コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 ebridement interval > 72 hours (73 of the 80 civilians).
2 ar profiles comparable to those of PTSD-free civilians.
3 tly weaker in military personnel relative to civilians.
4 eir higher likelihood of suicide relative to civilians.
5 1360780 in a sample of 82 traumatized female civilians.
6 83) of predominantly female African American civilians.
7 ry-owned educational system that also served civilians.
8 enetic predictor of lifespan, in traumatized civilians.
9 sample of noninstitutionalized United States civilians.
10 sistent with deliberate tactics to terrorise civilians.
11 ersonnel and PROWL-2 was a 5-center study of civilians.
13 y service personnel and PROWL-2 enrolled 312 civilians 21 years or older who spoke English; 241 indiv
15 with sarcoidosis significantly differed from civilians, according to metabolic and metallomics profil
16 can help close the gap between military and civilian actors to catalyse the contributions of all par
17 ith a representative US noninstitutionalized civilian adult (>/=18 years) sample (N = 36309) as the 2
18 is includes 3.7 million noninstitutionalized civilian adults in the United States with HCV antibodies
20 a major problem among military veterans and civilians alike, yet its pathophysiology remains poorly
21 gely similar to those reported elsewhere for civilians, although some predictors distinct to Army ser
28 y has produced innovations resulting in both civilian and military medical care advances, and our cur
29 n be developed using biologically compatible civilian and military populations as cytokine response i
32 population (41 +/- 19 vs. 26 +/- 7 years for civilian and military respectively, P < 0.0001) with a l
34 The discoveries were rapidly translated to civilian and military trauma surgical practices and fund
35 lure from surgical and medical ICUs across 5 civilian and Veteran Affairs (VA) hospitals from 2010 to
36 281 deaths by execution, 18 747 (92.4%) were civilians and 1534 (7.6%) were opposition combatants.
38 Burn Center serves as a referral center for civilians and is the sole center for significant burns i
39 ental health outcome among seriously injured civilians and military personnel who are survivors of tr
40 l, and temporal patterns of direct deaths of civilians and opposition combatants from conflict-relate
43 dataset, 26% (30,644 of 117,165) of injured civilians, and 11% (12,284 of 108,624) of civilian death
44 TSD from soldiers without PTSD, from healthy civilians, and from civilians with mild traumatic brain
46 Modern energetic motifs for military and civilian applications are most often evaluated using var
48 stries, the use of titanium in industrial or civilian applications has been extremely limited because
51 l outbreaks among both military recruits and civilians as the virus emerged for the first time in the
52 ctions seem to be part of a broad assault on civilians; assaults on medical functions are used to ach
53 y be warranted in military troops as well as civilians at both short- and long-term milestones follow
55 developed and field-tested a now operational civilian biodefense capability that continuously monitor
57 n and had disproportionate lethal effects on civilians, calling into question the use of wide-area ex
59 of combat care and that simply extrapolating civilian care concepts to the battlefield are insufficie
60 article, can possibly be adapted to those of civilian care during disaster management to meet the cha
62 isolates recovered from pediatric and adult civilian cases of acute respiratory infection were chara
63 HAdV-14 has been isolated from military and civilian cases of ARD of variable severity since 2003 in
67 caused 19% (42,928 of 225,789) of all Iraqi civilian casualties in our dataset, 26% (30,644 of 117,1
68 imentation, and drone strikes that result in civilian casualties, but not practices where harm is per
71 85 (74.6%) civilian women and 13 810 (79.4%) civilian children, and in 4058 (9.6%) opposition combata
75 gnificant effects on police use of force and civilian complaints, as well as other policing activitie
78 ht were also significantly higher than their civilian counterparts (OR, 1.87; 95% CI, 1.80-1.95 and O
86 on making for law enforcement, military, and civilian emergency organizations and responders, providi
87 casualties suffer wounds that have no common civilian equivalent and more frequently require massive
89 heir families and dependents in military and civilian facilities across the United States from Januar
90 l claims from United States DOD military and civilian facilities, January 1, 2003 through March 31, 2
91 , resulting in thousands of homes burned and civilian fatalities, although devastating, are not witho
92 rk debate by directly predicting the race of civilians fatally shot rather than comparing the rate at
93 lations are likely to draw interest from the civilian fireworks and military pyrotechnics communities
94 ts may garner widespread use in military and civilian fireworks because of their low hygroscopicities
95 lysis showed similar cytokine responses when civilians followed a military-like treatment schedule wi
97 The wars caused many deaths of non-combatant civilians, further damaged the health-supporting infrast
101 lirium, non-White race, lower education, and civilian hospitals (as opposed to VA), were associated w
102 h enables veteran access to surgical care at civilian hospitals if certain eligibility criteria are m
104 ts with those from brain specimens from male civilian (ie, non-military) cases with no history of bla
105 domized survey conducted in July 2004 of 153 civilians in 3 towns exposed to warfare in northwestern
106 human rights violations perpetrated against civilians in Darfur and to evaluate their consistency wi
109 g a nuclear weapon to kill millions of enemy civilians in the hope of ending a ground war that threat
110 a fifth, using nuclear weapons against enemy civilians (in survey 1) or approving of disproportionate
111 lling and air bombardments in 58 099 (57.3%) civilians, including 8285 (74.6%) civilian women and 13
112 ded to Rt of 1.52 (95% CI, 1.30-1.74), while civilian-induced events corresponded to Rt of 1.43 (95%
113 Ebola-targeted violence, primarily driven by civilian-induced events, had the largest impact on EBOV
114 Ebola-targeted or Ebola-untargeted, and into civilian-induced, (para)military/political, or protests.
117 more than the collateral damage inflicted on civilians, infrastructure, environment, and health syste
122 ted from infected and colonized soldiers and civilians involved in an outbreak in the military health
125 s troops return from Iraq and Afghanistan to civilian life, clinicians are starting to grapple with h
128 ld soldiers who were male (n=333), deaths of civilian male children (n=11 730) were caused more often
129 00 veterans resident in Scotland and 173,000 civilians matched on age, sex, and area of residence.
130 review of published literature pertaining to civilian medical disaster response efforts support these
131 unprecedented patient numbers and levels of civilian medical expertise, little progress was made in
133 to compare deaths from different weapons in civilian men, women, boys, and girls and adult and child
134 d to guidelines on management of mild TBI in civilians, military personnel, and athletes, but their w
136 range of the military cohort were excluded, civilian mortality was 5.0%, which did not differ from t
139 osives traces may have an enormous impact on civilian national security, military applications, and e
140 and rapidly could be of enormous benefit to civilian national security, military applications, and e
141 3,742 adults aged 30 years and older, of the civilian non-institutionalized population, having 1 or m
143 entative health examination survey of the US civilian noninstitutionalized population that includes m
147 alyzed a nationally representative sample of civilian noninstitutionalized US men from the National H
148 om a nationally representative sample of the civilian noninstitutionalized US population in 2009-2010
153 ted that, in 2015, 91.8 million (37.8%) U.S. civilian, noninstitutionalized adults used prescription
156 Results were weighted to represent the U.S. civilian, noninstitutionalized population between 14 and
158 tromethane in a representative sample of the civilian, noninstitutionalized population in the United
162 FL; Chicago, IL; and San Diego, CA) of U.S. civilian, noninstitutionalized self-identifying Hispanic
163 vey of a nationally representative sample of civilian, noninstitutionalized U.S. households, conducte
164 a from a nationally representative sample of civilian, noninstitutionalized US individuals younger th
165 nce estimates were weighted to represent the civilian, noninstitutionalized US population aged 40 yea
166 of nationally representative samples of the civilian, noninstitutionalized US population; 2781 adult
167 cidence and prevalence rates for the overall civilian, noninstitutionalized, US population and by dem
168 ly source of radioactive release in cases of civilian nuclear events; however, their physicochemical
169 open-globe injury was highest in host nation civilians (odds ratio [OR], 9.23; P < 0.001), but there
171 lly capable of causing mass destruction to a civilian or military population by inhalation of toxic b
172 ents are likely to cause maximum damage to a civilian or military population through an inhalational
174 rasian region, and whether it derives from a civilian or military source, is of major importance for
175 resistant tuberculosis who had treatment in civilian or prison services, between Sept 10, 2000, and
180 as the standard of care for severely injured civilian patients requiring emergent laparotomy in the U
185 mon mode of neurotrauma amongst military and civilian personnel due to an increased insurgent activit
188 esearch effort with hundreds of military and civilian physicians and scientists representing discipli
189 revalence of HCV in the noninstitutionalized civilian population and used a combination of literature
190 bility sample of the US noninstitutionalized civilian population and was conducted between 1988 and 1
191 recruited from an urban, highly traumatized civilian population at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlant
192 o develop a method for performing REBOA in a civilian population using a standardized distance from a
194 B Ads suggests a common external source (the civilian population) and a decrease in preexisting immun
195 samples of the adult, noninstitutionalized, civilian population, have estimated the prevalence of re
207 gents and toxic industrial chemicals against civilian populations constitutes a real threat, as demon
209 orror is all too common in both military and civilian populations, but not all individuals develop po
214 ments have hired veterans preferentially for civilian public jobs as recompense for active military s
215 of initiation devices used for military and civilian purposes continues to expand owing to variation
217 Deaths from barrel bombs were overwhelmingly civilian rather than opposition combatants, suggesting i
218 nsistent with the isotopic fingerprints of a civilian Russian water-water energetic reactor (VVER) fu
219 nected secondary school students from public civilian schools in every county and almost all school d
221 rograms where surgeons from the military and civilian sectors can gain exposure to the techniques, ex
226 and Relevance: Following an explosion in the civilian setting, 65 patients (38%) with GCS scores of 3
227 ring January-December 1918 in 8 military and civilian settings in the United States and Britain.
228 fferent transmission routes is suggested for civilian settings similar to those described in the curr
229 dvances in trauma care, in both military and civilian settings, and presents directions for future re
231 lent crime strongly predicts the race of the civilian shot; and 3) although we find no overall eviden
233 occurring now, the military adopts existing civilian standard of care practices developed for simila
235 serve component soldiers who had returned to civilian status were referred at higher rates on the PDH
237 y and may provide more accurate results than civilian studies, given the potential biases in the incl
238 rates among Army suicide attempts than among civilian suicide attempts highlights the potential impor
240 l research to shed light on the lessons that civilian surgery has learned from the military system an
242 et rates were lower than in a prior national civilian survey (with imputed/simulated age at enlistmen
243 e applications, could have a major impact on civilian tasks, including transportation, communication,
245 m taking action against the participation of civilians, the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC)
249 filtrate the plant disguised as high-ranking civilians (transcription factors) to trick the plant int
250 gy consumption of mechanical systems such as civilian transportation vehicles, which would have a pro
253 at both military health care facilities and civilian trauma centers and hospitals between January 1,
254 packed red blood cells (PRBCs) has led many civilian trauma centers to adopt this resource intensive
258 (CT) scans from a cohort of 280 consecutive civilian trauma patients from University Hospitals of Ly
260 s (Injury severity score > 15) admitted to a civilian trauma system during the adoption phase of TXA
261 a major hemorrhage protocol within a mature civilian trauma system provides outcome benefits specifi
262 m has been the opportunity to apply existing civilian trauma system standards to the provision of com
265 injuries are applicable to the management of civilian trauma, whether associated with small arms fire
270 f job holders identifying as veterans in the civilian US executive branch exceeds the proportion in t
273 ult weapons and large-capacity magazines for civilian use, and research to support strategies for red
275 re DSs purported to enhance performance than civilians use when matched for key demographic factors.
279 ia for PTSD, assessed via the PTSD Checklist-Civilian Version with a total severity score of 44; symp
281 Follow-up measures were the PTSD Checklist-Civilian Version, Patient Health Questionnaire-9, Genera
282 the Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist-Civilian version, respectively, at 3 months post-ICU.
283 the Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist-Civilian Version, the Patient Health Questionnaire 9-ite
286 vider of free clinical and legal services to civilian victims of torture and other human rights viola
287 ief effort, sending U.S. military forces and civilian volunteers to Haiti's aid and providing a terti
290 Janjaweed forces against non-Arabic-speaking civilians were corroborated by medical forensic review o
292 at-wounded service members and 11% to 20% of civilians who develop heterotopic ossification (HO) afte
293 osttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in 3,271 civilians who evacuated World Trade Center towers 1 and
295 thout PTSD, from healthy civilians, and from civilians with mild traumatic brain injury, which is com
298 99 (57.3%) civilians, including 8285 (74.6%) civilian women and 13 810 (79.4%) civilian children, and
300 erpressure exposure (BOP) in Warfighters and civilians, yet little is known about the underlying path