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1  (two each) in either a university clinic or private practice.
2 ial scaling and oral hygiene procedures in a private practice.
3 ) and controls (n = 49) were selected from a private practice.
4 imary care specialty, and 68 (37.6%) were in private practice.
5 and 1713 (63.4%) by cardiologists working in private practice.
6 ospital facility and a university-affiliated private practice.
7 aging workforce that is less likely to be in private practice.
8 (GR) at baseline were treated with FGGs in a private practice.
9 opathologists from residency to academic and private practice.
10 acular edema in a 9-member retinal specialty private practice.
11 tional study at a tertiary referral academic private practice.
12 nt in the University Clinic, and ran a small private practice.
13 hed with 11 self-referring urology groups in private practice.
14 1,043 consecutive new patients enrolled in a private practice.
15 nducted at the University of Iowa and select private practices.
16 ry academic hospital and six community-based private practices.
17 on billing codes in all French hospitals and private practices.
18  States, including both academic centers and private practices.
19 teaching hospitals, community hospitals, and private practices.
20 IDS Program (RWHAP)-funded facilities and in private practices.
21 t Autorefractor at 2 pediatric ophthalmology private practices.
22 ging radiologists from eight academic and 11 private practices.
23                         At a single clinical private practice, 100 children aged 9-18 with normal bin
24 s included academic (58.1%), hybrid academic/private practice (35.5%), and private practice only sett
25 y to experience burnout compared to those in private practice (37.7% vs. 43.1%), less likely to scree
26 he survey, including 262 (57%) women (20% in private practice, 53% in academic careers, and 27% train
27 reers, and 27% trainees) and 195 men (23% in private practice, 58% in academic careers, and 19% train
28                Most retired surgeons were in private practice (66.4%), with other practice environmen
29                               Most worked in private practice (71% as principals, 32% as associates),
30 ing clinics in total; SUS and two clinics in private practice accounted for 55.4% of all referrals.
31 e returned; 50 were identified as being from private-practicing adult rheumatologists and were the fo
32 ional study at a single-surgeon oculoplastic private practice among 55 eyes of 28 adult volunteers.
33 mprising 35 self-referring urology groups in private practice and a matched control group comprising
34 sed in more experienced practitioners with a private practice and a personal history of periodontal d
35 ohort study was conducted using data from US private practice and academic centers.
36 vilians 21 to 57 years of age conducted at 5 private practice and academic centers.
37 ating to career satisfaction for surgeons in private practice and academic practice were also differe
38                                              Private practice and academic surgery careers vary signi
39 tidepressants by psychiatrists in outpatient private practice and characterized antidepressant prescr
40  educational debt were more likely to pursue private practice and less likely to plan an academic car
41 eened through a collaborative network of 225 private practice and university nephrologists (the Glome
42 inus) were obtained retrospectively from two private practices and pooled for analysis.
43 eptember 2001 to February 2002, 23 academic, private practice, and hospital facilities in 9 US states
44  13 sites were affiliated with institutions, private practice, and other medical organizations, respe
45 sing 35 non-self-referring urology groups in private practice, and the other comprising non-self-refe
46  scales; formally registered small-to-medium private practices; and the corporate commercial hospital
47 easing academic salaries to levels nearer to private practice are necessary components of the solutio
48                          Ophthalmologists in private practice are often the first clinicians that pat
49                The new graduate entering the private practice arena faces many challenges.
50                                           In private practice, Barker maintained a high profile as a
51  CNBBs performed across six academic and six private practices between April 2019 and April 2021.
52              All implants were placed in one private practice by the same surgeon.
53                  As a result, acquisition of private practices by large private equity companies has
54             Women were more likely to choose private practice careers because of part-time options (P
55 %) of 95 academic centers and 41 (79%) of 52 private practice centers (P < .001).
56                  Seventy-two US academic and private practice centers participated.
57 enters returned 95 questionnaires (49%), and private practice centers, 72 (24%).
58 ssigned 116 patients from eight academic and private practice centres, using computer-generated rando
59 lantation of the study intraocular lens in a private practice clinic were considered for inclusion.
60      Patients were recruited from hospitals, private practices, clinical research units, and academic
61 o saw 23 rheumatologists at universities and private practice clinics in North Carolina.
62 er perceived difference between academic and private practice compensation were predictive of salary
63 ; 62.9% with >10 years in practice, 75.7% in private practice) completed the survey.
64                                        Under private-practice conditions, implants with an SLA surfac
65 ]) placed in everyday practice under routine private-practice conditions.
66 This retrospective case series from clinical private practices confirmed that a lateral window approa
67 ary prophylaxis and fear of lawsuits amongst private practice dentists and OS has not been addressed.
68       We provide experience on how to engage private practice dentists and OS in dental stewardship u
69       We provide experience on how to engage private-practice dentists and OS in dental stewardship u
70 versity of Pennsylvania Health System) and a private practice (Dermatologists of Southwest Ohio).
71                         Patients were from a private practice dermatology clinic, with assessed scars
72 ve risk factors for periodontal disease in a private practice environment.
73 specialties practicing in an academic versus private practice environment.
74      Only patients who initially consulted a private practice experienced delays between >4 and 12 we
75 ental Clinic, University of Varese, and to a private practice for treatment with mandibular ODs were
76 BS-D or IBS-M (Rome IV criteria) followed by private-practice gastroenterologists.
77 ing in community health centers (compared to private practice) had higher odds of reporting reduced s
78                                              Private practices have crafted tiered strategies to resp
79                   In this case series from a private practice (Hollywood Dermatology), 2 patients pre
80         The setting was a large rheumatology private practice in a metropolitan southwestern city.
81 almic examination by retina specialists at a private practice in Boston, Massachusetts, and were moni
82  in 1997, may signify the end of traditional private practice in the face of France's statist version
83 nterventional radiologists from academic and private practice in the United States were surveyed by e
84 nd >or=15 years of maintenance therapy, in a private practice in Yamagata, Japan.
85  phase 3b trial (SEAVUE) at 121 hospitals or private practices in 18 countries.
86 sed, phase 3 trial done in 301 hospitals and private practices in five European countries.
87 ruited from oncology offices in academic and private practices in four northeastern states, as part o
88 er prospective cohort study of hospitals and private practices in Germany and Austria encompassing 19
89 nd billing records of several large academic private practices in Philadelphia, PA were electronicall
90 adelphia including both teaching clinics and private practices in urban Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a
91 tes (clinics, hospitals, research units, and private practices) in 11 countries in Asia, Australia, E
92 d university clinics, with a small number of private practices) in 11 European countries.
93 onducted in 31 centers (hospital clinics and private practices) in Germany, Denmark, Lithuania, Spain
94  of IMRT use by self-referring urologists in private practice increased from 13.1 to 32.3%, an increa
95  academic nonhospital-associated retina-only private practice institutions over a 2-year period.
96                           The records from a private practice limited to periodontics were reviewed t
97                           The records from a private practice limited to periodontics were reviewed t
98                                         Four private practice locations in Lynwood, CA, Encino, CA, O
99                                              Private practice, Lynwood, California.
100                   Compared with providers in private practice, more providers at RWHAP-funded facilit
101  2, 2008, through September 26, 2014, in the private practice of a dermatologist and a gynecologist i
102 ybrid academic/private practice (35.5%), and private practice only settings (6.5%).
103 , although 80% of patients first consulted a private practice ophthalmologist and 25% a non-ophthalmo
104 t include broader voluntary participation by private practice ophthalmologists in charity eye care, a
105 cause of high procedural volumes, fragmented private practices, opportunities for real estate ownersh
106 (AOR = 7.04; 95%CI:1.74-28.47, P = .006) and private practice optometrists (AOR = 3.33; 95%CI:1.13-9.
107  years after treatment at a university-based private practice or a Veterans Affairs clinic.
108 feriority clinical trial was conducted at 66 private practice or academic centers in the United State
109 als, they take care of allergic patients, in private practices or in specialized public centres.
110 e included and categorized as institutional, private practice, or medical organization according to a
111 omized study at general community practices, private practices, or institutional practices.
112 utpatient dermatology clinic (NY, USA) and a private practice outpatient dermatology office in Newpor
113 ecome a surgeon again vs. 64.9% for those in private practice; P < 0.0001)) and to recommend a medica
114 the past 5 years by the same board-certified private practice periodontist (DH).
115 le email addresses representing academic and private practice physician organizations across the Unit
116                                              Private practice physicians (odds ratio [OR], 0.78; 95%
117                                              Private practice physicians (OR, 1.18; 95% CI, 1.02 to 1
118 sity and private hospitals and in offices of private practice physicians.
119  fellowship training and a 15.2% decrease in private practice positions for each year of full-time re
120 in academic practice (AP) and 482 (43.2%) in private practice (PP), with the remainder in other setti
121                                    Part-time private practice radiologists were significantly less li
122 ort synthesizes the collective experience of private-practice radiologists shared with members of the
123 tionnaires were sent to 193 academic and 300 private practice radiology departments in the United Sta
124 g discussions with colleagues and leaders of private-practice radiology groups from across the United
125 ersity School of Medicine, resigned to enter private practice rather than accept the terms of a full-
126                ICC was borderline higher for private practice readers than for academic readers (ICC
127                      This case series from a private practice reports on the clinical efficacy of an
128         Among 95 academic respondents and 52 private practice respondents, respectively, 56 (59%) and
129  [54%] of 95, vs 16 [31%] and 15 [29%] of 52 private practice respondents; P = .003) and 14-F cathete
130 ost (90 [95%] of 95 academic, 45 [87%] of 52 private practice) respondents use conscious sedation.
131 ograms in 12 healthy eyes from patients at a private practice retina clinic to evaluate the ability t
132                                   At these 3 private practice retinal specialty clinics, 41% of after
133      A total of 163 patients (326 eyes) in a private practice scheduled to have bilateral implantatio
134  process with 59 experts (25 academic and 34 private practice) scored the survey.
135 odel was set in a mixed small city and rural private practice setting and was extrapolated to a natio
136 inguinal hernias under local anesthesia in a private practice setting in general hospitals.
137 d performance status, and those treated in a private practice setting were significantly less likely
138 eporting greater financial barriers included private practice setting, fewer than 5 providers in the
139                                         In a private practice setting, the most significant positive
140     Intravitreal ocriplasmin efficacy in the private practice setting, while including patients with
141 98-5.58), they were also highly effective in private practice settings (OR, 1.79; 95% CI, 1.45-2.22)
142        The study was done in 78 academic and private practice settings in the USA.
143  trial (NRG-GI002), patients in academic and private practice settings were enrolled.
144       Sixty-one percent of reports come from private practice settings.
145 efore medical school predicted practicing in private practice settings.
146 e to be placed and restored in predominantly private-practice settings around the world.
147 articipants were enrolled at 38 academic and private practice sites in North America from March 2010
148 10, to November 27, 2012, at 38 academic and private practice sites in North America.
149 w-up at 48 academic, community hospital, and private practice sites in the United States and Germany,
150 ts are already being treated at academic and private practices, sometimes as part of Institutional Re
151  12% more work, respectively, while those in private practices sought 2% less.
152 rted being neither an academic surgeon nor a private practice surgeon and 19 surgeons who did not res
153 quartile range (IQR), 44-61 years]) and 1464 private practice surgeons (1276 men [87%]; median age, 5
154 y hours performing nonclinical work than did private practice surgeons (24 hours [IQR, 14-38 hours] v
155                                 Advocacy for private practice surgeons is important to encourage care
156      Academic surgeons were more likely than private practice surgeons to be satisfied with their car
157      Academic surgeons were less likely than private practice surgeons to feel that competition with
158  with 57 hours weekly (IQR, 45-65 hours) for private practice surgeons.
159 ction on several measures when compared with private practice surgeons.
160  with burnout were distinct for academic and private practice surgeons.
161 financial option is to develop a substantial private practice that cross-subsidizes the practice of t
162 rs determining the impact of the pandemic on private practices, the challenges these practices faced,
163 re physician who recently moved from a small private practice to a larger group-model practice.
164  of physicians in academic, nonacademic, and private practice until thematic saturation was reached.
165  results of regenerative therapy in clinical private practice using a bone allograft for the treatmen
166 so, greater differences exist when comparing private practice vs academic medicine and between higher
167 rospective, consecutive case series from two private practices was to report on the rate of Schneider
168           The practice setting (academic vs. private practice) was independently associated with burn
169  1.6, with higher reading levels observed in private practice websites compared with institutions and
170                                         More private practice websites had accessibility menus than i
171                                        Fewer private practice websites had multiple language options
172                 Internist rheumatologists in private practice were 3 times as likely as those in medi
173 ical and billing records of a large academic private practice were electronically queried for all cas
174                       All lost implants in a private practice were included in the data, except those
175 lly compliant (15 to 25 years' follow-up) in private practice were observed for oral and systemic hea
176  postgraduate periodontics programs and five private practices were selected.
177 gle-center, prospective study performed in a private practice with a dedicated research department in
178 em combines a strong tradition of autonomous private practice with nearly universal health care cover
179 rt study of 4,591 dental implants, placed in private practice, with 5- to 10-year follow-up.
180 bination of 17 tertiary referral centers and private practices worldwide contributed archived TAs fro
181 lows starting an academic career or entering private practice would have a career focus in cancer pre

 
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