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1 ce of winning pound1000 if they attend their appointment).
2 t to follow-up (LTFU, >90 days late for last appointment).
3 nd within 96 hours in 22.6% (n = 223) of the appointment.
4 erative month 1 and at the last noted clinic appointment.
5 were granted to the author with an academic appointment.
6 2015, who did not attend their first offered appointment.
7 at the respective sites at a 6-month recall appointment.
8 event of non-attendance at the first offered appointment.
9 ly associated with attendance at a follow-up appointment.
10 oot planing of the tooth prior to a surgical appointment.
11 ome will be whether or not they attend their appointment.
12 3 (7.9%) are awaiting an upcoming scheduled appointment.
13 gimen of systemic antibiotics at the initial appointment.
14 complaints about your vision?" before their appointment.
15 for failing to attend an initial HIV clinic appointment.
16 ade 2 or 3 days before a scheduled follow-up appointment.
17 nic and 136/153 (88.9%) completed at least 1 appointment.
18 n the control group attended their scheduled appointment.
19 ss any electronic information also booked an appointment.
20 view shortly after their first KT evaluation appointment.
21 mplaints prior to their first allergy clinic appointment.
22 view shortly after their first KT evaluation appointment.
23 amination, 935 (52.9%) attended their clinic appointment.
24 tients with more than one prior primary care appointment.
25 e visits to women who missed an ANC or PMTCT appointment.
26 eographical location) on the risk of missing appointments.
27 st likely to have patients who serially miss appointments.
28 o the likelihood of missing general practice appointments.
29 ) significantly more likely to miss multiple appointments.
30 ite visits and, ultimately, more new patient appointments.
31 period timed in accordance with dermatologic appointments.
32 ples were taken at initial and re-evaluation appointments.
33 compromised in 48/105 (46%) of the recorded appointments.
34 d opening and served both urgent and routine appointments.
35 increase attendance at subsequent follow-up appointments.
36 ne, 1 month, and 6 months after dermatologic appointments.
37 ctivities (28%) to provide transportation to appointments.
38 d enrollees seeking new-patient primary care appointments.
39 ent schedules rewarded on-time attendance at appointments.
40 r the patient to schedule additional imaging appointments.
41 ent at baseline and the 3-, 6-, and 12-month appointments.
42 cidence of acute rejection and missed clinic appointments.
43 charged, 29 referred, and 141 offered review appointments.
44 ved referrals accounted for 50% (n = 493) of appointments.
45 als longer than 6 months or 1 year between 2 appointments.
46 mary care practitioner offering prescheduled appointments.
47 rdination that includes outpatient follow-up appointments.
48 titutions than faculty with less prestigious appointments.
49 more intensive reminders to help donors keep appointments.
53 r proportion attending a scheduled follow-up appointment (45 of 153 [29.4%] vs 38 of 201 [18.9%]; adj
55 by reminder message (73%), transportation to appointment (63%), and elimination of copayment (59%).
56 pants were enrolled in the study and, in one appointment; a dentist performed the self-reported quest
57 ns conveyed equipoise during RCT recruitment appointments across six RCTs, with a view to (i) identif
58 ial determinants of health, including missed appointments, active substance abuse, homelessness, and
59 ates eight weeks prior to enrollment, median appointment adherence after using the system increased b
64 sults indicate that compliance with clinical appointments among patients with PDR is a substantial cl
67 ed men, 100,444 (44%) attended their initial appointment and 82,429 (82%) of attenders had a PSA test
69 identified independent predictors of faculty appointment and K/RPG award, reporting adjusted odds rat
70 each of full-time academic-medicine faculty appointment and mentored-K and/or Research Project Grant
72 r pack failed to return for their subsequent appointment and therefore defaulted prior to receiving a
74 up intervention consisted of 4 weekly clinic appointments and 1 booster clinic at month 6, where mult
75 esigned to take place during routine service appointments and conducted in a community-based pain man
76 tive in reducing the frequency of outpatient appointments and emergency/critical care admissions.
77 umber of missed appointments from individual appointments and investigated the risk of missing a gene
79 the management of patients who miss multiple appointments and the effectiveness of existing strategie
80 investigated factors associated with missed appointments and whether such nonadherence poses signifi
81 of patients attending a previously scheduled appointment) and efficiency (attendance/[measures of sta
82 (appointment near home, transportation, home appointment) and reminder for visit compared with low-ra
83 baseline, 2 weeks after the initial therapy appointment, and 8 weeks after the completion of treatme
85 (95% CI, 21.9%-30.1%) by providing expedited appointments, and 19.8% (95% CI, 16.1%-23.5%) by providi
86 nvitation, provision of results or follow-up appointments, and patient navigators), 5 provider-level
87 tient education, arranging timely outpatient appointments, and providing telephone follow-up) have su
88 lity of information received during clinical appointments, and the potential benefits of communicatio
89 ood caries, one study on adherence to dental appointments, and two studies on abstinence of illicit d
90 t keeping at least 75% of scheduled HIV care appointments, and; 2) for those with VS at Index, having
91 are those who have been invited to screening appointments annually, but who have not attended, or tel
92 ts were more likely to have received faculty appointments (AOR 1.790; 95% CI 1.573-2.037) and federal
93 nking interventions related to time (weekend appointment, appointment after 5 pm) and telemedicine.
95 when the costs of medications and healthcare appointments are at odds with basic food and housing nee
97 His research talent at du Pont earned him an appointment as a Research Associate allowing him to purs
100 9 or 10) or DSM-IV code, or inferred from an appointment at a specialist eating disorder clinic.
102 hort study while attending routine antenatal appointments at one of two peri-urban community-based cl
103 ears, my work as a Berkeley professor led to appointments at the Western Human Nutrition Research Cen
104 choices between hypothetical painful dental appointments at time points of up to approximately eight
109 asured as the proportion of scheduled clinic appointments attended (i.e., visit adherence) or the pro
110 d, and 21 (55.3%) individuals with confirmed appointments attended their initial visit with a liver s
112 t's sex, age, years since residency, faculty appointment, authored publications, National Institutes
113 tatus) and practice-level factors (including appointment availability and geographical location) on t
115 ted in the ACA, was associated with improved appointment availability for Medicaid enrollees among pa
116 ries of participating dermatologists,and the appointment availability of listed physicians.DESIGN, SE
117 age point; P=0.002), (4) arranging follow-up appointments before discharge (0.19 percentage point; P=
118 unt Sinai Health System for their postpartum appointment between January 2, 2020 and June 30, 2020, c
120 dependence, CCM compared with a primary care appointment but no CCM did not increase self-reported ab
121 with anesthesia is increasing and no-show to appointments carries significant patient health and fina
123 ipating patients made 19% fewer face-to-face appointments, compared with 11% fewer in patients with h
124 e number to call to book their new screening appointment (control) in the event of non-attendance at
126 s: loss to follow-up (>12 months with no HIV appointment), death, administrative censoring (2011-2014
127 e MRI unit, concluding that delayed terms of appointments, despite numerous facilities being availabl
128 These sex differences in promotions and appointments did not diminish over time and were not sma
129 03; P < 0.0001) and "Ease of scheduling your appointment" (Diff[1-2]=0.99; P < 0.0001) best correlate
130 care being delayed because of wait times for appointments (difference-in-differences estimate, 2.6 pe
132 were randomized to receive a CR orientation appointment either within 10 days (early) or at 35 days
133 o interval recommendations for follow-up eye appointments, even though cost and accessibility were mi
134 es were invited to attend a specialist nurse appointment for a serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA)
137 obile-phone-based reminders of scheduled HIV appointments for carers of paediatric patients in low-re
140 le phone call increase attendance at medical appointments for HIV care in a population of children in
141 aid to assess whether willingness to provide appointments for new Medicaid enrollees was related to t
142 he attending radiologist to set up follow-up appointments for patients who underwent procedures with
143 9%) vs 17,354 men (28.6%) had full-professor appointments, for an absolute difference of -16.7% (95%
144 calculated the per-patient number of missed appointments from individual appointments and investigat
145 onal (teaching, board certification, faculty appointment, general cardiology practice, and hospital e
147 versus 59% (44/74) in the early and standard appointment groups, respectively, which demonstrates a s
148 iates, survivors given follow-up psychiatric appointments had significantly lower likelihood of subse
149 Additionally, cancer follow-up or imaging appointments have been delayed in many clinics around th
150 health services outcomes (attending medical appointments, having a medical home, and avoidance of un
153 ients booked for their second virtual clinic appointment in a tertiary eye care referral center betwe
155 aught in the Bonn Anatomy Department, had an appointment in the University Clinic, and ran a small pr
156 ed the availability of and waiting times for appointments in 10 states during two periods: from Novem
158 of US physicians with medical school faculty appointments in 2014 (91,073 physicians; 9.1% of all US
159 US cardiologists with medical school faculty appointments in 2014 by using the American Association o
160 adiologists with U.S. medical school faculty appointments in 2014, men and women were similarly likel
162 rimester of pregnancy, attended four or more appointments in antenatal care, and received four compon
167 women, but were somewhat more likely to miss appointments in the adjusted model (1.05, 1.04-1.06).
168 to the recommended interval of follow-up eye appointments in the facility's ophthalmology service as
172 Preventive goals are agreed, and a review appointment is made with child's general dental practiti
173 recovery due to impaired self-management and appointment-keeping, clinicians may consider serious men
178 charge summary, a family physician follow-up appointment less than 1 week after discharge, and, for h
179 he ED visit (P < .001), additional follow-up appointments (<.001), no prior history of ophthalmology
180 be adherent at 6 weeks if they had follow-up appointments made before discharge and had a provider ex
183 LUTS patients attending their first clinical appointment (mean age, 48.7 years; standard deviation [S
184 RT) naive, had at least 1 viral load and HIV appointment measure after ART initiation, and a depressi
185 ng allergists with US medical school faculty appointments, men and women were similarly likely to be
186 al-level patterns of missed general practice appointments might thus provide a risk marker for vulner
187 both patient and practice factors to predict appointments missed gave a higher pseudo R(2) value (0.6
188 waited to start treatment and percentage of appointments missed were negatively associated with outc
189 r called about a new patient, 31.7% of these appointments (n = 131) led to surgery versus 10% (n = 14
190 ed about an existing patient, 37.5% of these appointments (n = 27) led to surgery versus 12.8% (n = 4
191 re similarly ranked: reminder message (48%), appointment near home (46%), elimination of copay (46%),
192 h-ranking interventions related to location (appointment near home, transportation, home appointment)
193 low-income patients hospitalized with HF, an appointment near the patient's home and a reminder messa
195 LMM) to estimate the risk and odds ratios of appointment non-attendance or unsuppressed viral load at
197 ween the second and sixth years of follow-up appointments, none of the subjects received treatment un
200 by SRP with (test) and without (control) two appointments of professional tooth cleaning but with mot
202 n uptake of hospital-based Lung Health Check appointments offering LDCT screening.Methods: In a two-a
205 cation on the Internet, scheduling a medical appointment on the Internet, communicating with healthca
206 oriented eHealth practices (e.g., scheduling appointments on the Internet, communicating with provide
207 he effects of multidisciplinary group clinic appointments on the primary outcome of time to first hea
209 s find opportunities for discussion at later appointments or if results become relevant as medical ne
210 buprenorphine prescribers did not offer new appointments or rapid buprenorphine access to callers re
212 .007); missing more than 10% of non-eye care appointments (OR, 1.61; P = .038); and receiving only PR
214 or home care as needed, and recommendations, appointments, or both for follow-up care with physicians
215 ic floor muscle training (five physiotherapy appointments over 16 weeks, and annual review) plus Pila
218 s (<.001), no prior history of ophthalmology appointments (P = .045), a visual acuity of 20/40 or bet
220 aseline, defined as the average IOP of the 2 appointments prior to the SLT procedure, was 18.7 mm Hg.
221 tly, as clinics begin to re-open for routine appointments, protocols have been put in place to reduce
222 cine by comparing the number of face-to-face appointments provided in 2016 to 2019 with the number pr
223 ribute to non-attendance of general practice appointments raise important questions for both the mana
224 ry care clinicians may eliminate unnecessary appointments, reduce wait time for treatment, lower cost
225 ds, waiting times to a scheduled new-patient appointment remained stable over time in the two study g
226 eturning for care visit, interim visit call, appointment reminder calls, missed visit call); EC + ski
227 laboratory test timing, flexible scheduling, appointment reminder methods, and stigma support service
228 laboratory test timing, flexible scheduling, appointment reminder methods, and stigma support service
233 reatment-eligible participants, mobile phone appointment reminders, health educational packages, and
235 iage call disposition for patient 'same-day' appointment requests in general practice using multivari
236 etinal specialty clinics, 41% of after-hours appointment requests resulted in an intervention within
238 linical recommendations and missed scheduled appointments, resulting in intervals longer than 6 month
239 cs are continuing to monitor and adapt their appointment schedules based on local outbreaks of COVID-
240 time spent with the practitioner and ease of appointment scheduling are the 2 variables that best cor
241 fined as 90 or more days late for their last appointment), selected a random sample, and intensively
242 ity to find items around the house, remember appointments, shop and pay for items, do laundry, drive
243 6; 95% CI, 1.92-2.81), were unable to get an appointment soon enough (OR, 2.04; 95% CI, 1.73-2.41), h
245 if WES were performed at the first genetics appointment, there would be an incremental cost savings
248 red included year of board certification and appointment to program director, academic rank, National
249 nvitations for breast screening with a timed appointment to women who did not attend their first offe
251 azard ratio, 0.77; 95% CI, 0.74 to 0.81) and appointments to department chair (hazard ratio, 0.46; 95
252 control parents attended individual coaching appointments to receive linguistic feedback, listen to l
253 ch' book plus 3-4 short face to face support appointments totalling up to 2 hours of guided support,
255 on uptake, change in BP, change in clinician appointment use, and participants' views on features tha
256 gated the risk of missing a general practice appointment using a negative binomial model offset by nu
257 and prospectively at three 9-month follow-up appointments using the Inventory of Depression and Anxie
258 d samples were collected at routine clinical appointment visits, clinical data were collected within
259 visit length) and 2 access-to-care metrics (appointment wait time and no-show rate) were tracked.
260 ese inaccuracies occurred in areas with long appointment wait times and where plans are terminating s
261 the accuracy of network directories and the appointment wait times varied substantially by health pl
262 ctices in affluent areas that typically have appointment waiting times of 2-3 days the most likely to
265 to assistance in making a follow-up eye care appointment was associated with nonadherence (odds ratio
266 cipation within 90 days of the first offered appointment was significantly higher in the intervention
268 in the pregnancy and who attended screening appointments was beneficial in encouraging the responsib
270 he pooled effects on the number of cancelled appointments was not significantly increased RR 1.08 (95
271 hin 90 days of the date of the first offered appointment; we used Poisson regression to compare the p
275 Factors associated with adhering to interval appointments were having an advanced age (odds ratio, 1.
276 rm, AED plasma levels were available at each appointment, whereas in the rescue TDM arm, levels were
277 ometimes multiple times-for these short-term appointments, which creates challenges that can dispropo
278 s also associated with longer wait times for appointments, which suggests that challenges in access t
280 no treatment (attendance of one reassessment appointment with a specialist shoulder clinician 3 month
281 0.81), patients who attended a pre-operative appointment with an anesthesiologist (OR 0.52; CI 0.32-0
282 ical record-based messages shortly before an appointment with an anticoagulation-eligible but untreat
284 d (1:1) to receive an invitation to a second appointment with fixed date and time (intervention) or a
285 ide follow-up or an initial in-person clinic appointment with primary care physicians providing usual
286 nrolled during their preoperative outpatient appointment with the following criteria: greater than 1
287 uninsured-self-pay contacts were offered an appointment with the possibility of buprenorphine prescr
291 These findings show that a policy of second appointments with fixed date and time for non-attenders
293 tely did not improve attendance at follow-up appointments with primary care providers, improve asthma
294 lier with shorter waiting times for hospital appointments with the new Scottish general ophthalmic se
297 women who did not attend their first offered appointment within the NHS Breast Screening Programme (N
298 ed by a member of the adult team and a first appointment within this new healthcare setting, were imp