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1 cond-degree relatives), 60% attended genetic counseling.
2 sults can be incorporated in routine patient counseling.
3               All groups received individual counseling.
4 had HIV, and 21% had undergone substance use counseling.
5 g treatment modality and appropriate patient counseling.
6 es on cognition and behavior, and prognostic counseling.
7 n in those who did not undergo substance use counseling.
8 eling and potentially for any health-related counseling.
9 on (PMTCT) care and provided information and counseling.
10 rome phenotype, natural history, and genetic counseling.
11 plications for clinical genetics and genetic counseling.
12  targeted investigations and accurate family counseling.
13 monitoring of exercise capacity and exercise counseling.
14 es experienced in cancer genetic testing and counseling.
15  a basis for risk stratification and genetic counseling.
16 relevant background data in clinical genetic counseling.
17 re-symptomatic disease detection and genetic counseling.
18 ies risk factors to be considered in genetic counseling.
19 is can improve patient management and family counseling.
20 articularly affects treatment and prognostic counseling.
21 tacept, a CTLA-4 mimetic, and inform genetic counseling.
22 entially applicable for nutrigenetic dietary counseling.
23 tification of disease modifiers, and genetic counseling.
24  subjects with the Pi*MZ genotype and aid in counseling.
25 sionals, and lowering thresholds for genetic counseling.
26 ides improved treatment and accurate genetic counseling.
27 with antiretroviral therapy (ART) complicate counseling.
28 andomized to prehabilitation versus standard counseling.
29                        This may help patient counseling.
30 gation for appropriate diagnosis and genetic counseling.
31 itoring, timing of intervention, and patient counseling.
32 molecular findings for diagnosis and genetic counseling.
33 ing: 120 [94%]; nonnicotine e-cigarette with counseling: 118 [93%]; counseling only: 88 [73%]), with
34 vents were common (nicotine e-cigarette with counseling: 120 [94%]; nonnicotine e-cigarette with coun
35 of the program (3 vs 1) compared to standard counseling (13.6% vs 3.4%, p = 0.094).
36  was higher in those receiving substance use counseling (36%) than those that had not (15%)(P=<0.01).
37 ap, chlorine, infant play space, and hygiene counseling (53 clusters); or (4) feeding plus WASH (53 c
38 h genetics experience-discuss an approach to counseling a patient who is considering DTC testing to l
39                                              Counseling about LHON should be offered to all maternal
40 isease drug therapy, other drug therapy, and counseling about safety and future planning.
41   Our findings support the need for adequate counseling about the possibility of developing new sympt
42   GCs feel more confident than cardiologists counseling about VUS results (P<0.001); while both cardi
43 nseling was not significantly different from counseling alone at 12 weeks (17.3% vs 9.1%; RD, 8.2 [95
44 for nicotine e-cigarettes plus counseling vs counseling alone at 12 weeks (21.9% vs 9.1%; risk differ
45 ng, nicotine e-cigarettes plus counseling vs counseling alone significantly increased point prevalenc
46 alidated, this has ramifications for patient counseling along with both approach and timing of surger
47               After diagnosis of T18 or T13, counseling and care have traditionally been based on ass
48 ings have important implications for patient counseling and care planning, as well as a potential bea
49 nd long-term HRQOL should be considered when counseling and caring for patients undergoing esophagect
50 ed well-defined messages about water through counseling and daily text messages, a water bottle, and
51 ization and quality improvement for prenatal counseling and delivery planning.
52 urrent information not only on preconception counseling and diagnostic evaluation to determine matern
53 se leads to difficulty in providing clinical counseling and diminishes the power of clinical trials u
54                           A patient-centered counseling and educational intervention may help to addr
55        POTTER could prove useful for bedside counseling and for benchmarking of ES care.
56 depth study is essential for accurate family counseling and future enrollment in gene therapy-based t
57                                      Genetic counseling and germline genetic testing of cancer predis
58 ting research and recommended strategies for counseling and intervention to reduce firearm-related de
59  acceptability of HIVST, offer insights into counseling and linkage to care for HIVST, and provide ex
60 tated cascade testing with telephone genetic counseling and mailed saliva kits resulted in high testi
61 ilial pathogenic variant and offer telephone counseling and mailed saliva testing.
62  could serve as a surrogate to individualize counseling and management for recipients.
63  could serve as a surrogate to individualize counseling and management for recipients.
64  offers a window of opportunity for parental counseling and management using procedures such as EXIT
65 ee cessation medication compared with 4-week counseling and medication advice resulted in higher 6-mo
66 sed on antiretroviral therapy (ART) meet for counseling and medication pickup, represent an innovativ
67 uster-randomized trial comparing a nutrition counseling and micronutrient supplement intervention int
68  nutrition interventions providing intensive counseling and micronutrient supplements may reduce some
69  model, preference for traditional adherence counseling and need for greater human resources influenc
70 et: 7% total body weight loss or 6 months of counseling and no weight gain.
71                                              Counseling and nutritional interventions or residential
72 ltifaceted management strategy that includes counseling and pharmacotherapy for smoking cessation, pu
73 r patient-level human papillomavirus vaccine counseling and potentially for any health-related counse
74 t study may assist with preoperative patient counseling and prognosis.
75                                Contraception counseling and provision are vital components of compreh
76 ated Comprehensive Cancer Centers, sustained counseling and provision of free cessation medication co
77 temporary data on sex mismatch for recipient counseling and reassurance with regards to equivalent lo
78 (SBIRT), including motivational interviewing counseling and referral out for alcohol treatment (SBIRT
79 g an important opportunity for postremission counseling and referrals to fertility specialists.
80 consequences regarding treatment and genetic counseling and reinforce the use of next-generation sequ
81 ether, our findings are helpful for parental counseling and resource planning, and support targeting
82 expands and condom use declines, routine HCV counseling and screening among MSM is important.
83                       Efforts to improve the counseling and selection of living donors should focus o
84 mily members, including the need for genetic counseling and sometimes particular types of surveillanc
85 pants received standard care with individual counseling and standardized, blinded, target-driven medi
86 YMP gene would be very important for genetic counseling and subsequent early diagnosis and initiation
87 versus left MTLE, and can guide preoperative counseling and surgical planning.
88  examined patterns and correlates of genetic counseling and testing and the impact of results on bila
89 ally have not sought or been offered genetic counseling and testing and thereby contribute to a reduc
90  HIV-negative participants from 10 voluntary counseling and testing sites aligned with INS.
91 ncluding key stakeholders to address genetic counseling and testing, PCA screening, and management in
92 cation model that can help post-test genetic counseling and that facilitates the decision-making proc
93 in women with breast cancer will help in the counseling and treatment of these women.
94 on strategies including pretreatment patient counseling and use of fertility preservation services.
95  risk assessment tool should receive genetic counseling and, if indicated after counseling, genetic t
96 -risk survivors who may benefit from genetic counseling and/or testing of DRGs, which may further inf
97 n prescribed for depression, or referral for counseling, and as untreated if none of these 3 criteria
98 workers; patient education; risk assessment, counseling, and decision aids; screening checklists; com
99 quisition forms and during post-test genetic counseling, and genetic ancestry predicted by a statisti
100 wed the evidence on risk assessment, genetic counseling, and genetic testing for potentially harmful
101 he effectiveness of risk assessment, genetic counseling, and genetic testing in reducing incidence an
102 nefits and harms of risk assessment, genetic counseling, and genetic testing to reduce cancer inciden
103 ered individualized genetic risk evaluation, counseling, and genetic testing.
104  of genetic test results and the evaluation, counseling, and management of genetically at-risk family
105 ations on primary care screening, behavioral counseling, and preventive medications.
106 etics, pharmacogenomics, genetic testing and counseling, and their social and cultural implications.
107 ype of mindfulness interventions, individual counseling, and time to follow up were moderators of the
108            Individualized screening, genetic counseling, and treatment protocols based on patient eth
109 ovement Amendments confirmed report, genetic counseling, and treatment recommendations.
110 l therapist weekly for 16 weeks; nutritional counseling; and daily vitamin D (2000 IU), calcium (600
111 m counselor and patient through a smartphone counseling application.
112 livery devices that can be coupled to remote counseling apps for personalized smoking cessation thera
113 ly informed or that barriers against genetic counseling are present.
114 propion, as well as individual and telephone counseling, are efficacious for smoking cessation in CVD
115 number of siblings should receive additional counseling as childhood infections occur in the home con
116 8 g NSP/d) diets and received individualized counseling at the start of radiotherapy to achieve these
117                Patients were randomized to a counseling behavioral intervention by telephone promotin
118 t of MNA comprises education (cognitive) and counseling (behavioral) that require the involvement of
119 enetic testing alone may be insufficient for counseling, but recessive inheritance should be consider
120 ian is accompanied by both pre- and posttest counseling by a trained genetic counselor.
121                                Preconception counseling by the multidisciplinary cardio-obstetrics te
122           The interventions included dietary counseling, daily text messages, and a cookbook with hea
123 sessment tools to guide referrals to genetic counseling demonstrated moderate to high accuracy (area
124 hanges to prescribing guidelines and patient counseling during the surveillance and survivorship phas
125 ed with willingness may inform education and counseling efforts to increase HHC confidence in and upt
126 The survey explored providers' confidence in counseling, explanation of VUSs, topics covered before a
127 milial Colorectal Cancer Risk Assessment and Counseling (Family CARE Project), Massively Parallel Seq
128 to that in health care settings, nonstandard counseling following receipt of test results, and diffic
129             The USPSTF recommends behavioral counseling for all sexually active adolescents and for a
130 e early genetic diagnosis and better genetic counseling for families with BRA.
131 ed five interventions: Fast Track Initiation Counseling for newly initiating patients, Enhanced Adher
132 trends in both medical therapy and lifestyle counseling for PAD patients in the United States from 20
133 or providing proper therapeutic planning and counseling for patients and their relatives.
134 ardiac rehabilitation, and smoking cessation counseling for patients with AMI.
135 ewly initiating patients, Enhanced Adherence Counseling for patients with an unsuppressed viral load,
136 enya, integration of universal screening and counseling for PrEP in FP clinics was feasible, making t
137 iated eye phenotypes can help inform genetic counseling for prognostic estimation of visual loss and
138 ic effects of maternal diabetes and improved counseling for risk of specific CHD phenotypes.
139 s a positive but small benefit of behavioral counseling for the prevention of CVD in this population.
140        These findings can help guide patient counseling for this challenging population.
141 aff/patients by opinion leaders and prenatal counseling for women and partners, although clinical aud
142 hat the benefits of risk assessment, genetic counseling, genetic testing, and interventions are moder
143 he overall harms of risk assessment, genetic counseling, genetic testing, and interventions are small
144 hat the benefits of risk assessment, genetic counseling, genetic testing, and interventions are small
145 nefits and harms of risk assessment, genetic counseling, genetic testing, and risk-reducing intervent
146 e genetic counseling and, if indicated after counseling, genetic testing.
147 ul to assist clinical ascertainment, genetic counseling, guidance of symptomatic monitoring, and earl
148              Interventions reviewed included counseling, health system interventions, physical activi
149  provide accurate diagnoses, improve genetic counseling, help define disease mechanisms, establish di
150  gestational weight gain may inform prenatal counseling; however, the optimal gestational weight gain
151 ports valid and feasible diet assessment and counseling in clinical settings, review existing tools,
152                 RATIONALE: Smoking cessation counseling in conjunction with low-dose computed tomogra
153 out patterns of medication use and lifestyle counseling in patients with peripheral artery disease (P
154 diate implementation for risk assessment and counseling in preoperative patients.
155 e criteria for clinical practice and genetic counseling in rare diseases.
156        Most of them (68.6%) attended genetic counseling in the first year.
157 ator reviews laboratory results and provides counseling in the OTP clinic.
158 tive epilepsy surgery and neuropsychological counseling in TLE.
159                               Formal genetic counseling includes preparation of a family pedigree; a
160 exist to the implementation of screening and counseling, including lack of training and knowledge, la
161 the most recent options and adequate patient counseling, including neuroadaptation, can avoid dissati
162 ed materials followed by telephone-delivered counseling increased mammography screening rates in surv
163                                              Counseling individuals affected with AMD regarding the u
164 lts obtained shortly after exposure, and for counseling individuals on when to retest after an exposu
165  of adequately powered studies on behavioral counseling interventions and a lack of studies on medica
166 ung or single parenthood) would benefit from counseling interventions and could be considered at incr
167 ate evidence to bound the potential harms of counseling interventions as no greater than small, based
168                                              Counseling interventions can be effective in preventing
169 ontrolled intervention studies of behavioral counseling interventions for adolescents and adults cond
170                                   Behavioral counseling interventions for individuals seeking primary
171 ant or postpartum women at increased risk to counseling interventions has a moderate net benefit in p
172 udes with moderate certainty that behavioral counseling interventions have a moderate net benefit on
173                                   Behavioral counseling interventions involved a median of 6 contact
174 udes with moderate certainty that behavioral counseling interventions reduce the likelihood of acquir
175                                              Counseling interventions result in improvements in healt
176 um- and high-contact multisession behavioral counseling interventions to improve diet and increase ph
177 s and harms of primary care-based behavioral counseling interventions to prevent illicit drug use, in
178                  The evidence for behavioral counseling interventions to prevent initiation of illici
179 he evidence on whether primary care-relevant counseling interventions to promote a healthful diet, ph
180 g adults with CVD risk factors to behavioral counseling interventions to promote a healthy diet and p
181                      Compared with controls, counseling interventions were associated with a lower li
182                                   Behavioral counseling interventions were associated with small, sta
183                                              Counseling interventions were the most widely studied in
184  a pooled effect size similar to that of the counseling interventions, but the pooled effect was not
185    The USPSTF found convincing evidence that counseling interventions, such as cognitive behavioral t
186 at increased risk of perinatal depression to counseling interventions.
187 ntary behaviors; and the harms of behavioral counseling interventions.
188 ologic (stress/mental health, exercise, diet counseling) interventions were calculated, and predictor
189                                     Although counseling is a required part of office-based buprenorph
190 id unintentional pregnancies, pre-conception counseling is mandatory in women of reproductive age who
191                         Dietary screening or counseling is not usually a component of routine medical
192 , the nature of what constitutes appropriate counseling is unclear and controversial.
193  received Plant and Animal products, dietary counseling, lab assessments, microbiome assessments (16S
194  intervention group received HIV testing and counseling, linkage to care, ART (started at a higher CD
195 rventions to traditional face-to-face health counseling may be an effective way to increase male smok
196                                      Dietary counseling may be offered with the goals of providing pa
197                                   Screening, counseling, monitoring and individualized health care ar
198 ll be valuable in the management and genetic counseling of a significant number of individuals.
199 es important prognostic information to guide counseling of affected families with cardiovascular dise
200  this study and provide information to allow counseling of at-risk couples.
201 more specific guidance for the screening and counseling of families and may help inform future invest
202 g its etiology can assist with prognosis and counseling of families.
203     Our findings may inform the reproductive counseling of female AYA cancer survivors.
204  could facilitate hepatologic assessment and counseling of individuals who carry the Pi*ZZ mutation.
205    These data are needed both for prognostic counseling of patients and for understanding potential t
206 lable to aid healthcare professionals in the counseling of patients for self-management.
207 rofessionals on nutritional recommendations, counseling of pregnant women on diet and physical activi
208 n time between disclosure to the proband and counseling of relatives was 6 months (range: 0-187 month
209 rtant public policy implications for genetic counseling of SCT carriers.
210                                      Dietary counseling on a well-balanced diet that includes an arra
211                                              Counseling on appropriate benzodiazepine and Z-drug use
212 Z) received enhanced IYCF including improved counseling on IYCF during pregnancy until 12 mo after bi
213 g information to allow provision of informed counseling on the predicted outcomes of affected babies.
214 g voucher, inclusive of immediate postpartum counseling, on uptake, early initiation, and continuatio
215 day oral metronidazole treatment: behavioral counseling only (control), or counseling plus intermitte
216 tine e-cigarette with counseling: 118 [93%]; counseling only: 88 [73%]), with the most common being c
217 ; 95% CI: 1.8 to 3.9), and smoking cessation counseling (OR: 4.4; 95% CI: 2.0 to 9.6).
218                                Substance use counseling [OR 2.51, 95% CI 1.80-3.51] and unstable hous
219 nds against routine risk assessment, genetic counseling, or genetic testing for women whose personal
220 nds against routine risk assessment, genetic counseling, or genetic testing for women whose personal
221 ficant change in medication use or lifestyle counseling over time.
222 s difficult yet of the utmost importance for counseling parents.
223 ients regarding ocular risks of smoking, and counseling patients about smoking cessation.
224 y benefit testing programs and clinicians in counseling patients about when the clinician and the pat
225 RATIONALE: Prognostication is important when counseling patients and defining treatment strategies in
226                This data might be helpful in counseling patients and their families about expectation
227 n after AVR, and are relevant for clinicians counseling patients before and after AVR.
228 nt responses provided useful information for counseling patients both before and after implantation.
229 These results may help guide physicians when counseling patients on expected improvements in angina s
230 plication of clinical trial results, and for counseling patients on how disease progression may affec
231  providers should consider this benefit when counseling patients on IRD offer acceptance.
232          Such information is invaluable when counseling patients prior to cataract surgery.
233 F) therapy may provide information useful in counseling patients.
234 nt: behavioral counseling only (control), or counseling plus intermittent use of oral metronidazole,
235 2 months old in the WSH (n = 369), nutrition counseling plus lipid-based nutrient supplement (n = 353
236 men in 4 arms: control, WSH, child nutrition counseling plus lipid-based nutrient supplements (N), an
237 y pregnant women and refer them to ANC, (ii) counseling pregnant women on maternal health, and (iii)
238 timal approach includes prepregnancy genetic counseling, prenatal diagnostic procedures, and a treatm
239             All patients entered a lifestyle counseling program.
240 ent of eligible MSM participated in the risk counseling program.
241             These findings are relevant when counseling PXE patients on their visual prognosis.
242 may provide a useful tool for individualized counseling regarding likely outcomes after device implan
243 ture review evaluating the current status of counseling regarding prenatal diagnosis of trisomy 18 (T
244 tially influencing diagnostic evaluation and counseling regarding recurrence risk and prognosis.
245 isk of developing uveal melanoma can enhance counseling regarding surveillance in patients with germl
246                These findings may facilitate counseling regarding the comparative harms of contempora
247 (RR: 1.47; 95% CI: 1.15-1.88) and individual counseling (RR: 1.64, 95% CI: 1.17-2.28) were both more
248          This information may be helpful for counseling, screening, and management of patients.
249             At the third and final in-person counseling session 6 months later, eye drop administrati
250  (n = 150) received 1 individual theoretical counseling session and 8 individual biweekly theoretical
251 als into an RCT of a survivorship care nurse counseling session coupled with the provision of individ
252 survivorship care plans coupled with a nurse counseling session, primarily on physician implementatio
253  received 4 biweekly and 3 monthly telephone counseling sessions and choice of Food and Drug Administ
254 atment (n = 150) received 4 weekly telephone counseling sessions and medication advice.
255                         The median number of counseling sessions completed was 8 (interquartile range
256 ndividual biweekly theoretical and practical counseling sessions each year.
257 nstituting use of face shields during family counseling sessions in households with a SARs-CoV-2-infe
258                          Group or individual counseling sessions lasting more than 2 hours were assoc
259 ervention included a minimum of 6 one-on-one counseling sessions over ~30 wk focusing on healthy diet
260 omated medication reminders, (2) 3 in-person counseling sessions with a glaucoma coach who had traini
261 roviders was endorsed to address the genetic counseling shortage.
262  BEST PRACTICE ADVICE 3: Genetic testing and counseling should be considered for familial pancreas ca
263 e emerging concept that personalized dietary counseling should be modified by the FADS1 genotype need
264             Psychosocial and/or psychosexual counseling should be offered to all patients with cancer
265                                              Counseling should be repeated after transplantation.
266 ce in dealing with patients, and training in counseling skills.
267 s and nicotine gums combined with behavioral counseling still has a low smoking cessation rate of 25%
268 tial to reduce harm when inadequate care and counseling strategies create conflicting values and unce
269 e suggest that EFS24 has utility for patient counseling, study design, and risk stratification in PTC
270 s critical to ensure appropriate management, counseling, support, and social care for children and th
271  tumors and valuable information for genetic counseling, surveillance, and immunotherapy for patients
272    Mindfulness interventions with individual counseling tended (p=0.09) to improve depression (g=.46,
273 the multigene testing era addressing genetic counseling, testing, and genetically informed management
274 feeding should be part of individual patient counseling that incorporates patient values and circumst
275  In addition to routine health and nutrition counseling, the intervention group received a package of
276 ematopoiesis are discovered and the need for counseling these patients is driving many institutions t
277 od glucose levels, or diabetes to behavioral counseling to promote a healthful diet and physical acti
278  interventions, including education or brief counseling, to prevent initiation of tobacco use among s
279  interventions, including education or brief counseling, to prevent tobacco use in school-aged childr
280 th workers for blood-pressure monitoring and counseling, training of physicians, and care coordinatio
281 and leukemia predisposition includes genetic counseling, treatment or prevention of excessive bleedin
282 antly greater for nicotine e-cigarettes plus counseling vs counseling alone at 12 weeks (21.9% vs 9.1
283  to quit smoking, nicotine e-cigarettes plus counseling vs counseling alone significantly increased p
284 pathogenic variant, family uptake of genetic counseling was assessed in the first year(s) after test
285 ht studies (n = 8060) indicated that genetic counseling was associated with reduced breast cancer wor
286 abstinence for nonnicotine e-cigarettes plus counseling was not significantly different from counseli
287                            Attending genetic counseling was observed more frequently in first-degree
288                             Exercise or diet counseling was used in 22% (SE: 2.3%) of visits.
289 ge 6 to 18 months plus complementary feeding counseling), WASH (ventilated improved pit latrine, hand
290                                  Condoms and counseling were available in most of the clinics.
291  visit, assessments, laboratory testing, and counseling were done.
292 nagement strategies that emphasize adherence counseling while delaying ART switch may promote drug re
293 nance program that includes at least monthly counseling with a trained interventionist.
294                                         IYCF counseling with LNSs reduced the risks of anemia, iron d
295 of voice and swallowing function and receive counseling with regard to the potential impact of treatm
296 6 years, 60.0% of relatives attended genetic counseling, with 41.0% in the first year.
297                                      Dietary counseling, with or without oral nutritional supplements
298       This suggests, therefore, that genetic counseling would benefit from the addition of sperm mosa
299 o) and infant and young child feeding (IYCF) counseling; WSH+N; and control.
300                    The cPRS may be useful in counseling younger individuals at higher genetic risk of

 
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