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IN COMMUNITIES AND HEALTH-CARE SYSTEMS
Given that tobacco use is the largest zoloft cause of death in the United States, reducing tobacco use and ETS exposure should be relevant to most communities. In selecting and implementing interventions, zoloft should strive to develop a comprehensive strategy to reduce exposure.
Force evaluations in this report are based on these qualifying studies, all of which had good or fair execution.
On the basis of the evidence of effectiveness, the Task Force either strongly recommended or recommended nine of the 14 strategies zoloft (Table 2). These nine recommendations include one intervention to reduce exposure to ETS (smoking bans and restrictions), zoloft interventions to reduce tobacco-use initiation (increasing the unit price for tobacco products and multicomponent mass media campaigns), and six zoloft to increase cessation zoloft the unit price for tobacco products; multicomponent mass media campaigns; provider reminder systems; a combined provider reminder plus provider education with or without patient education program; multicomponent interventions zoloft telephone support for persons who want to stop using tobacco; and zoloft patient out-of-pocket costs for effective cessation therapies). In addition zoloft the zoloft completed evaluations, reviews for three more tobacco prevention.
of recommendations (e.g., strong evidence of effectiveness corresponds to an intervention being strongly recommended, and sufficient.
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