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1 e DENWIS once per shift or at any moment of 'worry'.
2 or-Score (DENWIS) based on signs underlying 'worry'.
3 erized by the core symptom of uncontrollable worry.
4 order; and a clinically significant level of worry.
5 rceive to be at low risk, as this may reduce worry.
6 nowledge, risk perception, and breast cancer worry.
7 anagement preferences, risk perceptions, and worry.
8 d preventive services and may lessen patient worry.
9  self-reported sleep disturbances because of worry.
10 may result in unnecessary further testing or worry.
11 bout the condition, anxiety, depression, and worry.
12 ered by eyes/vision, social, and frustration/worry.
13 , 3) lack of social support, and 4) parental worries.
14 mers' behavior by exploiting their fears and worries.
15  to psychiatric inpatient beds in England is worrying.
16                                             'Worry' (0.81) and the DENWIS-model (0.85) had a lower ar
17 bothered by eyes/vision, social, frustration/worry (10 items each).
18 s to follow-up concern (78.4%), more patient worry (57.6%), and malpractice lawsuit concern (50.9%).
19       Overall, 20% of women stated that they worried a lot about stroke.
20  future and many American-based laboratories worried about attracting the best talent.
21  family was often used, although some people worried about becoming a burden.
22 iate logistic regression showed that feeling worried about breast cancer (Adjust OR = 0.33, p = 0.01)
23  health literacy were more likely to be less worried about COVID-19, to not believe that they would b
24  patients in cancer-research trials were not worried about financial ties between researchers or medi
25 t had strain on family life (P < 0.001), and worried about future finances (P = 0.005).
26 ed more with their daily lives and were more worried about losing vision from glaucoma.
27 sumed colon cancer, but he is understandably worried about the effect of his lung disease on his surg
28   The parents/grandparents were tended to be worried about the emotion, sleep and activity in daily l
29                                   But we are worried about the representational structure assumed by
30                             When parents are worried about their child's health, they need to be able
31                  Many are more than a little worried about their futures and often have trouble envis
32 ightened fears over their wife's well-being, worried about their job performance, were more uncertain
33 or more stress symptoms, and 47 percent were worried about their own safety or the safety of loved on
34                      In the 1960s and 1970s, worries about climate change helped to push the diverse
35  without commensurate faculty strengthening, worries about dilution effect on quality, outdated curri
36 escent health problems, body mass index, and worries about health during adulthood were controlled st
37                                  I raise two worries about the Debunker's and Defeater Dilemmas, resp
38 s had a good predictive ability for fear and worries about the forthcoming birth (79%) and a conclusi
39  that sitting for an important exam leads to worries about the situation and its consequences that un
40 at this integrated program assuages Brette's worries about the study of the neural code.
41 fies nine indicators which trigger nurses to worry about a patient's condition.
42 so much, why bother [with coaching]?" P009), worry about appearing incompetent ("I think it would be
43 atest mean difference 34 points worse on the Worry about child's eye condition domain (95% CI -46 to
44 parent PedEyeQ (impact on parent and family, worry about child's eye condition, worry about child's s
45 yeQ domains are impact on parent and family, worry about child's eye condition, worry about child's s
46 ut child's self-perception/interactions, and worry about child's functional vision.
47 d family, worry about child's eye condition, worry about child's self-perception and interactions, an
48 d family, worry about child's eye condition, worry about child's self-perception/interactions, and wo
49 ge is happening and human-caused, as well as worry about climate change.
50                 We propose that, rather than worry about defining curiosity, it is more helpful to co
51                           Patients expressed worry about developing and dying from HCC, but nearly ha
52                                       Cancer worry about developing melanoma in at-risk patients may
53 ol that can be used in PLCs to help decrease worry about developing melanoma in at-risk patients.
54 eralized anxiety disorder involves intrusive worry about diverse circumstances.
55 tient Health Questionnaire, TWEAK (Tolerance/Worry About Drinking/Eye-Opener/Amnesia/C[K]ut Down on D
56 their decision-making deficits and excessive worry about everyday problems by disrupting the online u
57 atening environment, in which colleagues may worry about exposing some of the weaknesses in their kno
58                                             'Worry about falling' was experienced by 42.0% (128/305)
59  than 90% of patients expressed little or no worry about financial ties that researchers or instituti
60 hild's self-perception and interactions, and worry about functional vision domains).
61 hiatric symptoms and drug problems, level of worry about getting AIDS, younger age, less education, m
62                     Although many physicians worry about injection frequency in vitrectomized eyes be
63 ilable; database administrators and curators worry about long-term financial support.
64 tending physicians (36%) were more likely to worry about making errors during an in-hospital cardiac
65 tal cardiac arrest resuscitation and did not worry about making errors.
66 rest resuscitation events lack confidence or worry about management errors.
67 rate that media coverage may increase public worry about more stringent firearm control and partially
68 ercentage points; P=0.002) and in reports of worry about paying medical bills (difference-in-differen
69                   Duarte et al. are right to worry about political bias in social psychology but they
70 pective - symptom, surgery, recovery and the worry about potential long lasting sequelae, and the nee
71                             Notably, greater worry about prosecution for fraud did not affect physici
72 8; 95% CI, 2.07-9.29; P < .001), and greater worry about recurrence (vs UM, RRR: 2.81; 95% CI, 1.14-6
73                                              Worry about recurrence appeared to drive decisions for C
74 tic resonance imaging, and patient extent of worry about recurrence at the time of treatment decision
75 Patients with no unmet expectations had less worry about serious illness (54% vs. 27%; P < 0.001) and
76 e satisfied with their care and to have less worry about serious illness.
77 lties with eating food, treatment adherence, worry about symptoms and illness, feelings of being diff
78          Among individuals reporting ongoing worry about terrorism post-9/11, high 9/11-related acute
79 urgical patients at teaching hospitals often worry about the involvement of inexperienced physician t
80 are (OR, 1.66; 95% CI, 1.40-1.97) because of worry about the related costs.
81 3.7 versus 5.3 +/- 3.7; P < 0.001) and their worry about the risk of the adverse event was greater in
82 atients' willingness to accept treatment and worry about the risk of the serious side effect were mea
83 atients seeking help for symptoms frequently worry about the underlying causes of their symptoms; hav
84 nce fears of cancer recurrence (P < .01) and worry about their children being diagnosed with RB (P <
85  information; fewer (51%, CI: 47%-55%) would worry about their privacy.
86 ing are ones that I will never forget, but I worry about what the next 2 weeks will bring.
87 w this can be achieved elsewhere rather than worry about whether it is unachievable.
88            Parents with young children often worry about whether or not to seek medical help for a si
89 urse practitioners (NPs) in terms of reduced worrying about cancer (odds ratio [OR], 2.21; P < .001),
90                   An alternative approach to worrying about details is to concentrate on understandin
91 ere visual field defects had greater odds of worrying about eyesight (OR, 3.4; 95% CI, 2.0-5.8) and b
92  poor social integration, economic problems, worrying about family or friends overseas, and lonelines
93  concerns with publication bias shifted from worrying about file-drawered studies to worrying about p
94 from worrying about file-drawered studies to worrying about p-hacked analyses.
95 ical financial hardship was measured as ever worrying about paying large medical bills.
96 rated by work (ie, a burnout item) (OR: 37), worrying about personal life at work (OR: 3), and having
97 lest, (4) maintaining normality, and (5) not worrying about the future.
98 specificity), improving delivery systems and worrying about the inexorable spread of drug resistance.
99  A fourth (24.6%) of participants were "very worried" about getting the coronavirus.
100 ptoms include chronic, pervasive anxiety and worry accompanied by nonspecific physical and psychologi
101 iation analysis suggested that the change in worry accounted for 66% of the change in delusion.
102 elief, happiness, sadness, guilt, anger, and worry) after disclosure that they did or did not carry t
103 nxiety, distress, and breast cancer-specific worry, although results varied across 80 observational s
104  reduced by a brief intervention targeted on worry, although the limitations for our study include no
105 hat open visit notes would result in greater worry among patients; far fewer patients concurred (12%
106 t comprises 12 questions to assess patients' worries and beliefs about topical corticosteroids.
107           Secondary outcomes included cancer worries and psychological distress, duration and dynamic
108 lete an exercise to help them regulate their worries and reinterpret their anxious arousal before the
109  control over their condition and reduce the worry and anxiety associated with it.
110 disorder, in which the patient has unfocused worry and anxiety that is not connected to recent stress
111 studies (n = 4322) showed that breast cancer worry and anxiety were higher after testing for women wi
112 ve effects on psychological outcomes such as worry and anxiety, behavioral outcomes have shown mixed
113 to test the hypothesis that core symptoms of worry and autonomic dysregulation in GAD arise from a sh
114 gative affective stimuli and a propensity to worry and be anxious.
115                                              Worry and concern were frequent findings among patients
116 ne characterizing the extent to which people worry and feel vulnerable, and the other characterizing
117 itality, role emotional, social functioning, worry and general health domains of the SF-36v2 and CLDQ
118 rized by negative emotionality (for example, worry and guilt) (1) ; heritability estimated from twin
119 ondary end points including general anxiety, worry and interference with emotional well-being, depres
120 lear result experienced a decrease in cancer worry and negative psychological consequences immediatel
121 o make a living from the science of secrecy, worry and paranoia are just signs of professionalism.
122  link functional brain mechanisms underlying worry and rumination to autonomic dyscontrol, highlighti
123                                   Similarly, worry and satisfaction scales were significantly better
124 e found to be statistically significant, the Worry and Satisfaction with Correction subscales approac
125 ciation between sleep disturbance because of worry and the risk for incident reports of alcohol probl
126 duals whose neuroticism was characterized by worry and vulnerability lived longer lives.
127 slowdown in the rate of funding increases is worrying and likely to partly result from the present fi
128 items, 26 of which pertained to concepts of "worry" and "anxiety." The subset of vision-related anxie
129          Nurses systematically scored their 'worry' and the DENWIS once per shift or at any moment of
130 regression analysis, subsequently inserting 'worry' and the Early Warning Score into the model.
131                                      Adding 'worry' and the Early Warning Score to the DENWIS-model r
132 is to determine the significance of nurses' 'worry' and/or indicators underlying 'worry' to predict u
133  of anxiety that are unique to humans (e.g., worry) and to screen new treatments.
134 r disease prognosis and corresponding hopes, worries, and goals.
135 women's childbirth-related anxiety, fear and worries, and the time constraints that midwives perceive
136 in self-reported diet, self-reported weight, worry, and anxiety were observed between trial groups.
137 (pain and hurt, daily activities, treatment, worry, and communication) were administered to 231 child
138 use of good health or that negative emotion, worry, and depression are significant direct causes of d
139 bothered by eyes/vision, social, frustration/worry, and eye care.
140                                          The worry, and it is a valid concern, is that, without a str
141 ge drinking, general health status, eyesight worry, and major chronic conditions, self-reported visua
142 red from 1 to 7) pertaining to satisfaction, worry, and physical discomfort was canvassed after both
143 n, Near Vision, Far Vision, Glare, Symptoms, Worry, and Satisfaction with Correction subscales; the O
144 r follow-up by a virtual visit, on survival, worrying, and stress related to cancer.
145 I disorders; a greater level of pathological worry; and a higher morbid risk for generalized anxiety
146 g among unlikely carriers and cancer-related worry, anxiety, and depression.
147 ng was associated with reduced breast cancer worry, anxiety, and depression; increased understanding
148 ng self-reported diet, self-reported weight, worry, anxiety, and perceived risk).
149 ssing might become maladaptive, such as when worries are excessively revisited.
150 ogically chimeric mice may suggest that such worries are reasonable.
151 pable of evoking and maintaining anxiety and worry associated with GAD.
152 spondents with sleep disturbances because of worry at the time of the baseline interview had a twofol
153 tients reported more physical discomfort and worry because of cancer or its treatment than did orchie
154                         This is a particular worry because scientists tend to publish their positive
155 nsequences may contribute to uncertainty and worry, because it is not yet known how to modify these r
156                   Simply writing about one's worries before a high-stakes exam can boost test scores.
157 r 31, 2008, to answer questions about cancer worry before and after undergoing TBDP.
158 impact on cancer survival and cancer-related worrying compared with in-person visits with clinicians.
159 ing, appearance, satisfaction with care, and worry/concern up to 48 months after burn injury.
160 ; pain/itching, 15.8 vs 33.5 [P < .001]; and worry/concern, 31.6 vs 44.9 [P < .001]).
161 tivity bias clarify differences between what worries conservatives and liberals and suggest that rela
162 e use of coping statements, problem solving, worry control, behavioral activation, exposure therapy,
163 e in dismissing obsessions, compulsions, and worry despite recognition that these symptoms are excess
164 n identified in Ethiopia and Sudan, and this worrying development has prompted the World Health Organ
165 ate test experience (including satisfaction, worry, discomfort, adverse effects) and a 3-month questi
166 d not report significant increases in cancer worry/distress; over half reported physical activity and
167  residual amblyopia on the Child Frustration/worry domain (P = .03), on 4 of 5 Proxy domains (P <= .0
168 ered by eyes/vision, social, and frustration/worry domains).
169                Lower general anxiety levels, worries due to family history, and perceived knowledge o
170  lower levels of generalized anxiety, higher worry due to family history, or greater perceived knowle
171 d: risk factor knowledge, personal risk, and worry due to family history.
172 ad higher scores for items related to anger, worry, dysphoria, and irritability.
173 bothered by eyes/vision, social, frustration/worry, eye care (total 39 items), as did the Proxy 12- t
174                              One of the most worrying features of this rapid increase is the emergenc
175 s was ambivalence about donation: doubts and worries, feeling unsure about donation, wishing someone
176                                              Worrying, feeling depressed, and cognitive problems were
177  human brain for next-day memory formation-a worrying finding considering society's increasing erosio
178 he has pain and stiffness in her back and is worried for her future bone health.
179 omfort encouraging patient participation and worries for sharing confidential and sensitive informati
180 uences of encouraging patient participation, worries for sharing confidential and sensitive informati
181 ypertension in pregnancy and is a particular worry for Mrs F because she may have had it with her pri
182 e events may lead to significant concern and worry for the parents.
183 threatening all environments this presents a worrying future for the pervasiveness of mutualisms.
184 erior to telephone-delivered NST in reducing worry, GAD symptoms, and depressive symptoms in older ad
185 ce of the Beijing genotype in Bamako remains worrying, given its high transmissibility and virulence.
186       Therapy redirecting preoccupation with worries has been effective.
187 ppy?", Do you feel easily nervous, tense, or worried?", "Have you lost interest in things?", "Do you
188 t will help to respond to the current public worry in a balanced way and allow policy makers to take
189 ficantly associated with increased levels of worry in partners.
190       Little is known about melanoma-related worry in patients with atypical mole syndrome (AMS).
191                                              Worry in the long-term survivorship period was higher am
192 PHE also had a beneficial effect on patient "worry" in 1 randomized, controlled trial but had mixed e
193 nical assessment tool, the Dutch-Early-Nurse-Worry-Indicator-Score (DENWIS) based on signs underlying
194 st that worry might cause paranoia, and that worry intervention techniques might be a beneficial addi
195 sessor-blinded, randomised controlled trial (Worry Intervention Trial [WIT]), we recruited patients a
196 nd in most major demographic categories; the worry is that rates of diabetic ESRD continue to rise in
197                                     Nurses' 'worry' is used as a calling criterion in many Rapid Resp
198     The anticipation of adverse outcomes, or worry, is a cardinal symptom of generalized anxiety diso
199                Here, we show that there is a worrying lack of consensus about what rewilding is and w
200                Sleep disturbances because of worry may increase risk for alcohol-related problems.
201 s the CBT intervention significantly reduced worry (mean difference 6.35 [SE 1.56] PSWQ units, 95% CI
202 onfidence interval [CI], 0.54-3.32), or more worry (mean McGill score, 6.5 vs 7.0; P = .19).
203                    The primary outcomes were worry measured by the Penn State Worry Questionnaire (PS
204 spectively; P = .008) and significantly more worried (median score of 16 [IQR, 12-21] vs 15 [IQR, 9-1
205                                              Worry might be a contributory causal factor in the occur
206                     Our results suggest that worry might cause paranoia, and that worry intervention
207 n presented with high-risk results and would worry more about those results.
208 he best in the world, but the field shares a worrying number of similarities with the American auto i
209                                              Worrying observations include increasing acaricide resis
210  and scientists to chronicle the wonders and worries of modern science.
211 terility of an operating theatre, and to the worry of waiting for pathology results.
212           We also did not observe changes in worry or anxiety in the study population.
213 8% reported that the notes caused confusion, worry, or offense; and 20% to 42% reported sharing notes
214 anxious: OR=4.09, P=0.003; unable to control worrying: OR=10.46, P<0.001), and the panic item predict
215                                              Worries over sudden climate change and irreversible chan
216 eported significantly lower levels of cancer worries (p = .005) and distress (p = .02) after counseli
217  breast cancer (P = 0.02) and greater cancer worry (P = 0.03) predicted interest in CPM.
218 llapse scenarios highlight what for some are worrying parallels between past case studies and societi
219  negative consequences, such as confusing or worrying patients and complicating rather than improving
220                 Sleep disturbance because of worry predicted the development of alcohol problems amon
221                               Greater cancer worry predicted who had CPM (P = 0.02).
222 and disease-specific quality of life, health worry, prostate-specific antigen (PSA) concern, and outl
223 es of urinary dysfunction, sexuality, health worry, PSA concern, perceived cancer control, treatment
224 e questionnaires included measures of cancer worry, psychological consequences, and perceived benefit
225 tcomes were worry measured by the Penn State Worry Questionnaire (PSWQ) and delusions measured by the
226 T increased response rates on the Penn State Worry Questionnaire but not on the Hamilton Anxiety Rati
227 and self-reported worry severity (Penn State Worry Questionnaire-Abbreviated) measured at baseline, 2
228 .93; 95% CI, 0.50-1.36; P < .001; Penn State Worry Questionnaire: 0.30; 95% CI, 0.23-0.48; P = .01; a
229  (r = 0,220, p = 0,025) and the anticipatory worry (r = 0.227, p = 0.021) dimension.
230 s)--and in this way provides support for the worries raised by the target article.
231 ssant medication augmented with CBT leads to worry reduction in the short-term.
232 on by four strata, to either six sessions of worry-reduction CBT intervention done over 8 weeks added
233 tionnaires/domains: impact on parent/family, worry regarding child's eye condition, worry regarding c
234 mily, worry regarding child's eye condition, worry regarding child's self-perception and interactions
235 ng child's self-perception and interactions, worry regarding child's visual function (total 35 items)
236 s (18/28) expressed (7) significant fear and worry related to their glaucoma diagnosis.
237 late to the poor quality of life anxiety and worry reported by parents of food-allergic children.
238 rror encoding have dramatically reduced this worrying resource overhead, making an all-optical archit
239 cused on processes of cognition-for example, worry, rumination, and attentional bias-rather than the
240 s, 1.04 to 3.16) Other mood states (anxiety, worry, sadness, happiness, challenge, feeling in control
241 d Impact of Event Scale (RIES), the Melanoma Worry Scale (MWS), the Hospital Anxiety and Depression S
242 eived risk of invasive breast cancer (Cancer Worry Scale and a study-specific question).
243 ed 88 cancer survivors with high FCR (Cancer Worry Scale score >/= 14) from 6 months to 5 years after
244 me was FCR severity assessed with the Cancer Worry Scale.
245 nd anxiety scores did not differ, but cancer worries scores decreased during the same time period.
246 , mean depression, state anxiety, and cancer worries scores increased from baseline to 2 weeks postdi
247 apy compared with EUC significantly improved worry severity (45.6 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 43.4
248 lton Anxiety Rating Scale) and self-reported worry severity (Penn State Worry Questionnaire-Abbreviat
249 there was a significantly greater decline in worry severity among participants in the telephone-deliv
250 nalyses, response rates defined according to worry severity were higher following CBT compared with E
251  EUC, CBT resulted in greater improvement in worry severity, depressive symptoms, and general mental
252 lenge to paediatricians worldwide, and are a worrying sign for both parents and clinicians alike.
253 tion of significant cognitive dysfunction is worrying since it has profound implications for how we t
254 iated with greater reductions in anxiety and worry symptoms.
255 re 51 percent less likely to report feeling "worried, tense, or anxious" about repaying, were 54 perc
256  experienced greater depression, anxiety and worry than their older counterparts.
257 ly higher levels of anxiety, depression, and worry than their partners (t's > 2.53, p's < .05).
258 riers experienced higher levels of anger and worry than they had anticipated.
259                          However, physicians worried that an apology might create legal liability.
260 teracy skills were two times as likely to be worried that FOBT was messy (26.7% v 13.3%; P =.008), 1.
261                         In particular, he is worried that he may not be able to be weaned off the ven
262 ce won't pay for a clinical trial," and "I'm worried that I wouldn't be able to afford the costs of t
263 t clinic for inborn errors of metabolism was worried that isolated AST-elevation indicated cell damag
264 th medical professionals and the public have worried that many patients receive non-beneficial care i
265  ecosystem services (PES) programs have long worried that payments flow to landholders who would have
266             Many patients and clinicians are worried that pregnancy after the diagnosis of Hodgkin ly
267                       Some investigators are worried that radioprotectors may stop tumour tissue resp
268                                           We worried that this might bias researchers toward positive
269 sorders (ADs) experience persistent fear and worries that are highly debilitating, conferring risk fo
270 logy becomes ever more expensive, Eve Marder worries that researchers in less wealthy institutions mi
271                     Although many physicians worry that openly discussing a poor prognosis will cause
272 or performance (P4P) has become common, many worry that P4P will lead providers to avoid offering sur
273                                 Policymakers worry that physician expert witnesses who espouse unfoun
274                         Some policy analysts worry that reductions in readmissions are being achieved
275                           Almost 60% (57.2%) worry that reporting patients negatively influences the
276 hers having their information, and 37% would worry that study data could be used against them.
277                                           We worry that such a framing may exacerbate tensions betwee
278  improve quality of care, but some observers worry that such efforts will lead clinicians to avoid hi
279                                         Many worry that the use of specialty tiering for biologic dis
280                                              Worry that they will not feel confident performing proce
281                                   Many still worry that they will not wake up after their surgery, or
282 early influenced by their excessive fear and worry, the relationship between anxiety and decision-mak
283 velop the same condition in their other eye, worrying them about losing vision in both eyes.
284 urses' 'worry' and/or indicators underlying 'worry' to predict unplanned Intensive-Care/High-Dependen
285 eart failure in hospital, and to address the worrying trends in women.
286  Anxious individuals tend to experience more worry under uncertainty, and processing uncertain inform
287 se, substance use, discrimination, terrorism worries, vigorous exercise, obesity, and self-rated heal
288 evels of anxiety/tension, and high levels of worry/vulnerability are associated with genetic variants
289 l factors of neuroticism-anxiety/tension and worry/vulnerability-and how they contrast with that of g
290 d Anger steeply declined from the early 20s, Worry was elevated through middle age and then declined,
291 atients with a personal history of melanoma, worry was reduced on all scales.
292 ectories of global disease dynamics: (i) the worried well in developed countries (demanding less risk
293 tories received similar requests to test the worried well or evaluate potentially contaminated mail o
294                   The lack of treatment for "worried well" patients with high-grade prostatic intraep
295 tionately of HIV-uninfected new couples and "worried well" persons, as well as very recently infected
296                                         Such worries were a documented concern during the 2013 Ebola
297                           Baseline levels of worry were low and reduced further after TBDP.
298                Participants were relieved of worry when they could exert control over their bladder f
299 with AMS have low levels of melanoma-related worry, which is similar to data from other populations a
300        Therefore we postulated that reducing worry with cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) would reduc

 
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