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1 h prescriptions and type of physician (e.g., rheumatologist).
2 were identified (n = 57; 37 radiologists, 20 rheumatologists).
3 as 0.64 (0.62 for nephrologists and 0.67 for rheumatologists).
4 patients discussed their CAM use with their rheumatologist.
5 received a biologic, including 12% who saw a rheumatologist.
6 t were not significantly related to seeing a rheumatologist.
7 pronounced for patients under the care of a rheumatologist.
8 ncome to a university by a clinical-academic rheumatologist.
9 ear to be associated with lower trust in the rheumatologist.
10 dentify factors associated with trust in the rheumatologist.
11 istances between each county and the nearest rheumatologist.
12 tionnaire by each patient at each visit to a rheumatologist.
13 ritis patients were clinically examined by a rheumatologist.
14 a variety of diseases that may be seen by a rheumatologist.
15 tension, especially the significance for the rheumatologist.
16 , 11% see a physical therapist, and 6% see a rheumatologist.
17 ecific Disease Activity Score performed by a rheumatologist.
18 istances to see an SLE physician, especially rheumatologists.
19 nee examinations was assessed by experienced rheumatologists.
20 ents with AL amyloidosis to the attention of rheumatologists.
21 or male rheumatologists and 2,800 for female rheumatologists.
22 ots and fill rates, and practice patterns of rheumatologists.
23 xceed supply by 2,576 adult and 33 pediatric rheumatologists.
24 was reviewed by an expert Delphi panel of 6 rheumatologists.
25 feasibility panel of community and academic rheumatologists.
26 ermit lactation and nursing is important for rheumatologists.
27 ight associations of particular relevance to rheumatologists.
28 y not be uncommon among patients referred to rheumatologists.
29 tic challenge to primary care physicians and rheumatologists.
30 rviews and periodic updates on severity from rheumatologists.
31 ly be a medical problem increasingly seen by rheumatologists.
32 chieve higher accuracy than more experienced rheumatologists.
33 vational cohort identified through community rheumatologists.
34 he diagnosis and treatment of sarcoidosis by rheumatologists.
35 he CLASI as a reliable instrument for use by rheumatologists.
37 tients with RA were under the supervision of rheumatologists; 15 of the patients with RA were being t
38 R criteria and diagnosis by an ACR-certified rheumatologist, 4) > or = 3 ACR criteria, or 5) diagnosi
41 cipants were recruited from the practices of rheumatologists affiliated with a major urban hospital.
42 RA patients are rare, and more than half of rheumatologists agree that a less stringent monitoring r
45 d States live within 50 miles of a pediatric rheumatologist and nearly 90% live within 50 miles of a
48 er rheumatologist per year is 3,758 for male rheumatologists and 2,800 for female rheumatologists.
49 th rheumatoid arthritis who were followed by rheumatologists and 98 controls matched on age, sex, and
50 e more geographically diffuse than pediatric rheumatologists and act as substitutes for pediatric rhe
51 d justifiable optimism in recent years among rheumatologists and among patients with rheumatic diseas
52 earch continue to be of interest to clinical rheumatologists and arthritis researchers interested in
54 ldhood rheumatic disorders present pediatric rheumatologists and critical care physicians with diagno
55 ignificant collaborative effort by groups of rheumatologists and dermatologists regarding development
56 is being optimized by close collaboration of rheumatologists and gastroenterologists, leading to a mo
57 FM were recruited from a national sample of rheumatologists and interviewed by phone at baseline and
58 ons and are more likely to rely on internist rheumatologists and nonrheumatologists to address rheuma
60 be fostered between pediatricians, pediatric rheumatologists and ophthalmologists to effectively moni
70 espondents age > or =65, 37% had seen a plan rheumatologist, and 11% reported being unable to obtain
71 ge was almost universal, 60% had seen a plan rheumatologist, and 17% had been unable to obtain referr
72 ses commonly encountered by the physiatrist, rheumatologist, and internist in clinical practice, incl
76 least some patients under care of almost all rheumatologists, and it appears likely that they will be
78 ories ("paper cases") sent to 100 practicing rheumatologists, and the clinic data set, obtained from
84 nowledge, though beyond the usual purview of rheumatologists, are essential to understanding the vasc
86 e types of CAM, and patients who rated their rheumatologist as using a more participatory decision-ma
89 ieval rate) and blindly reviewed, two expert rheumatologists assessed only a minority of the cases as
92 ent to individuals with arthritis who saw 23 rheumatologists at universities and private practice cli
93 y the metric was not met, and performance of rheumatologists based on years of experience were evalua
94 ly reported cohort of patients examined by a rheumatologist because of chronic joint pain or evidence
95 idoses has historically been the province of rheumatologists, because of the relation to long-standin
102 or demographics and disease characteristics, rheumatologist care (compared with nonrheumatologist car
103 troversy surrounds the cost-effectiveness of rheumatologist care compared with generalist care for pa
106 oeconomics appear to play a dominant role in rheumatologists' choice of treatment regimens, at times
108 ritis, or osteoarthritis receiving care from rheumatologists completed mailed questionnaires that inc
115 ons with the medical record gold standard of rheumatologists' diagnosis of ankylosing spondylitis (AS
116 f performance and disease outcomes will help rheumatologists document and improve the quality of rheu
118 that may bring patients to the attention of rheumatologists, evaluate Ig V(L) gene usage in this sub
119 Four dermatologists, 3 pulmonologists, and 4 rheumatologists evaluated facial cutaneous sarcoidosis i
120 Diagnoses of familial SSc were verified by rheumatologist evaluation and/or review of medical recor
122 s were evaluated by an ophthalmologist and a rheumatologist following a predefined visit schedule.
123 sland, 159 patients were first referred to a rheumatologist for post-Chikungunya chronic musculoskele
125 ed 55 consecutive patients referred by three rheumatologists for MR imaging of the spine and sacroili
128 en and adolescents are referred to pediatric rheumatologists for the evaluation of suspected rheumato
129 mprovement using this core set, 21 pediatric rheumatologists from 14 countries met, and, using consen
130 ort study, we asked international paediatric rheumatologists from specialised centres to enrol childr
131 the number of K08/K23 awards, and recruiting rheumatologists from underrepresented demographic groups
133 pediatric rheumatologists rely on internist rheumatologists, general pediatricians, or other physici
134 ng in their offices, whereas mixed-referring rheumatologists had 6.40-times increase in that setting.
135 risk patients whose SLE or RA was managed by rheumatologists had a 77.4% increased likelihood of regu
140 ness of this new pathogen is warranted among rheumatologists, hematologists, oncologists, and infecti
142 lderly patients with RA or SLE are seen by a rheumatologist in a given year; access is particularly l
144 logics-naive RA patients under the care of a rheumatologist in the US were identified from the Consor
145 out the availability of an on-site pediatric rheumatologist in their institution, the availability of
148 d are in equilibrium in 2005, the demand for rheumatologists in 2025 is projected to exceed supply by
152 This is a significant problem for clinical rheumatologists in academic medicine who are often expec
153 tients with RA (n = 1,130) under the care of rheumatologists in Bradford, West Yorkshire, UK was perf
154 s needed to understand the role of internist rheumatologists in caring for children with rheumatic di
155 s, and changes in QOL; and agreement between rheumatologists in confirming the initial diagnosis.
157 state of Washington who were listed as adult rheumatologists in the American College of Rheumatology
159 merican College of Rheumatology (ACR) member rheumatologists in the state and SES using a validated c
161 logists and act as substitutes for pediatric rheumatologists in those regions that lack such provider
162 ion, when cost was not considered, 217 (65%) rheumatologists included new disease-modifying antirheum
165 ficant predictors of a prescription included rheumatologist-initiated discussion about exercise (odds
167 itional antirheumatic medications, pediatric rheumatologists intervene to control disease early and m
173 mand under current scenarios, the demand for rheumatologists is expected to exceed supply in the comi
176 ting in the Western Consortium of Practicing Rheumatologists long-term observational study of early s
177 enerally utilized by nonrheumatologists, and rheumatologists may diagnose fibromyalgia in patients wh
179 mon finding amongst patients presenting to a rheumatologist; more often than not, it is being overloo
182 universal in programs with on-site pediatric rheumatologists, nearly two-thirds of programs without o
184 medicine has become an important subject for rheumatologists, not least because many patients try com
186 ly or general practitioners, patients seeing rheumatologists (odds ratio [OR] 3.4, 95% confidence int
191 arly 90% live within 50 miles of a pediatric rheumatologist or an internist rheumatologist who treats
192 ltidisciplinary care can be coordinated by a rheumatologist or other physician with appropriate refer
194 Moreover, self-referring podiatrists and rheumatologists order radiographic examinations of incre
196 For the purpose of our analysis, we defined rheumatologists, orthopedists, and physical therapists a
197 (n = 127) seen predominantly by one academic rheumatologist over one month of clinic were followed fo
206 luded the presence and quantity of visits to rheumatologists, primary care physicians, other care pro
210 of all patients started on HCQ by NorthShore rheumatologists received doses in excess of the recommen
213 ntly influences the diagnostic confidence of rheumatologists regarding clinical features and overall
214 thirds of programs without on-site pediatric rheumatologists rely on internist rheumatologists, gener
218 ted for validity compared with the pediatric rheumatologist's assessment and deficiencies in adult GA
222 dings show that overall, the way in which UK rheumatologists select patients for starting and discont
224 ul both diagnostically and prognostically, a rheumatologist should be familiar with autoantibodies fo
228 ciencies can predispose to autoimmunity, and rheumatologists should understand the basis for and mani
229 ds of collaboration between radiologists and rheumatologists so as to optimize the diagnostics and tr
232 ortance: Dermatologists, pulmonologists, and rheumatologists study and treat patients with sarcoidosi
234 therapy who were judged by their consultant rheumatologist to be in remission and 17 normal control
235 ment who had been judged by their consultant rheumatologist to be in remission, as well as 17 normal
238 ad, and careful consideration is required by rheumatologists to balance the beneficial effects and de
239 likely than those without on-site pediatric rheumatologists to have an on-site pediatric rheumatolog
240 er revenues to quality indicators, requiring rheumatologists to measure, document, and improve their
241 munosuppressive agents in collaboration with rheumatologists to obtain the best possible visual outco
250 Prior to the start of the program, 18% of rheumatologists used self-report questionnaires, 6 month
252 rd diagnosis was confirmed by the consulting rheumatologist using radiography and magnetic resonance
255 eumatologist visits and 102 (28%) had only 1 rheumatologist visit, mostly for diagnostic confirmation
257 One hundred forty-four (40%) patients had no rheumatologist visits and 102 (28%) had only 1 rheumatol
262 etal complaint recorded, indicating that the rheumatologist was likely acting as a primary care provi
263 considering only primary care, such care by rheumatologists was, again, not associated with higher t
265 US-guided injections performed by a trainee rheumatologist were more accurate than the CE-guided inj
266 who live 200 or more miles from a pediatric rheumatologist were more than twice as likely to treat c
268 e visits between 79 women with SLE and their rheumatologists were coded for active patient participat
270 from a random sample of Northern California rheumatologists were interviewed annually between 1994 a
271 from a random sample of northern California rheumatologists were interviewed annually between 1999 a
272 ere evaluated by primary care physicians and rheumatologists were more likely to have undergone bone
274 rheumatoid arthritis, patients cared for by rheumatologists were prescribed significantly more disea
275 slow and contain the spread of the disease, rheumatologists were presented with the difficult task o
277 n conducted, on the same day, by a pediatric rheumatologist who classified children as having abnorma
279 questionnaires were distributed to pediatric rheumatologists who are members of the Children's Arthri
280 iated TMA syndromes, which are well known to rheumatologists who care for patients with severe system
282 ntion group with those in a control group of rheumatologists who did not receive the intervention.
290 e remodeling of the traditional "pyramid" by rheumatologists, who now treat rheumatoid arthritis earl
293 ently available assessment tools may provide rheumatologists with a more precise working framework, w
294 development of biologic agents has provided rheumatologists with a variety of new and effective trea
296 agents, these therapeutics have been used by rheumatologists with less consideration of their pharmac