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1  be inadequate and frequently result in high recidivism.
2 in tissue repair is likely to increase wound recidivism.
3 ine continues to carry a substantive risk of recidivism.
4 include higher rates of subsequent crime and recidivism.
5  by callous antisocial behavior and criminal recidivism.
6 ern because it predicts violence and offense recidivism.
7 e as relationship partners and likelihood of recidivism.
8 y was associated with greater odds of 30-day recidivism.
9 een numeracy and health literacy with 30-day recidivism.
10 identifies factors predicting posttransplant recidivism.
11 reening and intervention, and risk of injury recidivism.
12 ymptoms and diagnosis may cause much of this recidivism.
13 ed to recidivism and 3 to noncompliance with recidivism.
14  appears to be effective in reducing general recidivism.
15 mption and would decrease the rate of trauma recidivism.
16  alcohol intake and a reduced risk of trauma recidivism.
17 ers may play a role in treatment failure and recidivism.
18      This study was not designed to evaluate recidivism.
19 tween homelessness after release and risk of recidivism.
20 le (APPs)-can reduce rates of violations and recidivism.
21  alcohol dependent patients (n = 48, alcohol recidivism 5/48, 10%) found no combination of variables
22 patients with poly-drug use (n = 15, alcohol recidivism 8/15, 53%) and the remaining low-risk group o
23 n and reduced between-subject violations and recidivism, a 13% reduction that would translate to less
24 ansplantation for ALD, though depression and recidivism adversely impact survival.
25                                              Recidivism after liver transplantation for alcoholic liv
26 nalysis, and probability of homelessness and recidivism after release.
27  recommend expanding interventions to reduce recidivism among mentally ill inmates.
28 ter release can substantially reduce violent recidivism among prisoners with schizophrenia.
29  deaths in group I, only 1 was attributed to recidivism and 3 to noncompliance with recidivism.
30 ns or limited their findings to drug use and recidivism and have not explored interventions delivered
31 entification of individuals most at risk for recidivism and loss of viral suppression might mitigate
32 ed to develop interventions to reduce trauma recidivism and preventable death.
33 s of confinement (secondary), and (3) reduce recidivism and re-involvement in the system (tertiary).
34 king cessation strategies to reduce rates of recidivism and the posttransplantation complications ass
35 the hypothesis that treating illness reduces recidivism and therefore improves individual and communi
36 or ALD, methods are being devised to monitor recidivism and to ameliorate its risk and that of co-mor
37   This cohort demonstrates higher healthcare recidivism and utilization.
38 associated with maintenance of reductions in recidivism and violence after graduates were no longer u
39 a mental health court can reduce the risk of recidivism and violence by people with mental disorders
40 dicate that a mental health court can reduce recidivism and violence by people with mental disorders
41 ciation between recurrent trauma admissions (recidivism) and subsequent long-term mortality, and to i
42 ars 3-6 of the trial) sustained quitting, 4) recidivism, and 5) continued smoking.
43 m patient survival, graft survival, rates of recidivism, and development of de novo cancers in this g
44  reduce subsequent alcohol intake and injury recidivism but have not yet been widely implemented.
45 nce status, hospital site, days eligible for recidivism, chronic kidney disease, abnormal hemoglobin,
46 ributions of numeracy and health literacy to recidivism for patients with acute heart failure (AHF) a
47 meracy and health literacy may reduce 30-day recidivism for patients with acute heart failure.
48 ective interventions to reduce mortality and recidivism for people who use drugs who have been incarc
49 llected in 130 patients found that alcoholic recidivism (hazard ratio, 2.66; P > 0.001) was the only
50                                       Trauma recidivism identifies a high-risk population, but its as
51  research on restorative justice in reducing recidivism in crimes other than DV, a randomized control
52  The data indicate that clozapine may reduce recidivism in subjects with criminal histories who are i
53 tive psychosocial factors of early alcoholic recidivism in transplant candidates.
54 treatment results in weight restoration, but recidivism is common, and the rate of relapse is estimat
55 hat actions focused on decreasing corruption recidivism may substantially mitigate this type of organ
56 of delinquent youth have focused on criminal recidivism, not on psychosocial outcomes in adulthood.
57 n energy expenditure that contributes to the recidivism of obesity after weight loss.
58                       Despite the well-known recidivism of obesity, surprisingly little is known abou
59 re effective than nontreatment in preventing recidivism of sexual offenders in general, a finding tha
60                  Graft loss/death related to recidivism or chronic rejection was extremely low.
61 .97]) at the index visit as predictive of ED recidivism or death within 24 months.
62 fectiveness of any intervention on drug use, recidivism outcomes, sexual or injecting risk behaviours
63 ANOCA frequently experience invalidation and recidivism, possibly leading to anxiety and depression.
64  corruption networks operate near a critical recidivism rate below which the network is entirely frag
65 ot be sufficient to account for the over 80% recidivism rate to pre-weight loss levels of body fatnes
66 d in significant survival advantage with low recidivism rate.
67 te effective counseling and pharmacotherapy, recidivism rates after transplantation remain high (10-4
68  liver transplantation, studies to determine recidivism rates and influential factors affecting those
69 ho have been incarcerated for such behavior, recidivism rates are high.
70  of these challenges, the high mortality and recidivism rates associated with MBP make it imperative
71 y have implications for the high-cocaine use recidivism rates by contributing to the drive to consume
72                                              Recidivism rates for cigarette smokers following treatme
73                                              Recidivism rates for schizophrenic patients discharged o
74 rs in geographic space, what would happen to recidivism rates if ex-prisoners were dispersed across s
75                 Despite these interventions, recidivism rates remain high.
76 y, major adverse cardiovascular event rates, recidivism rates, and downstream resource utilization.
77                                   Similarly, recidivism (relapse) rates for repeat violent offenders
78 s appropriate care and trust, violations and recidivism (return to jail or prison) may be more likely
79 ture interpretation, facial recognition, and recidivism risk assessments.
80 ation between the ACE DD polymorphism and AF recidivism supports the use of genetic data for predicti
81  low health literacy, adjusted odds ratio of recidivism was 1.17 (95% confidence interval, 0.83-1.65;
82 s of release from prison, the probability of recidivism was 73.2% (95% CI 72.8-73.7).
83                                              Recidivism was defined as any unplanned return to the em
84                                  The risk of recidivism was higher among people experiencing homeless
85 enetrating injury are associated with trauma recidivism which leads to a higher risk of death.
86 associated with the rate of post-LTx rate of recidivism, which was 20%.
87 llowing release from first imprisonment, and recidivism within 2 years of release, defined as the fir
88 meracy was associated with increased odds of recidivism within 30 days (adjusted odds ratio, 1.41; 95