Example sentences of "[prep] need for [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Overall , whilst this variation undoubtedly includes examples of good assessment practice , there is also evidence that the general level of social services assessment of older people is restricted to the assessment of need for specific services , often requested by a carer , a general practitioner , or other third party , frequently undertaken by untrained ancillary staff ( Means , 1981 ; Black et al. , 1983 ; Bowl , 1986 ) .
2 In his pioneering study , Noel Boaden ‘ suggests that activity in any service will depend on the incidence of need for that service , on the disposition of the authority to provide the service and on the availability of resources with which to provide the service ’ ( Boaden 1971:21 ) .
3 If some form of assessment of need for such care is introduced , as seems likely , we shall then have a situation in which old people with private means can choose such care but most will have to prove need .
4 Health costs in the previous four years had risen at 15 per cent per annum and the President instituted a requirement for certificates of need for any hospital expenditure over $150 000 .
5 The anonymous questionnaire filled in by participants after each course highlight areas of need for further training , give the staff opportunity to criticise the day , suggest improvements , and to spotlight what they found most helpful .
6 Anyway if you wan na give a donation to children in need for that , dial .
7 The second key component in the RAWP procedure consists of an adjustment which is intended to represent regional differentials in need for each service .
8 The clinical course of osteonecrosis is unpredictable in the individual case but it often disables the patient and results in need for alloplastic joint operations .
9 The only area that I 'm saying is in need for careful consideration is that related to risks associated with the possibilities of food poisoning and very high-risk food handling .
10 Unfortunately there are still many people who think it is nothing but a fringe event , an extra little treat grafted onto their work without need for fundamental or organizational change .
11 The policies of the Fabians were described by Beatrice Webb during the 1890s as ‘ essentially collective ownership wherever practicable ; collective regulation everywhere else ; collective provision according to need for all the impotent and sufferers ; and collective taxation in proportion to wealth ’ .
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