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1 pregnant women with obesity (294 contol, 263 intervention).
2 these findings and realize the potential for intervention.
3 rvention and evaluating the effectiveness of intervention.
4 ber 12, 2018, of whom 76 completed the study intervention.
5 lance and identify potential for therapeutic intervention.
6 patients who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention.
7 d, inactivated, or unchanged vs. RVD with no intervention.
8 nge of illnesses, often warranting immediate intervention.
9  requirement of hospitalization and surgical intervention.
10 ccessive adjustments hindering rapid process intervention.
11 ion undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention.
12  immediate multivessel percutaneous coronary intervention.
13 tically requires a well-defined hypothetical intervention.
14 roaches for better exploiting EVs in disease intervention.
15 uch taxation is an effective population-wide intervention.
16 on of the technique in percutaneous coronary intervention.
17 the use of virtual reality as an educational intervention.
18 47phox is a potential target for therapeutic intervention.
19 s (LPG) stoves, likely the cleanest scalable intervention.
20 ial therapeutic target for metabolic disease intervention.
21 ticipants, 491 (97%) received the Step it Up intervention.
22 erapy is an important target for stewardship intervention.
23  or LBs to levels below those at the time of intervention.
24 s are amenable to nutritional or therapeutic intervention.
25 um TRiC-mediated protein folding for malaria intervention.
26 closed-loop neurostimulation for therapeutic interventions.
27 detection might lead to less invasive, early interventions.
28 r-lasting effectiveness over single-approach interventions.
29 or alter disease progression via appropriate interventions.
30 , requires urgent development of therapeutic interventions.
31 C concentrations varied differently with the interventions.
32  strategies for therapeutic and preventative interventions.
33 p had more invasive diagnostic and treatment interventions.
34 ng may overcome the limitations of the prior interventions.
35 pment is necessary to pioneer novel prenatal interventions.
36 an be useful in designing disease management interventions.
37 sible target for preventative or therapeutic interventions.
38 ptomatic infection is essential for targeted interventions.
39  levels of readiness and acceptance for such interventions.
40 s significant implications for network-based interventions.
41 le of climate, urbanization and variation in interventions.
42 30 pregnant women) were randomly assigned to intervention (22 clusters [36 008 pregnancies]) or contr
43 and practice level (list size, locality, pre-intervention achievement against primary outcomes, total
44                                              Interventions across the developmental span, varying ris
45                              But few housing interventions address the broader aspects of healthy chi
46                                              Interventions addressing chronic health conditions (requ
47 r cumulative risk of disease progression and intervention after uncomplicated cataract surgery was 0%
48 g may be useful in the development of future interventions aimed at advancing the timing of food inta
49                                              Interventions aimed at ameliorating Treg function may be
50                                        Thus, interventions aiming at normalizing BMI in girls with hi
51        A one-time LTBI testing and treatment intervention among non-U.S.-born residents was projected
52  are promising targets for human therapeutic intervention and developing stress-resilient crops.
53 ce for the government in providing effective intervention and evaluating the effectiveness of interve
54 sectional study are comparable to those from intervention and genetic observational studies.
55 ional attention as a promising superutilizer intervention and has been expanded to cities around the
56  evolving physiological guidance of coronary intervention and its use is supported by large clinical
57                 Features of this lead hazard intervention and measures to control dust may reduce chi
58 HIV aged 18-49 years who participated in pre-intervention and post-intervention surveys, previous HIV
59 ervention periods, respectively (baseline vs intervention and postintervention, P = .001 and P = .003
60 c variants had undergone cancer surveillance interventions and 4 had undergone cancer risk-reducing s
61 n, time to papilledema resolution, treatment interventions and final visual outcomes.
62 ol initiatives, and the microscale of design interventions and placemaking such as building orientati
63                     By focusing on pragmatic interventions and simple aims, we demonstrate the feasib
64 patient survival, survival free of operative intervention, and data on complications and hospitalizat
65 ne-concordant duration) during the baseline, intervention, and postintervention periods, respectively
66 ublications were included-10 RCTs, 4 non-RCT interventions, and 23 observational studies.
67 esponse to changing environments and medical interventions, and information is often modified by indi
68 evaluated a sleep-related/fatigue-management intervention; and (2) studies that reported intervention
69  exciting concepts and potential targets for intervention are emerging.
70 novation lifecycle, multisite studies of EHR interventions are critical for generalizability.
71 havioral-psychosocial, SSP, OAT, FSI, and CM interventions are effective in reducing risk of HIV and
72                                   Additional interventions are needed to control and eliminate malari
73                                              Interventions are needed to reinforce awareness that pul
74 r INSTI initiation and potential therapeutic interventions are needed.
75 and treatment support, along with prevention interventions, are needed to achieve HIV epidemic contro
76                                       In the intervention arm, 1354 patients received prebiotic or sy
77      WHO recommends the use of psychological interventions as first-line treatment for depression in
78  for their main endpoint, five for increased intervention-associated mortality.
79 eds to start at an early age with primordial interventions at the population level.
80 he Perioperative Pain Self-management (PePS) intervention, based on principles of CBT, to determine f
81 on, contact quarantine, and population-level interventions because of the specific transmission kinet
82 uggestion is based on an attempt to link the interventions being facilitated by SER, the participatio
83 ual, and temporal conditions under which the interventions benefit students.
84 transferred to the hybrid suite for emergent intervention between 2013 and 2017 were compared to cons
85 was moderate for multicomponent clinic-based interventions but was low or very low for other interven
86 on of AKI in children can allow for targeted interventions, but the wealth of data in the electronic
87 ws to run complex analyses requiring minimal intervention by users.
88  increased weight and CD4+ T cells, and such interventions can be integrated into HIV-care programs i
89                               Evidence-based interventions can deliver substantial public health and
90 e latent neural stem cells and that targeted interventions can guide them through their neuronal diff
91          We disaggregated costs according to intervention characteristics (delivery platform, deliver
92 a nearby comparison school district with pre-intervention characteristics similar to those of the int
93 transcatheter VSD closure and 6 months after intervention (closure group).
94 ,382 potentially eligible people, 637 from 5 intervention clusters and 1,097 from 10 UC clusters were
95  network meta-analysis found that meditation interventions, cognitive training, cognitive rehabilitat
96 ulations (United States general or similar), interventions (colonoscopy, autopsy), comparisons (world
97 o were diagnosed was significantly higher in intervention communities (absolute increase of 9% to 93%
98                             At study end, in intervention communities, 1228 people living with HIV (9
99 gative men (40% of 1673) were circumcised in intervention communities.
100 ary outcomes, there was no effect of any UBL intervention compared to control on women's past-year ex
101 port 29 recommendations (from 30 population, intervention, comparison, and outcomes questions) on the
102                                Despite these interventions, confirmed COVID-19 infection rates have b
103 ers were randomized 1:1 to either a 12-month intervention consisting of a nurse care manager with an
104                          This evidence-based intervention could be part of EtHE.
105  unclear whether systemic lifespan-extending interventions could ameliorate the declining performance
106 ad 1118 eligible index cases that led to 342 interventions covering 8948 individuals.
107 mly assigned to receive 1 of the following 3 interventions daily for 5 wk: low-nitrate vegetables + p
108                                         WASH interventions decreased the number of parasites detected
109  lead-time for vaccine development and other interventions decreases.
110 15 GNI for LICs and lower-MICs combined) and interventions delivered in health centres (requiring 49.
111 rch in this area and an increasing number of interventions designed to improve psychological well-bei
112 suggesting the potential for new therapeutic interventions, directed against evolving resistance.
113 und that in February 2019, the proportion of intervention drinks over the lower levy sugar threshold
114 tudy, we measured the impact of a sanitation intervention (dual-pit latrines, sani-scoops, child pott
115 tifying the rate of decay after experimental intervention (e.g., pulse labeling).
116  intervention; and (2) studies that reported intervention effects on fatigue, sleep, or performance a
117                                              Intervention effects were estimated using mixed-effects
118                                A nutritional intervention, exclusive enteral nutrition (EEN) can indu
119 wed improvement of 15 letters or more in the intervention eye, and 3 participants lost more than 15 l
120  mm(2) and median BCVA was 43 letters in the intervention eye.
121                       This smoking cessation intervention for expectant fathers that focused on expla
122 ot been previously evaluated as a population intervention for HBV infection, despite high-profile dat
123           Seven eyes (10.6%) required repeat intervention for IOP control with median time of 3.17 ye
124 rm expeditious primary percutaneous coronary intervention for patients presenting with ST-segment-ele
125    Environmental enrichment (EE) is a robust intervention for reducing cocaine-seeking behaviors in a
126 patients after primary percutaneous coronary intervention for ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarct
127 elated cognitive/motor impairment and inform interventions for addiction.
128 tation, and exercise were the most effective interventions for adult non-central nervous system cance
129  and to evaluate the efficacy of therapeutic interventions for breathing and sleep anomalies.
130  These findings highlight the need for early interventions for dementia prevention to mitigate the ef
131                  Nevertheless, candidate HIV interventions for men advance to clinical trials without
132 rther study as a metric to guide therapeutic interventions for patients with bacterial pneumonia.
133 effectiveness, and benefits of psychological interventions from client, practitioner, and societal pe
134 use of traditional stoves in addition to the intervention gas stove) may occur.
135 are being used to assess compliance with the intervention, given that stove stacking (use of traditio
136 control group and 10.4 (22.7) minutes in the intervention group (baseline-adjusted difference [95% co
137 2016, with follow-up occurring in 459 in the intervention group and 1,012 in UC.
138 sation, 149 (2%) of 6983 participants in the intervention group and 143 (2%) of 6531 participants in
139 e enrolled; 43 patients were assigned to the intervention group and 52 to the placebo group.
140            Twelve (4.3%) participants in the intervention group and 7 (2.4%) in the control group rep
141  Hg (95% CI, 1.1 to 5.8 mm Hg) higher in the intervention group compared with the control group.
142      Compared with controls, patients in the intervention group received significantly lower daily do
143               In addition to usual care, the intervention group used devices to target mobility and p
144 to treatment (28 [42%] of 66 patients in the intervention group vs 21 [32%] of 65 in the control grou
145                                 Women in the intervention group were recruited by postal invitation.
146               Among 1654 participants in the intervention group who swallowed the Cytosponge device s
147                                          The intervention group's moderate-to-vigorous physical activ
148  assigned ICUs to either audit and feedback (intervention group) or participation to a national regis
149 up) and from September 2017 to January 2019 (intervention group).
150 ersus 3%, p < 0.001) were more likely in the intervention group.
151 milar emergency case and successful surgical intervention have been reported before.
152  significantly reduced percutaneous coronary intervention (hazard ratio, 0.68 [95% CI, 0.59-0.79]; P<
153 ive inotropic drug or mechanical or surgical intervention (HR, 0.64; 95% CI, 0.47-0.87; P=0.005).
154  [95% CI, 0.59-0.90]), percutaneous coronary intervention (HR, 0.78 [95% CI, 0.63-0.95]), and fatal m
155 health efforts in addition to local targeted interventions.IMPORTANCE While traditional epidemiologic
156 uture trials to determine if tricuspid valve intervention improves outcomes in this high-risk group.
157 rs were surveyed in each arm, one before the intervention in 2014 (control: n = 1,301, intervention:
158 strategies for cell type- and stage-specific intervention in cardiac diseases.
159 yogenesis and new strategies for therapeutic intervention in early pregnancy loss.
160  bleeding events after percutaneous coronary intervention in the GLOBAL LEADERS study.
161 nt and 99% of patients received the assigned intervention in the PVI-alone and CMR group, respectivel
162                      Studies comparing these interventions in adults, whether administered alone or a
163  learning may be a viable approach for novel interventions in bipolar disorder.
164                               Rehabilitation interventions in critically ill patients do not influenc
165  therapy and to enhance the effectiveness of interventions in persistent hotspots of transmission.
166 e databases for randomized trials of eHealth interventions in solid organ transplant recipients.
167                                              Interventions included pars plana vitrectomy and silicon
168                                 The peer-led interventions included the Triple A (Adolescent Asthma A
169 omponents with specialist investigations and interventions including rehabilitation.
170 gned to receive HIV prevention and treatment interventions, including enhanced HIV testing, earlier a
171 no statistically significant benefits of any intervention individually or in combination for the 6 en
172 his hypothesis, we found that, following the intervention, individuals displayed a reduction in coupl
173  (INSIGHT) study's responsive parenting (RP) intervention, initiated in early infancy, prevented the
174                 Limiting research and policy interventions is the low temporal and spatial resolution
175 e agent of the diseases, through restrictive interventions, it is believed that only effective vaccin
176 ompared in the baseline (January-June 2016), intervention (January-June 2017), and postintervention (
177 mised controlled trial (RCT), of a lifestyle intervention (low glycaemic index (GI) diet plus physica
178 avascular imaging with percutaneous coronary intervention may overcome the barriers to utilization.
179 ltiple substances, the opioid specificity of interventions may limit their ability to address the bro
180 nce's large-scale intensive surveillance and intervention measures.
181                  Studies of patient-provider interventions (n = 12), health information technologies
182 ion technologies (n = 11), and health system interventions (n = 88) indicated higher cancer screening
183 roup-only intervention, n=400 mixed-delivery intervention, n=376 comparison group).
184 lled and randomly assigned (n=376 group-only intervention, n=400 mixed-delivery intervention, n=376 c
185  years afterwards in 2016 (control: n = 996, intervention: n = 1,035).
186 he intervention in 2014 (control: n = 1,301, intervention: n = 1,357), the other 2 years afterwards i
187 hundred eighty-four patients (n = 142 before intervention; n = 42 after intervention) were included.
188 ive medication reduction (removal of 1 drug [intervention], n = 282) or usual care (control, n = 287)
189 ind any effect of rumination, neither on the intervention nor on the emotion regulation task.
190                                          The Intervention Nurses Start Infant Growing on Healthy Traj
191 ided into four groups that were subjected to intervention of saline (normal and model control group),
192                               Meanwhile, the intervention of TRAF6 expression in melanoma cells affec
193 eased from baseline to immediately after the intervention on flat and undulating surfaces and while l
194 n cigarettes; no trials evaluated effects of interventions on e-cigarette use.
195 sed the effects of different pharmacological interventions on the aggregation and internalization of
196      There was no difference between the two interventions on the tested outcomes (besides OLST).
197 ial and for a pragmatic multiple risk-factor intervention, one designed by Institute staff and operat
198                           There is no single intervention or medication to treat delirium, making it
199  algorithms still require significant manual interventions or have yet to demonstrate their utility i
200 ve repair/replacement; percutaneous coronary intervention; or heart/heart-lung transplant).
201 y orders, 46% (95% CI, 42%-49%) with limited-interventions orders, and 62% (95% CI, 58%-66%) with ful
202 ore intervention to 42 (range, 14-100) after intervention (P = 0.003).
203                                   Of the 505 intervention participants, 491 (97%) received the Step i
204         At the time of percutaneous coronary intervention, participants were randomly assigned to pro
205 ibrillation (AF) after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is unclear.
206 giography and possible percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).
207  The incidence of SSI-CRANs was lower in the intervention period (15.3% vs. 3.5%; p < 0.001).
208 nd prospects for drug discovery and consider intervention points for mitophagy enhancement.
209 anism for COVID-19 that provides therapeutic intervention points that can be addressed with existing
210 global gap or learn effective individualized intervention policies.
211  necessitate establishing rapid conservation interventions postconflict that align with local socio-c
212 usiastic about educational and technological interventions preferring practical training and auditory
213 scribed by a physiotherapist according to an intervention protocol, including virtual reality video g
214  in randomised controlled trials of surgical interventions provided there is a strong scientific and
215                                 The surgical intervention rate was 47%.
216 wise meta-analysis showed that psychological interventions reduce PTSD symptoms more than inactive co
217  0.73; 95% CI: 0.56-0.94, p = 0.014), and no intervention reduced perpetration of past-year physical
218 es the importance and potential of sustained intervention regarding the skin pH and urges for larger
219 gful metric for risk stratification to guide interventions remains a challenge.
220 he quality and reporting of future self-care intervention research.
221 ere unblinded, and specific physical therapy interventions responsible for effects could not be deter
222                                         Both interventions resulted in a similar decrease in body wei
223 tion characteristics similar to those of the intervention school district and matched schools in each
224 espite the risk of bias, almost all types of intervention seemed effective in reducing opioid prescri
225                       Future community-level interventions should expand the community health worker
226  weight loss is the primary goal of surgical intervention, significant volume reduction is required,
227 r the secondary outcomes, only the men's UBL intervention significantly reduced male perpetration of
228 he sprayed sites while the proportion in non-intervention sites remained unchanged.
229                                      Disease intervention specialist records for ES cases in Missouri
230            This interpretation suggests that intervention strategies should target a wide range of re
231 ntified with a clear need for individualized intervention strategies, the neurobiological substrates
232 at might suggest novel disease prevention or intervention strategies.
233 rference with the ISR emerges as a promising intervention strategy for combating age-related cognitiv
234 idered as a potentially useful AR outcome in intervention studies.
235 ial was a randomized, controlled, crossover, intervention study.
236  Karzinom) is a population-based prospective intervention study.
237                                       Simple interventions such as swallowing assessments, bowel and
238 mmunodeficiency virus (HIV) has driven novel interventions, such as antiretrovirals, for pre-exposure
239 arding nutritional, pharmacologic, and other interventions, such as exercise, for cancer cachexia.
240 ity, acceptability, and scalability of these interventions suggest they have potential to encourage s
241 ho participated in pre-intervention and post-intervention surveys, previous HIV diagnosis increased f
242 ates of outcome risk with versus without the intervention, taking into account all relevant patient a
243                      Conclusion A behavioral intervention targeting physical activity increased lower
244     Our findings indicate that public health interventions targeting diabetes prevention and manageme
245 erall aim is to suggest that pharmacological interventions targeting lysosomal function in general, a
246             Our findings suggest that health interventions targeting specific multimorbidity patterns
247                                              Interventions targeting the gut microbiome may be warran
248 dies could predict prognosis or be potential intervention targets to prevent systemic effects of peri
249  and benefits of an illustrative double-duty intervention that addresses both stunting and overweight
250  transfers for primary percutaneous coronary intervention that reflects inter-facility communication
251 ytic production, opening venues for clinical intervention that require enhanced or reduced production
252                                           An intervention that successfully cured a reasonable fracti
253                                Consequently, interventions that are commonly used by nephrologists ha
254 These findings may help assess the impact of interventions that improve access to treatment.
255                                              Interventions that led to changes in degree of AI and AS
256 ions in social situations, and the potential interventions that might result in efficient treatment o
257  catalyst for a renewed research agenda into interventions that support good therapeutic relationship
258 ynamic parameters, structural and behavioral interventions that target women are required to bolster
259 ere considered sufficiently important for AI interventions that they should be routinely reported in
260  prescribing following percutaneous coronary intervention.The primary outcome was the rate of prasugr
261 ly, nanomotors move unidirectionally without intervention through an external force field or a patter
262 OME decreased from 93 (range, 27-500) before intervention to 42 (range, 14-100) after intervention (P
263 lementation can serve as a potential dietary intervention to block melanoma tumour growth and sensiti
264 st monitoring, comparing observed rates post-intervention to extrapolations from a 24-month pre-inter
265 ertain types of immunotherapy, together with interventions to abrogate stress-inflammatory responses,
266                                              Interventions to address the U.S. opioid crisis primaril
267  mediated events and on possible therapeutic interventions to correct imbalances in this triune.
268 These findings may inform the development of interventions to counter the effects of pathogenic DHTKD
269 practices is needed, along with system-level interventions to create a supportive environment for imp
270 tree populations and suggest that management interventions to facilitate movement of gametes along sh
271 new diagnostic biomarkers or inform clinical interventions to help prevent or treat disease.
272 ing these brain abnormalities and to explore interventions to mitigate them even in patients who cann
273 ns worldwide and, with no vaccine available, interventions to mitigate transmission are urgently need
274 study is required to determine whether early interventions to optimize LVSWI can improve outcomes in
275           These results can inform potential interventions to prevent readmissions through OPAT clini
276                      However, deciding which interventions to pursue and understanding their relative
277                  These findings suggest that interventions to reduce AGE accumulation, such as dietar
278 e to develop and implement evidence-informed interventions toward achieving this goal that undergirds
279 y to prevent mental illness may be to target interventions toward children who are exposed to adversi
280 ention to extrapolations from a 24-month pre-intervention trend.
281 erventions but was low or very low for other intervention types.
282 otected left main stem percutaneous coronary intervention (uLMS-PCI) is poorly defined.
283 ncy and the efficacy of a lifespan-extending intervention up to a year in advance.
284  5 years and evaluate the impact of clinical interventions using virological and phylogenetic analysi
285  the incidence of kidney failure (31.7% with intervention vs 27.3% with placebo; adjusted risk differ
286                                      The RFP intervention was associated with a 2-fold increased odds
287                               An educational intervention was implemented for the technicians to impr
288 After controlling for patient stability, the intervention was still associated with reduced omissions
289   Although the strength of evidence for most interventions was low or very low, intensified patient c
290 patient stratification for immune checkpoint intervention, we quantitatively imaged PD-1/PD-L1 intera
291 ise restriction, beta-blockers, and surgical intervention were discussed with the families.
292 d acetyl polyamines at baseline and 26 wk of intervention were measured by an ultra-high-performance
293                               Effects of the intervention were significantly higher in women with obe
294                                          All interventions were for asthma.
295   "Don't know" responses concerning clinical interventions were more common in the exit survey after
296                               Simulations of interventions were performed until outcomes reached a st
297 s (n = 142 before intervention; n = 42 after intervention) were included.
298 e and mortality, and to assess whether these interventions will be enough to achieve epidemic control
299 s major bleeding after percutaneous coronary intervention with drug-eluting stents, whereas extended-
300               We then focus on three malaria interventions with strong evidence for reducing the burd

 
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