'It was an incidental cause'
You can use "incidental" in a sentence like this: "The incidental details in her presentation added depth to her main argument, making it more engaging for the audience." This demonstrates how something minor or secondary can enhance a primary focus.
incidental means not a major part of something. His injuries were a result of incidental damage. That is an incidental fact, not related to the main argument.
Having the fastest time was incidental to winning the race.
I tripped, incidentally, my enemy's leg was out where I had tripped.
After discovering that his partner was embezzling from their firm, the man shot the culprit; the fact that his partner was also having sex with the man's wife was incidental.
The Incidental Economist was created in 2009.
A parenthesis is used in a sentence to indicate that you wish to interrupt your own sentence to include some comment or information that is incidental to the actual point of statement that your sentence is making. This is actually quite similar to the use of commas, which are used to separate different clauses of a sentence so that they don't all run together, but the parenthesis does so with greater emphasis, it sets something apart more forcefully than commas do.
Physical safeguards are
all the above
Incidental uses or disclosures of protected health information (PHI) that occur as a byproduct of an otherwise permitted use or disclosure under the HIPAA Privacy Rule are not considered violations, provided that reasonable safeguards were in place to minimize such occurrences. For example, if a patient's conversation is overheard in a waiting room while staff is discussing their care, this is an incidental disclosure. However, healthcare providers must still take appropriate measures to limit the potential for such incidental disclosures.
all the above
Established appropriate physical and technical safeguards