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1 survivors' quality of life in the context of healthcare.
2 samples is one of the cornerstones of modern healthcare.
3 ng analysis tools can revolutionize everyday healthcare.
4      A key modifier of outcomes is access to healthcare.
5  treatment and prevention to improve patient healthcare.
6 lead to further advancements in correctional healthcare.
7 as caused major disruption in all aspects of healthcare.
8 gnosis and aetiological discovery in routine healthcare.
9 ditional treatments pathways towards digital healthcare.
10 ly important in the evaluation of quality in healthcare.
11 ractice worldwide and a fundamental value in healthcare.
12 or monitoring general physiology in clinical healthcare.
13 nadequate integration of physical and mental healthcare.
14 tem can influence adoption of innovations in healthcare.
15 PR, 2.3; 95% CI, 2.0-2.6), a usual source of healthcare (53% vs 34%; aPR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.3-1.9), and
16 wing the maturity of nanomedicine for global healthcare, accelerating the pace of transformation of i
17                   We assessed differences in healthcare access and utilization among persons who inje
18                      Low insurance coverage, healthcare access, and medication-assisted treatment uti
19 e, but without elimination of disparities in healthcare access, we found that wide disparities persis
20                                              Healthcare-acquired infection has been reported in simil
21            Empiric antimicrobial therapy for healthcare-acquired infections often includes vancomycin
22 s are understood and considered by surgeons, healthcare administrators, and policy-makers in order to
23 icy makers, media professionals, clinicians, healthcare administrators, researchers, health advocates
24 advanced genetic devices for applications in healthcare and biotechnology.
25 : For example, we simplified pathways in the healthcare and criminal justice systems, modeled an aver
26      Since that time, significant changes in healthcare and critical care have occurred.
27 e (HF) is responsible for a large portion of healthcare and disability costs worldwide.
28      With the rising demand for personalized healthcare and health management tools, electrochemical
29 earch Datalink (CPRD), linked with secondary healthcare and mortality data, to derive an open 2005-20
30 d with developmental disorders, we integrate healthcare and research exome-sequence data from 31,058
31 e evaluated over 5 years and a lifetime from healthcare and societal perspectives, with uncertainty i
32 ce base for efficiently distributing limited healthcare and transportation resources to underserved p
33  Wearable interfaces are central to multiple healthcare and wellness strategies encompassing diet and
34 iting has powerful applications in research, healthcare, and agriculture.
35 ion in a trustable manner for both sport and healthcare applications.
36 rticularly when the costs of medications and healthcare appointments are at odds with basic food and
37          While some geographic variations in healthcare are normal, unwarranted variations raise ques
38                       Candidemia is a common healthcare-associated bloodstream infection with high mo
39 ioides difficile is the most common cause of healthcare-associated diarrhea.
40 dioides difficile infection (CDI) is a major healthcare-associated diarrheal disease.
41                        Cases were considered healthcare-associated if culture was obtained >3 days af
42                     Mathematical modeling of healthcare-associated infections and multidrug-resistant
43 cter baumannii (AB) is critical for limiting healthcare-associated infections and providing the best
44 lth threat owing to increasing prevalence of healthcare-associated infections caused by multidrug-res
45 patients admitted with community-acquired or healthcare-associated pneumonia to 170 US hospitals in t
46             There was a trend toward reduced healthcare-associated transmission of MRSA (IRR, 0.74 [9
47 onth after an RSV illness episode leading to healthcare attendance.
48                               Among Partners HealthCare Biobank individuals, high polygenic score-def
49 ing a large biorepository database (Partners Healthcare Biobank, N = 116,389) with diagnoses and medi
50 anage uncontrolled asthma and its associated healthcare burden may account for important health-relat
51 rly readmission not only increases burden on healthcare, but is also associated with calendar year mo
52 owding, and lack of access to safe water and healthcare can increase susceptibility to infectious dis
53                                     Partners HealthCare Center for Population Health and internal dep
54  care consultations and represents a growing healthcare challenge in an active and increasingly agein
55                 Autism has become a pressing healthcare challenge.
56 od and Drug Administration review documents, healthcare claims, and national survey data.
57 n the year prior to the inpatient admission; healthcare contacts in the week prior to the inpatient a
58  future role for Big Data within the digital healthcare context means balancing the benefits of impro
59 d Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality/Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project data from 43 Sta
60                                        Using Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Data State Inpat
61                                     The 2016 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Nationwide Inpat
62                                              Healthcare cost reduction policies should consider the l
63  during EMR may lead to significantly higher healthcare cost without a clear clinical benefit.
64 ing their hospitalization and increasing the healthcare cost.
65 major driver of overall reductions in direct healthcare cost.
66 nterval, 0.6-1.0 billion dollars) in averted healthcare costs and $2.5 billion dollars (95% uncertain
67                                    Given the healthcare costs associated with obesity (especially in
68 from the Global Burden of Disease Study; and healthcare costs from NHS England programme budgeting da
69 ntact dermatitis, antibiotic resistance, and healthcare costs in conjunction with a low baseline rate
70                             When considering healthcare costs only, the program cost $25,500/QALY gai
71 1) early mobilization is safe and may reduce healthcare costs, 2) safety criteria should be provided,
72  simulating individuals' long-term outcomes, healthcare costs, and quality of life based on their cha
73 nd health-related costs (formal and informal healthcare costs, productivity costs) from established s
74 rove antimicrobial stewardship, and decrease healthcare costs.
75 cal complications have substantial impact on healthcare costs.
76 sus 35%) and less likely to have used public healthcare coverage or a publicly sponsored assistance p
77  This population-based cohort study utilized healthcare data (2005 to 2014) from a statutory health i
78 formation is not available in administrative healthcare data.
79 f diagnosis in the reference-standard mental healthcare data.
80 17, using data from a large secondary mental healthcare database as reference standard, linked to Eng
81 nts discharged from hospitals in the Premier Healthcare Database between April - June 2020.
82             We used a United Kingdom primary healthcare database, the Clinical Practice Research Data
83 vement Network (THIN) database, a UK primary healthcare database.
84      It is unknown how the growth of virtual healthcare delivery affects outpatient UTI management an
85                             In an integrated healthcare delivery system, we examined temporal trends
86 tance of biomedical research, providers, and healthcare delivery systems in advancing the care of pat
87  Care Act, the rapidly changing landscape of healthcare delivery systems, and our evolving recognitio
88 esults show that the spatial distribution of healthcare demands mismatches the post-earthquake capaci
89 s the growing demand for eye care and lessen healthcare disparities for patients.
90 anging, with an increasing proportion of all healthcare dollars flowing through value-based payment m
91 ound physiological parameters monitoring and healthcare during sleep.
92  a major impact on patient safety as well as healthcare economics.
93 unities, and patient flow using our Regional Healthcare Ecosystem Analyst software platform.
94  the perspectives of stakeholders across the healthcare ecosystem can influence adoption of innovatio
95                This would benefit the entire healthcare ecosystem, especially in light of the shift t
96 d computer-based, is well established within healthcare education, allowing rehearsal and refinement
97 ture sectors, including economic, political, healthcare, education, and research systems.
98                                'Big data' in healthcare encompass measurements collated from multiple
99 ussed with integrated sensor applications in healthcare, energy, and environment.
100 inistrative organization to conform to a new healthcare environment while still providing high-qualit
101 e transformation in the increasingly complex healthcare environment.
102 ents-had effects of similar magnitude on the healthcare experience of nontargeted, privately insured
103          The serious health problems, recent healthcare experiences, need for medications and medical
104 eceived acid suppressants, 76.8% (n=350) had healthcare exposure after FMT.
105 eloped an agent-based model of all inpatient healthcare facilities (90 acute care hospitals, 9 long-t
106 ent early outbreaks in the community, within healthcare facilities and at an international conference
107                                     Fourteen healthcare facilities were non-randomly matched into pai
108 ve database that collects information on all healthcare facilities' discharges.
109 o the absence of a comprehensive database of healthcare facilities.
110 between co-resistant phenotypes, patient and healthcare facility characteristics, and time.
111 aces (17%, n = 1170), non-COVID-patient-room healthcare facility surfaces (12%, n = 1429), and househ
112 aces (21%, n = 83), followed by patient-room healthcare facility surfaces (17%, n = 1170), non-COVID-
113 points included incidence of community-onset healthcare facility-associated CDI (CO-HCFA-CDI), incide
114  professional hazard acquired when providing healthcare for patients.
115 but reduced the financial barrier to seeking healthcare for sick children (DD = -26.4 pp, ROR: 0.23,
116 ybrid electronics in the domain of connected healthcare have enabled rapid development of innovative
117 of personalized medicine for next-generation healthcare highlight the need for sensitive and accurate
118 ians to promote the efficiency and safety of healthcare in the future.
119 Why does the country that spends the most on healthcare in the world have one of the worst responses
120 ation Learning Collaborative of the Value in Healthcare Initiative, a partnership between the America
121 ted therapeutic options, referred from other healthcare institutions, since 2016.
122                    Analysis of United States healthcare insurance claims database (July 2007-December
123                                    Access to healthcare is a requirement for human well-being that is
124 mples and the advantages they provide within healthcare, is provided.
125 hildhood pneumonia management at the primary healthcare level in low-income countries is unknown.
126 is was considered in ICU admission, reducing healthcare load at a cost of decreased survival in patie
127 portable, selective, rapid, and non-invasive healthcare monitoring device for immense applications in
128 he new generation of implantable devices for healthcare monitoring.
129 , we estimated hospitalizations, deaths, and healthcare needs expected, age-adjusted for the Kutupalo
130 dies in the Roman Army, US Government, and a healthcare organisation.
131 ation to the quality of work environments in healthcare organizations.
132 cal sensors have been essential in improving healthcare outcomes over the past 30 years, though limit
133 and public health strategy to reduce adverse healthcare outcomes, improve antimicrobial stewardship,
134  relationship to readmission rates and other healthcare outcomes.
135                  A total of 81.5% of medical/healthcare participants who were eligible registered, an
136 ude patients, caregivers, and rehabilitative healthcare partnerships, which are central to cardiac ar
137                                              Healthcare payers in the United States are increasingly
138 hese findings for estimates of the impact of healthcare payment reforms and more generally for the de
139 ompared in quantity and distribution between healthcare personnel (HCP) and patient room (PR) sinks.
140                                    Patients, healthcare personnel, and outcome assessors remained unb
141  with net lifetime savings of $10.42B from a healthcare perspective and $12.71B from a societal persp
142                                       From a healthcare perspective, the volume tax would prevent 850
143 cost-effective treatment option from a payer/healthcare point of view.
144 reforms and more generally for the design of healthcare policy.
145                                              Healthcare practitioners are increasingly paying close a
146 y of air filtration and air recirculation in healthcare premises.
147 ost participants (80%) had access to a named healthcare professional and were more frequently satisfi
148 D severity on patient burden and patient and healthcare professional attitudes towards IBS.
149 lder, 1000U were administered biweekly (by a healthcare professional or self-administered) via intrav
150                                       Of 679 healthcare professional respondents, one-third routinely
151 lding collaborative relationships with other healthcare professionals and negotiating the role are cr
152 ntatives of patient advocacy groups and five healthcare professionals and researchers.
153    However, little research has explored how healthcare professionals experience disgust and what cop
154 hat would previously have been undertaken by healthcare professionals in clinical settings.
155        This guideline is intended for use by healthcare professionals who care for patients with NTM
156                          Tweetable abstract: Healthcare professionals' perspectives on second-level n
157 ion, increasing awareness among families and healthcare professionals, and lowering thresholds for ge
158 Of PwPA (N = 965), 95% reported diagnosis by healthcare professionals, mostly by clinical history and
159 o wished to have support from nonjudgemental healthcare professionals.
160  and T2DM-Ins is cost saving to the national healthcare provider (National Health Service (NHS)) over
161                                 We estimated healthcare provider direct medical economic costs based
162 have led to facility congestion, patient and healthcare provider dissatisfaction, and suboptimal qual
163                  From the perspective of the healthcare provider, the average direct medical cost per
164 " program created by the Camden Coalition of Healthcare Providers (hereafter, the Coalition) has rece
165                To better inform patients and healthcare providers about BIA-ALCL, we convened to revi
166 on knowledge hub linking academia, industry, healthcare providers and hopefully policy makers to redu
167 were merged with 2015 Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems for PQRS survey data.
168                                Hospitals and healthcare providers are preparing for the anticipated s
169 eviewed in this scoping review indicate that healthcare providers are reluctant to initiate conversat
170           (3) What are the opportunities for healthcare providers to address the SDOH affecting the c
171           Investigating COPD trends may help healthcare providers to forecast future disease burden.
172  prioritized by a multidisciplinary group of healthcare providers, researchers, and parents/caregiver
173 eillance system (ILINet) monitors outpatient healthcare providers, which may be largely inaccessible
174  the COVID-19 pandemic on liver patients and healthcare providers.
175 placed a significant burden on hospitals and healthcare providers.
176 cted data from Twitter and two London mental healthcare providers.
177 Practice Evaluation, critical care medicine, healthcare quality, and The Joint Commission.
178 of anthropometric measurements in electronic healthcare records, has rapidly inflated the number of m
179 ith severe wheeze exacerbations confirmed in healthcare records.
180 s committed to advancing the dialogue around healthcare reform and has prepared this updated statemen
181  The American Heart Association's vision for healthcare reform describes the foundational changes nee
182 ective of the patient in taking positions on healthcare reform while recognizing the importance of bi
183 ity metrics, research database accuracy, and healthcare reimbursement in order to highlight potential
184 nt severity of illness, quality metrics, and healthcare reimbursement.
185 ter align with elements commonly included in healthcare-related ABMs.
186 BASE, the Cochrane Collaboration, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality reports, and other relev
187 BASE, the Cochrane Collaboration, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality reports, and other relev
188 sh from PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Reports, and other selec
189 an interagency agreement with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
190 on rates using CDC data, and used Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality/Healthcare Cost and Util
191 r preventive patient management and improved healthcare resource management.
192 patient characteristics, treatment patterns, healthcare resource use (HCRU) and clinical outcomes in
193 ning) and health economics/cost-utility (eg, healthcare resource use and quality-adjusted life years)
194                                              Healthcare resource utilization and utility scores were
195                    Systematically collecting healthcare-resource utilization data will be important f
196 nt RSV infection has a significant long-term healthcare-resource utilization impact across gestationa
197 s constrained, in part, by the allocation of healthcare resources relative to the geographically disp
198 ill have major impact on the future need for healthcare resources, including critical care.
199                          Given its impact on healthcare resources, strategies to improve NAFLD identi
200  to address this burden given limited mental healthcare resources.
201 den of COVID-19 and the subsequent burden on healthcare resources.
202 robacteriaceae data reported to the National Healthcare Safety Network and patient transfer data from
203 categories were identified from the National Healthcare Safety Network procedures.
204 ars (QALY), discounted 3% annually, from the healthcare sector and societal perspectives.
205 d annual budget impact, assessed from the US healthcare sector perspective.
206 ssays, prospective community screenings, and healthcare seeking behaviors.
207 ease severity was positively associated with healthcare seeking in 3 of 5 catchment areas.
208 sehold wealth was positively correlated with healthcare seeking in 4 of 5 study sites, and at least o
209  increased probability of serious morbidity, healthcare seeking, hospitalization, and absenteeism.
210       A survey was administered to ascertain healthcare-seeking behavior in individuals with recent s
211 mortality, and for increased use of advanced healthcare services during and postdischarge along with
212 r achieving universal access to reproductive healthcare services, as called for in the 2030 Agenda fo
213 nd nurses may improve cultural competence in healthcare services.
214  predict the likelihood of finding a DV, but healthcare setting and gender did not.
215 aluation and specimen collection outside the healthcare setting, avoiding unnecessary exposures and r
216 oscopy following abnormal FIT in an academic healthcare setting.
217 ed the risk of covert plasmid propagation in healthcare settings and revealed the national distributi
218  of surfaces and air across a range of acute healthcare settings in the absence of cultured virus und
219  the workplace as well as in educational and healthcare settings.
220 nd midwives make up almost 50% of the global healthcare shift working workforce.
221 sation (aHR 0.48, 0.33 to 0.72, p<0.001) and healthcare/social care costs (margin US$17 524, -24 763
222 ar models to examine association with 5-year healthcare/social-care costs.
223 gy that balances potential patient risks and healthcare staff exposure with improvement in meaningful
224 ential risks of exposure to patients, allied healthcare staff, industry representatives, and hospital
225 in nurses, midwives, and other shift working healthcare staff.
226  treatment options was analyzed from a payer/healthcare standpoint.
227 c while ensuring no disparities in access to healthcare support.
228 validation on a blind cohort from the second healthcare system (15,360 operative events).
229 l validation on a blind cohort from the same healthcare system (1850 operative events) and external v
230 aining cohort (4574 operative events) from 1 healthcare system and then conducted internal validation
231 of preoperative patients within the national healthcare system during the period 1 October 2008-30 Se
232 his approach is still pending, preparing the healthcare system for the advent of disease-modifying th
233 bsequent mortality in the largest integrated healthcare system in the United States.
234 study of antibiotic use across an integrated healthcare system on 12 randomly selected days from 2017
235  outcome was average net cost of care to the healthcare system per patient, calculated as the differe
236 t and ambulatory care sites in an integrated healthcare system to prioritize antibiotic stewardship e
237  pandemic has put tremendous pressure on the healthcare system worldwide.
238  30 to 79 years in a multi-center integrated healthcare system, free of cardiovascular disease, with
239                             In an integrated healthcare system, more than half of antibiotic use occu
240 al drugs are an important part of the global healthcare system, with some estimates suggesting over 5
241 uccessfully implemented in the United States healthcare system.
242 ealth screenings and are connected to the US healthcare system.
243 , healthcare utilization, and cost in the US healthcare system.
244 of life, and are a substantial burden on the healthcare system.
245 place an estimated $20 billion burden on the healthcare system.
246 the treatment of ABSSSI in a community-based healthcare system.
247 grating patient-generated data into existing healthcare systems and clinical workflows, harm resultin
248                                              Healthcare systems and public health agencies use differ
249 s of Cancer Core Europe have organized their healthcare systems at an unprecedented scale and pace to
250  This analysis might be of wider interest in healthcare systems slower in SDD adoption.
251                          The reassessment of healthcare systems to better protect the oncological pat
252  results suggest AXDX can be integrated into healthcare systems with an active ASP even without the r
253 ntrol programs or more broadly support local healthcare systems.
254 matic heart disease, and underdevelopment of healthcare systems.
255 n-continental spread in light of the fragile healthcare systems.
256 enicillin allergy efficiently within complex healthcare systems.
257 es constitutes a growing challenge to global healthcare systems.
258 significant burden on patients, families and healthcare systems.
259 ort better preparation for patient surges in healthcare systems.
260 es can be synthesized for use in hundreds of healthcare target screens.
261 s genomics becomes increasingly important in healthcare, the need for a consistent language for human
262                Expanding delivery of primary healthcare to urban poor populations is a priority in ma
263 dmissions will not have a sepsis code, their healthcare trajectories following the admission are wors
264 ble ratio matched on age, gender, and recent healthcare use.
265 d with substantial morbidity, mortality, and healthcare use.
266 l risks, and quantifying associated costs to healthcare using multiscale models.
267 tality, complications, and reinterventions), healthcare utilization (ED visits, rehospitalizations, a
268 s by subtype, such as costs due to increased healthcare utilization and savings due to simplified pay
269  non-operative management (NOM) on long-term healthcare utilization and survival outcomes.
270 ated with device replacement, follow-up, and healthcare utilization were sourced from the literature.
271  severely impact mortality, quality of life, healthcare utilization, and cost in the US healthcare sy
272 ssociated with lowest lung function, greater healthcare utilization, and longitudinally, further spir
273 ble, and resulted in reduced opioid use, and healthcare utilization, with no difference in pain or pa
274                                          One healthcare visit for a potential vaccination-related sym
275     Patients' last histoplasmosis-associated healthcare visits occurred a median of 6 months after di
276 rapy and the biases of self-reporting across healthcare, we hypothesized that an engaging, personaliz
277 ics and self-reported ability to self-manage healthcare were compared by transition status, and multi
278 completed transition from pediatric to adult healthcare were included.
279 lp to estimate whether individuals will seek healthcare when it is needed, as well as providing an ev
280 tion, household stress, and interruptions in healthcare will contribute to acute chronic disease comp
281 ant differences exist in the availability of healthcare worker (HCW) SARS-CoV-2 testing between count
282  outbreak, whether the text was written by a healthcare worker (HCW), whether the user was based in t
283 5, 65 people came into direct contact with a healthcare worker presenting with a late reactivation of
284                            Across the world, healthcare workers (HCW) are at a greater risk of infect
285 , we showed that 3% (31/1032)of asymptomatic healthcare workers (HCWs) from a large teaching hospital
286  During major epidemic outbreaks, demand for healthcare workers (HCWs) grows even as the extreme pres
287 t testing immunized subjects (in particular, healthcare workers [HCWs]) to investigate the persistenc
288 nd enteric outbreaks, as well as those where healthcare workers became ill.
289 than general population raising concern that healthcare workers could act as silent vectors.
290 sitive-pressure ventilation is a concern for healthcare workers during the severe acute respiratory s
291 g (FGM/C) are a source of growing concern to healthcare workers globally as forced displacement and m
292            The quality of hand antisepsis of healthcare workers in neonatal intensive care units may
293                                      Seventy healthcare workers performed a total of 485 scans.
294 ol for prevention, however, compliance among healthcare workers remains low.
295 l countries reported higher prevalence among healthcare workers than general population raising conce
296 rome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) among Danish healthcare workers to identify high risk groups.
297 disease, whilst minimizing exposure risk for healthcare workers.
298  the health, safety, and availability of the healthcare workforce during this pandemic and to facilit
299  (efforts to increase the number of existing healthcare workforce members involved in the care of PLW
300 ure risk and propagation among patients, the healthcare workforce, and our community at large.

 
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