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1 gories (e.g. essential, domain essential or 'sick').
2 d/or those they interact with are healthy or sick.
3 vanced practice clinicians (APCs) work while sick.
4 icinal plants that make their offspring less sick.
5 eople who have been infected but who are not sick.
6 e drug courses even when they no longer feel sick.
7        Fifteen patients met the criteria for SICK.
8  surprising: faces appeared green and looked sick.
9                        Among adults, feeling sick (15.9%, 95% CI 13.0%-18.8%) was a more commonly cit
10 he signal differentiates between healthy and sick AAT-deficient individuals suggesting that affinity
11                                           In sick AF patients with multiple comorbidities, AVNA with
12  or dying after aspiration are those who are sick (American Society of Anesthesiologists physical cla
13 l similarity and are synthetically lethal or sick, an observation that has puzzled many geneticists.
14 , from healthy populations to people who are sick and from wealthy individuals to those who are poor.
15 he Ctnnb1(loxp/loxp); Alb-Cre(+/-) mice were sick and lethargic, especially during the first 2-3 days
16 ning COVID-19 is why some individuals become sick and others not.
17                                       Quiet, sick and shy children who were alone were the most likel
18 ral and physiological traits as hosts become sick and subsequently return to health.
19 hould include waitlist removal rate for "too sick" and waitlist death ratios, so waitlist management
20  outcome rates were 72.6% LT, 18.2% died/too sick, and 6.1% SS.
21 various factors that encourage working while sick, and free-text comments written in response to open
22      Faces were less socially desirable when sick, and sick body odors tended to lower liking of the
23 specific endopeptidase (mepS) were synthetic sick, and the defects were abrogated by lack of l,d-tran
24  in the blood of infected but not clinically sick animals offers a great promise for the noninvasive
25                      Thirty-eight percent of sick animals versus 8% of controls were infected with mu
26 tal of 32 IDV isolates from both healthy and sick animals, including those with antibodies against ID
27 solates were recovered from both healthy and sick animals, including those with evident antibodies ag
28                       Although isolated from sick animals, it is unclear whether IDV causes any clini
29                                  Findings of SICK are infrequent in the US ESRD population and do not
30 ef, 446 respondents (83.1%) reported working sick at least 1 time in the past year, and 50 (9.3%) rep
31 t year, and 50 (9.3%) reported working while sick at least 5 times.
32  RESULTS: We included 5250 delisted for "too sick" at 127 centers, in 53 DSAs, over 16 years.
33  was for care-seeking, with 102 (77%) of 132 sick babies in Newhints zones taken to a hospital or cli
34  were less socially desirable when sick, and sick body odors tended to lower liking of the faces.
35 ructural properties with PrPres derived from sick brains.
36 cipants in green homes experienced 47% fewer sick building syndrome symptoms (p<0.010).
37 n a controversial medical condition known as sick building syndrome.
38  best clinical judgment for determining "too sick," but it is unclear how social determinants influen
39 d with lower ratings of general health, more sick call visits, more missed workdays, more physical sy
40 al home model, those that emphasize same-day sick care and professional continuity are more likely to
41 produce sharing, field labor, childcare, and sick care) among 2,161 household dyads of Tsimane' horti
42 fferences in body burden between healthy and sick cats diagnosed with Feline Hyperthyroidism (FH).
43  used by the child's caregiver to care for a sick child (59% before intervention vs 51% during interv
44 regnancy or continue it and take care of the sick child after birth.
45 out the caregiver behavior of "offering" the sick child fluid and food.
46 ut whether or not to seek medical help for a sick child.
47  and nonconvulsive status epilepticus in the sick child.
48 d non-intervention groups, respectively, for sick-child care (DiD p-value = 0.01); +11.4% (from 78.3%
49  healthcare seeking behavior and outputs for sick-child care among children <5 years old, as well as
50 of infrastructure, ranging from 0.63 of 1 in sick-child care to 0.75 of 1 for family planning on aver
51 was low, with an average of 37% adherence in sick-child care, 46% in family planning, 60% in labor an
52 on of family planning, antenatal care (ANC), sick-child care, and (in 2 countries) labor and delivery
53 tative facility surveys capturing quality of sick-child care, facility readiness, and provider and pa
54 6 direct clinical observations of outpatient sick-child visits across 9 countries, including Uganda (
55                                User fees for sick-child visits increased risk by 30% (HRR = 1.30, 95%
56 ver, kidney, multiorgan) at The Hospital for Sick Children (2002-2011), excluding prevalent obesity.
57 , liver, kidney, multiorgan) at Hospital for Sick Children (2002-2011), excluding prevalent obesity.
58 department of the Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children (Belfast, UK) with suspected meningococcal
59  financial barrier to seeking healthcare for sick children (DD = -26.4 pp, ROR: 0.23, 95% CI: 0.08-0.
60 g their active treatment at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) in Toronto, Canada.
61 ed between 1991 and 2013 at the Hospital for Sick Children (Toronto, Ontario, Canada), Children's Nat
62 ain guidance on research practices involving sick children and adolescents, as well as to identify re
63 stitutional review board of the Hospital for Sick Children and by Health Canada.
64 ls who regularly communicate with parents of sick children and who were also "NICU parents." We have
65 sessment, diagnosis, and referral of acutely sick children attending out-of-hours services; and enhan
66 rds of children admitted to the Hospital for Sick Children between 2001 and 2011 with SJS, TEN, and O
67 mary care patient safety incidents involving sick children from England and Wales' National Reporting
68 rm ready-to-use therapeutic foods in acutely sick children in a hospital setting also had limited eff
69  potentially due to the burden of caring for sick children in the home; interventions need to be targ
70 at two pediatric hospitals, The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Canada, and the Children's Med
71 demic dermatology clinic at The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
72                   Substantiating research in sick children is still needed.
73    All children admitted to the Hospital for Sick Children over a 16-year period with acute neurologi
74 s of MMN in improving morbidity or growth in sick children presenting for primary care has not been a
75                                              Sick children with cough and fast breathing, or signs of
76                                  Many of the sick children with G12P[8] rotavirus in their diarrheal
77            We did a cross-sectional study in sick children younger than 5 years who attended a health
78 rtainties in the strictest view of promoting sick children's interests.
79 ll transplanted children at The Hospital for Sick Children, 25% developed obesity within 5-years post
80 ng all transplanted children at Hospital for Sick Children, 25% developed obesity within 5-years post
81 from the fracture clinic at the Hospital for Sick Children, and matched controls were obtained from t
82 NHS Scotland, the Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children, and the Pan Thames PICU Commissioning Con
83 rviews (KIIs) were conducted with parents of sick children, community leaders, and health workers to
84 noblastoma was performed at the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada.
85  solid organ transplants at the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, from 1991 to 2014, and compared
86 re for Global Child Health, the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, the Aga Khan University, and Mot
87 ts with VEOIBD diagnosed at The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, from 1994 through
88  T-cell immunodeficiency at the Hospital for Sick Children.
89 nts of anesthetic drugs given to infants and sick children.
90     The objective was to compare the rate of sick clinic visits by infants aged 43-182 d according to
91 s associated with a significant reduction in sick clinic visits, especially those due to diarrhea.
92 the origin of disease, and peer bonding with sick colleagues.
93  study demonstrates that innate avoidance of sick conspecifics requires an intact vomeronasal organ,
94 le cues indicating sickness and avoidance of sick conspecifics would therefore be an adaptive way of
95 here was no history of travel or exposure to sick contacts.
96            Risk of EDs was assessed with the Sick-Control-One-Fat-Food Questionnaire (SCOFF), and cat
97 lity were employment status, part-time work, sick day use, and limitation in work demands; the latter
98 s of poorer overall health status, number of sick days, and doctor visits, such that eczema and each
99 costs, indirect costs from lost workdays and sick days, and increased health care utilization.
100  due to factors such as lost wages, need for sick days, and travel expenses.
101 nd by 35% compared with deaths plus the "too sick" designation.
102 ng physicians and APCs frequently work while sick despite recognizing that this choice puts patients
103       Only 26% of candidates removed as "too sick" died within 90 days of delisting; 6335 deaths afte
104 ttainment and having an employment status of sick/disabled (p = 0.0014 for age, all other p-values<0.
105 dds of people having an employment status of sick/disabled were 7.2 (CI 5.5, 9.4, p<0.001) for people
106 n external epithelia of recently vaccinated, sick dogs is a clinically useful diagnostic test and val
107 y to inform the daughter that her father was sick enough to die (68% vs 43%; 95% CI, 5-44%; p = 0.01)
108          Finally, this review describes how "sick fat" helps account for various clinical obesity/car
109 es, termed adiposopathy (adipose-opathy) or "sick fat," that result in endocrine and immune derangeme
110 sk of dying on the wait-list or becoming too sick for a transplant in comparison with white patients.
111 ndidates died on the wait-list or became too sick for a transplant within 1 year of listing.
112 ncreased likelihood of death or becoming too sick for liver transplantation (26.5% vs 22.0%, respecti
113 re more likely than men to die or become too sick for liver transplantation post-MELD (23.7% vs 21.4%
114 tients were more likely to die or become too sick for liver transplantation than white patients (27.0
115  mortality (=death or delisted for being too sick for liver transplantation).
116 actices surrounding delisting for being "too sick" for LT contribute to this disparity beyond death a
117  included; 4458 were delisted for being "too sick" for LT.
118 erve children exposed to, infected with, and sick from all forms of tuberculosis.
119 h more than 10 million people becoming newly sick from tuberculosis each year.
120         The transmission of L. donovani from sick hamsters to flies was surprisingly low (mean, 24% o
121 d parasite pick-up by flies were assessed in sick hamsters.
122  was previously described from ticks and two sick human beings from Germany.
123 ommonly isolated from cattle but rarely from sick humans (bovine-biased genotypes [BBG]) and those co
124 s, and provides the majority of care for her sick husband.
125 ele of the GTPase obgE that is synthetically sick in the absence of Mla; providing another link betwe
126 hal in the absence of Mud2 and synthetically sick in the absence of Nam8, Mud1 and Tgs1 or in the pre
127 nts were excluded if they were too well, too sick (in the setting of advanced liver disease), or too
128 s deemed important in deciding to work while sick included not wanting to let colleagues down (521 [9
129 why attending physicians and APCs work while sick, including extreme difficulty finding coverage (205
130                           On 20 July 2014, a sick individual flew into Lagos, Nigeria, from Monrovia,
131 ical level of concern, i.e., empathy, by the sick individuals above which disease is eradicated rapid
132 different microbiome profiles in healthy and sick individuals for a variety of diseases; this suggest
133                                              Sick individuals may utilize preemptive measures to avoi
134 l control of infection--e.g., segregation of sick individuals, disposal of the dead, quality assessme
135 nt denied fevers, night sweats, contact with sick individuals, occupational exposure to infection, bl
136 sease without the preemptive measures of the sick individuals.
137 odeficiency virus counseling and testing and sick infant treatment interventions were among the longe
138 ey be kept on the differential diagnosis for sick infants and children with cutaneous findings, as ea
139                                              Sick infants have increased levels of cytokines in their
140 we uncovered a previously unknown "synthetic-sick" interaction between the tumor suppressor folliculi
141                This screen reveals synthetic sick interactions between Brd9&Jmjd6, Kat6a&Jmjd6, and B
142 y real and morbid consequences of being this sick is essential.
143                         The decision to work sick is shaped by systems-level and sociocultural factor
144  the mortality of patients delisted for "too sick" is unexpectedly low.
145  findings (small indented calcified kidneys [SICK]) is linked to analgesic ingestion.
146 1.3 vs 1.9; P = 0.03; P = 0.013) and shorter sick leave (12.3 vs 14.8 d; P = 0.045).
147         21.4-50.8% of employed patients took sick leave (mean: 11.6-64.1 days).
148                                              Sick leave and disability pension data were retrieved fr
149                   We estimated the burden of sick leave and disability pension in a population-based
150            We analysed rates of work-related sick leave and standard sick leave seperately, with rate
151 s well as the use of more municipal support, sick leave benefits, and disability pension funds than t
152 tly lower adjusted annualized mean number of sick leave days (0.09, vs 4.18 with placebo, P = .015) a
153 ipt of disability pension, income, number of sick leave days, and nursing home residency.
154 nth follow-up, the mean rate of work-related sick leave decreased by 0.28 percentage points (pp) from
155 4.6% (N=455) remained employed without using sick leave during the first 6 months after returning to
156  general population, and 21% vs 13% had >/=1 sick leave episode (P < .001 for each comparison).
157              The mean percentage of standard sick leave increased by 0.48 pp from 4.97% (0.22) in the
158 to RTW was estimated through the duration of sick leave of 801 cancer survivors younger than 58 years
159 vely managed patients was 0.4 days, and mean sick leave period was 5.8 days.
160 ates of work-related sick leave and standard sick leave seperately, with rate being defined as sickne
161 l stays of all donors were 6 days and median sick leave was 56 days (range, 14-132).
162                    In men, the time spent on sick leave was independent of the probability of returni
163       Multivariate analysis of the RTW after sick leave was performed using a Weibull accelerated fai
164                      Mean numbers of days of sick leave were 3.4 days (SD 7.1) in the resection group
165 6) as well as a greater likelihood of taking sick leave when they had not worked through their grief
166 ntative and therapeutic health care, limited sick leave, and household structure.
167 lting in less postoperative pain and shorter sick leave, DGHAL was more expensive, took longer, and p
168  that encourage self-isolation, such as paid sick leave, may delay the epidemic peak, giving a window
169 nable to participate in social life, days on sick leave, morbidity (additional procedures and hospita
170 ceipt of disability pension, income, days of sick leave, or nursing home residency.
171 costs were classified into three categories: sick leave, short-term and long-term disability.
172  the control cohort (n = 337,792), including sick leave, short-term disability, and long-term disabil
173             Data on length of hospital stay, sick leave, socioeconomic parameters, and life events we
174 ed absenteeism costs related specifically to sick leave, which was experienced on average by 10 to 24
175 tions for policy aimed at reducing long-term sick leave.
176 ing an independent risk factor for long-term sick leave.
177  increased health service use, and increased sick leave.
178 talization for (131)I administration, rhTSH, sick leaves, and transportation) was collected prospecti
179 c modifiers, including 38 that are synthetic sick/lethal and 63 that are suppressors.
180 e carried out novel predictions of synthetic sick/lethal gene pairs at a genome-wide scale.
181 raction networks are available and synthetic sick/lethal gene pairs have been extensively identified.
182 bility, i.e., their propensity for synthetic sick/lethal interaction.
183 s input features for prediction of synthetic sick/lethal interactions.
184 peroxidation (GPX4) scored high as synthetic sick/lethal.
185 ole of hepatic mitochondrial morphology in a sick liver, we expressed a cleavage-resistant long form
186 amples were taken from the same donors when "sick" (LPS-injected) and when "healthy" (saline-injected
187 terminal domain of PrP, brains of clinically sick mice accumulate longer proteinase K-resistant (PrP(
188 ositive 10% brain homogenate from terminally sick mice infected with the Rocky Mountain Lab strain of
189                    Bone marrow (BM) from the sick mice showed myeloid hyperplasia with predominant ma
190 ntranasal NAD(+) treatment of prion-infected sick mice significantly improves activity and delays mot
191 d robustly differentiate between healthy and sick microbiome profiles is needed.
192 n postnatal days 0, 2, 5, and 8 and referred sick neonates to a hospital, where blood was collected f
193 venth days of birth, and referred or treated sick neonates.
194 oductive health, obstetric care, and care of sick newborn babies and children); four through outpatie
195 Chitinase 5, Adar, Innexin 2, Transferrin 1, Sick, Oatp26F) and Gene Ontology categories (e.g. purine
196 c bee paralysis virus (CBPV), extracted from sick or dead bees, was studied by mobility measurements
197 tion, social contraindication, recipient too sick or dead, approved but did not donate, or donated.
198 been suggested to be feeding vessels for the sick or infirm(3,4).
199 3-harbouring cells have acquired a synthetic sick or lethal phenotype relationship with the nucleosid
200 ither SET2 or set2Delta and is synthetically sick or lethal with a number of transcription elongation
201 in budding yeast, but htz1Delta is synthetic sick or lethal with the null alleles of about 200 noness
202 here that over half of [PSI(+)] variants are sick or lethal.
203                                    Synthetic sick or synthetic lethal (SS/L) screens are a powerful w
204 her ICU and 270 because they were deemed too sick or too well to benefit from ICU admission.
205 kg/yr also was significantly associated with SICK (OR 8.2; 95% CI 1.5 to 45).
206 come of delisting with removal codes of "too sick" or "medically unsuitable." A total of 44 388 patie
207                     Persons who are elderly, sick, or poor are especially vulnerable to these potenti
208  Patients were included if delisted for "too sick." Our primary outcome was Model for End-Stage Liver
209 ion predicted the MELD at delisting for "too sick" (P < 0.05).
210 n emergency surgical procedure in a COVID-19 sick patient.
211 hauser Comorbidity Index [ECI] <2) and older-sick patients (age >=71, ECI >4).
212 ity risk (5.0%), except in the case of older-sick patients mortality was highest at high-volume hospi
213  has, therefore, shifted to caring for these sick patients outside the operating room and increasingl
214  rates, and the rates are slowest in acutely sick patients undergoing pulmonary exacerbations; nevert
215  for-profit hospitals selectively treat less sick patients, provide less evidence-based care, limit i
216 e with those observed for healthy as well as sick patients.
217 ion process impossible to understand by very sick patients.
218 ts, in the right doses, at the right time in sick patients.
219 ith no improvement or worse outcomes in less sick patients.
220 s and perform more transplantations for less sick patients.
221 ould be most frequent in well people than in sick people (low likelihood ratio).
222 hrough their undisrupted daily routines than sick people and represent the bulk of DENV infections, o
223 he weakened health care system prevents many sick people from seeking care at a health care facility,
224          He denied a history of contact with sick people, illicit drug use, or recent travel.
225 y to other households or connections to many sick people.
226               She reported no contact with a sick person or recent travel.
227 ntact with someone with suspected EVD or any sick person, and 25.5% reported having attended a funera
228 asible, we recommend dedicated bathrooms for sick persons and informing cleaning staff (professional
229 d gratitude for, the privilege of caring for sick persons.
230 ts (504 [95.3%]) believed that working while sick put patients at risk.
231 eline smoking behavior only, were subject to sick-quitter bias and misclassification resulting from c
232 se (MELD) score at waitlist removal for "too sick." Regression assessed the association between socia
233 al determinants and MELD at removal for "too sick." RESULTS: We included 5250 delisted for "too sick"
234  vitreous reservoir may recover function of "sick" retinal neurons.
235 here is variation in delisting MELD for "too sick" score across DSA and time.
236 ytokine response in the brains of clinically sick scrapie-infected mice was restricted to a small gro
237 nt provision of HLA-matched stem cells for a sick sibling.
238 ve retired blood donors reported having been sick since the start of the pandemic.
239 nd cyclosporine (1), pacemaker placement for sick sinus syndrome (1), and supportive care (3).
240 ventricular arrhythmia (13 of 15), including sick sinus syndrome (5 of 15) and atrial fibrillation (9
241  about the incidence of and risk factors for sick sinus syndrome (SSS), a common indication for pacem
242                                              Sick sinus syndrome and atrioventricular block are commo
243 13 mg/m2 (n = 1), and transient asymptomatic sick sinus syndrome and hypocalcemia in one patient at 1
244 rugada syndrome, dilated cardiomyopathy, and sick sinus syndrome in the future.
245 tered cardiac conduction and reduced risk of sick sinus syndrome, and both heart rate-increasing and
246 on in the Nkx2-5(+) domain of the SAN caused sick sinus syndrome, associated with the loss of the pac
247 rmalities in its structure or function cause sick sinus syndrome, the most common reason for electron
248 , which contribute to a phenotype resembling sick sinus syndrome.
249 lls, and suggest ISL1 mutations may underlie sick sinus syndrome.
250 ng-defective mutation D1275N associated with sick sinus syndrome/dilated cardiomyopathy/atrial arrhyt
251 rugada syndrome, dilated cardiomyopathy, and sick sinus syndrome; however, no effective therapy exist
252 vity in the sinoatrial node (SAN) underlies "sick sinus" syndrome (SSS), a common clinical condition
253                 In computer simulations of a sick SN, ectopic foci in AVR were unmasked, causing tran
254 redicted outcome probabilities (LT, died/too sick, spontaneous survival [SS]) were obtained with mult
255                       Patients were severely sick (Survival After Venoarterial ECMO score mean+/-SD,
256 r, the mechanisms involved in the "euthyroid sick syndrome" remain poorly understood.
257              Originally termed the euthyroid sick syndrome, this phenomenon is now more commonly refe
258                           More Americans are sick than are healthy, largely from rising diet-related
259 t individuals who are considered abnormal or sick (the rightward tail of the distribution) and those
260  generalizability, exclusion of patients too sick to consent, fluctuations in procedures in the stand
261 cluding-or even especially-when they are too sick to participate in decisions.
262  were alive at 4 and 17 months and 1 was too sick to return.
263 sk of dying on the wait list or becoming too sick to transplant (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.83, 95% CI
264 sk of death on the wait list or becoming too sick to transplant has decreased by 17% in the US since
265  for death on the wait-list (or becoming too sick to transplant) and posttransplant graft loss (media
266 ed with wait-list mortality (or becoming too sick to transplant) or post-transplant graft loss (death
267 cally unsuitable, 35 died, and 26 became too sick to transplant.
268 tients were more likely to die or become too sick to undergo liver transplantation compared with whit
269 didates withdrawn from the list as being too sick to undergo transplant nearly doubled between 2009 a
270 onding percentiles for death or becoming too sick to undergo transplant were 5% and 9%.
271 th or removal from the list due to being too sick to undergo transplant, n = 339) or 180 days.
272 ), and ambiguity about what constitutes "too sick to work" (180 [57.0%]).
273                     Delisting for being "too sick" to be transplanted is subjective.
274 atio of number of candidates removed as "too sick" to number who died on the waiting list varied by r
275 may be associated with determination of "too sick" to transplant.
276 ein (PrP(Sc)) in the brains of spontaneously sick transgenic (Tg) mice overexpressing PrP linked to G
277                Considering specific viruses, sick urban infants had lower rates of detectable rhinovi
278 rimary care offices that guaranteed same-day sick visits (coefficient, 0.57 [SE, 0.05]; P < .001) fol
279 % CI, 11-16 minutes) for guaranteed same-day sick visits and 44 minutes (95% CI, 37-51 minutes) for a
280                                         When sick visits as well as routine healthy-child visits are
281 pe and associated with recurrent respiratory sick visits in young children.
282 ment and then quarterly for 12 months and at sick visits were assessed; multiplicity of infection was
283 ads and were more likely to have respiratory sick visits within 12 months of discharge (OR = 5.8).
284 h 120 participants tested monthly and during sick visits.
285               In addition, the CT finding of SICK was present only in a minority of heavy analgesic u
286          The mean MELD at delisting for "too sick" was 25.8 (SD +/- 11.2).
287 nants influence decisions to delist for "too sick." We hypothesized that social determinants and Dono
288 otein levels increased during virus-positive sick weeks.
289 cted in 3 of the 'well' weeks and 17 of the 'sick' weeks (10 rhinovirus, three coronavirus, two influ
290 sessment (15 'well' weeks; 22 self-assessed 'sick' weeks).
291 list events (LT and dropout for death or too sick) were calculated and modeled using Fine and Gray co
292 o interrogate mutants that are synthetically sick when two other genes are deleted but interact minim
293  and phenacetin (used by three patients with SICK), which are no longer available.
294              Globally, >30 000 children fall sick with multidrug-resistant (MDR) tuberculosis every y
295              A total of 276 individuals were sick with typical NoV infection symptoms of vomiting (93
296 if they came from the same district and were sick within the same year of a person with a confirmed i
297 re a failure to recognize and respond to the sick woman and inadequate antibiotic and fluid managemen
298  the costs of absenteeism and replacement of sick workers.
299 agious disease, if not two, and several very sick!" wrote Dr.
300 otential to increase access to treatment for sick young infants who cannot be referred to hospital.

 
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