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1 a larger decrease in the percentage who were worried about (66.5% to 51.1%; -15.4% [-25.4%, -5.4%], P
2              Additionally, clinicians report worries about a lack of genetics knowledge, informed con
3 fies nine indicators which trigger nurses to worry about a patient's condition.
4 so much, why bother [with coaching]?" P009), worry about appearing incompetent ("I think it would be
5  future and many American-based laboratories worried about attracting the best talent.
6  family was often used, although some people worried about becoming a burden.
7        Participants who were worried (vs not worried) about being able to afford care, surrogates mak
8  significant total effects of deprivation on worries about being infected (p = 0.002), economic activ
9 tigate inequality is by addressing students' worries about belonging.
10 iate logistic regression showed that feeling worried about breast cancer (Adjust OR = 0.33, p = 0.01)
11 ng and made women feel anxious, confused, or worried about breast cancer.
12 ion (7.8% vs 24.0% and 23.6%; P < .001), and worry about breast cancer (quite/very worried: 6.9% vs 1
13 hey were cancer-free, and they reported more worry about cancer than did surgical patients.
14 urse practitioners (NPs) in terms of reduced worrying about cancer (odds ratio [OR], 2.21; P < .001),
15  [95% CI, 0.12-0.78]; P=0.008) had increased worry about cardiovascular disease risk compared with co
16 atest mean difference 34 points worse on the Worry about child's eye condition domain (95% CI -46 to
17 yeQ domains are impact on parent and family, worry about child's eye condition, worry about child's s
18 parent PedEyeQ (impact on parent and family, worry about child's eye condition, worry about child's s
19 ut child's self-perception/interactions, and worry about child's functional vision.
20 d family, worry about child's eye condition, worry about child's self-perception and interactions, an
21 d family, worry about child's eye condition, worry about child's self-perception/interactions, and wo
22                      In the 1960s and 1970s, worries about climate change helped to push the diverse
23 ge is happening and human-caused, as well as worry about climate change.
24                            Should businesses worry about climate risk because doing so is good for th
25 to cite the following reasons: caregiver was worried about COVID-19 (odds ratio [OR](VI) = 7.2, 95% C
26 oductivity, and 2334 participants (47%) were worried about COVID-19 impacting their career developmen
27 xing was associated with being younger, less worried about COVID-19, perceiving a lower risk of COVID
28  health literacy were more likely to be less worried about COVID-19, to not believe that they would b
29 able anxiety (RR = 1.42; 95% CI, 1.23-1.65), worry about COVID-19 (RR, 1.37; 95% CI, 1.17-1.61), perc
30                         Depression, anxiety, worry about COVID-19, perceived stress, and loneliness w
31                 We propose that, rather than worry about defining curiosity, it is more helpful to co
32                   An alternative approach to worrying about details is to concentrate on understandin
33 I, 1.28-3.29; P = 0.003), and those who were worried about developing glaucoma (OR, 2.07; 95% CI, 1.2
34                           Patients expressed worry about developing and dying from HCC, but nearly ha
35                                       Cancer worry about developing melanoma in at-risk patients may
36 ol that can be used in PLCs to help decrease worry about developing melanoma in at-risk patients.
37  without commensurate faculty strengthening, worries about dilution effect on quality, outdated curri
38 eralized anxiety disorder involves intrusive worry about diverse circumstances.
39 tient Health Questionnaire, TWEAK (Tolerance/Worry About Drinking/Eye-Opener/Amnesia/C[K]ut Down on D
40 s Scale, indicating the extent to which they worried about each of five worry domains: social conditi
41 4), whereas worry about personal savings and worry about economic activities and livelihood partially
42                                Specifically, worry about economic activities and livelihood partly me
43 their decision-making deficits and excessive worry about everyday problems by disrupting the online u
44 nalyses examine caregiver-reported stress or worry about eviction, foreclosure, or condemned housing
45 atening environment, in which colleagues may worry about exposing some of the weaknesses in their kno
46 erceptions of telehealth-based eye care, and worry about eyesight.
47 ere visual field defects had greater odds of worrying about eyesight (OR, 3.4; 95% CI, 2.0-5.8) and b
48 dentified by a survey question of time spent worrying about eyesight and response was treated as a di
49                                             'Worry about falling' was experienced by 42.0% (128/305)
50  poor social integration, economic problems, worrying about family or friends overseas, and lonelines
51  concerns with publication bias shifted from worrying about file-drawered studies to worrying about p
52  patients in cancer-research trials were not worried about financial ties between researchers or medi
53  than 90% of patients expressed little or no worry about financial ties that researchers or instituti
54 vere family-level food insecurity, including worrying about food running out (odds ratio [OR], 1.97;
55  emotion, appraise officers more negatively, worry about force being used, and predict worse outcomes
56 hild's self-perception and interactions, and worry about functional vision domains).
57 t had strain on family life (P < 0.001), and worried about future finances (P = 0.005).
58 tic stress symptoms (PTSS), global distress, worry about future events (generalized worries), and fun
59               Patients with cancer were more worried about getting infected with SARS-CoV-2 compared
60 x, comorbidities, metastasized cancer, being worried about getting severe acute respiratory syndrome
61  A fourth (24.6%) of participants were "very worried" about getting the coronavirus.
62 hiatric symptoms and drug problems, level of worry about getting AIDS, younger age, less education, m
63 ing food in the past month, and 1500 (87.0%) worried about having enough to eat at least once.
64 g no [1.0%] to the question concerning being worried about having stable housing in the next 2 months
65     One question asked patients if they were worried about having stable housing in the next 2 months
66 w about the protective policies and were not worried about having their rights taken away reported th
67 escent health problems, body mass index, and worries about health during adulthood were controlled st
68 y housing); reluctance to seek medical care (worry about health care costs, concerned about ability t
69 ng vaccine safety, questions about efficacy, worry about implications for future pain management, sti
70  mortality reduction and quality of care but worry about increased anxiety, overdiagnosis, and more f
71                     Although many physicians worry about injection frequency in vitrectomized eyes be
72               As systems dazzle, researchers worry about lack of safeguards and regulation.
73 CU professionals narrated about anticipatory worry about life and death decisions, lack of knowledge
74 ilable; database administrators and curators worry about long-term financial support.
75 ed more with their daily lives and were more worried about losing vision from glaucoma.
76  housing, moving >=2 times in past year, and worrying about losing housing), and stress (the 10-item
77 erns most often perceived by physicians were worries about loss of control, being a burden, being dep
78          Food insecurity may produce lasting worries about maintaining fullness between meals, which
79 tiety Insecurity Scale (4-items), reflecting worries about maintaining fullness.
80 tending physicians (36%) were more likely to worry about making errors during an in-hospital cardiac
81 tal cardiac arrest resuscitation and did not worry about making errors.
82 rest resuscitation events lack confidence or worry about management errors.
83                        Participants who were worried about money, health insurance, or food had highe
84 rate that media coverage may increase public worry about more stringent firearm control and partially
85 ith the evolving outbreak, such as decreased worry about mpox and less engagement in risk reduction b
86  definitive answers that could ease people's worry about Omicron, dividing debates and distracting di
87 from worrying about file-drawered studies to worrying about p-hacked analyses.
88 ted on cancelled healthcare appointments and worry about partners not being allowed in hospital.
89                                 Participants worry about patients' ability to meet restrictive requir
90 ly-level food insecurity, parent's financial worry about paying for monthly bills and housing costs,
91 e to cost); (2) health care unaffordability (worry about paying for potential medical bills or existi
92 % versus 11.6%; OR, 1.68 [1.17-2.40]) and to worry about paying medical bills (40.1% versus 33.8%; OR
93 ercentage points; P=0.002) and in reports of worry about paying medical bills (difference-in-differen
94  cancer history was associated with parent's worry about paying monthly bills (OR, 1.41; 95% CI, 1.15
95 ical financial hardship was measured as ever worrying about paying large medical bills.
96 income adults, there was a large decrease in worrying about paying medical bills (40.5% to 27.5%; -13
97  debt, inability to cover medical costs, and worrying about paying medical bills.
98 stractibility, strong emotional feelings and worry about perceived work performance associated with d
99                                              Worrying about perceived threats is a hallmark of multip
100 mental health disorders (p = 0.004), whereas worry about personal savings and worry about economic ac
101 rated by work (ie, a burnout item) (OR: 37), worrying about personal life at work (OR: 3), and having
102                   Duarte et al. are right to worry about political bias in social psychology but they
103 tient procedure because patients and doctors worry about postoperative pain.
104 pective - symptom, surgery, recovery and the worry about potential long lasting sequelae, and the nee
105                             Notably, greater worry about prosecution for fraud did not affect physici
106 8; 95% CI, 2.07-9.29; P < .001), and greater worry about recurrence (vs UM, RRR: 2.81; 95% CI, 1.14-6
107                                              Worry about recurrence appeared to drive decisions for C
108 tic resonance imaging, and patient extent of worry about recurrence at the time of treatment decision
109 ities underlie our ability to think (or even worry) about reputation, and how do these concerns manif
110           Determine whether diagnosis of and worries about serious illness are associated with ACP en
111 ur findings offer insights into how people's worries about serious illness care may affect their enga
112            Barriers to ACP documentation and worries about serious illness were also assessed.
113 Patients with no unmet expectations had less worry about serious illness (54% vs. 27%; P < 0.001) and
114 e satisfied with their care and to have less worry about serious illness.
115                                              Worry about social conditions was the domain most strong
116 cal debt); and (3) general financial stress (worry about subsistence spending [eg, monthly bills, hou
117 lties with eating food, treatment adherence, worry about symptoms and illness, feelings of being diff
118          Among individuals reporting ongoing worry about terrorism post-9/11, high 9/11-related acute
119 sumed colon cancer, but he is understandably worried about the effect of his lung disease on his surg
120   The parents/grandparents were tended to be worried about the emotion, sleep and activity in daily l
121 ocyanin contents can be useful for consumers worried about the impacts of food on their wellbeing and
122                                   But we are worried about the representational structure assumed by
123 entified Republicans, both of whom were less worried about the virus and more skeptical about public
124 vers' concerns about the child's behavior or worries about the child as measured on the ASQ.
125 g for age-standardized ASQ scores, caregiver worries about the child increased slightly in the intrap
126                                  I raise two worries about the Debunker's and Defeater Dilemmas, resp
127 s had a good predictive ability for fear and worries about the forthcoming birth (79%) and a conclusi
128  that sitting for an important exam leads to worries about the situation and its consequences that un
129 at this integrated program assuages Brette's worries about the study of the neural code.
130 tudents from less-educated homes, confirming worries about the uneven toll of the pandemic on childre
131  by COVID-specific factors, such as personal worry about the disease and COVID-specific misinformatio
132  adulterated worldwide and a major reason to worry about the health and safety procedure.
133  (mode 2, CVW = 0.14; rank 7), and decreased worry about the impact of COVID-19 on their family's fin
134 urgical patients at teaching hospitals often worry about the involvement of inexperienced physician t
135 are (OR, 1.66; 95% CI, 1.40-1.97) because of worry about the related costs.
136 3.7 versus 5.3 +/- 3.7; P < 0.001) and their worry about the risk of the adverse event was greater in
137 atients' willingness to accept treatment and worry about the risk of the serious side effect were mea
138 atients seeking help for symptoms frequently worry about the underlying causes of their symptoms; hav
139 rticipants who expressed "worry" or "extreme worry" about the malignancy risk of IPMN had significant
140 lest, (4) maintaining normality, and (5) not worrying about the future.
141 specificity), improving delivery systems and worrying about the inexorable spread of drug resistance.
142 ing the workforce or reducing hours and were worried about their career development related to the pa
143                             When parents are worried about their child's health, they need to be able
144                 In-person visit participants worried about their eyesight more (2.7, standard deviati
145                                 Participants worried about their eyesight were more likely to have un
146 ical activity and were more likely to remain worried about their future financial situation.
147                  Many are more than a little worried about their futures and often have trouble envis
148 ightened fears over their wife's well-being, worried about their job performance, were more uncertain
149 or more stress symptoms, and 47 percent were worried about their own safety or the safety of loved on
150      Trans individuals who were concerned or worried about their rights being taken away (vs not) had
151 y, although 16% of carriers reported feeling worried about their test results.
152 nce fears of cancer recurrence (P < .01) and worry about their children being diagnosed with RB (P <
153  information; fewer (51%, CI: 47%-55%) would worry about their privacy.
154  the United States are more likely to report worrying about their vision and often have uncorrected o
155                   Provider concerns included worries about transmitting COVID-19 to their families/co
156 ospital is unable to keep providers safe and worries about transmitting infection to their families/c
157 ) expressed high hesitancy, with significant worries about vaccine safety and mistrust in health auth
158 s associated with increases in self-reported worry about violence for oneself and others, increased f
159                              Topics included worry about violence for oneself before and during the p
160 .3%-44.6%] White individuals), self-reported worry about violence for oneself was significantly highe
161 ing are ones that I will never forget, but I worry about what the next 2 weeks will bring.
162 w this can be achieved elsewhere rather than worry about whether it is unachievable.
163            Parents with young children often worry about whether or not to seek medical help for a si

 
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