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1 pitals, clinical research units, and private offices).
2 he measurement of blood pressure (BP) in the office.
3 se of decision making once in a specialist's office.
4         Defense Biological Product Assurance Office.
5 Council; Scottish Government Chief Scientist Office.
6 g around a busy city or sitting in a cafe or office.
7 dishonesty might help politicians survive in office.
8 he United States' largest medical examiner's office.
9  and UK Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office.
10 eillance video in a Chinese graduate student office.
11 nd, along with drinking water from homes and offices.
12 academic institution with affiliated private offices.
13 ient department: 36.6%, P < 0.001; physician office: 22.1%, P < 0.001; ambulatory surgery center: 36.
14 support was received from the UNICEF Country Office Afghanistan, the Centre for Global Child Health,
15      Secondary endpoints included changes in office and 24 h ambulatory blood pressure.
16 or randomized control trials (RCT) reporting office and 24 hr.
17 renal denervation for 3-month change in both office and 24-h blood pressure from baseline: 24-h SBP -
18 , and 36 months showed similar reductions in office and 24-h BP for patients with varying baseline AS
19 pants was 58 years (SD 11) and mean baseline office and 24-h systolic and diastolic blood pressure le
20 ts randomized to gastric bypass, considering office and 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring,
21                                              Office and ambulatory blood pressure outcomes did not di
22              Similar differential effects on office and ambulatory diastolic blood pressures, along w
23                                  Compared to office and emergency visits, UTIs were increasingly diag
24                                  Compared to office and emergency visits, UTIs were increasingly diag
25  supports the efficacy and safety of both in-office and facility-based surgery for congenital NLDO.
26  wait more than 6 days to get results in the office and more than 11 days to get results by telephone
27 g satisfaction with the IACUC administrative office and the animal resource unit, several IACUC proce
28 d satisfaction with the IACUC administrative office and the animal resource unit.
29 may differ considerably when measured in the office and when measured outside of the office setting,
30 icine screening intervention in primary care offices and Federally Qualified Health Centers detected
31                                 Primary care offices and Federally Qualified Health Centers were used
32 gan procurement organization (OPO) ran 3 DMV offices and implemented an intervention: a donor-centric
33 ernationally, with concentrations highest in offices and schools, suggesting that DBDPE is widely use
34 s, are often used for diagnosis by physician offices and urgent care centers.
35 ed Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) regional offices, and national governments.
36  and United Nations Children's Fund regional offices, and national governments.
37 r and dust collected from Irish homes, cars, offices, and primary schools during 2016-2017.
38 e measured in air and dust from cars, homes, offices, and school classrooms in Ireland, along with dr
39 rement of BP by an individual outside of the office at home, is a validated approach for out-of-offic
40 2.2 billion from 20 Institutes, Centers, and Offices at the NIH.
41           Nationally, 94% of injections were office based and 6% were facility based.
42 tandardized mean difference in the change in office based systolic and diastolic pressures (p = 0.18;
43 y, a nationally representative assessment of office-based and hospital outpatient department practice
44 vity of 0.82 and a specificity of 0.70 for 2 office-based blood pressure measurements.
45    Although counseling is a required part of office-based buprenorphine treatment of opioid use disor
46 and intensity of behavioral interventions in office-based buprenorphine treatment.
47 lts (mean age = 73.5 +/- 6.1 years) with the office-based Framingham Heart Study cardiovascular disea
48 ), clinical location (hospital outpatient vs office-based laboratory), and resource utilization (oper
49 P) without other augmentation is superior to office-based measurement of BP for achieving better BP c
50                                 However, the office-based model substantially underestimated the risk
51 prehensive harm reduction (CHR) programs and office-based opioid therapy (OBOT), as well as workforce
52 patient settings fare worse with only 14% of office-based physicians sharing data with providers outs
53 erapists), and (4) mental health facility or office-based practice (ie, any community-based resource)
54 rrangements for low-income populations), (2) office-based practice of mental health specialist physic
55 f mental health specialist physician(s), (3) office-based practice of nonphysician mental health prof
56 to be located in poorer communities, whereas office-based practices of mental health professionals ar
57 s after surgery ranged from 66% to 95.6% for office-based procedures versus 50% to 97.7% for facility
58 CI:$319-$328) compared to predicted cost for office-based procedures.
59 low or high risk by the laboratory-based and office-based risk scores.
60 eek care for nonurgent ocular diseases in an office-based setting could yield considerable cost savin
61 ients from an operating to procedure room or office-based setting.
62  on the timing of traditional telephone- and office-based styles of communication.
63 nd total cholesterol; in the non-laboratory (office-based) risk score, we replaced diabetes and total
64  Time and frequency domain HRV indices, BRS, office beat-to-beat BP, and heart rate (HR) were measure
65 rrelations among HRV, HR, BRS and ambulatory/office beat-to-beat BP.
66  to 40.4% for daytime, sleeping, 24-hour and office beat-to-beat measurements.
67      Swiss Government Excellence Scholarship Office, Beatrice Ederer-Weber Foundation, and North-Sout
68 pstream errors, originating in the clinic or office before surgery, and ineffective communication dur
69 ly for 2 weeks, then 500 mg BID if automated office blood pressure (AOBP) >140/90 mm Hg; hydrochlorot
70 erm cardiovascular risk of isolated elevated office blood pressure (BP) is unclear.
71 g the reliability and predictive validity of office blood pressure (OBP), ambulatory BP (ABP), and ho
72 tment, 18 (100%) of 18 participants achieved office blood pressure less than 140/90 mm Hg, compared w
73                                         Mean office blood pressure was 184/109 mm Hg (18/14) at basel
74 he quadpill was 19 mm Hg (95% CI 14-23), and office blood pressure was reduced by 22/13 mm Hg (p<0.00
75 ide of the office setting, and higher out-of-office BP is associated with increased cardiovascular ri
76  at home, is a validated approach for out-of-office BP measurement.
77 P monitoring is cost-effective compared with office BP monitoring alone or usual care among individua
78 e addition of self-measured BP monitoring to office BP monitoring is cost-effective compared with off
79                                       Out-of-office BP monitoring is critical in the diagnosis and ma
80 es include new diagnostic thresholds, out-of-office BP monitoring, intensified treatment goals, and a
81 increased cardiovascular risk independent of office BP.
82 ne or usual care among individuals with high office BP.
83 ion in well-mixed indoor air in a commercial office building.
84 ettings, PM(2.5) prediction models for large office buildings are particularly lacking.
85 sured BP may be a helpful adjunct to routine office care.
86 t was demonstrated to be integrated into the Office Chromatography concept, in which all relevant ste
87 going competence in the International Labour Office classification system to ensure accurate radiogra
88 d before and during the 4-year OPO licensing office contract.
89  exposure situations (such as outdoors or in offices) contributed significantly to the overall person
90  distribution of oxygen-containing groups on office-copy papers between pencil-drawn electrodes.
91 onductive traces and sensing electrodes, and office-copy papers work as flexible supporting substrate
92  setting types, including outpatient medical offices, correctional facilities, emergency medical serv
93  with field trials being performed within an office corridor.
94 BP -7.7 mm Hg (-14.0 to -1.5; p=0.0155), and office DBP -4.9 mm Hg (-8.5 to -1.4; p=0.0077).
95 tric approach, including employee education, office decoration with donation materials, and customer
96 rst show that county-level variation in post office density is highly correlated with a bevy of histo
97 50 mm Hg or greater and less than 180 mm Hg, office diastolic blood pressure (DBP) of 90 mm Hg or gre
98  Hg, 95% CI: -2.73 to -0.42; p = 0.008), and office diastolic BP (WMD -3.37 mm Hg, 95% CI: -4.86 to -
99                Data were also extracted from office, emergency department, and hospital records.
100 ber 31, 2017, UTIs from outpatient settings (office, emergency, and virtual visits) were identified f
101 ecember 2017, UTIs from outpatient settings (office, emergency, and virtual visits) were identified f
102 nicious effects on the ocular surface of the office environment, which poses a significant risk for t
103                    The chamber replicated an office environment.
104 22 times greater than estimated for home and office environments, respectively, likely because of the
105 USA) and Snohomish County Medical Examiner's Office (Everett, WA, USA) in negative-pressure isolation
106  in patients who could not cooperate with in-office examinations.
107 the World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Office for Africa from 2010 to 2018, as well as country
108 ing Criterion (FSANZ-NPSC), the WHO Regional Office for Europe (EURO) model, the Pan American Health
109           World Health Organization Regional Office for Europe.
110                 WHO through a grant from the Office for Foreign Disaster Assistance.
111 -19 UK cancer control population from the UK Office for National Statistics (2017 data).
112 ked to Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) and Office for National Statistics (ONS) mortality records.
113  England and Wales from 1997 to 2012, to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) national mortality
114  audit, with death registrations from the UK Office for National Statistics and data for unplanned ho
115 ablished using cancer registrations from the Office for National Statistics and the Welsh Cancer regi
116 d for all-cause mortality with data from the Office for National Statistics and used to generate life
117 inked to the Hospital Episode Statistics and Office for National Statistics databases.
118 inked to the Hospital Episode Statistics and Office for National Statistics databases.
119              Ethnicity was defined using the Office for National Statistics ethnicity categories: Whi
120         We linked mortality data from the UK Office for National Statistics for the general populatio
121 pital Episode Statistics data, linked to the Office for National Statistics mortality data for Englan
122 ohol-related deaths were ascertained via the Office for National Statistics mortality records.
123 nk linked to Hospital Episode Statistics and Office for National Statistics mortality.
124                                Data from the Office for National Statistics on whether patients had d
125 ital Episode Statistics, with linkage to the Office for National Statistics to create a comprehensive
126        We used mortality records from the UK Office for National Statistics to study all 2 465 285 pr
127 ational Death Registration Database from the Office for National Statistics, 2001-14.
128 casualties) to partners, WHO, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, and
129 ogy using just a desktop cutting plotter and office grade thermal-laminator.
130  Health (NIH) Scientific Workforce Diversity office has led the charge to develop and implement evide
131                                          All office-hour strategies showed a very poor performance of
132 ations may occur in early morning or outside office hours and can be missed during routine in-clinic
133  in the second eye at all time points during office hours and negates the requirement for an addition
134 higher early morning IOP than the maximum in-office hours IOP.
135  P = 0.005) and mean increase in IOP outside office hours of 2.7 mmHg (95% CI, 0.61-4.7; P = 0.013) t
136 igher early morning IOP and mean IOP outside office hours.
137 nology has the potential to revolutionize in-office imaging of the larynx.
138 nics, emergency rooms, and private physician offices in the USA, Thailand, Mexico, Argentina, and Aus
139 ng; (2) rates of testosterone initiation (in-office injection, surgical implant, or pharmacy dispensi
140 quivalent to that obtained with a commercial office ink-jet printer.
141 sive screening tool for ALVD in the doctor's office is not available.
142 orporated into glasses or loose prism in the office), iseikonic manipulation (using iseikonic lenses
143 services (POHS) to young children in medical offices ("medical POHS").
144 able in the emergency room (n = 40 [64.5%]), office (n = 35 [56.5%]), and operating room (n = 35 [56.
145  women suicide completers from the coroner's office (n=6), by assessing which markers were stepwise c
146      Treatments consisted of observation, in-office nasolacrimal probing, or facility-based nasolacri
147 ssion Database, the National Health Security Office (NHSO).
148 ecurity (MoAFS) and the National Statistical Office (NSO) of Malawi.
149  retracted following correspondence from the Office of Accountability and Compliance at the Universit
150 nstitute; Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; Office of AIDS Research; American Cancer Society; Nation
151 dry were supported by the Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the US Department of
152 s and Methods Protocols were approved by the office of biologic safety and institutional animal care
153 .S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research.
154 tion from the media, state legislatures, the Office of Civil Rights, and recently the National Counci
155                                      The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements convened a public workshop
156 and Technology has been working with the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements for several years to devel
157                                      NIH and Office of Dietary Supplements grants HL103866, HL126827,
158 ion with the National Institutes of Health's Office of Dietary Supplements.
159      The workshop was cosponsored by the NIH Office of Disease Prevention (ODP), National Institute o
160                National Institutes of Health Office of Disease Prevention through an interagency agre
161             The report was posted on the NIH Office of Disease Prevention Web site for 5 weeks for pu
162      The workshop was cosponsored by the NIH Office of Disease Prevention; National Institute on Mino
163 onwide data set from the Federal statistical Office of Germany from 1 January 2007 through 31 Decembe
164 ent progresses in this field produced by the Office of Health Assessment and Translation (OHAT) of th
165 veloped by the National Toxicology Program's Office of Health Assessment and Translation.
166 itted to the US Food and Drug Administration Office of Hematology and Oncology Products in 2015.
167 wer of Nutrition, and the National Nutrition Office of Madagascar.
168 gories that are defined by the United States Office of Management and Budget as: American Indian/Alas
169 ansplant registry to mortality data from the Office of National Statistics and evaluated the impact o
170 ansplant Registry to mortality data from the Office of National Statistics and evaluated the impact o
171 Information Centre (now NHS Digital) and the Office of National Statistics.
172  In 2010, the Veterans Health Administration Office of Nursing Services (VHA ONS) issued a Staffing M
173 ta were obtained from the Georgia Governor's Office of Planning and Budget, stratified by age and rac
174 ars, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Portfolio Analysis (OPA) has been aggregating
175                                Swiss Federal Office of Public Health, Swiss School of Public Health (
176 rans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration Office of Research and Development, Health Services Rese
177 tional Center for Research Resources and the Office of Research Infrastructure Programs, Cheng Si-Yua
178       Anticipating these guidelines, the NIH Office of Research on Women's Health, in October 2014, c
179 opment and the National Institutes of Health Office of Research on Women's Health.
180  the Molecular Foundry were supported by the Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of t
181 cs, funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmenta
182 egistry (CCR) dataset merged with California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSH
183                   Analysis of the California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development data
184 ergency departments listed in the California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development data
185 m 2000 to 2012 and linked the records to the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development Inpa
186  1, 2004, through December 31, 2011) and the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development inpa
187 r the HHS Region 3 Treatment Center from the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and R
188 wledgements: 'This work was supported by the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health
189                                    Using the Office of the Chief Coroner of Ontario database encompas
190                                              Office of the Director and the Division of Intramural Re
191 UK Medical Research Council, Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government, and UK Stroke Associa
192 UK Medical Research Council, Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government, The Stroke Associatio
193         Defense Biological Product Assurance Office of the US Department of Defense and the Armed For
194 Retina Service of Wills Eye Hospital and the offices of Mid Atlantic Retina from February 1, 2015, th
195  with receiving results in their physician's office on day 7 (utility, -.60), participants preferred
196 ances (NPS), according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
197 ndicators defined by WHO, UNAIDS, and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime.
198 s study identifies causal effects of holding office on politicians' behavior.
199 ntaining foods in the health care provider's office or at home.
200                         This study addresses office or operating-room based retinal imaging.
201 ethod of receipt (online portal, physician's office, or phone), and condition of receipt (before, at
202 (ED) or urgent care settings (versus regular office), otolaryngologist/ED doctors (versus primary car
203 electrochemical sensor was screen-printed on office paper previously wax-patterned via wax-printing t
204 the reagents needed for the measurement, and office paper to print electrodes able to measure the but
205 e was developed by integrating two different office paper-based screen-printed electrodes and multipl
206 ce water as a result of combining filter and office papers, screen-printing, wax-printing and nanomat
207 uity, disability, and duration and number of office phone calls.
208 study assesses US pediatrician practices and office policies in response to parents who either refuse
209                         Success rates for in-office probing were lower for bilateral than for unilate
210 nesthesia and emotional trauma of nonsedated office probings on patients and may explore further the
211                                        An in-office procedure was performed at the time of examinatio
212 d OOP expenses (95%CI:$297-$306) compared to office procedures.
213 such importance of APL, we have developed an office punching machine crafted paper biosensor for nake
214                                   Having the offices run by an OPO was associated with more enrollmen
215                          Based on the UK Met Office's long-term temperature and rainfall records, we
216 4-h DBP -4.4 mm Hg (-7.2 to -1.6; p=0.0024), office SBP -7.7 mm Hg (-14.0 to -1.5; p=0.0155), and off
217 Prussian Blue's fading, detected by a common office scanner supported by ImageJ software.
218 VID-19 at the King County Medical Examiner's Office (Seattle, WA, USA) and Snohomish County Medical E
219  the office and when measured outside of the office setting, and higher out-of-office BP is associate
220 ggesting the procedure is appropriate for an office setting.
221 o are hospitalized, those managed in routine office settings, and those in skilled nursing facilities
222  symptoms than people working in the average office space.
223 Medicaid (CMS) were obtained to identify the office street addresses of Oklahoma ophthalmologists and
224      In overt videography of a post-graduate office, students spent 9% of their time touching their o
225                                           In-office sutureless AM may be an effective adjuvant therap
226 nts were adults with resistant hypertension (office systolic blood pressure >/=160 mm Hg despite taki
227                             Patients with an office systolic blood pressure (SBP) of 150 mm Hg or gre
228 association of a history of hypertension and office systolic blood pressure (SBP) with major adverse
229 acy endpoint was baseline-adjusted change in office systolic blood pressure from baseline to 3 months
230  UK, and the USA, hypertensive patients with office systolic blood pressure of 150 mm Hg to less than
231  95% credible interval -6.2 to -1.6) and for office systolic blood pressure the difference was -6.5 m
232 7 mm Hg, 95% CI: -6.46 to -1.68; p < 0.001), office systolic BP (WMD -5.53 mm Hg, 95% CI: -8.18 to -2
233 ould relieve patients and clinicians from in-office testing and allow for more frequent examinations.
234    We collaborated with a medical examiner's office to assist in finding a diagnosis for their autops
235 wants to know if a test could be done in the office to determine if he has diabetes.
236 ore selected the Malawi National Statistical Office to lead an in-depth country case study, aimed mai
237 atment option by allowing satellite doctor's offices to offer intrauterine insemination as an option
238          The 3-month postoperative follow up office vaginoscopy revealed that the vaginal septum had
239 pital outpatient department versus physician office versus ambulatory surgery center).
240 scape, making diagnosis and treatment in one office visit a reality for TB.
241 ion were summarized from coaching notes; one office visit after the coaching session was audio record
242 edical Center, UPMC) among adults seen in an office visit by a UPMC-employed primary care physician (
243          Of 333735 adult patients seen in an office visit by PCPs in 2014, 53196 patients (15.9% of t
244 examination questions and the percentages of office visit conditions or hospital stay conditions seen
245 ed with the 142 eyes that did not undergo an office visit for a continuous 12-month period, eyes with
246 fect and transferability: rapidly adjustable office visit frequency for unstable patients, close moni
247 odifiable hypertension management processes: office visit frequency, clinician treatment intensificat
248                          Median EHR time per office visit in 2006 was 4.2 minutes (interquartile rang
249 sing the EHR associated with each individual office visit using EHR audit logs and determined chart c
250       Linear mixed models found EHR time per office visit was 31.9+/-0.2% (P < 0.001) greater from 20
251 ne call within 6 days (utility, -0.49) or an office visit within 2 days (utility, -.53).
252 oviders spend more time using the EHR for an office visit, generate longer notes, and close the chart
253 teristics were recorded for each patient and office visit.
254 ht up 82.4% of topics of interest during the office visit.
255 CNV activity identified by FFA and SD OCT by office visit.
256 timated from the primary diagnosis for 13832 office visits (2010-2013 National Ambulatory Medical Car
257 s brought up QPL-related topics during their office visits (70.2% v 32.6%; P < .001).
258  preexisting POAG, persons with XFG had more office visits (mean 9.3 vs 7.3; P < .0001), perimetry (8
259 ewly diagnosed POAG, those with XFG had more office visits (mean, 9.1 vs 7.9; P = .001), cataract sur
260 tegories of medical conditions seen in 13832 office visits and 108472 hospital stays with the percent
261 cess that could readily be incorporated into office visits and in field settings to screen all youth
262 s (73%) met the inclusion criteria of annual office visits and received a mean of 5.8 +/- 2.5 intravi
263 istration of IVI during times when follow-up office visits and resources may be limited.
264 y disease accounts for 3.2% of all physician office visits annually and is the fourth leading cause o
265 -up included 3-day Holter ECG recordings and office visits at 3, 6, and 12 months.
266 ia at baseline and those with fewer than two office visits during the follow-up period.
267 d corticosteroid use, outpatient physician's office visits for asthma, and asthma-related hospitaliza
268 tional analysis of 24.4 million primary care office visits in 2017 and performed comparisons between
269        For concordance between questions and office visits only, 2010 questions (58.08%; 95% CI, 56.4
270 of conditions seen in practice during either office visits or hospital stays for each of 186 conditio
271 continuous 12-month period, eyes with annual office visits showed similar baseline mean visual acuity
272 emale PCPs generated 10.9% less revenue from office visits than their male counterparts (-$39,143.2;
273 lar trial eliminates the need for additional office visits to confirm the therapeutic effect.
274 ng treatment intensification rates to 62% of office visits with an uncontrolled blood pressure result
275          The reliability of 1 week of HBP, 3 office visits with mercury sphygmomanometry, and 24-h AB
276  individuals with complete AF risk data, >=2 office visits within 2 years, and no prevalent AF.
277 gists have limited time with patients during office visits, and EHR use requires a substantial portio
278 tient self-care, maximizing effectiveness of office visits, selecting cost-effective diagnostic and t
279  care was associated with similar numbers of office visits, urgent care or emergency department visit
280 e 186 conditions seen in practice (0.74% for office visits; 0.51% for hospital stays).
281 ings of either treatment method ($562 for in-office vs. $701 for facility-based, depending on cost mo
282 patients leads to easy access to patients in office waiting areas, emergency departments, or hospital
283                             The 37 WHO field offices were equipped with electronic financial systems
284 artment of motor vehicle (DMV) and licensing offices, where people register their vehicles and obtain
285 ited at a specialized psychiatrist's medical office, whereas controls were hired via flyers, advertis
286                                     Francis' office window (at the Salk) commanded a panorama of the
287                         However, even at the office with the highest percentage of FPA registrations,
288                                Also, the DMV office with the lowest preimplementation registration ra
289 ce increases FPA registration, especially at offices with low initial registration rates.
290 nually from 2012 to 2014 through WHO country offices, with each survey covering the previous 12-mo pe
291 nstruction workers (12.45 +/- 17.50) than in-office workers (28.51 +/- 22.99) (p < 0.001).
292 (PFAS) among women firefighters (N = 86) and office workers (N = 84) in San Francisco.
293 serum samples from 83 women FFs and 79 women office workers (OW) in San Francisco.
294 tric mean concentrations of PFAS compared to office workers PFHxS (2.22 (95% CI = 1.55, 3.18)), PFUnD
295  severe symptoms (23 to 100 points in OSDI), office workers presented dry eye symptoms 4.15 times mor
296 dry eye symptoms in construction workers and office workers using the OSDI questionnaire.
297                            A total of 18 OFS office workers were used as additional controls.
298 4 subjects (149 construction workers and 155 office workers).
299 ed to higher levels of some PFAS compared to office workers, suggesting that some of these exposures
300 compare PFAS levels between firefighters and office workers.

 
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