinate actions that could help prevent a
recurrence
of genocidal acts.
In my case, they could have gone something like this: assume you have a 70% chance of survival (defined as no
recurrence
for five years) if you simply have the tumor removed.
Radiation and chemotherapy treatments can reduce
recurrence
by a further 30%.
That sounds like a lot, until you realize that it means your “survival” chances go up only nine points, from 70% to 79%, because it is the 30%
recurrence
rate that drops 30%, to 21%.
Was I willing to take on three years of aggressive treatment and potential long-term side-effects for a 10-point increase in my chances of being alive and cancer-free for five years, especially since no one really knows what the chances of
recurrence
in 10 or 20 years are?
Meanwhile, five years from now there may be new drugs that are more effective and less toxic, mitigating the downside of a later
recurrence.
While politicians talk about their commitment to regulatory reform to prevent a
recurrence
of the crisis, this is one area where the devil really is in the details – and the banks will muster what muscle they have left to ensure that they have ample room to continue as they have in the past.
Underlying this
recurrence
is the instinctive feeling that economic calamities must have monetary causes, and therefore monetary remedies.
Provided that there is no
recurrence
of the severe external demand shock of 2008 – a likely outcome unless Europe implodes – there is good reason to hope for a soft landing to around 8% GDP growth.
If we are honest about the causes of the 2008 crisis – and serious about avoiding its
recurrence
– we must accept what economic analysis cannot deliver in order to benefit from what it can.
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