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1 urviving the first postoperative 30 days and hospital admission).
2 iffer significantly according to the time of hospital admission.
3 PRIT-SHOCK trial with respect to the time of hospital admission.
4 negative patient acquiring MRSA during their hospital admission.
5 red a ventilator, and none died during their hospital admission.
6 uses), lung transplant, or first nonelective hospital admission.
7      Body mass index (BMI) was calculated at hospital admission.
8 nary approach that starts and extends beyond hospital admission.
9  of stay along with mobility status prior to hospital admission.
10 entral obesity are risk factors for COVID-19 hospital admission.
11 for infection and severe infection requiring hospital admission.
12 epresents the most common cause of emergency hospital admission.
13  ( P<0.001); 26.8% of deaths occurred before hospital admission.
14 e subgroup of patients showing AF already on hospital admission.
15 ateral versus bilateral) changed the risk of hospital admission.
16 ticularly when such effects do not result in hospital admission.
17 ients with suspected infection and sepsis at hospital admission.
18 chaemic stroke, or unstable angina requiring hospital admission.
19 utine nursing assessment for all patients at hospital admission.
20 ected patients, of whom 164 (11.4%) required hospital admission.
21 ectomized patients from their first recorded hospital admission.
22 er LRTD progression, and lower likelihood of hospital admission.
23  in-hospital mortality (0-100%) by survey at hospital admission.
24 prevalence and the case-fatality rate during hospital admission.
25 riencing bacterial/fungal coinfection during hospital admission.
26 ed by the reporting sites during the patient hospital admission.
27 esity were associated with increased odds of hospital admission.
28 ons was collected, no case of which required hospital admission.
29 ilator support, and 2 (5%) died during their hospital admission.
30 ily emergency clinic and daily review of all hospital admissions.
31 associations between air pollution and daily hospital admissions.
32 V-2 clinical test results and local COVID-19 hospital admissions.
33 estimate associations between the orders and hospital admissions.
34 nglish national records for 45,706 emergency hospital admissions.
35 tatistics, an administrative database of all hospital admissions.
36 ily emergency clinic and daily review of all hospital admissions.
37 safety outcomes, i.e., fractures, falls, and hospital admissions.
38 line comorbidities and identified subsequent hospital admissions.
39 h self-reported falls and falls that require hospital admissions.
40 (1-5) days; P = 0.021], and more psychiatric hospital admissions (1.3% vs 0.1%; P<0.001).
41 lity was higher in the LRPV PCI group during hospital admission (12 % versus 1.5 %, P<0.001), at 30 d
42 h a lower likelihood of an influenza-related hospital admission (14% vs 2%, P = .04).
43      His relevant medical history included a hospital admission 2 months earlier for abdominal discom
44 tbreak, 2,641 cases of COVID-19 led to 1,832 hospital admissions, 207 intensive care admissions and 1
45 r 2,043 CM diagnoses, 72.9% were made during hospital admission, 21.7% in ambulatory clinics, 3.2% in
46                               There were 83% hospital admissions, 25% ICU admissions, 23% intubations
47 6 (2.7%) participants had injuries requiring hospital admission, 2911 (1.8%) participants had pneumon
48 E], moderate), fewer patients with all-cause hospital admissions (39.74% vs 75.00%; RD, -35.26% [95%
49                                         Upon hospital admission, 5.5% (83/1506) and 3.7% (56/1506) of
50 ar mortality was not affected by the time of hospital admission (54.4% ON-hours versus 51.7% OFF-hour
51 .1); 870 000 influenza-virus-associated ALRI hospital admissions (543 000-1 415 000), 15 300 in-hospi
52 s, Black patients had the highest mean total hospital admissions (6.1 +/- 6.3, p = 0.01) and the high
53              Among them, we recorded 794 824 hospital admissions (74 313 for stroke, 69 446 for ischa
54 e used Cox regression to model time to first hospital admission, according to whether there was evide
55 l trend (decreasing mortality and increasing hospital admissions) across the three ethnic groups, Mao
56   However, it is unknown whether the time of hospital admission affects the overall outcome of these
57                                  Survival to hospital admission also increased significantly when dru
58 nts who presented to the ER, higher odds for hospital admission among patients with known asthma were
59 ificantly longer time from symptoms onset to hospital admission among patients with STEMI during COVI
60 sociations between indoor heat and emergency hospital admissions among African Americans compared wit
61  influenza underdetects influenza-associated hospital admissions among infants by a factor of 2.6 (95
62 of laboratory-confirmed influenza-associated hospital admissions among infants is at least twice that
63 xcluded, as determined by evidence of recent hospital admission, an invasive medical device, or resid
64 ivation) in 39 COVID-19-infected patients at hospital admission and 2 additional times during the fir
65                               Rates of first hospital admission and cardiovascular disease medication
66 n testing were drawn at admission and during hospital admission and convalescence (up to 30 days afte
67 l, <6 g per deciliter) is a leading cause of hospital admission and death in children in sub-Saharan
68 e counted the number of medications taken at hospital admission and discharge; and classified each me
69  of life and clinical outcomes and to reduce hospital admission and health care spending.
70  adverse pneumonia outcome in order to guide hospital admission and improve rational antibiotic use.
71 ph severity score was predictive of risk for hospital admission and intubation.
72 condary outcomes included cellulitis-related hospital admission and quality-of-life assessments.
73 plex, and outcomes may depend on the time of hospital admission and subsequent intervention (ie, ON-h
74                             About 23% of the hospital admissions and 36% of the in-hospital deaths we
75 of specimen collection, 1-4 d ahead of local hospital admissions and 6-8 d ahead of SARS-CoV-2 positi
76  for ABSSSI, with potential for reduction in hospital admissions and cost savings.
77 rd linkage to national electronic records of hospital admissions and death certification.
78 e cell anaemia (SCA) and a leading cause for hospital admissions and death.
79 ccines have led to substantial reductions in hospital admissions and deaths due to gastroenteritis, b
80 Practice Research Datalink (CPRD), linked to hospital admissions and deaths in 1998-2017.
81 ber of complications that result in frequent hospital admissions and high morbidity and mortality.
82 eaths from influenza virus ALRI by combining hospital admissions and in-hospital case-fatality ratios
83 fe but will also reduce all-cause mortality, hospital admissions and lifetime healthcare costs for th
84 verse events were recorded, consisting of 23 hospital admissions and one death, which occurred in CRP
85  (doctor, nurse and dietitian consultations, hospital admissions and prescribed medications) and indi
86 ral pattern of cost savings during inpatient hospital admissions and the end-of-life phase.
87 e models were trained on the earliest 80% of hospital admissions and validated on the most recent 20%
88 ly actionable TAT is associated with reduced hospital admissions and, in admitted adults without foca
89         Uncertainty about the probability of hospital admission (and typhoid incidence and mortality)
90 d patients in the emergency department after hospital admission, and boarding has been a growing prob
91 onic linkage to routinely collected national hospital admission, and death databases.
92 y, cardiovascular hospital admission, cancer hospital admission, and end-stage renal disease hospital
93 who are diagnosed with tuberculosis during a hospital admission, and in those with tuberculous mening
94 ated with lower risk of mortality, all-cause hospital admission, and intubation, but no significant d
95 f asymptomatic CVC-related thrombosis during hospital admission, and the incidence of residual CVC-re
96 ences in cannabis withdrawal symptoms during hospital admission, and week 4 (end of treatment) self-r
97 s accounted for 7% of ALRI cases, 5% of ALRI hospital admissions, and 4% of ALRI deaths in children u
98 mary diagnosis for a GI disease, 3.0 million hospital admissions, and 540,500 all-cause 30-day readmi
99 man metapneumovirus-attributable ALRI cases, hospital admissions, and deaths by combining human metap
100        We estimated the incidence, number of hospital admissions, and in-hospital mortality due to al
101 neumovirus-associated ALRI global incidence, hospital admissions, and mortality burden in children yo
102 ate estimates of the global number of cases, hospital admissions, and mortality from influenza-virus-
103 in the incidence of common diseases, related hospital admissions, and related mortality in a large co
104 studies that assessed the risk of mortality, hospital admissions, and symptoms/dysfunction associated
105 ducing the performance of unnecessary tests, hospital admissions, and treatment with lack of a suppor
106 cancers, injuries, respiratory diseases, and hospital admissions, and we calculated the age-standardi
107 ous 12 months further increased the odds for hospital admission (aOR 3.16, 95% CI 1.63, 6.12).
108 ng blood transfusion (AOR = 4.7, p < 0.001); hospital admission (AOR = 1.60, p < 0.001); and ED visit
109 ent intubation or death within three days of hospital admission (area under the receiver operating ch
110 for-service) beneficiaries with an inpatient hospital admission associated with an explicit sepsis co
111                              She had another hospital admission at 12 years of age.
112 ries analysis assessing changes in pneumonia hospital admissions at three public tertiary hospitals i
113 endemic for CM resulted in a large number of hospital admissions, attendant costs, and unneeded antib
114 atment occurred in 18 (39%) patients (mostly hospital admissions because of infections).
115 alls (total sample = 4013) and falls require hospital admission being modelled separately (total samp
116  aimed to compare the rates of mortality and hospital admission between Maori, Pacific, and European
117  could reduce unnecessary antibiotic use and hospital admission, but its clinical utility requires va
118  significantly associated with lower risk of hospital admission, but there was no significant differe
119  Risk and 95% CIs for COVID-19 diagnosis and hospital admission by use of the NRTIs tenofovir disopro
120  mortality, cancer mortality, cardiovascular hospital admission, cancer hospital admission, and end-s
121 tpartum, we did not find an association with hospital admissions (cHR 2.16, 95% CI 0.69-6.75, p = 0.1
122 019, in terms of time from symptoms onset to hospital admission, clinical characteristics, and in-hos
123 292, with over 80% of costs due to inpatient hospital admission costs, which did not vary by haematom
124                               Total initial (hospital admission) costs for persons with index firearm
125                      Mortality and emergency hospital admission data were obtained through the Texas
126 Research Datalink GOLD 1998-2016) and linked hospital admissions data (Hospital Episode Statistics),
127        Data were extracted from the national hospital admission database according to International C
128 tween 2009 and 2013 from the Thai Nationwide Hospital Admission database, which comprises 76% of all
129                                 The national hospital admissions database for Scotland was used to ex
130 ng the 5-year period before the index ICU or hospital admission date (including matched general popul
131                                All unplanned hospital admissions, deaths or delistings before transpl
132  of all-cause death or heart failure-related hospital admission (DHFA) was assessed.
133 k factors for severe disease, indicators for hospital admission, discharge criteria, and nosocomial i
134  room visit and 7.2% (4.9-10.5) at least one hospital admission due to exacerbation of respiratory sy
135 the association between flavonoid intake and hospital admissions due to atherosclerotic cardiovascula
136 t analysis, the overall number of deaths and hospital admissions during three malaria-transmission se
137 ia deaths by combining in-hospital CFRs with hospital admission estimates from hospital-based studies
138 s due to RSV-ARI by combining hCFR data with hospital admission estimates from hospital-based studies
139 t resulted in significantly fewer annualized hospital admissions, fewer days in hospital, and a lower
140          Similar results were also found for hospital admissions following a fall.
141 y endpoint was a composite of cardiac death; hospital admission for a cardiac event; recurrence or pe
142       Beneficiaries with no sepsis inpatient hospital admission for a year prior to an index hospital
143 cy department presentation for chest pain or hospital admission for AMI between practices.
144 onal Units (IU) or to placebo within 72 h of hospital admission for an acute pulmonary exacerbation,
145 essional soccer players showed lower risk of hospital admission for anxiety and stress related disord
146           The primary end point was death or hospital admission for at least 24 hours that was not du
147 BP at home for three consecutive days before hospital admission for blood and urine sampling and an o
148 investigated whether adults with low pGSN at hospital admission for community-acquired pneumonia (CAP
149 s associated with an increased risk of daily hospital admission for depression in the general urban p
150 utcome was any emergency department visit or hospital admission for either (1) a drug related adverse
151 ar death alone (HR 0.50 [95% CI 0.37-0.67]), hospital admission for heart failure alone (0.32 [0.24-0
152 old) free from cardiovascular death or first hospital admission for heart failure and 1.4 additional
153 mortality by 12% (0.88, 0.83-0.95; p=0.001), hospital admission for heart failure by 9% (0.91, 0.83-0
154                                              Hospital admission for heart failure occurred in 47 (3.5
155  primary endpoint of cardiovascular death or hospital admission for heart failure was 0.38 (95% CI 0.
156  MACE, its components, death from any cause, hospital admission for heart failure, kidney outcomes, a
157 a composite of cardiovascular death or first hospital admission for heart failure; we also assessed t
158 is the most common cardiovascular reason for hospital admission for people older than 60 years of age
159        Bronchiolitis is the leading cause of hospital admission for respiratory disease among infants
160 pital admission for a year prior to an index hospital admission for sepsis were nearly indistinguisha
161 ency department presentation for chest pain, hospital admission for unstable angina or acute myocardi
162                 The HEDIS data underreported hospital admissions for 3 common medical conditions, and
163  found between short-term PM2.5 exposure and hospital admissions for 7 major disease categories: (1)
164 ing a random-effects model for mortality and hospital admissions for a specific health outcome and as
165  hundred adolescents and adults with SCA and hospital admissions for ACS were identified through the
166                                              Hospital admissions for acute coronary syndrome declined
167 and sustained reduction in the proportion of hospital admissions for acute gastroenteritis due to rot
168 tios (aIRRs) of antibiotic prescriptions and hospital admissions for any infection comparing MMR-2 as
169 ith use of the Phenol-Explorer database) and hospital admissions for atherosclerotic cardiovascular d
170                Between 2000 and 2015, global hospital admissions for child pneumonia increased by 2.9
171                                The burden of hospital admissions for childhood pneumonia in Kilifi, K
172 We found evidence of increased mortality and hospital admissions for circulatory and respiratory even
173 wn high neurodegenerative disease mortality, hospital admissions for common mental health disorders w
174               The authors identified 111,620 hospital admissions for depression in 75 cities.
175 l studies, the evidence is still lacking for hospital admissions for depression, which indicates a mo
176  (95% CI=0.73, 2.83), respectively, in daily hospital admissions for depression.
177  exposure to ambient air pollution and daily hospital admissions for depression.
178 5% to 0.27%; adjusted P < 0.001) increase in hospital admissions for diseases of the digestive system
179 ement was associated with lower incidence of hospital admissions for heart failure (adjusted rate rat
180 nvasive management, and compared the rate of hospital admissions for heart failure.
181 s using available data suggest the number of hospital admissions for IE related to IDU ranged from 29
182 s, which included 25 suicide attempts and 22 hospital admissions for medical complications.
183  reported in the treatment withdrawal group: hospital admissions for non-cardiac chest pain, sepsis,
184                                Daily data on hospital admissions for primary diagnosis of 14 major an
185                       The increased risk for hospital admissions for respiratory disease, asthma, and
186 munisation programmes has led to declines in hospital admissions for rotavirus gastroenteritis among
187                         The global number of hospital admissions for RSV-ARI in older adults was esti
188            The opioid epidemic has increased hospital admissions for serious infections related to op
189 econdary outcomes included ED presentations, hospital admissions, fractures, death, falls risk, falls
190 ases of COVID-19 serious enough to warrant a hospital admission from 16 March 2020 to 26 April 2020.
191 east two creatinine values measured during a hospital admission from January 2014 through January 201
192                                   Of 898,139 hospital admissions from 2006-2016, 19,039 (2.1%) were H
193 r National Statistics and data for unplanned hospital admissions from Hospital Episode Statistics.
194 lness in young children and a major cause of hospital admissions globally.
195             Accurate recording of SMI during hospital admissions has the potential to facilitate inte
196 of both cardiovascular and noncardiovascular hospital admissions, highlighting the need for focus on
197 increased hazard of post-treatment all-cause hospital admission (HR, 1.17; 95% CI, 1.05-1.30; P = 0.0
198 gh risk of severe COVID-19 and would require hospital admission if infected (ranging from <1% of thos
199 gh risk (defined as those that would require hospital admission if infected) using age-specific infec
200 ciated if culture was obtained >3 days after hospital admission; if associated with dialysis, hospita
201  we measured global cognitive function at KT hospital admission in a prospective, 2-center cohort of
202 Mothers and Babies was to assess the risk of hospital admission in children with mild-to-moderate ant
203 PM2.5] and ozone) and cause-specific risk of hospital admission in China over a wide spectrum of huma
204  reductions in the rates of ED admission and hospital admission in the 30 days after index events, as
205  and patient costs were derived from similar hospital admissions in administrative datasets.
206  was associated with a decrease in pneumonia hospital admissions in children aged 2-59 months.
207 for the main tertiary hospital to reclassify hospital admissions in children aged younger than 2 year
208 to evaluate the effect of PCV10 on pneumonia hospital admissions in children younger than 5 years and
209  similar age distributions of RSV-associated hospital admissions in each country, with the highest bu
210                          We analysed data on hospital admissions in England for types of acute corona
211 failure (HF) is one of the leading causes of hospital admissions in the US.
212 ergency department (ED) visits and inpatient hospital admissions in this case-crossover study of adul
213 s the commonest cause of respiratory related hospital admissions in young children.
214  a higher number of C-sections and prolonged hospital admission, in addition to worse neonatal outcom
215                  The total cost of inpatient hospital admission including an explicit sepsis code for
216 predictive modelling, considering factors at hospital admission (including urine lipoarabinomannan [L
217 osed in 31 patients (28%) 8 +/- 7 days after hospital admission, including two patients diagnosed wit
218            The proportion of patients with a hospital admission increased significantly in the post-I
219 ative.Conclusion: SARS-CoV-2 RNA in serum at hospital admission indicates a high-risk of progression
220              During 2010-2017, data from the hospital admission logbook were recorded for bacterial m
221 Data were linked with national registers for hospital admissions, malignancies, and death regarding l
222 ; isolation centres, for cases not requiring hospital admission; mass symptom screening and molecular
223      Predictors of poor outcome collected on hospital admission may inform clinical and public health
224 and comorbidities, independent predictors of hospital admission (n = 145, 43%) were chest radiograph
225          In patients enrolled within 36 h of hospital admission (N = 70), IMX-BVN-1 AUROCs are: bacte
226   Primary outcomes were mortality, all-cause hospital admissions, need for intubation, and quality of
227                                              Hospital admission occurred in 90%.
228  episodes) of clinical pneumonia resulted in hospital admissions of older adults worldwide.
229 se cardiovascular events during the surgical hospital admission or within 30 days of surgery.
230 r, we did not find evidence for an impact on hospital admissions or unscheduled physician visits, and
231 sed risk of death during COVID-19-associated hospital admission (OR 2.09, 95% CI 1.09-4.08; p=0.028).
232 tion values, investigations performed during hospital admissions, or information about follow-up in c
233      For each beneficiary, we identified all hospital admissions, outpatient encounters and procedure
234 ications (27% vs 25%), mortality (0% vs 0%), hospital admissions, pancreatic function, and quality of
235 -up; number of interventions, complications, hospital admissions; pancreatic function; quality of lif
236 atients with COVID-19 symptoms not requiring hospital admission: PCR-confirmed convalescent plasmaphe
237 m the DCSS with national death registration, hospital admission, pharmaceutical claim, and socioecono
238 ar associations between flavonoid intake and hospital admissions, plateauing at total flavonoid intak
239 re and C-reactive protein on days 3 and 5 of hospital admission predict failure of intravenous steroi
240 e, sex, Charlson comorbidity score, previous hospital admissions, procedure type, and surgical approa
241               Adjusted odds ratios (AOR) for hospital admissions, procedures, emergency department (E
242 to ~6% positive RT-PCR was found for a daily hospital admission rate >1.5 per 100,000 inhabitants, an
243                                          The hospital admission rate and hCFR were higher for those a
244                             We estimated the hospital admission rate and in-hospital case-fatality ra
245                                          The hospital admission rate increased with advancing age and
246 ignificantly associated with fewer all-cause hospital admissions (rate ratio, 0.50 [95% CI, 0.35-0.71
247  difference in the total number of all-cause hospital admissions (rate ratio, 0.91 [95% CI, 0.71-1.17
248 mic groups in China had greater increases in hospital admission rates and greater reductions in case
249 sociated with changes in GP consultation and hospital admission rates for the selected conditions com
250                     We applied incidence and hospital admission rates of human metapneumovirus-associ
251 and Pacific patients had consistently higher hospital admission rates than European patients.
252 odels were used to estimate trends in annual hospital admission rates, 28-day case fatality rates, an
253                      We estimated incidence, hospital admission rates, and in-hospital case-fatality
254 SV diagnosed <12, 12-24, and >24 hours after hospital admission, respectively.
255 e (O(3)), and carbon monoxide (CO)-and daily hospital admission risk for depression in 75 Chinese cit
256 ratio, 3.09; 95% CI, 2.82-3.89), survival to hospital admission (risk ratio, 2.50; 95% CI, 1.68-3.72)
257 model for end-stage liver disease at time of hospital admission, serum levels of albumin and sodium,
258                                DNR status at hospital admission should be considered when reporting r
259                                              Hospital admissions significantly delayed PRP delivery.
260 ring short-term shelter-in-place orders when hospital admissions surpass a threshold.
261  (mean age, 69 +/- 15 yr; 23% female; 12% of hospital admission survival): capnograms exhibited vario
262  skilled nursing facility after an inpatient hospital admission, those who had sepsis coded during th
263 due to non-gallbladder pathologies but total hospital admission time for biliary causes was lower ove
264             Following matching, 1-year total hospital admission time was significantly higher followi
265 ) with younger patients (N = 340), time from hospital admission to diagnosis was longer (P < .0001);
266 rapid exome sequencing report, the time from hospital admission to the laboratory report, and the pro
267                           The mean time from hospital admission to ultra-rapid exome sequencing repor
268 valuated during a period of surging COVID-19 hospital admissions, to determine the safety of continui
269 R 8.0 million to 15.7 million), 502 000 ALRI hospital admissions (UR 332 000 to 762 000), and 11 300
270 n), 643 000 human metapneumovirus-associated hospital admissions (UR 425 000 to 977 000), 7700 human
271            Diagnosis of endophthalmitis upon hospital admission was associated with a higher intraocu
272                                  The risk of hospital admission was higher in children with RPD at th
273                     The risk of at least one hospital admission was seven times greater in those with
274 rquartile range) time from symptoms onset to hospital admission was significantly longer in 2020 as c
275 care services in the week prior to inpatient hospital admission was similar among beneficiaries who w
276 ure-response relationships between PM2.5 and hospital admissions was observed.
277                             Risk factors for hospital admission were analyzed.
278                                     Odds for hospital admission were lower in Asian patients born ove
279                Infection status, diarrhea or hospital admission were recorded throughout the study.
280  of those who knew they were HIV-positive at hospital admission were taking antiretroviral therapy (A
281                            Around 58% of the hospital admissions were in infants under 12 months, and
282                                              Hospital admissions were more frequent in UG compared to
283                       A total of 117,338,867 hospital admissions were recorded in the study period.
284                                          101 hospital admissions were reported in the vitamin D(3) gr
285 pital admission, and end-stage renal disease hospital admission) were identified.
286 dren with RPD at the FAS had higher rates of hospital admissions when there was persistent dilatation
287 consumption and obesity, with high levels of hospital admissions which are worsening in deprived area
288  a multiple sclerosis exacerbation requiring hospital admission while taking modafinil).
289 care beneficiaries destined for an inpatient hospital admission with a sepsis code are nearly indisti
290 ast one alcoholic drink per week, 1560 had a hospital admission with cirrhosis (n=1518) or died from
291                                              Hospital admission with encephalopathy, defined as a mai
292 nset of oral feeding in the first 24 h after hospital admission with usual oral refeeding and determi
293 tcome was cardiovascular disease, defined as hospital admission with, or mortality from, acute myocar
294                               Adjustment for hospital admissions with an infectious disease in the fi
295                                      Data on hospital admissions with CVEs (based on international cl
296        We relied on ICD-10 codes to identify hospital admissions with CVEs, and there may therefore h
297 34 GP consultations and >5 million emergency hospital admissions with predefined conditions.
298 ic codes from beneficiaries who had an index hospital admission without sepsis.
299 ere disease and one of the leading causes of hospital admissions worldwide.
300 ing improved estimates of the probability of hospital admission would be valuable whenever the optima

 
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