Kuwait Clause Samples
Kuwait. Unless all necessary approvals from the Kuwait Ministry of Commerce and Industry required by Law No. 31/1990, its Executive Regulations and the various Ministerial Orders issued pursuant thereto or in connection therewith, have been given in relation to the marketing, of and sale of the notes, these notes may not be offered for sale, nor sold in the State of Kuwait. Neither this pricing supplement, nor any of the information contained therein is intended to lead to the conclusion of any contract of whatsoever nature within Kuwait.
Kuwait. If either Party is located in the State of Kuwait, the country specific provisions provided in Section 16.8, below, for Qatar shall apply. In addition, the following sentences shall be added to the end of Section 2.7: If Your Content contains Personal Data (as this term is defined in applicable data privacy provisions under Kuwaiti law including and not limited to Law No. 20 of 2014) or if Personal Data is otherwise transferred to us pursuant to the DSA or other applicable regulations, you represent that you have obtained the relevant individuals’ consent on the cross-boundary transfer and provided them with the relevant privacy notices to the extent necessary under applicable privacy laws.
Kuwait. A diabetes risk score was developed in Kuwait in 2010 using data from a cross-sectional study (▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇, Eid, Najjar, Alhajry, & ▇▇▇▇▇▇, 2010). In this study, data was collected from 460 government employees using multi-stage cluster sampling, excluding pregnant women and those previously diagnosed with diabetes. The outcome of diabetes was defined using the American Diabetes Association’s definition of FPG ≥ 126 mg/dL or random plasma glucose ≥ 200 mg/dL. The risk score was developed using forward stepwise logistic regression and the final model included four variables: age, waist circumference, treatment for hypertension, and presence of a sibling with diabetes. The risk score had a sensitivity of 87% and specificity of 64%, but was not validated. When the authors tested the Omani diabetes risk score on this population, they found that the Omani risk score was more sensitive (96%), but less specific (42%). This was different than how the Omani diabetes risk score performed in the Omani population, suggesting the importance of validating risk scores in each target population. Since this study only included individuals who worked for the government, the results may not be generalizable to the greater adult population in Kuwait.
