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1 led environment rooms with HEPA filters in a hospital.
2 18 years of age were evaluated at a tertiary hospital.
3 ococcosis from 2002 to 2019 at Barnes-Jewish Hospital.
4 d December 2015 at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital.
5 n models with a random effect for study site hospital.
6 ents with COVID-19, and a public area of the hospital.
7 ty, and 104,572 (17%) had their onset in the hospital.
8 SI and Verigene (VG) testing at a children's hospital.
9 h pain who lived within 50 km from the study hospital.
10 reened for SARS-CoV-2 in a large UK teaching hospital.
11 -volume hospitals and 47.6% in medium-volume hospitals.
12 we found remarkable variability of DM across hospitals.
13 studied 10 patients treated at 12 adult care hospitals.
14 greater) was obtained from a consortium of 8 hospitals.
15  adaptation process of external AI models in hospitals.
16 niversity setting, four medical wards in two hospitals.
17 randomized clinical trial conducted at 17 UK hospitals.
18 th a wide variation in the rates of TO among hospitals.
19 olved in the transmission of A. baumannii in hospitals.
20 nments, though costs were higher at teaching hospitals.
21 atabase of all discharges from US acute care hospitals.
22 n from long-term care facilities (46.6%) and hospitals (27.7%).
23                                           In-hospital, 30-day, and 90-day mortality were 3.2%, 3.6%,
24                                           In-hospital, 6-month and 12-month mortality were studied in
25 01), and more frequently treated in tertiary hospitals (74.7% vs 45.8%; p < 0.0001).
26 e (95% CI, 52.6%-55.7%), 38.0% were from the hospital (95% CI, 36.6%-39.5%), and 7.8% (95% CI, 7.1%-8
27 range: US $37.25 at Hospital B, US $73.27 at Hospital A).
28 ostic rate of close to 100 percent (100% for hospital A, 99.71% for hospital B and 100% for hospital
29 e retrospectively identified in women at two hospitals (a large tertiary care academic hospital and a
30                      In a teaching Brazilian hospital, a retrospective cohort of adult KPC-KP bloodst
31 nstitutes of Health Research, and The Ottawa Hospital Academic Medical Organization.
32 evel characteristics and transfer acute care hospitals (ACHs) as risk factors for colonization.
33 ; cases were attributed mostly to acute care hospitals (ACHs; 141, 50%) and skilled nursing facilitie
34 e most frequently occurring, yet preventable hospital-acquired adverse events.
35  an audit on the adherence to guidelines for hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) for can improve the ou
36                  The cumulative incidence of hospital-acquired pressure ulcers in neonates was 9.8% (
37           Not registered Tweetable abstract: Hospital-acquired pressure ulcers occur frequently in pe
38 ent intubation or death within three days of hospital admission (area under the receiver operating ch
39  Risk and 95% CIs for COVID-19 diagnosis and hospital admission by use of the NRTIs tenofovir disopro
40 s associated with an increased risk of daily hospital admission for depression in the general urban p
41  primary endpoint of cardiovascular death or hospital admission for heart failure was 0.38 (95% CI 0.
42                  The total cost of inpatient hospital admission including an explicit sepsis code for
43                      We estimated incidence, hospital admission rates, and in-hospital case-fatality
44 rapid exome sequencing report, the time from hospital admission to the laboratory report, and the pro
45 ated with lower risk of mortality, all-cause hospital admission, and intubation, but no significant d
46 model for end-stage liver disease at time of hospital admission, serum levels of albumin and sodium,
47 prevalence and the case-fatality rate during hospital admission.
48 PRIT-SHOCK trial with respect to the time of hospital admission.
49 e models were trained on the earliest 80% of hospital admissions and validated on the most recent 20%
50  hundred adolescents and adults with SCA and hospital admissions for ACS were identified through the
51 s, which included 25 suicide attempts and 22 hospital admissions for medical complications.
52                       The increased risk for hospital admissions for respiratory disease, asthma, and
53                          We analysed data on hospital admissions in England for types of acute corona
54                               There were 83% hospital admissions, 25% ICU admissions, 23% intubations
55 s accounted for 7% of ALRI cases, 5% of ALRI hospital admissions, and 4% of ALRI deaths in children u
56 Data were linked with national registers for hospital admissions, malignancies, and death regarding l
57 been infected and outbreaks have occurred in hospitals, aged care facilities and prisons.
58 spitalized for COVID-19 are predictive of in-hospital AKI and the need for dialysis.
59 wo hospitals (a large tertiary care academic hospital and a National Comprehensive Cancer Network-des
60 nd handheld computer devices for 6 months in hospital and at home.
61 g cognitive exams, telephone interviews, and hospital and death certificate codes.
62 tiating (including re-initiating) ART in the hospital and its association with linkage to HIV care, f
63 eurysms diagnosed at the Brigham and Women's Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital between 1990
64 as no association with ART initiation in the hospital and retention in HIV care and viral suppression
65        The median distance between the donor hospital and transplant center increased from 83 to 216
66 o had been discharged or died in Jin Yin-tan hospital and Wuhan union hospital between January 5, 202
67 ter salvage surgery was 27.6% in high-volume hospitals and 47.6% in medium-volume hospitals.
68  and determine whether overuse varied across hospitals and conditions.
69 h 2016 at BPCI hospitals and matched control hospitals and difference in differences models to compar
70 rformed in five Brazilian referral maternity hospitals and enrolling nulliparous women at 19-21 weeks
71  PCI and CABG from 2013 through 2016 at BPCI hospitals and matched control hospitals and difference i
72            The study was done in 21 research hospitals and universities in Italy, Egypt, Greece, Alba
73 ebriefing frequency after IHCA varies across hospitals and whether hospitals which routinely perform
74 describe the characteristics of transferring hospitals, and determine the risk factors of transfer an
75 encounters were from small- and medium-sized hospitals, and managed by nonintensivists.
76 icity (HR = 1.71, 95% CI 1.06-2.77), and low hospital annual volume of antireflux surgery (HR = 1.32,
77 -II, and general distress assessed using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.
78 nt was associated with greater likelihood of hospital ART initiation (p=0.008).
79 00 to 2016 at the National Taiwan University Hospital, assessed the association of hypertension and C
80 th unrelated conditions who were at the same hospital at the same time were matched for sex, age, and
81 100 percent (100% for hospital A, 99.71% for hospital B and 100% for hospital C).
82  per case was US $58.64 (range: US $37.25 at Hospital B, US $73.27 at Hospital A).
83                             We also examined hospital-based affiliation.
84 ostsecondary DENV infection from a pediatric hospital-based study in Nicaragua using a Multi-Color Fl
85  in practice, 11.9% in rural location, 26.8% hospital-based, and 24.6% in primary care).
86       We included patients recruited to a UK hospital-based, multicentre observational study of adult
87 dy describes demographic characteristics and hospital bed capacities of the 5 New York City boroughs,
88 with COVID-19, the needed total capacity for hospital beds would reach 3131 to 12 650 across the 3 ho
89 d Women's Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital between 1990 and 2016 who had available CT angi
90 iagnosed with amblyopia at Boston Children's Hospital between 2010 and 2014.
91      We describe 47 patients referred to our hospital between 21 February and 16 April 2020 with prov
92 died in Jin Yin-tan hospital and Wuhan union hospital between January 5, 2020, and February 22, 2020.
93 acteremia conducted in 3 Swiss tertiary care hospitals between April 2017 and May 2019, with follow-u
94 am was deployed in a staggered fashion at 19 hospitals between August 1, 2016, and February 28, 2019.
95 uded intubated patients with COVID-19 from 5 hospitals between March 15 and June 11, 2020, with tropo
96 5,441 outpatient surgeries performed at 4058 hospitals between October 1, 2015 and September 30, 2016
97 r complication while 7.6% (n=2651) had an in-hospital bleeding event.
98 ness mortality within a non-minority-serving hospital, but no change within minority-serving hospital
99  centres that are linked to district general hospitals by operational delivery networks.
100 spital A, 99.71% for hospital B and 100% for hospital C).
101 urvey on 2 hematology wards at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, United Kingdom, in 2015 to isolate
102 rect transmission from patient to patient in hospitals can drive infections, supported by this organi
103 spect to transport to hospital during out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) resuscitative efforts.
104 cantly improve overall survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest from shock-refractory ventricula
105 isk-standardized survival rate (RSSR) for in-hospital cardiac arrest has emerged as an important metr
106 rvival but not neurologic outcomes in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients compared with placebo.
107  2 links in the chain of survival for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
108 e management in comatose survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
109 with B-CPR delivery and survival from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
110 e, disability, quality of life, dementia and hospital care costs stratified by haematoma location.
111 ying for such exemptions at a Yale New Haven Hospital care practice between 2011 and 2017.
112 h studies into older people's experiences of hospital care.
113  incidence, hospital admission rates, and in-hospital case-fatality ratios (hCFRs) of human metapneum
114 iency rather than the characteristics of the hospital catchment area.
115 s with zero observations was used to predict hospital catchment for malaria admissions adjusting for
116    We propose a plan based around specialist hospital centres that are linked to district general hos
117 d injury were not significantly different by hospital characteristics.
118 itable difficulties that arise when academic hospitals close.
119 open; P<0.001), driven by a lower rate of in-hospital complications (6.6% EVR versus 38.0% open; P<0.
120                            Overall, teaching hospitals consistently showed greater improvements than
121 -operative analgesia, major reductions in in-hospital consumption of opioids, and reduced pain, compa
122 led 1-to-1 matched intussusception cases and hospital controls; 249 pairs were included.
123                             Fangcang shelter hospitals could be powerful components of national respo
124 A discharges for both groups occurred before hospital day 3.
125 scertain the extent of risk reduction for in-hospital death in COVID-19.
126                 We sought to examine whether hospital debriefing frequency after IHCA varies across h
127  as well as in close organic groups, such as hospital departments, army units, or factory shifts.
128                                     Prior to hospital-diagnosis (median of 32 days), 45.1% of patient
129 fety, survival, and functional assessment at hospital discharge and at 3 months and 6 months after di
130          They were more likely to survive to hospital discharge and survive with favorable neurologic
131 east 7 days, the mean error of Prediction of Hospital Discharge Date at day 7 was 0.231 +/- 22.98 day
132 n could reduce morbidity and mortality after hospital discharge in children younger than 5 years of a
133 s, early IFN-alpha2b was not associated with hospital discharge or computed tomography (CT) scan impr
134 aboratory reports returned prior to death or hospital discharge.
135          44% of patients (11/25) survived to hospital discharge.
136 lity of life at 2-3 months and 6 months post-hospital discharge.
137 to breastfeed immediately after birth and at hospital discharge.
138 d who received first HT at Boston Children's Hospital during 1986-2015 with at least 1 post-HT corona
139 l systems (EMS) with respect to transport to hospital during out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) re
140 neous pneumothorax were recruited from 24 UK hospitals during a period of 3 years.
141 o ascertain whether LoS can be attributed to hospital efficiency rather than the characteristics of t
142                                   Among BPCI hospitals, emergency department use differentially incre
143                                          The Hospital Episode Statistics database was used to identif
144  underwent primary antireflux surgery in the Hospital Episode Statistics dataset, 811 (3.6%) had surg
145 his 20-year epidemiological study of all EGS hospital episodes in Scotland has enhanced our understan
146 % versus 27%, p = 0.002) and AD inclusion in hospital files (10% versus 3%, p < 0.001) were more like
147 e sterility validation, which is critical in hospitals, food and pharmaceutical industries to help mi
148 tients were followed-up until discharge from hospital for a median of 2 days (IQR 1-4).
149 3-year-old caucasian man was admitted to our hospital for high fever, lack of appetite related to nau
150 art, lung, liver, kidney, multiorgan) at The Hospital for Sick Children (2002-2011), excluding preval
151 howed greater improvements than non-teaching hospitals for both hospital-level (safe patient handling
152 osed with candidemia our tertiary university hospital from 2012-2017 who had at least 2 serum BDG det
153 red at Kaiser Permanente Northern California hospitals from 2008 to 2011.
154 res including staff testing may help prevent hospitals from becoming independent 'hubs' of SARS-CoV-2
155 s presenting to surgical clinics across five hospitals from July 1 to December 31, 2016, and 8,172 of
156 f 316 patients enrolled at Houston Methodist hospitals from March 28 to July 6, 2020.
157                                     Acquired hospitals had a significant differential improvement in
158 ay readmission (1923/2573, 74.7%), low-value hospitals had higher inpatient evaluation and management
159                                  High-volume hospitals had less variability across outcomes and risk
160                          The lowest spending hospitals had the lowest complication, ED visit, post-ac
161 pital, but no change within minority-serving hospitals (hazard ratio, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.97-1.01).
162  study were obtained from five collaborating hospitals hosting NIHR Biomedical Research Centres in th
163 hophysiology Department at <<Laiko>> General Hospital in Athens, Greece, between December 2014 and De
164 diseases presenting at the national referral hospital in Bhutan.
165       Participants were employees of a large hospital in Boston, MA, who enrolled in the study betwee
166 ted for a period of six months in a tertiary hospital in Coimbatore.
167 art failure program at New York-Presbyterian Hospital in New York, NY rapidly and comprehensively tra
168 s were more common in Brazilians admitted to hospital in the north region than in the central-south,
169 uded adults discharged from Premier Database hospitals in 2016-2017.
170 acebo-controlled study done in 48 acute care hospitals in eight countries, we enrolled patients with
171               There were four trial sites in hospitals in Ghana (Agogo, Tepa, Nkawie, Dunkwa) and one
172 domized controlled trial at three university hospitals in Glasgow, United Kingdom.
173 randomized, placebo-controlled trial in nine hospitals in Kenya and Uganda to determine whether 3 mon
174  2019 (COVID-19) presenting to New York City hospitals in March 2020 led to a sharp increase in blood
175 COVID-19 at 1 of 5 Mount Sinai Health System hospitals in New York City between February 27 and June
176 ies of patients with COVID-19 admitted to 12 hospitals in New York City, Long Island, and Westchester
177 , non-inferiority NOBLE trial was done at 36 hospitals in nine northern European countries.
178 ntation and were actively followed up in two hospitals in Paris on March 1st, 2020.
179  basket trial, we recruited patients from 26 hospitals in six European countries and the USA.
180 ere recruited from 35 academic and community hospitals in ten countries.
181 c and symptomatic staff at Oxford University Hospitals in the United Kingdom.
182 in a multicenter study including 16 teaching hospitals in the United States (n = 13) and Europe (n =
183 aith-based dispensaries, health centres, and hospitals, in 18 regions.
184 beds would reach 3131 to 12 650 across the 3 hospitals, including 338 to 1608 ICU beds and 118 to 599
185 From an Acute Heart Failure Episode), the in-hospital initiation of sacubitril/valsartan in patients
186                         Sharing data between hospitals is restricted by legal and ethical regulations
187                                    Forty-two hospitals joined BPCI for PCI and 46 for CABG.
188 stay (ED-LOS); ICU length of stay (ICU-LOS); hospital length of stay (HLOS); complications; and in-ho
189 e barriers to discharge, which could prolong hospital length of stay (LOS) and increase financial bur
190 e associated with ICU readmission, increased hospital length of stay and death and are not predicted
191                                Over a median hospital length of stay of 7 days (interquartile range,
192 mortality rates based on insurance type, and hospital length of stay.
193 ll as 30-day mortality, independent of other hospital level characteristics including procedural volu
194 ut, when analyzed by time periods, or at the hospital level or the patient level, Impella use was ass
195 vements than non-teaching hospitals for both hospital-level (safe patient handling programs and organ
196 time, cluster effects, and patient-level and hospital-level characteristics.
197 emoprophylaxis, and (3) examine patient- and hospital-level factors associated with failure.
198 le the impact of demographic-, clinical- and hospital-level factors on outcomes following surgery hav
199 ved variation was attributable to unmeasured hospital-level factors.
200                                       Median hospital-level risk-adjusted 30-day home time was 24.0 d
201  and less frequently to long-term acute care hospitals (LTACHs; 29, 10%).
202  Department of Medical Genetics at La Timone Hospital (Marseille, France).
203       Ragon Institute (Massachusetts General Hospital, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Har
204 cant difference between groups, including in-hospital mortality (1.7% for uncemented fixation vs 2.0%
205                                              Hospital mortality (29.75% vs 21.1%), combined mortality
206 ssociated with decreased risk-adjusted acute hospital mortality (odds ratio, 0.94; 95% CI, 0.90-0.99;
207 en between higher strain and increased acute hospital mortality (odds ratio, 1.04; 95% CI, 1.00-1.10;
208 cterize COVID-19-associated morbidity and in-hospital mortality by race/ethnicity.
209 ention-to-treat primary analyses examined in-hospital mortality in the four pairwise comparisons of e
210 ients with COVID-19 and is associated with a hospital mortality rate of >60%.
211 vities Score per nurse ratio on day 1 and in-hospital mortality remained significant (odds ratios, 1.
212 ss-sectional observational study of COVID-19 hospital mortality using data from the SIVEP-Gripe (Sist
213                                   Overall in-hospital mortality was 20.3% (95% CI, 18.2%-22.4%).
214                                           In-hospital mortality was 8.8% for the entire patient cohor
215                 In the subgroup analysis, in-hospital mortality was lower in patients operated in cen
216 length of stay (HLOS); complications; and in-hospital mortality were compared before (PRE) and after
217 elirium rate, intensive care unit mortality, hospital mortality, and physical function- and mental he
218                             Outcomes were in-hospital mortality, mortality rates based on insurance t
219                      The primary outcome, in-hospital mortality, was analyzed using a multivariable l
220 cess to TAVR, TAVR utilization rates, and in-hospital mortality.
221 R, 4.86 [1.92-12.28]) had higher rates of in-hospital mortality.
222 riod for ED-LOS, HLOS, complications, and in-hospital mortality.
223  versus 2.35 DOTs), resulting in 31-33% more hospitals moving into bottom or top usage quartiles post
224  had an HP procedure at a low occupancy rate hospital (n = 1,218, 3.6%).
225 atients) recruited from the John Peter Smith Hospital Network.
226 g an immediate registration opportunity in 2 hospitals notably increased the number of registrations
227   There was a monotonic relationship between hospital occupancy rate and the odds of experiencing a c
228 dds ratio, 4.4; 95% CI, 3.0-6.4), and die in hospital (odds ratio, 6.4; 95% CI, 2.8-14.0) (p < 0.001
229 irmed to have COVID-19 from the San Raffaele Hospital of Milan and 480 samples of prepandemic organ d
230 015 were enrolled from the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine.
231 pective TIA database of the First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University.
232  of treatment in disproportionately minority hospitals on outcomes in patients with sepsis across the
233  available over the counter or prescribed in hospitals or drug treatment centres.
234 I 0.39-0.99, P = 0.045) or Magnet designated hospitals (OR 0.45, 95% CI 0.29-0.71, P = 0.001).
235  process measure if treated at nonsafety net hospitals (OR 0.62, 95% CI 0.39-0.99, P = 0.045) or Magn
236 ome public health priorities linked to major hospital outbreaks and the recent emergence of multidrug
237 ive feedback interventions designed to avert hospital outbreaks.
238 virological outcomes in a large multi-centre hospital outpatient population, and guide development of
239 ible, meticulous rules (precise triage, safe hospital path, high level of protection for health-care
240                                           In-hospital pediatric sepsis mortality has decreased substa
241  factors above, medical comorbidities, and a hospital random effect were used to quantify odds of rec
242 , the association with patient outcomes, and hospital rankings.
243 dpoints were survival and inflation-adjusted hospital readmission charges.
244 ation included 343 eyes of 185 subjects with hospital record diagnoses of MFC or PIC.
245                 In a retrospective review of hospital records of 40 human monkeypox cases from Nigeri
246 rted early detection, initial treatment, and hospital referral of women with hypertension.
247 in demographic, clinical, socioeconomic, and hospital-related characteristics between patients with a
248 es in large, teaching, non-profit, and rural hospitals reported slightly better scores for safe patie
249 omized clinical trial conducted at 24 trauma hospitals representing the UK Major Trauma Network that
250 A study of Medicare patients at 340 teaching hospitals (resident-to-bed ratios >= 0.25) and matched p
251 tched patient controls from 2444 nonteaching hospitals (resident-to-bed ratios < 0.05).We studied 86,
252 mportant metric to benchmark and incentivize hospital resuscitation quality.
253                           We calculated each hospital's average annual volume for total open AAA repa
254                                            A hospital's risk-standardized survival rate (RSSR) for in
255 ) and non-DLBCL pathologic images from three hospitals separately using AI models, and obtain a diagn
256 I), a complication that frequently occurs in hospital settings, is often associated with hemodynamic
257 older patients' experiences of care in acute hospital settings.
258 ere were a total of 244 patients at 1 remote hospital site who were provided with ID consultations, e
259 re was significant variation in rates across hospital sites (adjusted median rate, 11.4%; IQR, 8.9-14
260 o, 10.4; 95% CI, 5.9-18.1), suffer prolonged hospital stay (odds ratio, 4.4; 95% CI, 3.0-6.4), and di
261 ipated laser benefits for ThuVARP of reduced hospital stay and complications were not observed.
262 ere found in major morbidity, mortality, and hospital stay between MIPD and OPD.
263 ignificantly lower than predicted throughout hospital stay for all gestation groups when compared wit
264 chological events, he was discharged after a hospital stay of almost 1 year.
265                                   The median hospital stay was 1 to 9 days across specialties.Postope
266 sing a 100 mm visual analog scale, length of hospital stay, and patient-reported quality of life.
267                         To prevent prolonged hospital stay, initiatives should in addition focus on d
268 , 1.74; 95% CI, 1.42 to 2.14), and length of hospital stay.
269 as time to functional recovery and length of hospital stay.
270 o be discharged home and necessitated longer hospital stays and greater hospitalization charges.
271 ; 95% CI, 0.37-0.80), but prolonged ICU- and hospital stays.
272  optimization to derive triggers that ensure hospital surges will not exceed local capacity and lockd
273 roup (P = 0.004) but not when conditioned on hospital survival (P = 0.34).
274                                              Hospital survival was 80%.
275 Organism type, specimen collection time, and hospital teaching status influenced TTR.
276 eriod, the RR was 0.85 (95% CI 0.80-0.91) in hospitals that did not implement CCRT.
277                            Among patients in hospitals that introduced CCRT, the relative risk (RR) o
278 vation myocardial infarction requiring inter-hospital transfers for primary percutaneous coronary int
279                     Strong significant inter-hospital variation remained after adjustment for the maj
280 veral obstetric conditions did not influence hospital variation.
281                 The primary outcomes were in-hospital vascular complications and bleeding events.
282 logical care in order to dramatically reduce hospital visits and admissions and therapy-induced immun
283 rse events are common after ICU discharge to hospital ward and are associated with ICU readmission, i
284 pragmatic cluster-randomized trial where the hospital was the unit of randomization.
285                    The New York Presbyterian Hospital-Weill Cornell Medicine PICU physician group con
286 n 1989 and 2017 at a tertiary care pediatric hospital were analyzed.
287                          For each procedure, hospitals were categorized into 3 groups according to va
288            Occupancy rate was calculated and hospitals were categorized into quartiles.
289                      At the time of surgery, hospitals were defined as having a COVID-19-free surgica
290                          The highest-quality hospitals were identified as those in the quintile with
291             A total of 1316 patients from 20 hospitals were included.
292 rts, medical records for all events at every hospital where the patient reported receiving care were
293 ter IHCA varies across hospitals and whether hospitals which routinely perform debriefing have higher
294 lected data of patients who were admitted to hospital with a clinical diagnosis of TBI and an indicat
295 Most patients underwent an HP operation at a hospital with an above average occupancy rate (n = 20,86
296             We enrolled patients admitted to hospital with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 and at lea
297 pital with the best transplant rate over the hospital with the best posttransplant outcomes (marginal
298 had the largest impact on survival chose the hospital with the best transplant rate over the hospital
299 l 1, 2020, 1150 adults were admitted to both hospitals with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19, of which 2
300       After hip fracture repair, patients in hospitals with major decreases in LOS had a higher risk
301 e+/-azithromycin from March 1 to the 23 at 3 hospitals within the Northwell Health system were includ

 
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