Showing 1,881 - 1,900 results of 4,620 for search 'significantly ((((((less decrease) OR (larger decrease))) OR (mean decrease))) OR (teer decrease))', query time: 0.65s Refine Results
  1. 1881
  2. 1882
  3. 1883
  4. 1884
  5. 1885
  6. 1886

    Map showing the intervention and control LGAs. by Chinwe C. Eze (8787503)

    Published 2025
    “…However, post-intervention, the adjusted mean SARI Stigma Score significantly decreased in the intervention group compared to the control group, with an adjusted mean difference of 37.72 (95% CI: 36.01–39.43, p < 0.000).…”
  7. 1887

    Consort diagram. by Chinwe C. Eze (8787503)

    Published 2025
    “…However, post-intervention, the adjusted mean SARI Stigma Score significantly decreased in the intervention group compared to the control group, with an adjusted mean difference of 37.72 (95% CI: 36.01–39.43, p < 0.000).…”
  8. 1888
  9. 1889
  10. 1890
  11. 1891
  12. 1892
  13. 1893
  14. 1894
  15. 1895
  16. 1896
  17. 1897

    COVID19 effect on essential services. by Admas Abera (11821659)

    Published 2024
    “…The present study found that the mean number of patients treated for TB declined by 35 patients (β: -34.62; 95%CI: -50.29, -18.95) compared to the pre-COVID-19 era while the number of new patients enrolled for ART decreased by 71 patients (β: -70.62; 95%CI: -107.19, -34.05). …”
  18. 1898

    Tuning curve sharpening and familiarity suppression. by Weifan Wang (4669081)

    Published 2025
    “…Both learning rules result in a statistically significant decrease in the SI. The inset shows the convergence of the distribution’s mean over training epochs. …”
  19. 1899

    R scripts. by Ehsan Ghafouri (21688451)

    Published 2025
    “…<div><p>Climate change has emerged as a significant driver of biodiversity loss, with profound implications for species distribution. …”
  20. 1900

    Bioclimatic variables used in the study. by Ehsan Ghafouri (21688451)

    Published 2025
    “…<div><p>Climate change has emerged as a significant driver of biodiversity loss, with profound implications for species distribution. …”