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1  mortality of 0.3% (CI 0.1-0.5%, p = 0.009) (continuity of care).
2 rate of satisfaction and positive effects on continuity of care.
3 visit patterns: visit frequency, regularity, continuity of care.
4 ity of Care Index (COCI) was used to measure continuity of care.
5 admitted on different service days to assess continuity of care.
6 eeking, diagnosis, treatment initiation, and continuity of care.
7 in psychiatric hospitalizations and improved continuity of care.
8  average prison stay combined with a lack of continuity of care.
9 ve timeliness of clinical review and improve continuity of care.
10 ent and patient selection, and postoperative continuity of care.
11 portance of tailored follow-up and long-term continuity of care.
12 imary care physician or surgeon and promotes continuity of care.
13 e medical home such as care coordination and continuity of care.
14 udies link similar communication findings to continuity of care.
15 bility to provide prompt access and reliable continuity of care.
16 al health providers to improve access to and continuity of care.
17       40% reported some dissatisfaction with continuity of care.
18  colleagues (342 [64.0%]), and concern about continuity of care (337 [63.8%]).
19                          With respect to the continuity of care, 52.0 percent of respondents preferre
20 Most were "very enthusiastic" for "promoting continuity of care" (75%), "expanding access to quality
21 ealth (9 articles), activation (7 articles), continuity of care (8 articles), and convenience (6 arti
22 s and healthcare-related variables including continuity of care, access to care, information needs an
23 hospital stays, and problems with delivering continuity of care across sectoral boundaries.
24          Little is known about the extent of continuity of care across the transition from outpatient
25 ronments that increase the likelihood of the continuity of care among people experiencing homelessnes
26 the need for sustained efforts in increasing continuity of care among these hospitals and highlight t
27                                   Inadequate continuity of care and ART coverage present challenges t
28 e emergency department (ED) are critical for continuity of care and clinical decision-making.
29  at hospital discharge may negatively affect continuity of care and contribute to adverse events.
30 health challenges for HIV lies in optimising continuity of care and effectively re-engaging people ou
31 ialists are advanced practitioners who offer continuity of care and expert support for people diagnos
32 g model which relies on single screeners for continuity of care and mandated weekly screening demonst
33             Disparities in treatment access, continuity of care and outcomes could contribute to surv
34 esponsible or contibute; evidence of reduced continuity of care and reduced continuity in residents'
35 patient care; Effects of day shift length on continuity of care and relationships; Effects of day shi
36 iations between quality of life outcomes and continuity of care and social difficulties suggest these
37  of care over time, to reward and facilitate continuity of care and the positive patient outcomes wit
38                 Improved discharge planning, continuity of care, and access to housing and postacute
39 have negatively impacted resident attitudes, continuity of care, and even availability for teaching.
40 sociated with more physician visits, greater continuity of care, and fewer deferrals of care.
41  on patients' perceptions of access to care, continuity of care, and interpersonal aspects of care we
42 mportant shortcomings that affect screening, continuity of care, and medication titration and disprop
43 road access to high-quality health services, continuity of care, and surveillance for complications.
44   Many patients did not receive care or lost continuity of care, and the traditional "safety net" men
45 ng; 4) relief of pain and other symptoms; 5) continuity of care; and 6) grief and bereavement support
46                                              Continuity of care as measured by the Continuity of Atte
47 h approximately one-third of the decrease in continuity of care between 1996 and 2006.
48 referral and linkage protocols should enable continuity of care between these systems levels.
49 ansplantation requires serial assessment and continuity of care by a dedicated team of health profess
50 Distance medicine technology enables greater continuity of care by improving access and supporting th
51                                              Continuity of care can assess this risk, which depends o
52                                      Because continuity of care (CC) is a necessary component of resi
53 s or unplanned presentations, increasing the continuity of care, clinical teaching aimed at the chief
54                                              Continuity of care (COC) has been emphasized in research
55    Existing evidence regarding the impact of continuity of care (COC) in asthma patients is limited,
56 s studies have noted benefits of maintaining continuity of care (COC), including improved patient com
57 comfort and family support, coordination and continuity of care, communication as an ethical and ther
58 ntered decision making; b) communication; c) continuity of care; d) emotional and practical support;
59              Continuous Medicaid enrollment, continuity of care, deferral of care, and number of visi
60 hysician plays a central role in maintaining continuity of care despite the fact that successful care
61       Poor transition leads to disruption in continuity of care, disengagement from services and is l
62 e strategies into routine care would enhance continuity of care, especially for some high-risk patien
63 cians to provide personalised, comprehensive continuity of care, especially in socioeconomically depr
64                    Satisfaction, regret, and continuity of care following puberty blockers or suppres
65 is a component of palliative care provision, continuity of care for bereaved individuals is often not
66                                          Yet continuity of care for CMC is often disrupted with emerg
67 arly routine communication with families and continuity of care for complex patients leaving the ICU.
68                      Improving access to the continuity of care for migrants requires a shift towards
69                The study shows that improved continuity of care for newly-diagnosed dyslipidemic pati
70  may contribute to improving the quality and continuity of care for older adults.
71 patient and outpatient settings and maintain continuity of care for patients with refractory or recur
72 distance traveled, but the impact of loss of continuity of care for some patients and reduction in th
73  pediatrician should be empowered to utilize continuity of care for the recognition of unusual or sev
74 tric to adult health care is crucial for the continuity of care for young adults with sickle cell dis
75 example, rehospitalizations), improvement of continuity of care (for example, accurate discharge info
76 actice providers in patient care management, continuity of care, improved quality and safety metrics,
77 igate disease transmission, complicating the continuity of care in high-risk patients diagnosed with
78     We propose potential solutions to ensure continuity of care in the field of surgical oncology.
79 formation is available on the association of continuity of care in the hospital with hospital complic
80 have demonstrated the importance of ensuring continuity of care in the management of rCTDs, including
81                                 The provider Continuity of Care Index (COCI) and site COCI were calcu
82                                          The Continuity of Care Index (COCI) was used to measure cont
83 dium, and low continuity groups based on the continuity of care index (COCI).
84 .90), treatment in hospitals (P < .001), and continuity of care index (P < .001) were associated with
85 icant differences in surveyed perceptions of continuity of care, intensive care unit mortality (8.5%
86                                              Continuity of care is necessary throughout the lifecycle
87                                    Midwifery continuity of care is the only health system interventio
88            A core attribute of primary care, continuity of care, is usually viewed as the relationshi
89 ion, offered access to nurses, and optimised continuity of care led to better patient outcomes.
90 nd clinical outcomes of a model of midwifery continuity of care linked with a specialist obstetric cl
91 and achieve fidelity of a model of midwifery continuity of care linked with specialist obstetric care
92 ical complexity of these patients, a lack of continuity of care may adversely affect their outcomes d
93                               Disruptions of continuity of care may harm patient outcomes, but existi
94                              Thus, improving continuity of care may have a paradoxical effect of wors
95  The latest evidence of the effectiveness of continuity of care on outcomes for children and adolesce
96  resource utilization, mortality, morbidity, continuity of care, palliative care, and other critical
97 hlighting the complicated relationship among continuity of care, patient safety, and fatigued provide
98  to readdress a patient's goals of care, and continuity of care planning.
99                      Lower satisfaction with continuity of care predicted poorer physical (OR=2.6), s
100 icies on multiple aspects of patient safety, continuity of care, professionalism, and resident educat
101 apy-Colorectal Cancer Survey and the Patient Continuity of Care Questionnaire.
102       They discuss the potential benefits of continuity of care reentry programs to help mentally ill
103 pact of the new standards on patient safety, continuity of care, resident learning, and staffing in t
104  and public health service, and insufficient continuity of care throughout the entire health-care sys
105 2023 survey (main sample); information about continuity of care was available for all youth.
106                              They considered continuity of care was important, especially for older p
107 y preferred the intervention period and felt continuity of care was maintained (15% control vs. 54% i
108                                              Continuity of care was reduced after the introduction of
109                                   To improve continuity of care, we outline communication of treatmen
110 and fragmented referral systems that prevent continuity of care when detainees cycle into and out of
111                             The level of the continuity of care, which had been constant, showed a re
112 red service schedule is predicted to improve continuity of care while increasing free weekends and co
113  mentality that is not patient-focused, less continuity of care with a loss of critical information w
114 ciaries experienced relative improvements in continuity of care with primary care clinicians (1.9 per

 
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