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1 ultidisciplinary approach to the care of the surgical patient.
2 d reduce liberal transfusion practice in the surgical patient.
3 tine management of the postoperative cardiac surgical patient.
4  for proctectomy especially in the poor risk surgical patient.
5 oints regarding care for the geriatric frail surgical patient.
6  relative risk, and cumulative effect on the surgical patient.
7 g resources to expedite care of the emergent surgical patient.
8 ant), and staff from units that care for the surgical patient.
9 ntervention that improves outcomes for older surgical patients.
10 tion could dramatically improve the lives of surgical patients.
11 -that underlie disparities' occurrence among surgical patients.
12 e oxidase subunit-2-deficient mice; elective surgical patients.
13  of routine preoperative risk assessment for surgical patients.
14  the use of a combined approach in high-risk surgical patients.
15 WS) could predict inpatient complications in surgical patients.
16 phylactic enoxaparin dosing among trauma and surgical patients.
17 s core decisional and informational needs of surgical patients.
18 to PAC have not been adequately examined for surgical patients.
19 lity events identified in a cohort of 212733 surgical patients.
20 ed outcomes or lower Medicare payments among surgical patients.
21 ponsible for the care of elective colorectal surgical patients.
22  requiring reoperation occurred in 3 primary surgical patients.
23 individual risk assessment in critically ill surgical patients.
24 architectural features on health outcomes in surgical patients.
25  of infections in critically ill medical and surgical patients.
26 ant postoperative pulmonary edema in at-risk surgical patients.
27 study was a consecutive cohort of 150 MRI(-) surgical patients.
28  predominance of cardiothoracic and vascular surgical patients.
29  was observed between the randomized arms in surgical patients.
30 our burden and the survival of pre- and post-surgical patients.
31 more restrictive use of FFP and platelets on surgical patients.
32 medical admissions and lowest among elective surgical patients.
33  postoperative adhesions suffered by current surgical patients.
34  from January 2000 to October 2014 on art in surgical patients.
35 s of preventable patient injury and death in surgical patients.
36  trauma, and to a lesser degree, in elective surgical patients.
37 n contributors of morbidity and mortality in surgical patients.
38 tilize more ICU resources than other general surgical patients.
39 evaluation, and risk stratification of older surgical patients.
40 ded in this retrospective study were 25 MRI- surgical patients.
41  reducing the incidence of adverse events in surgical patients.
42 ive and perioperative management of vascular surgical patients.
43 or a hypothetical cohort of major noncardiac surgical patients.
44 nstitutionalization, and death among elderly surgical patients.
45 d calibration as a frailty-screening tool in surgical patients.
46 scussions regarding advance directives among surgical patients.
47  often used but poorly defined descriptor of surgical patients.
48 ffective tools to improve outcomes for older surgical patients.
49 ms for the care of this subset of adolescent surgical patients.
50 as 26%, similar among cardiology and cardiac surgical patients.
51 tiplatelet therapy during anticoagulation in surgical patients.
52 ich may have profound effects on the care of surgical patients.
53  no reduction in VTE was observed in at risk surgical patients.
54 ealth expenditures changed for middle-income surgical patients.
55 ed mobility and decreased delirium rates for surgical patients.
56 how these novel functions affect the care of surgical patients.
57 onstrate its utility for identifying at-risk surgical patients.
58 g represents a major source of morbidity for surgical patients.
59 eflect care quality and clinical outcomes in surgical patients.
60 sing approach to improve sepsis diagnosis in surgical patients.
61 nd is the only agent of its class studied in surgical patients.
62 which are directly implicated in the care of surgical patients.
63         We identified 5,148,485 opioid-naive surgical patients.
64 laxis for venous thromboembolism (VTE) among surgical patients.
65 tiveness of these therapies on POCs in adult surgical patients.
66  27,009 nurse survey respondents and 852,974 surgical patients.
67 SSI) (RR = 0.28; 95% CI, 0.12-0.64) in adult surgical patients.
68 junctive therapy to prevent POCs among adult surgical patients.
69  evidence-based care improvement process for surgical patients.
70 lliative care consultations were ordered for surgical patients: 160 before initiation of frailty scre
71                                      In post-surgical patients, (18)F-DCFPyL-PET/CT correlates with P
72        Of all the opioid tablets obtained by surgical patients, 42% to 71% went unused.
73 1101 hits with 48 studies focusing on art in surgical patients: 47 studies on musical intervention an
74 Increases in tracheostomy use were driven by surgical patients (9.5% in 1993; 15.0% in 2012; P < 0.00
75 nstrate that in more than 50% of all cardiac surgical patients, a standardized practice model can be
76                            Adult medical and surgical patients admitted to the study wards of eight h
77 med to compare 5-year outcomes of adolescent surgical patients after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass with th
78 - p2) * unit cost, where N was the number of surgical patients after the intervention, p1 was the pro
79                   We recruited 1932 cataract surgical patients aged >/=64 years at Westmead Hospital
80                             13,582 bariatric surgical patients and 45,948 reference individuals were
81 samples were collected in 141 cardiovascular surgical patients and analyzed for urinary alpha-(alpha-
82 a trade-off between good quality of care for surgical patients and ensuring a positive patient experi
83 imed to assess kidney dysfunction in general surgical patients and examine the effect on postoperativ
84 nal tract samples were collected from eleven surgical patients and five autopsy cases.
85 g opportunities to identify the highest-risk surgical patients and improve their outcomes.
86 ening program effectively identifies at-risk surgical patients and is associated with a significant r
87 chemoprophylaxis is used only in appropriate surgical patients and may minimize bleeding complication
88                       Only 2.3% of high-risk surgical patients and those with adverse respiratory pro
89 nees conducted ward rounds of 3 standardized surgical patients and were assessed using a checklist of
90 surgical patients with sepsis, 53 uninfected surgical patients, and 16 blood donors by using ddPCR.
91  plausible mechanism for breakthrough VTE in surgical patients, and identifies anticoagulant dose ade
92 cope of the antibiotic misuse in surgery for surgical patients, and provides immediate practice impro
93 es with iv-fluid volumes given to colorectal surgical patients, and the level of NT-Pro-BNP is associ
94                    Unplanned readmissions in surgical patients are common in patients experiencing po
95  in the United States continues to rise, and surgical patients are initially seen with increasingly c
96                       In the VHA population, surgical patients are less likely to receive either hosp
97 ssment and optimization strategies for older surgical patients are proposed.
98 roper caloric intake goals in critically ill surgical patients are unclear.
99 f blood products should not be withheld from surgical patients as a means to prevent SSI.
100 ssion, discharge, and occupancy patterns for surgical patients at a large children's hospital and ass
101 to improve the access to care of nonelective surgical patients at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH
102 toperative respiratory complications and for surgical patients at risk for postoperative acute respir
103                    NO may be insufficient in surgical patients because its precursor arginine is decr
104 ntrol analysis was performed on all eligible surgical patients between 2014-2017 after ERP implementa
105 higher readmission rates compared with other surgical patients, but data on predictors are limited.
106 s negative impacts of frailty on outcomes in surgical patients, but little investigation of its assoc
107 rette smoking increases complication risk in surgical patients, but the potential effects of smoking
108 d with those from nonfailing nonhypertrophic surgical patients by performing patch-clamp and intracel
109                         Among critically ill surgical patients, caloric provision across a wide accep
110 come common challenges to safe and effective surgical patient care.
111 , and experts in POC US, scanned 4 different surgical patient cases in a controlled set-up.
112     This is a retrospective case series of 4 surgical patients (cholecystectomy, hernia repair, gastr
113 orative study require validation in a larger surgical patient cohort.
114 elf-harm/suicide was almost twice as high in surgical patients compared to control patients both befo
115 ces and admissions) was higher in adolescent surgical patients compared with adolescent controls.
116 nical trials and observational studies among surgical patients comparing CCDSSs with VTE risk stratif
117 ge preoperative wait time of all nonelective surgical patients decreased by 25.5% (P < 0.001), even w
118 ence for the use of IVC filters in bariatric surgical patients, describe trends in practice, and disc
119 During the study period, approximately 2% of surgical patients developed SSI annually.
120  by 0.99 mmHg from 16.50 mmHg in the average surgical patient (difference in difference, 1.21 mmHg; 9
121 ta with staff nurse survey data (N=1024) and surgical patient discharge data (N=76,036) from 14 high-
122 , 2009-2010 Medicare claims data for 954,926 surgical patient discharges from 2786 hospitals who were
123 ects of nursing factors on the likelihood of surgical patients dying within 30 days of admission, bef
124 proved financial protection among low-income surgical patients eligible for both cost-sharing and pre
125                   Improvement in the overall surgical patient experience can stem from multidisciplin
126                              Morphine use in surgical patients exposed to extreme physiologic stress
127  (peptic ulcer disease, unknown source, post surgical); patient factors (hemodynamic instability, coa
128         Many centers are currently screening surgical patients for COVID-19 using either chest CT, RT
129  channels may offer new treatment options in surgical patients for the management of pain and infecti
130 a national surgical registry and a cohort of surgical patients for whom RAI was measured prospectivel
131 , 6.4% at 5 years, and 13.8% at 10 years for surgical patients; for matched control patients, 1.7% at
132                                              Surgical patients from 129 Veterans Affairs (VA) hospita
133 combined routinely collected data on 422,730 surgical patients from 300 general acute hospitals in 9
134  were also present in atrial appendages from surgical patients &gt;=75 years as compared with the younge
135 days and Fridays often had high occupancy of surgical patients (&gt;90% of designated beds filled), wher
136                         Overall, 526 of 6178 surgical patients had a reoperation (8.5%).
137                  We investigated whether any surgical patients had acquired HBV infection while under
138                                              Surgical patients had fewer hours than medical patients
139 for tight glycemic control in critically ill surgical patients has been shown to reduce mortality; ho
140 to death compared with medical patients, yet surgical patients have a longer length of time in these
141 llness, critically ill postoperative cardiac surgical patients have different underlying pathophysiol
142                                   Studies of surgical patients have shown this population to receive
143                     The elective and cardiac surgical patients have statistically significantly bette
144                                    Geriatric surgical patients have unique vulnerabilities and are at
145 ntario, Canada, did not reduce FTR among all surgical patients having surgery, CCRTs may reduce the r
146 However, the effect of these Marketplaces on surgical patients' healthcare spending remains largely u
147                                           In surgical patients, heart rate recovery after cardiopulmo
148 persistence of ventriculomegaly in some post-surgical patients highlight our limited knowledge of dis
149                              A total of 8552 surgical patients hospitalized from July 1, 2009, to Jun
150  and ICU nurses participating in the care of surgical patients in the ICU.
151 ety of heparin thromboprophylaxis in medical-surgical patients in the ICU.
152 n on cardiac output in postoperative cardiac surgical patients in whom norepinephrine increased mean
153        Recommendations for VTE prevention in surgical patients include chemoprophylaxis based upon pr
154                                   Comparator surgical patients included 5556 patients undergoing elec
155                          The large sample of surgical patients included in this study underwent a wid
156 RY OF BACKGROUND DATA:: PC for seriously ill surgical patients, including aligning treatments with pa
157 sepsis risk and unintentional hypothermia in surgical patients increases infectious complications.
158 benefits and harms of chemoprophylaxis among surgical patients individually risk stratified for venou
159 on, the proportion of direct paying cataract surgical patients, intervention program costs per additi
160                 Critical care of the cardiac surgical patient is a complex and dynamic endeavor.
161 t in the approach to management of the older surgical patient is critical to improve postoperative co
162                      Self-selected music for surgical patients is an effective and low-cost intervent
163  Functional compromise in elderly colorectal surgical patients is considered as a significant factor
164 rect for intravascular deficits in high-risk surgical patients is either effective or safe.
165  to introduce or improve palliative care for surgical patients is further limited by methodologic fla
166  and efficacy of IVC filter use in bariatric surgical patients is highly heterogeneous.
167 reduce the anticholinergic exposure in older surgical patients is likely warranted.
168 surgical service (hereinafter referred to as surgical patients), is unclear.
169 ith higher mortality and complications among surgical patients, little is known regarding the drivers
170 nts who received hospice or palliative care, surgical patients lived significantly longer than their
171                                              Surgical patients lost more weight than medically treate
172 rmining criteria for higher-risk medical and surgical patients may help with increasing the relative
173                               Critically ill surgical patients may receive concomitant aspirin and th
174 t controls was similar to that in adolescent surgical patients (mean change -12.3 kg/m(2), 95% CI -13
175                                              Surgical patients' mean computed tomography index was 5.
176                                              Surgical patients' mean total oral morphine equivalents
177                                  Among 21787 surgical patients meeting inclusion criteria, 402 (1.8%)
178              Tracheostomy was more common in surgical patients, men, and racial/ethnic minorities.
179   All general surgery residents (n = 49) and surgical patients (n = 2420) for whom residents wrote ad
180                                              Surgical patients (n = 2500) had a mean age of 52 years
181                                              Surgical patients often develop "breakthrough" VTE event
182                                              Surgical patients often receive routine postoperative me
183 house intensivist-only management of cardiac surgical patients on postoperative complications and hea
184                                              Surgical patient outcomes are related to surgeon skills.
185       The change in bodyweight in adolescent surgical patients over 5 years was -36.8 kg (95% CI -40.
186              After multivariable regression, surgical patients (p < 0.001) and all patients in surgic
187  provide optimal care for the critically ill surgical patient, particularly with continuing involveme
188  and 20 normal skin specimens from noncancer surgical patients (patient age, 61.4 [9.1] years).
189 trainee participation on outcomes in a broad surgical patient population.
190                                           In surgical patients, pre-existing CKD and postoperative AK
191 ence infection rate and clinical outcomes in surgical patients probably due to their immunomodulatory
192                                      In post-surgical patients, PSA, PSAdt and PSAvel correlated with
193                                              Surgical patients readmitted within 30 days following di
194                         Approximately 59% of surgical patients received adjuvant CRT.
195                       Over the study period, surgical patients received the highest proportion of pot
196                                         Most surgical patients received trimodal therapy with adjuvan
197 um is associated with neuronal injury in 114 surgical patients recruited to a prospective biomarker c
198 n many patients, but data focusing on art in surgical patients remain scarce.
199 cts on human health, their clinical value in surgical patients remains unclear given a paucity of app
200 he treatment of patients undergoing surgery (surgical patients) remains poorly defined.
201      The preoperative management of vascular surgical patients requires a complete understanding of t
202 ystematically review the outcomes of cardiac surgical patients requiring prolonged intensive care wit
203 r for this technology to facilitate improved surgical patient safety.
204 aracteristics and comorbidities in our adult surgical patient sample: American Society of Anesthesiol
205                  Overall, 19 (50%) of the 38 surgical patients (seven [37%] of 19 in the gastric bypa
206 nd cardiovascular risk factors in adolescent surgical patients showed improvement over 5 years and co
207  by invasive cortical stimulation mapping in surgical patients, suggesting potential for use in clini
208 ity of primary PC delivered to seriously ill surgical patients SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA:: PC for se
209      Given the inherent decline of the older surgical patient, the benefit of an ERP in this populati
210 s that in a large cohort of gastrointestinal surgical patients, the peak serum lactate (in the first
211 ostoperative complications and mortality for surgical patients through early identification and inter
212 to measure high quality PC for seriously ill surgical patients throughout the surgical episode.
213                            We matched 20,590 surgical patients to 41,180 nonsurgical patients.
214 ditures requires identification of high-cost surgical patients to allow for effective implementation
215 and clinical outcomes of referring high-risk surgical patients to local high-quality hospitals within
216 mparing the surgical outcomes of a cohort of surgical patients treated before and after implementatio
217                                   One in 203 surgical patients undergoes CPR, and more than 70.0% of
218 ections but also reduces 1-year mortality in surgical patients undergoing clean procedures.
219    In a single-center cohort of 51,457 adult surgical patients undergoing major inpatient surgery, lo
220    In a single-center cohort of 50,314 adult surgical patients undergoing major inpatient surgery, we
221          In a single-center cohort of 51,457 surgical patients undergoing major inpatient surgery, we
222                    20 (25%) of 81 adolescent surgical patients underwent additional abdominal surgery
223 arious patient subtypes (89.3% for electives surgical patients up to 94.8% for trauma patients) and I
224 By 30 to 36 months, 5% (95% CI, 4%-6%) fewer surgical patients used an ophthalmic medication.
225 kers in a nested case-control study of older surgical patients using a proteomics approach followed b
226 ions were as follows: death, 30.4% among 194 surgical patients versus 52.0% among 179 medical patient
227            Administrative claims database of surgical patients was analyzed at hospitals treating Med
228 spirin and anticoagulation in critically ill surgical patients was associated with an increased rate
229 ssess information transfer for deteriorating surgical patients was developed and tested using simulat
230 VTE prophylaxis among critically ill medical-surgical patients was more effective and had similar or
231                 In a single-center cohort of surgical patients, we assessed the association between p
232 enrolment in the RCT, mortality dates of all surgical patients were checked.
233 g propensity-score matched early and delayed surgical patients were compared using percent absolute r
234 equirement, length of stay or costs in adult surgical patients were eligible.
235              These results did not change if surgical patients were eliminated or in the subgroup wit
236                                              Surgical patients were excluded.
237                                              Surgical patients were identified from the American Coll
238                 A total of 134,227 bariatric surgical patients were identified.
239     A total of 10,246 functionally dependent surgical patients were included for analysis.
240         Seventeen studies comprising 235,779 surgical patients were included in this meta-analysis (1
241        A total of 192 hospitals with 110,987 surgical patients were included.
242        In 2012, more than 50% of all cardiac surgical patients were managed with our standardized car
243 f open and laparoscopic colorectal resection surgical patients were recruited.
244 s of palliative care interventions for adult surgical patients were reported.
245 ospective single-center observational study, surgical patients were screened for the presence of anem
246                                              Surgical patients were significantly less likely than me
247 s for all hospitalized acute care medical or surgical patients were used to calculate predicted morta
248  do not currently have the means to identify surgical patients who are at high risk for unplanned reh
249 E risk stratification may identify high risk surgical patients who benefit from peri-operative chemop
250                                              Surgical patients who develop chronic critical illness a
251 sk (from 0.7% to 10.7%) was identified among surgical patients who did not receive chemoprophylaxis,
252 rmation when discussing expected outcomes of surgical patients who experience a complicated clinical
253 jective is to describe prediction models for surgical patients who have suspected obstructive sleep a
254    Half of the population was represented by surgical patients who mostly required an urgent procedur
255 hrombocytopenia among critically ill medical-surgical patients who received dalteparin.
256                                   Numbers of surgical patients who received PRBC transfusion, estimat
257    Use of CCDSSs increases the proportion of surgical patients who were prescribed adequate prophylax
258  state-level variations in the proportion of surgical patients who were readmitted elsewhere.
259                        Identifying high-risk surgical patients who will benefit from PCP integration
260 ted with a lower mortality risk, compared to surgical patients whose visual impairment persisted post
261  optimal care for critically ill and injured surgical patients will become more challenging with staf
262                                        Among surgical patients with 1 to 2, 3 to 18, 19 to 48, and mo
263 glucocorticoids (GCs) are routinely given to surgical patients with a history of GC exposure to preve
264 us renal replacement therapy is valuable for surgical patients with an acute and correctable indicati
265 idence, morbidity and mortality amongst post-surgical patients with and without VTE chemoprophylaxis
266                                       In non-surgical patients with atrial fibrillation, novel oral a
267  illness and mortality were more frequent in surgical patients with baroreflex dysfunction (relative
268 ve VTE chemoprophylaxis was only found among surgical patients with Caprini scores >/=7.
269 re to rescue (FTR), the mortality rate among surgical patients with complications, is an emerging qua
270 n the assessment, evolution, and outcomes of surgical patients with congenital heart disease.
271 nosis of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia in surgical patients with critical illness.
272                                              Surgical patients with GBM who had a prior history of as
273    A retrospective medical records review of surgical patients with groin and pelvic pain, 2008-2013,
274                          Compared with other surgical patients with IE, those with DUA-IE were younge
275                                              Surgical patients with infection also exhibited an impai
276 ases (sepsis patients) and 31 controls (post-surgical patients with infection-negative systemic infla
277                                  For non-ICU surgical patients with length of stay 7 days or less (97
278                          We hypothesize that surgical patients with low aFXa levels will be more like
279 nalysis of outcomes and efficacy compared 42 surgical patients with LVSD to 2588 without known LVSD.
280                                          For surgical patients with moderate regurgitation, the benef
281 I: 1.93-3.34) to 3.69 (95% CI: 2.25-6.03) in surgical patients with preoperative hospitalization or e
282                           Fewer than half of surgical patients with preoperative MOLST have documente
283 he odds of glaucoma surgery were elevated in surgical patients with primary open-angle glaucoma (OR,
284 ts, including endothelial damage, in cardiac surgical patients with prolonged CPB duration.
285                                              Surgical patients with schizophrenia showed significantl
286                           When compared with surgical patients with schizophrenia-related outpatient
287 CD28, ICOS) was quantified in blood from 101 surgical patients with sepsis, 53 uninfected surgical pa
288 ay postoperative outcomes of consecutive IBD surgical patients with serum drawn within 7 days preoper
289 ent (TAVR) is an option in certain high-risk surgical patients with severe aortic valve stenosis.
290  Sloan Kettering Cancer Center risk-stratify surgical patients with solid tumors, ages 75 years and o
291  We compared clinical outcomes in adolescent surgical patients with those of matched adolescent contr
292  Veterans Affairs hospital of all noncardiac surgical patients with ward-acquired postoperative pneum
293 coding in successful versus failed trials in surgical patients, with similar results in our RNS Syste
294                                    Among the surgical patients, within subject comparison of atrial c
295 the years 2004 and 2007 compared with 35,868 surgical patients without mental disorders.
296 adjusted OR = 2.70; 95% CI: 2.08-3.49), than surgical patients without mental disorders.
297             This target should be adopted in surgical patients without significant kidney injury risk
298   Each patient with stent was matched with 2 surgical patients without stent on surgical characterist
299 therapy (goal-directed therapy) in high-risk surgical patients would reduce postoperative morbidity,
300 fusion can be a lifesaving treatment for the surgical patient, yet transfusion-related immunomodulati

 
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