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1 location, 26.8% hospital-based, and 24.6% in primary care).
2 er presenting with influenza-like illness in primary care.
3 an cancer in symptomatic women presenting to primary care.
4 ELF as a prognostic tool in health checks in primary care.
5 ing asymptomatic children and adolescents in primary care.
6 (SMASH) intervention on medication safety in primary care.
7 of fibrosis in the general population and in primary care.
8 infection (BSI) in adults aged >=65 years in primary care.
9 million antibiotic items were prescribed in primary care.
10 to assess the effectiveness of this model in primary care.
11 pared with conventional FHH ascertainment in primary care.
12 are deemed to be preventable with effective primary care.
13 covered interventions and encouraged better primary care.
14 tional Health Service (NHS) Health Checks in primary care.
15 ple to current use of antidepressants within primary care.
16 tection of familial hypercholesterolaemia in primary care.
17 a higher likelihood of testing compared with primary care.
18 have not been widely implemented in routine primary care.
19 ing OUD and integrating behavioral health in primary care.
20 itoring system for hypertension into routine primary care.
23 inicians (41% female, 83% physicians, 50% in primary care, 17% in rural areas), including 48.6% who w
24 ii, introduced Population-based Payments for Primary Care (3PC), a new capitation-based primary care
28 ommendations include increased investment in primary care; alignment of financial incentives to achie
29 e of perceived ineffectiveness in real world primary care and because individuals who will especially
30 as limited to patients prescribed opioids in primary care and does not include opioids available over
31 gap between clinicians and families, between primary care and hospital care, and provide medical educ
32 ge of such prescriptions grew as scrutiny of primary care and pain medicine opioid prescribing increa
33 ead adoption of rapid diet screener tools in primary care and relevant specialty care prevention sett
35 t (by migrant status) of those only seen via primary care and that our findings may not generalize to
37 y, radiation oncology, pulmonary, radiology, primary care, and advocacy experts to conduct a literatu
38 larly among older patients, those engaged in primary care, and providers with large patient panels.
42 of participants commencing treatment in the primary care arm (75%, 43/57) was significantly higher t
44 s with SVR12 was significantly higher in the primary care arm, compared to in the SOC arm (49% [28/57
46 hypertension can be implemented into routine primary care at scale with little impact on clinician wo
47 tween Jan 1, 1994, and July 31, 2018, to the primary care audit programme, the Diabetes Care Support
48 assess the balance of benefits and harms of primary care-based behavioral counseling interventions t
50 STF concludes that the benefits and harms of primary care-based interventions to prevent illicit drug
52 to 5 years in Bavaria, Germany, a program of primary care-based screening showed an islet autoantibod
53 (4) treatment outcomes of patients receiving primary-care-based mental health services, evaluated thr
55 reduce depressive symptoms within 6 weeks in primary care but we observed improvements in anxiety, qu
58 d (1:1) controlled noninferiority trial in 9 primary care centers in Tanzania (substudy of the ePOCT
59 ate molecular subtyping of bladder cancer in primary care centers, we analyzed the protein expression
60 and low-income Lebanese mothers accessing a primary care centre in Beirut between January and June 2
61 , Nigeria, we randomly allocated clusters (a primary care clinic and neighbouring TFH facilities) 1:1
62 women aged 13 to 54 years registered with a primary care clinic in Britain (England, Wales, and Scot
63 d diabetic retinopathy screening system in a primary care clinic serving a low-income metropolitan pa
64 g patients with a diagnosis of COPD in their primary care clinical record who consulted a clinician a
65 We performed a matched cohort study set in primary care (Clinical Practice Research Datalink GOLD 1
66 staging, and appropriate referral of CKD by primary care clinicians are important in reducing the bu
68 = 19) that included asthma content experts, primary care clinicians, dissemination and implementatio
73 d program for obesity treatment delivered in primary care clinics in which a high percentage of the p
74 e, and the van was sent with a technician to primary care clinics throughout the city on a rotation s
75 cted a prospective, observational study in 7 primary care clinics, in which an intervention comprised
76 cted a prospective, observational study in 7 primary care clinics, in which an intervention comprised
77 tal care (ANC) in 7 nurse-led, public-sector primary care clinics-combined into 6 clusters-over 8 ste
79 in home settings, and two were delivered in primary care clinics; clinical setting was not reported
83 ere is scope to optimise the contribution of primary care, community care and advocacy services to ca
84 rmine the effectiveness of providing DAAs in primary care, compared with hospital-based specialist ca
85 could rationalise antibiotic prescription in primary care, comparing two proposed thresholds to class
90 ations, drug prescriptions and contacts with primary care contractors from >200,000 individuals newly
92 try, and death certificate records, and from primary care data among a subset of participants for who
93 l, cohort study was conducted using historic primary care data from The Health Improvement Network.
94 rm to analyse routinely collected electronic primary care data linked to national death registrations
96 and that our findings are based solely on UK primary care data, so caution is need in extrapolating t
98 risk factor measurements from the UK routine primary care database and limited albuminuria measuremen
100 ptimum Patient Care Database, a longitudinal primary care database from across the United Kingdom.
101 atient Care Research Database, a UK national primary care database, we constructed an open cohort of
102 Clinical Practice Research Datalink, a large primary-care database, we illustrate how it can answer a
104 physicians of various specialties, including primary care doctors, hospital internists, intensivists
109 interpersonal interventions; observations of primary care encounters in 3 diverse clinics (n = 27 enc
111 tal illness among participants presenting in primary care facilities, evaluated through a facility st
112 d HIV-positive women aged 30-65 years from a primary care facility and a referral colposcopy clinic i
113 SPSTF concludes with moderate certainty that primary care-feasible behavioral interventions, includin
114 assess the balance of benefits and harms of primary care-feasible interventions for the cessation of
115 office), otolaryngologist/ED doctors (versus primary care), fewer comorbidities, and older patient ag
117 rals are infrequently prescribed in European primary care for influenza-like illness, mostly because
118 whether adding antiviral treatment to usual primary care for patients with influenza-like illness re
119 We evaluated the performance of CA125 in primary care for the detection of ovarian and non-ovaria
122 e was to determine whether people treated in primary care had a noninferior rate of sustained virolog
124 orary overview of the patterns and trends in primary care healthcare utilization and treatment is lac
125 ved quality metric performance compared with primary care; however, shared visits between gastroenter
126 population of 8597 patients followed for HIV primary care in a large, urban county system from Januar
127 ew and meta-analysis of studies conducted in primary care in LMICs to estimate the prevalence of anti
129 from the first year of routine use of FIT in primary care in one NHS Board in Scotland were examined:
132 decline in patients with CKD (stages 3-5) in primary care in the United Kingdom, we conducted a clust
134 , to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of four primary care initiated strategies: (1) routine liver fun
135 termine the balance of benefits and harms of primary care interventions for tobacco cessation among s
137 c prescription in febrile patients attending primary care is common, and a probable contributor to th
141 in the number of clinical pharmacists within primary care makes them ideally placed to conduct AF scr
143 non-invasive liver fibrosis tests (NILT) in primary care may permit earlier detection of patients wi
145 ce delivery pathway: (1) contact coverage of primary care mental health services, evaluated through a
148 d a cross-sectional analysis of 24.4 million primary care office visits in 2017 and performed compari
149 lly, we investigated the effect of access to primary care on tuberculosis incidence in this populatio
152 ence-based recommendations about the optimal primary care panel size for achieving beneficial health
156 f CRP tests to rationalise antibiotic use in primary care patients with an acute febrile illness.
157 In an analysis of 15,946 Black and White primary care patients with diabetes and eGFR>=30 ml/min
161 In its first year, the 3PC population-based primary care payment system in Hawaii was associated wit
164 n Bavaria, Germany, between 2015 and 2019 by primary care pediatricians during well-baby visits.
170 antly more likely to be female (46% vs 37%), primary care physicians (36% vs 30%), and classified as
171 six other dermatologists and superior to six primary care physicians (PCPs) and six nurse practitione
172 e (P4P) scheme in Britain was introduced for primary care physicians (PCPs) to offer advice about LAR
173 after adjustment for characteristics of the primary care physicians (PCPs), patients, and types of v
175 ellows), provide professional development to primary care physicians and advance practice providers,
176 ensive model of care led by NPHWs, involving primary care physicians and family that was informed by
178 tegies were more likely to be implemented by primary care physicians and in patients with depression
179 include are numbers of Nurse Practitioners, Primary Care Physicians and rural hospitals per capita,
182 logical condition and patients referred from primary care physicians of the Canadian National Health
183 an initial in-person clinic appointment with primary care physicians providing usual care within the
184 ologists, diabetologists, nephrologists, and primary care physicians to be familiar with this drug cl
185 of performance, we evaluate the accuracy of primary care physicians to categorize skin lesion morpho
186 ogists, nephrologists, endocrinologists, and primary care physicians to facilitate the prompt and app
188 In comparison, the diagnostic accuracy of primary care physicians was 36% without any aids and 68%
189 olving non-physician health workers (NPHWs), primary care physicians, family, and the provision of ef
190 f this Seminar, which is intended mainly for primary care physicians, is to provide an overview of di
193 orce shortages, including the undersupply of primary care physicians; and understanding and ameliorat
194 gram for obesity delivered in an underserved primary care population resulted in clinically significa
195 12-2016) data of 916,619 participants from a primary care, population-based electronic health record
199 previous blood tests were recruited from 32 primary care practices across Derbyshire, United Kingdom
200 sessed, who were randomly selected from 1500 primary care practices across the UK contributing to the
201 cohort analysis of medical records from 389 primary care practices contributing data to the United K
203 Patients were recruited from 3 hospitals and primary care practices in England from 2016 through 2018
207 al, 2,012 participants were selected from 16 primary care practices using these criteria: 1) aged 60
208 its of estrogen therapy, and the role of the primary care practitioner in the care of transgender per
209 invitation, and reminder letters from their primary care practitioner offering prescheduled appointm
210 ires an interdisciplinary approach including primary care practitioners, gastroenterologists, surgeon
211 , multidisciplinary teamwork, involvement of primary care practitioners, patient networks, support gr
215 enty-seven percent of survivors and 20.0% of primary care providers (PCPs) had a survivorship care pl
217 ack of bariatric surgery guidelines, limited primary care providers and referring provider knowledge
218 om low-income families and support nondental primary care providers delivering preventive oral health
220 of the disease burden, an increased role of primary care providers in screening, patient stratificat
221 sation of systemic risk factors by patients' primary care providers is an important component of the
223 ervice-based categories (birth-attending and primary care providers), and across the entire women's h
224 evere obesity, including bariatric surgeons, primary care providers, registered dietitians, and healt
227 th expertise in LCS, implementation science, primary care, pulmonology, health behavior, smoking cess
230 rst-ever diagnosis of eczema recorded in the primary care record, and eczema prevalence was defined a
231 rescriptions without these being recorded in primary care; recording of sepsis has increased over the
235 nested case-control study was created using primary care records of >1 million individuals, >50% of
237 rtainment of major malformations from infant primary care records was maximized by linkage to hospita
238 t rates were low and only events recorded in primary care records were counted; however, any underrec
241 Pre-entry tuberculosis screening, early primary care registration, and LTBI screening are strong
242 actitioners Research and Surveillance Centre primary care research database of 3.85 million children
244 stitute for Health Research (NIHR) School of Primary Care Research, NIHR Biomedical Research Centre O
246 to provide evidence-based recommendations on primary care screening, behavioral counseling, and preve
248 SMI) on the use of inpatient, emergency, and primary care services for nonpsychiatric medical disorde
249 es electronic health record data to describe primary care services offered by US community health cen
253 hophysiology would have greater utility in a primary care setting and in eligibility screening for cl
254 therapy with glucocorticoid injection in the primary care setting in the U.S. Military Health System.
255 sk factors for T2D regularly recorded in the primary care setting were used to evaluate future T2D ri
260 veness of treatment for obesity delivered in primary care settings in underserved populations is lack
262 on-developed countries, and those limited to primary care settings, the public health sector, and ped
267 be needed beyond endocrinology practices to primary-care settings and broader populations of patient
269 e Practitioners have the potential to reduce primary care shortages for underserved populations.
270 database (Information System for Research in Primary Care, SIDIAP) were included in this retrospectiv
271 alia or New Zealand to receive DAAs at their primary care site or local hospital (standard of care [S
273 December 2012, conducted at 607 hospital and primary care sites in 43 countries involving 6042 partic
276 and 3476 GBM with HIV-infection attended our primary-care sites annually providing 13,801 person-year
278 rventions on social determinants relevant to primary care, the USPSTF will continue to provide recomm
279 wn it is feasible to deliver brief advice in primary care to encourage reductions in SFA intake and t
280 of cardiovascular disease (CVD) are used in primary care to identify high-risk individuals among the
281 before and after diagnosis of comorbidity in primary care to identify opportunities for antibiotic st
284 is needed regarding the cost and accuracy of primary care ultrasound, and the potential impact of the
285 25 years old were recruited from 119 public primary care units, including all 26 state capitals and
290 is early evidence of a decline in per capita primary care visit rates, and little is understood about
291 with obesity and hypertension presents for a primary care visit, during which he expresses concern ab
293 point-of-care screening administered during primary care visits would increase the adherence to reco
294 interval [CI] 87.7-100) of people treated in primary care was noninferior when compared to historical
296 sepsis following infection consultations in primary care when antibiotics were or were not prescribe
297 onditions, representing 80% of cases seen in primary care, while also providing a secondary predictio
299 n the period after the P4P scheme in British primary care, with additional impact for young women age
300 th biochemically confirmed PHPT who received primary care within an academic health system were ident