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 e University of California, Berkeley, and an emergency physician.
2 The unit of analysis was the Emergency physician.
3 better education for primary healthcare and emergency physicians.
4 nurse practitioners was 91% and 88% for the emergency physicians.
5 hs between emergency nurse practitioners and emergency physicians.
6 ionnaire was filled from 2008 to 2010 by the emergency physicians.
7 able children (67.2%) for requests filled by emergency physicians.
8 ital-based attending physicians, including 6 emergency physicians, 13 hospitalists, and 8 intensivist
9 identified as men [71.7%]), 25 (54.3%) were emergency physicians, 17 (37.0%) were hospitalists, and
11 % (95% confidence interval, 78%-85%); 17% of emergency physicians, 40% of neurologists, and 52% of ra
14 lines." In response, the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) has developed a set of guide
18 l features for ICHs and fractures could help emergency physicians and radiologists improve their imag
19 ediatric critical care physicians, pediatric emergency physicians, and trainees in these subspecialti
20 intra intravenous fibrinolysis, even though emergency physicians are most commonly the first to eval
21 spitalization/discharge) were established by emergency physicians before and after CT scan results.
22 nline in a national convenience sample of 72 emergency physicians between January 1 and March 31, 202
23 29% by emergency medical technicians, 71% by emergency physicians) between December 2008 and December
24 al Care Medicine and the American College of Emergency Physicians convened a Task Force to understand
25 algorithm was created to help non-specialist emergency physicians diagnose posterior circulation stro
28 tivation by emergency medical technicians or emergency physicians has been shown to substantially red
29 NINDS-compliant strategy (ie, evaluation by emergency physician in less than 10 minutes, interpretat
30 ivation by emergency medical technicians and emergency physicians in a large group of hospitals organ
31 efore assessed anaphylactic patients seen by emergency physicians in the Berlin area covering 4 milli
32 (AI) system designed to aid radiologists and emergency physicians in the detection and localization o
33 ntially changed the malpractice standard for emergency physicians in three states had little effect o
34 on, such as infectious diseases specialists, emergency physicians, intensivists, internists, pediatri
35 ion such as infectious diseases specialists, emergency physicians, internists, pediatricians, family
37 re and included heart failure cardiologists, emergency physicians, laboratory medicine specialists, n
38 of knowledge of ophthalmological diseases by emergency physicians, leading to unnecessary referrals t
41 givers (n=24) and individual interviews with emergency physicians (n=23) and advanced practice nurses
43 unravels a strong underuse of adrenaline by emergency physicians, not reflecting treatment protocols
44 working in 2020 (5% of all clinically active emergency physicians), of whom 1357 were women (56%) and
45 literature from the perspective of pediatric emergency physicians, offer suggestions for family membe
48 ty-four readers (radiologists, orthopedists, emergency physicians, physician assistants, rheumatologi
49 l diagnostic ultrasonography performed by an emergency physician (point-of-care ultrasonography), ult
52 orrhage prediction model in the decisions of emergency physicians regarding ordering head computed to
53 NICT referral rate of the initially assigned emergency physician relative to local peers within discr
54 then assessed by an experienced accident and emergency physician (research registrar) who completed a
56 ate the catheterization laboratory, allowing emergency physicians to activate the catheterization lab
57 ect the emergency medical services provider, emergency physician, trauma surgeon, and anesthesiologis
62 y to create a route to CCM certification for emergency physicians who complete a critical care fellow
63 intervals, and triage decisions were made by emergency physicians who were unaware of point-of-care r