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1 priate management of allergic disease by the general practitioner.
2  prescribe antibiotics and for clustering by general practitioner.
3 geal reflux disease (GERD) never visit their general practitioner.
4 ad an endoscopy if deemed necessary by their general practitioner.
5 ls (n=65) per case, matched by age, sex, and general practitioner.
6  or routine care by a gastroenterologist and general practitioner.
7 omly assigned to the therapist and 66 to the general practitioner.
8 therapy from a counsellor to care from their general practitioner.
9 d received at least 1 dose administered by a general practitioner.
10 ractices and invited to participate by their general practitioner.
11 ation was collected from medical records and general practitioners.
12 st in non-pharmacological therapies to their general practitioners.
13  the main source was active collaboration of general practitioners.
14 estionnaire to a representative sample of UK general practitioners.
15 icosteroids, this treatment is often used by general practitioners.
16 eb-based access to discharge information for general practitioners.
17 with a model of family medicine delivered by general practitioners.
18  signs and symptoms of child maltreatment by general practitioners.
19 e dermatology residents, and 83 (16.2%) were general practitioners.
20 guidelines, supervised by paediatricians and general practitioners.
21 oms persisting >6 weeks could be referred by general practitioners.
22 alian subjects, identified through patients' general practitioners.
23 and is well known by gastroenterologists and general practitioners.
24 of western Sydney, NSW, Australia, mainly by general practitioners.
25 nd spinal cord injury specialist nurses, and General Practitioners.
26 individuals identified through the patients' general practitioners.
27 f adults with AR were exclusively treated by general practitioners.
28 d from the Scottish population through their general practitioners.
29 and disease severity was classified by their general practitioners.
30 0.98 to 4.76, P=0.06); burnout was lowest in general practitioners (0.16, 0.03 to 0.88, P=0.04).
31 82), family physicians (0.69, 0.64 to 0.74), general practitioners (0.58, 0.53 to 0.63), other medica
32 nternists (20%), family physicians (18%), or general practitioners (11%; P<0.001).
33                   On average, patients see a general practitioner 12.27 times and various specialists
34 ts were mainly reported by family physicians/general practitioners (28.3%), followed by gynecologist/
35 d drug changes made at the discretion of the general practitioner; 317 participants).
36 .8%), and mostly comprised family physicians/general practitioners (43.7%), and gynecologist/obstetri
37  the COVID-19 crisis made them contact their general practitioner (852 of 4068 [20.9%] and 218 of 979
38                                              General practitioners across Pakistan need training and
39 f being discharged directly to the care of a general practitioner after a hospital stay than urban pa
40 hree narrative exposure consultations with a general practitioner and eight scheduled contacts with a
41  in combination with resource use from their general practitioner and hospital records.
42 ncial problems and the number of visits to a general practitioner and medical specialists.
43  follow-up information was sought from their general practitioner and mortality data were sought from
44 lly discussed their falls problem with their general practitioner and only 12.7% (39/308) had seen a
45          Many cases can be recognized by the general practitioner and referred to the appropriate spe
46  is a common clinical complaint for both the general practitioner and the orthopaedic surgeon.
47 tients reported an average of 7.34 visits to general practitioners and 4.61 to specialists prior to d
48                             We surveyed 1715 general practitioners and 783 (46%) completed our questi
49             Referrals could be obtained from general practitioners and all departments from participa
50 n Europe, including 'practicing allergists', general practitioners and any other physicians with spec
51 mmon reason for visits to dermatologists and general practitioners and can be caused by a range of co
52 were enrolled between 2000 and 2002 by their general practitioners and followed up for up to 17 years
53                                              General practitioners and general paediatricians usually
54                                              General practitioners and gynecologists accounted for th
55                                              General practitioners and gynecologists were the most co
56  the Portuguese territory and mobilized most general practitioners and health centers.
57                          Participants, their general practitioners and health-care providers, and the
58             Health services staff, including general practitioners and hospital discharge teams, are
59 n which care was determined by participants' general practitioners and may have included a referral t
60 rtension, it is important for cardiologists, general practitioners and other physicians to be aware o
61 duction of locally made bCPAP, supervised by general practitioners and paediatricians, was associated
62 eived shared palliative care more often from general practitioners and physicians with subspecialty t
63 el, facilitated by interactive workshops for general practitioners and physiotherapists with an updat
64 n having regular source of primary care from General Practitioners and reduced hospitalization amongs
65 m for their SLE, and reported more visits to general practitioners and the emergency room for SLE.
66  discussing residents' end-of-life care with general practitioners and those working in specialist pa
67 cteristics of patient populations, supply of general practitioners and travel times to health service
68 -up data were obtained for 149 patients from general practitioners and tumor registries.
69                                              General practitioners and/or hospital consultants in the
70 SC+ patients, 82.6% (19 of 23) visited their general practitioner, and 63.2% (12 of 19, 7.6% of total
71 SC+ patients, 82.6% (19 of 23) visited their general practitioner, and 63.2% (12 of 19, 7.6% of total
72 ed police contact, absence of or mistrust of general practitioners, and ethnic disadvantages.
73 d up with PHE local health protection teams, general practitioners, and hospital clinicians to collec
74 ch population registry, patient phone calls, general practitioners, and hospital records.
75 patient and clinician (ie, ophthalmologists, general practitioners, and specialty physicians) charact
76 ed by midwives, with no routine contact with general practitioners, and was extended to 3 months.
77                                      Because general practitioners are the main contact for the relat
78                                              General practitioners are usually the first health profe
79                              They, and their general practitioner, are asked to inform anyone giving
80                       Data were collected by general practitioners as part of the patient's medical r
81 elp they received than those assigned to the general practitioner at both 3 and 9 months' follow-up (
82 on of allergy care in the community with the general practitioner at the forefront is proposed.
83 d healthy content, and compared favorably to general practitioners' average success rates in diagnosi
84 r one roof in either addiction care units or general practitioner-based models--or can occur in secon
85                              This pragmatic, general practitioner-based, cluster-randomized intervent
86 ast 1 year of continuous registration with a general practitioner before this date.
87  number of pre-referral consultations with a general practitioner between patients with different can
88         The reactions of the patients to the general practitioners' brief interventions did not diffe
89                Ferritin is often measured by general practitioners, but the association of different
90                                    Educating general practitioners by collaborative consultations may
91 a potential underlying genetic defect by the general practitioner can be lifesaving.
92 erse events that do not come to attention of general practitioners cannot be excluded.
93 artment management, or patients suitable for General Practitioner care were kept in the Emergency Dep
94                                              General-practitioner care is as effective as brief psych
95 ps receiving brief psychotherapy and routine general-practitioner care.
96 al questionnaires were sent prospectively to general practitioners caring for all women aged 15 to 44
97 on it was not possible to mask participants, general practitioners, CBT therapists, or researchers to
98 study was conducted at 2 urban hospitals and general practitioner centers from March 20 to April 30,
99 ts with distal colonic symptoms, referred by general practitioners, completed a patient consultation
100 le scores in participants reporting a recent general practitioner consultation for their hand problem
101 ge is increasingly used to manage demand for general practitioner consultations in UK general practic
102       We examined variation in the number of general practitioner consultations with cancer symptoms
103                                          The general practitioner consulted by the patient before com
104 ious outcomes; a possible reporting bias, as general practitioners could be more prone to record an i
105  national health registries (birth register, general practitioner data, and patient registries).
106 ntinuation were prescriber, with patients of general practitioners demonstrating longer persistence t
107 imarily came from periodontists, hygienists, general practitioners, dental students, and dental hygie
108 amined the effects of this safety warning on general practitioners' depression diagnosing and prescri
109 d survey study of physicians, physicians and general practitioners described numerous barriers to dep
110  the study were sent to 15 203 patients with general practitioner-diagnosed asthma, of whom 655 were
111 n 2010 two cohorts of PAR patients, based on General Practitioners' diagnoses and prescribing data, w
112 lated explanations must be explored, such as general practitioners' difficulties in arriving at a dia
113 nternal medicine specialists, pediatricians, general practitioners, emergency department doctors, and
114  orient a wide range of clinicians-including general practitioners, emergency medicine providers, and
115 fic enhancements, such as negation rules for general practitioners' entries and a regular expression
116 s room for improvement in the proactivity of general practitioners, especially with men, and in the a
117                                              General practitioners examined participants and filled o
118        We randomly selected 2000 people from general practitioners' (family physicians) lists in Lond
119 pisodes; outpatient use included visits to a general practitioner for a mental health concern or any
120  of both cases and controls) were taken to a general practitioner for a non-immunization-associated v
121 people using inhaled medicines or visiting a general practitioner for breathing problems in the previ
122 , 3.8), with 100,000 children visiting their general practitioner for norovirus-associated IID each y
123 ng their weight when they have visited their general practitioner for other reasons.
124 se who were prescribed methotrexate by their general practitioner for six months or more during 2007-
125  survivors, responses were received from the general practitioners for 102 (70% response).
126                 Responses were received from general practitioners for 241 of 353 survivors (68% resp
127  the association of daily consultations with general practitioners for allergic rhinitis with air pol
128 ime series of the number of weekly visits to general practitioners for influenzalike illness in the N
129 27.7), and the incidence of consultations to general practitioners for norovirus-associated IID was 3
130 diate care (hospital emergency department or general practitioner) for the pain described in the case
131 ys were sent to a sample of 2,250 family and general practitioners (FP/GPs), internists and cardiolog
132 ely referred to our hypertension unit, by 19 general practitioners from Torino, Italy.
133 y made a postdischarge telephone call to the general practitioner (GP) and community pharmacist, alon
134 ations were consecutively recruited by their general practitioner (GP) and completed the questionnair
135 8, and 280 controls matched for age, sex and general practitioner (GP) area, designed to assess the i
136 wing referral from general practice, where a general practitioner (GP) assesses symptoms according to
137 E) approach to LBP (intervention) with usual general practitioner (GP) care (control).
138 eive either a screening questionnaire at the general practitioner (GP) consultation (opportunistic) o
139 tal Episode Statistics datasets, we examined general practitioner (GP) consultations (visits) and eme
140 ionwide hospitalizations with confirmed RSV, general practitioner (GP) data on attendance for care fr
141                                              General practitioner (GP) in-hours, GP out-of-hours, and
142 lion of the NHS budget for secondary care to general practitioner (GP) led Clinical Commissioning Gro
143  discuss their abdominal symptoms with their general practitioner (GP) more than 10 times and wait mo
144 nt data for patients diagnosed with IBS by a general practitioner (GP) or specialist between 2006 and
145 mely diagnosis, but trials aimed at changing general practitioner (GP) practice have been unsuccessfu
146 erol >3 mmol/L (n = 113) were recruited from general practitioner (GP) practices in Oxfordshire and r
147                Women were recruited from 100 general practitioner (GP) practices in seven regions of
148 Poisson regression, taking clustering within general practitioner (GP) practices into account using m
149 incidence and socio-demographic variation in General Practitioner (GP) recorded diagnoses of anxiety,
150 AF; however, this is limited by shortages in general practitioner (GP) resources.
151 s was a prespecified secondary analysis of a general practitioner (GP)-based, cluster randomized, 2-a
152 unity, and are common reasons for visiting a general practitioner (GP).
153  17 (35%) reported obstacles to going to the general practitioner (GP).
154 s the effectiveness and cost consequences of general practitioner-(GP)-led and nurse-led telephone tr
155               To determine whether providing general practitioners (GPs) a list of patients who are n
156 ed to assess the direct clinical workload of general practitioners (GPs) and practice nurses in prima
157 regarding the referral relationships between general practitioners (GPs) and specialists.
158                                              General practitioners (GPs) are lacking in allergy train
159  unnecessary prescriptions of antibiotics by general practitioners (GPs) in England.
160                                              General practitioners (GPs) in the intervention group re
161 epression-management educational program for general practitioners (GPs) on the suicide rate in a reg
162                                              General practitioners (GPs) report defensive antibiotic
163              An additional 24 patients whose general practitioners (GPs) reported them to be certifie
164                                              General practitioners (GPs) sometimes initiate a treatme
165 is study aimed to evaluate whether prompting general practitioners (GPs) to routinely assess and mana
166                                     In 2012, general practitioners (GPs) were contacted to complete a
167                        In control screening, general practitioners (GPs) were given a teaching sessio
168                  Patients, their family, and general practitioners (GPs) were interviewed by phone to
169 veillance is usually carried out by sentinel general practitioners (GPs) who compile weekly reports b
170                                    Providing general practitioners (GPs) with access to a genetic tes
171 urvey study included hospital physicians and general practitioners (GPs) working across 6 European Co
172 mphasises that normal practice should be for general practitioners (GPs), practice nurses, and others
173                                              General practitioners (GPs), their 5- to 15-year-old pat
174     Most care for depression is delivered by general practitioners (GPs).
175 the types of periodontal services offered by general practitioners (GPs).
176         Radiological tests are often used by general practitioners (GPs).
177 and volume of periodontal procedures done by general practitioners [GPs]) are having on the specialty
178 to the different roles of parents, children, general practitioners, hospital specialists, and type of
179 ars and older who had been registered with a general practitioner in one of five Primary Care Trust a
180 ith depression, after having consulted their general practitioner in primary care, both interventions
181 is of data on all patients registered with a general practitioner in the National Health Service (NHS
182                       Physicians were mainly general practitioners in ambulatory care.
183 highlight the potential of the DLS to assist general practitioners in diagnosing skin conditions.
184 rs may have influenced dementia diagnosis by general practitioners in electronic health records, and
185 tients who were followed by a network of 860 general practitioners in Italy.
186 a primary care skin cancer clinic managed by general practitioners in metropolitan Newcastle, Austral
187 ied as a problem, where patients streamed to General Practitioners in or parallel to Emergency Depart
188 ractice-based psychotherapists with those of general practitioners in providing treatment to people w
189  from three large teaching hospitals and via general practitioners in South London.
190 online survey of primary care physicians and general practitioners in the USA aimed to understand the
191 ivided among midwives, hospital doctors, and general practitioners) in terms of clinical efficacy and
192  vaccine uptake and efficacy attributes, and general practitioner influenza-like-illness consultation
193                          Participants, their general practitioners, investigators, and the analysis t
194 versatility of teledermatology, and decrease general practitioner investment time.
195                             Among Australian general practitioners known to frequently request muscul
196 rticipants were identified from clinical and general practitioner laboratory databases and recruited
197  patients attending Emergency Departments to General Practitioners lacks exploration.
198                                  An enhanced general practitioner-led model of care for HeFH is likel
199 nd 1033 quality-adjusted life years when the general practitioner-led program was employed compared w
200                                            A general practitioner-led screening and care program for
201 eillance arm of MEL-SELF from specialist and general practitioner-led skin cancer clinics in Australi
202 o 60 years who were recruited at random from general practitioner lists.
203 e, with 142 controls, randomly selected from general practitioners' lists.
204 hat they had sought clinical help (>80% from general practitioners; &lt;10% from specialist services).
205                             In all, 40 of 80 general practitioners (mean age [SD] 50 [12] years, 42%
206               Fracture data were reported by general practitioners (median follow-up 14.8 y).
207 creening to be successful, public health and general practitioners need to be aware of the signs and
208 through sentinel surveillance, hospital, and general practitioner networks.
209                Data were also collected from general practitioner notes.
210 ates of primary care contact (contact with a general practitioner, nurse, or other health care profes
211  A pragmatic sample of 37 members of staff - General Practitioners, nurses, and practice support staf
212              A questionnaire was sent to the general practitioners of all surviving co-twins to find
213                                          The General Practitioners of four study participants with th
214 ectronic letter-based nudge on GDMT for CKD; general practitioners of individuals with CKD were indep
215  and initiating remedial actions or advising general practitioners on doing so.
216 l illness, or who were unable to visit their general practitioner or complete the questionnaires were
217 id patients were more likely to be seen by a general practitioner or in the emergency room for their
218 face-to-face, telephone or home visit), by a general practitioner or nurse.
219 ogist: Clinical cases were referred by their general practitioner or optometrist, and Genetic cases w
220    Doctor-diagnosed offspring asthma status (general practitioner or parent reports) for the first 10
221  satisfaction, child status, assessment by a general practitioner or physician at the hospital, telep
222 and 15 years in the UK either by referral by general practitioner or self-referral (with diagnosis ma
223 n curbs appropriate preventive strategies by general practitioners or adult cardiologists.
224 dication prescribed by physicians, including general practitioners or private psychiatrists; and (3)
225 y received an endoscopy if required by their general practitioner, or usual care plus an offer of the
226 ation included working with large numbers of general practitioners, out-of-hours services and access
227 or older with at least 1 consultation with a general practitioner participating in the Family Medicin
228 ation-based cohort study of patients seen by general practitioners participating in the General Pract
229 imary care physicians and achieved levels of general practitioner participation of 59% (1998) and 30%
230      Compared with patients seeing family or general practitioners, patients seeing rheumatologists (
231 (overall, one nurse per six patients and one general practitioner per 18 patients) in all hospitals.
232 sity in situ, and (d) educating and training general practitioner plant doctors.
233                                              General practitioners, practice staff, and SSS advisers
234 ren and adults registered with participating general practitioner practices between 2009 and 2018 inc
235 ruited to a prognostic cohort study from 247 general practitioner practices in England.
236 ch as hospitalized patients (three centers), general practitioners' practices (one center), or relati
237 es, secondary care consultants, primary care general practitioners, psychologists, physiotherapists,
238 ere was a preference to seek help from their general practitioner rather than their dentist due to pe
239 ltations as reported by the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) Research and Surveillance C
240  sentinel scheme run by the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP).
241 rding dementia incidence were obtained using general-practitioner-recorded diagnosis of dementia with
242                   Here, we used hospital and general practitioner records in UK Biobank, deriving a b
243 tified through hospital, histopathology, and general practitioner records.
244 ed from questionnaires and from hospital and general practitioner records.
245    We identified diagnostic events by use of general practitioners' records, hospital discharge lette
246                         The current model of general practitioner referral of patients to hospital sp
247                                          The general practitioners referred 3170 patients, of whom 20
248 re; 2093 controls randomly selected from the general practitioners' registers and frequency matched t
249 K Biobank participants with self-reported or general practitioner registration-based address history.
250 al myocardial infarction and stroke based on general practitioners' reports obtained between screenin
251 d Kingdom-wide cohort study was based on the General Practitioner Research Database (GPRD), enrolling
252 ort was identified from the Royal College of General Practitioners Research and Surveillance Centre d
253 , using the UK-based Oxford-Royal College of General Practitioners Research and Surveillance Centre p
254                 We used the Royal College of General Practitioners Research and Surveillance Centre p
255 bjects underwent digital ECG recordings in a general practitioner's core facility from 2001 to 2010.
256       Patients aged 18 years or older with a general practitioner's diagnosis of symptomatic asthma a
257           INTERPRETATION: In patients with a general practitioner's diagnosis of symptomatic asthma a
258 curred on their request rather than on their general practitioner's initiative.
259 enior colorectal surgeon separately from the general practitioner's letter and from the questionnaire
260  about human papillomavirus vaccination at a general practitioner's office, and 2569 (55.3%) rated ac
261  assigned to the IMD quintile score of their general practitioner's practice for each year.
262 p had more primary-care consultations at the general-practitioner's premises than did the control gro
263  we extracted data from the Royal College of General Practitioners sentinel primary care network on c
264 w-up: RR = 0.5, CI: 0.3-0.8) and less use of general practitioner services (1 year follow-up: RR = 0.
265  working in Emergency Departments or related General Practitioner Services were thematically analysed
266                                              General practitioners should offer low-dose amitriptylin
267                                           In general, practitioners should consider unlicensed doses
268  anonymized clinical documents: entries from general practitioners, specialists' letters, radiology r
269 d to compare joint teleconsultations between general practitioners, specialists, and patients (virtua
270     On the fifth occurrence of symptoms, the general practitioner suspected FDEIA and referred the pa
271  to 2 hours of guided support, compared with general practitioner TAU.
272  Scottish Office Home and Health Department, general practitioners, the UK National Health Service Ce
273 proportion of patients who had visited their general practitioner three or more times before hospital
274 e criteria for referral of patients from the general practitioner to a heart failure (HF) center.
275     In patients with symptoms suspected by a general practitioner to be due to heart failure, plasma
276 ication at the primary care setting can help general practitioners to better observe patients' multip
277 c engagement with our study should encourage general practitioners to involve patients in referral de
278 disease and, in particular, schemes to allow general practitioners to refer patients directly for ela
279 zed to 1 of 3 hypothetical scenarios where a general practitioner told them they had a BP reading of
280 orrect skill-mix imbalance, and priority for general practitioner training, especially of rural prima
281 e complementarity of specialist training and general practitioner training, which are essential for t
282 y seen in Bristol, UK, and the activities of general practitioner turned murderer Harold Shipman, we
283     Given concerns about coding behaviour of general practitioners, we sought to study the current co
284  or agencies, and emergency referrals to the general practitioner were based on a standard protocol a
285 ment visits, outpatient visits, or visits to general practitioners were observed.
286                                              General practitioners were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 g
287 eralists to prescribe coxibs, only family or general practitioners were significantly more likely to
288 ual questionnaires completed by patients and general practitioners were used to follow patients who w
289 prediction model to guide decision-making by general practitioners, which estimates risk of one year
290 hen they have a recent disorder, but may use general practitioners, which raises questions about the
291 rvention; n=149) or to usual care from their general practitioner while on an 8-month waiting list fo
292 al microbiologists, gastroenterologists, and general practitioners who are still unsure of the clinic
293 periodontitis were found among the 130 PEARL general practitioners who participated in the RCP survey
294                 New funding arrangements for general practitioners will be required if these proposal
295         This article aims to familiarize the general practitioner with the appropriate roles and effe
296 design, patients presenting to participating general practitioners with influenza-like illness are sw
297 rmatologists, most cases are seen instead by general practitioners with lower diagnostic accuracy.
298 ving in Europe is confronting clinicians and general practitioners with the question of whether or no
299 ncy Departments be directed or 'streamed' to General Practitioners working in or parallel to Emergenc
300 ple of family physicians, pediatricians, and general practitioners younger than 65 years who were in

 
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