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1 ypertension care in Los Angeles County Black-owned barbershops significantly improved blood pressure
2 LARC (outcome), teaching hospital, Catholic-owned or operated, obstetrical care level, and urban or
3 dialysis at for-profit and non-profit chain-owned facilities, and were more likely to receive dialys
4 atients started dialysis at for-profit/chain-owned facilities compared to 76% of all patients startin
5 et reliant received care at for-profit/chain-owned facilities, they were disproportionately cared for
15 phoma (NHL), we expanded T cells from client-owned canines diagnosed with NHL on artificial antigen p
17 subgingival microbial communities in client-owned cats, comparing findings between periodontally hea
18 terization of the serum metabolome of client-owned cats with chronic kidney disease (CKD), which shar
19 cted tissues derived from a cohort of client-owned cats with FCGS compared to tissues from unaffected
24 not consider employment by a private equity-owned practice, and 81.4% of vitreoretinal fellows voice
31 cluding surpluses in academic and government-owned practices, a shortage of radiologists in private r
32 t percent of radiologists were in government-owned practices, and 15% (primarily academic) were in pr
33 o attended eye clinics at a large government-owned or a privately owned health facility in Enugu, Nig
36 80) higher odds respectively than government-owned facilities, the availability of a computer had 46%
37 nd patients, between 2009 and 2012, hospital-owned physician organizations in California incurred hig
38 r patient (95% CI, $2892 to $3240), hospital-owned physician organizations had mean expenditures of $
39 or fully integrated (enrolled in a hospital-owned MA plan and surgical procedure performed at the ho
40 indings suggest that enrolling in a hospital-owned MA plan and undergoing a surgical procedure at the
41 partially integrated (enrolled in a hospital-owned MA plan but surgical procedure performed at nonaff
42 .1-15.3) percentage points lower at hospital-owned practices, large independent practices, and small
43 ing outpatient knee arthroplasty at hospital-owned surgery centers (HOSCs) vs freestanding ambulatory
44 ons using databases from California hospital-owned and nonhospital-owned ambulatory facilities, emerg
45 cess to FASCs may increase, leaving hospital-owned centers to bear a greater share of the burden of c
46 ther factors over the period, local hospital-owned physician organizations incurred expenditures per
47 er nonintegrated (enrolled in a non-hospital-owned MA plan), partially integrated (enrolled in a hosp
48 ned the association of the entry of hospital-owned satellite freestanding EDs with medical debt betwe
51 ncluded percentage of fills with the insurer-owned mail-order pharmacy, percentage of fills with a 90
52 located in areas of low need and investment-owned homes located more in areas with low house prices.
53 pared with Local Authority homes, investment-owned homes were less likely to operate in areas of high
56 esults reflect shifts in ED care at investor-owned facilities, which limits generalizability to other
57 rating health care consolidation by investor-owned organizations, government austerity policies, and
58 ed to Chevron, the highest-emitting investor-owned company in our data, for example, very likely caus
59 Compared with not-for-profit HMOs, investor-owned plans had lower rates for all 14 quality-of-care i
60 ial infarction, 59.2% of members in investor-owned HMOs vs 70.6% in not-for-profit plans received a b
61 anization (HMO) members enrolled in investor-owned plans has increased sharply, yet little is known a
62 patients with diabetes mellitus in investor-owned plans vs 47.9% in not-for-profit plans had annual
63 verhead and profits of the private, investor-owned insurance industry and reducing spending for marke
65 the federal government frowned on a military-owned educational system that also served civilians.
66 om California hospital-owned and nonhospital-owned ambulatory facilities, emergency departments, and
67 A total of 1833 calls were made to 204 PE-owned and 407 control clinics without PE ownership acros
70 94%-99%; P = .02) were slightly higher at PE-owned clinics (compared with 94.6% [95% CI, 92%-96%] and
75 s similar regardless of clinic ownership, PE-owned clinics were more likely than controls to offer ne
76 SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: In this study, PE-owned US clinics were randomly selected and matched with
79 CI, 1.7% to 19.7%) higher than did physician-owned organizations (adjusted difference, $435 [95% CI,
80 suggest that physicians working in physician-owned practices are more likely to be satisfied with the
81 93 respondents [68.1%]) working in physician-owned practices reported being satisfied with their EHR
87 t physicians practicing in solo or physician-owned practices are more likely to be satisfied with the
90 physician organizations (75%) were physician-owned and provided care for 3,065,551 patients, 19 organ
91 d 15% (primarily academic) were in privately-owned practices in which all physicians were employees.
92 ed, and breed group differences of privately-owned dogs from Japan (n = 2,951) and the United States
96 isition, or closure involving medical school-owned or medical school-affiliated hospitals used for co
98 2) pollution increases more quickly at state-owned plants accountable to the central government, comp
99 efficiency of resource allocation for state-owned enterprises, enterprises in non-monopoly industrie
100 as transferring at least 25% of large state-owned enterprises to the private sector within 2 years w
103 to the central government, compared to state-owned plants accountable to the local (city or below) go
105 , 35% practiced in hospital or health system-owned practices, while 27% practiced in independently ow