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1        Anxiety symptoms predicted (p</=0.05) bed days at 3, 6, and 12 months and work performance at
2         Medical and surgical ICUs at a 1,100-bed academic medical center.
3 ban population of 920 000 in 2016, with 1000 beds, although occupancy often exceeds capacity.
4 enting to the emergency department at a 1500-bed referral hospital in Zambia between October 22, 2012
5  highest quartile of occupancy (net, +10,157 beds; 54.0% of total growth).
6 hildren 21 years or younger admitted to a 20-bed, multidisciplinary, tertiary pediatric intensive car
7                        Small hospitals (<200 beds) have similar rates of antibiotic prescribing compa
8 reaticoduodenectomy, and colectomy at a 2000-bed urban medical center in Taipei, Taiwan, from August
9 input from the rounding intensivists at a 24-bed open SICU at an urban, academic hospital.
10 itals with an intensive care unit and >/=250 beds.
11 n 2013) compared to smaller hospitals (< 250 beds; 4.4% in 2009 to 6.2% in 2013).
12                               SETTINGS: A 28-bed, surgical ICU in a university hospital.
13    Seven ICU and 30 non-ICU wards at a 1,300-bed academic hospital in the United States.
14 ospitals with 250 or more beds (net, +18,327 beds; 91.8% of total growth), and hospitals in the highe
15 guideline on blood culture practices in a 36-bed, combined medical/surgical pediatric intensive care
16 itals was observed for medium-sized (100-399 beds) hospitals (8.6% vs 9.3% and 9.4%; 0.8% difference
17 atifying by hospital size, 187 large (>/=400 beds) major teaching hospitals had lower adjusted overal
18 occurred in teaching hospitals (net, +13,471 beds; 72.1% of total growth), hospitals with 250 or more
19 of participating hospitals had less than 500 beds; most were public (59%) and academic (66%).
20                                        A 650-bed university hospital in Iceland The sample consisted
21            The study was undertaken in a 676-bed teaching hospital in the Midwestern U.S.
22 e mix of hospital beds with an average of 71 beds per 100 000 population.
23 n 2013) and was more common in bigger (> 750 beds; 5.2% in 2009 and 7.3% in 2013) compared to smaller
24                           Among small (</=99 beds) hospitals, 187 minor teaching hospitals had lower
25                      Only data acquired at a bed station that included the head were used for this st
26  the unit, daily unit occupancy (occupying a bed at midnight), and length of mechanical ventilation.
27 eworming medication, zinc supplementation, a bed net, and malaria chemoprophylaxis.
28 low of acidified desalinated water through a bed packed with millimeter-size calcite particles.
29  higher thresholds for admission to an acute bed, and short revolving-door stays with high rates of r
30 tional support for mass drug administration, bed nets, and other preventive measures has resulted in
31 te the electrostatic charging of an agitated bed of identical grains using simulations, mathematical
32 present a similarly attractive cue, allowing bed bugs to 'hitch-hike' around the world after aggregat
33 rved deep brain structures such as amygdala, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, dorsal raphe, and l
34  through its interactions with the amygdala, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, periaqueductal gray
35  were mainly observed in the medial amygdala/bed nucleus of the stria terminalis to lateral septum ci
36 refrontal cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, and bed nucleus of the stria terminalis).
37 etectable in dust samples of eating area and bed.
38 gate whether hen's egg allergen in house and bed dust plays a role in sensitization via skin.
39      How such programs impact population and bed management within a healthcare system are not known.
40 alysis suggest that elevated tidal range and bed shear stress optimized mangrove development along ti
41  central nuclei of the amygdala and anterior bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, and densely to the
42 secticide-based vector control tools such as bed nets and indoor residual spraying.
43 isage such a test having a role in assessing bed-bound patients in hospital where access to formal vi
44 age level (between human- and bat-associated bed bugs), and inter-species level (between C. lectulari
45 intra-lineage level (within human-associated bed bugs), inter-lineage level (between human- and bat-a
46 erally higher in summers following bankfull, bed-scouring winter floods.
47 clude prone and side sleeping, soft bedding, bed sharing, inappropriate sleep surfaces (including sof
48 les (hammerstones and anvils) in the CM bone bed display use-wear and impact marks, and are hydraulic
49 ng areas when travelling can be exploited by bed bugs to facilitate passive dispersal.
50 on differences in tumor-associated capillary bed at different stages of disease progression are not w
51 nous blood to bypass the pulmonary capillary bed through anatomic right-to-left shunts.
52 nstrate that for RBCs entering the capillary bed close to the cortical surface (< 400 mum) the larges
53 BC trajectories reveal that in the capillary bed RBCs preferentially move in plane.
54 on, increasing blood flow into the capillary bed.
55 eterogeneous BBB disruption in the capillary bed.
56 urred from a small fraction of the capillary bed.
57 is peripheral resistance in tissue capillary beds.
58 k of ZIKV epidemics, adequate intensive care bed capacity is required for management of severe GBS ca
59                 Increasingly, intensive care bed expansion in the United States is occurring in large
60      Overall, the majority of intensive care bed growth occurred in teaching hospitals (net, +13,471
61 es analysis of hospital-level intensive care bed supply using data from Centers for Medicare and Medi
62 lationship between increasing intensive care beds and these characteristics, controlling for other fa
63 aracterize national growth in intensive care beds by identifying hospital-level factors associated wi
64        Although the number of intensive care beds in the United States is increasing, little is known
65 ute care hospitals with adult intensive care beds over the years 1996-2011.
66 ed with increasing numbers of intensive care beds over time.
67 We correctly predicted that 8 intensive-care beds and 7 ventilators would be sufficient to treat GBS
68 t care activities: patient bathing, changing bed linens, pouring and flushing liquid waste, bronchosc
69 crease in gravel flux and subsequent channel bed aggradation (that is, sediment deposition by a river
70  FIB removal rates can be explained by clean bed filtration theory (CBFT, 31%), antecedent dry period
71 rmal weather conditions exceeds the critical bed shear stress for erosion (tau cr ) accounts for 63%
72 ry structures (e.g. ripple lamination, cross-bedding) have received a great deal of attention in sedi
73 rinated ethene removal was 87% in the CYP2E1 bed, 85% in the WT bed, and 34% in the unplanted bed in
74 er the past two decades, primarily in deeper beds where light is already limiting.
75 ly gene mapping highlighted the dorsolateral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (dlBST) as a structu
76  the noise-equivalent counting rates in each bed position.
77  As one of the most notorious ectoparasites, bed bugs rely heavily on human or animal blood sources f
78                      Excavation of Ediacaran bedding surfaces of the Rawnsley Quartzite in South Aust
79 3/mg dissolved organic carbon) and BAC empty bed contact times (EBCT; 15-60 min) on the formation aft
80                           Besides, the empty bed residence time and inlet load range of biofilter wer
81 o E-selectin displayed at target endothelial beds.
82 th the hand lying palm up on the examination bed.
83 ured individuals) and ICU size (ten or fewer beds vs more than ten beds), finally generating 40 strat
84                           Four hundred fifty bed urban teaching hospital.
85      After 200h of continuous use in a fixed-bed reactor, SiQT10 remained with approximately 90% acti
86 tion delays (end-of-life decisions and floor bed unavailable) as well as in the overall rate of poten
87 aging early disposition of patients to floor beds.
88 ree dimensional organoids, using a fluidised bed bioreactor, together with single-use bioprocessing e
89 g option for industrial packed and fluidized bed CO2 capture systems due to large particles with a di
90 the use of a microfluidic magnetic fluidized bed approach that enables dynamic, highly efficient and
91                                The fluidized bed was 20-50% more efficient than a commercially availa
92 icrofluidic chip that combines the fluidized bed with the polymer microarray for a highly simplified
93 e operations of petroleum refinery fluidized-bed catalytic cracking units.
94 ake and work performance and requirement for bed rest in the year after injury.
95 d the supplies of crisis, acute and forensic beds to meet a mandatory target to safely reduce mental
96 iting nuisance and disease transmission from bed bugs.
97 nd shape and their consequent effect on fuel bed structure, ventilation and flammability.
98                Monitoring technologies (e.g. bed-monitoring systems; wearable location-tracking devic
99  transplanted into the prevascularized graft bed reversed diabetes when combined with postoperative 5
100 unction with prevascularization of the graft bed by agarose-basic fibroblast growth factor.
101 isk corneal transplantation, where the graft bed is inflamed and vascularized, immature APCs in the d
102 eal allograft recipients with inflamed graft beds.
103 ly analogous to ripples emerging on granular beds submitted to viscous shear flows.
104 in the bankfull hydraulic geometry of gravel bedded channels through its control on bed surface grain
105                               In many gravel-bedded rivers, floods that fill the channel banks create
106 le (active group) or control (placebo group) bed encasings.
107 a occupy up to one quarter of acute hospital beds, however, staff working in hospitals report lack of
108 diagnosis, more regional acute care hospital beds, and urban residence (all P < 0.05).
109  have wide variations in the mix of hospital beds with an average of 71 beds per 100 000 population.
110 ch it is derived, namely friction at the ice-bed interface and form drag, and the resistance to ice f
111 show a contrasting topography across the ice-bed interface.
112 l patients 16 years or over occupying an ICU bed on one of two Point Prevalence study days in 2015.
113 s attributed to lack of cardiac surgical ICU bed availability.
114 had sepsis (30.2 septic patients per 100 ICU beds, 95% CI 28.4-31.9).
115 cupancy: the greatest odds of increasing ICU beds were in hospitals with 500 or more beds in the high
116 luate the use of house dust mite-impermeable bedding and its impact on severe asthma exacerbations in
117                                           In bed bugs, both the odorant identity and concentrations p
118 es in sediment supply through adjustments in bed surface grain size, as also shown through numerical
119  performance and increased number of days in bed due to health in the year after injury.
120           Our analysis reveals a decrease in bed surface armoring with increasing [Formula: see text]
121 eement primarily occurred in the "nothing in bed" versus "in-bed activity" categories because "the se
122 s collapsed into four categories: nothing in bed, in-bed activity, out-of-bed activity, and walking.
123 terbalanced 3-week period of 8 hours time in bed per night).
124 rom birth and cat and dog allergen levels in bedding at age 1 year.
125 sed into four categories: nothing in bed, in-bed activity, out-of-bed activity, and walking.
126  occurred in the "nothing in bed" versus "in-bed activity" categories because "the sensor assessed mo
127 d at the lesion, region (prostate, including bed and seminal vesicle, or extraprostatic, including al
128 er domestic wastewater effluent infiltration beds both act as continuous PFAS sources to the groundwa
129 le below the FTA and wastewater-infiltration beds.
130 829 to -3651; p<0.0001), number of inpatient bed days (-16.98 days, -18.45 to -15.51; p<0.0001), prob
131 pulsory admission to a psychiatric inpatient bed, compared with people admitted voluntarily or receiv
132 ompulsory admission to psychiatric inpatient beds in England is worrying.
133 MHS (ie, availability of services, inpatient beds, and clinicians and organisations, and delivery of
134 ation, or a more direct topography involving bed nucleus vs central nucleus divisions; (2) CRF conten
135 geochemical and mineralogical data from lake-bed mudstones collected during the first 1300 martian so
136 availability of electricity may enable later bed times without compensating sleep extension in the mo
137 , full use of staffed and unstaffed licensed beds, and cancellation of elective and transfer admissio
138 nly discrete palpable finding was lumpectomy bed seroma.
139        nov., based primarily on monospecific bedding plane assemblages from the Lower-Middle Devonian
140 of total growth), hospitals with 250 or more beds (net, +18,327 beds; 91.8% of total growth), and hos
141  ICU beds were in hospitals with 500 or more beds in the highest quartile of occupancy (adjusted odds
142 patial scales of self-organization on mussel bed persistence, we conducted field manipulations in whi
143 ed the persistence of the constructed mussel beds in comparison to nonorganized beds.
144 formation improves the persistence of mussel beds (Mytilus edulis) on intertidal flats.
145                                   In natural beds, mussels generate self-organized patterns at two di
146 flow that arises as ice deforms to negotiate bed topography.
147                                     Nineteen-bed cardiothoracic ICU.
148                                           No bed rest or activity restriction was recommended.
149 ed mussel beds in comparison to nonorganized beds.
150 in Eridania are thick (>400 m), massive (not bedded), mottled deposits containing saponite, talc-sapo
151 orce microscopy (AFM) and developed a novel "bed of nails"-like approach that uses quartz glass nanop
152 and their crude death rate per 1000 occupied bed days (OBDs).
153 y of C difficile infection per 1000 occupied bed-days in hospitals or per 100 000 inhabitant-days in
154 onally, preoperative posturing consisting of bed rest and positioning is prescribed to patients with
155 nal Fos results, we determined the effect of bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) injections of
156 tory conditions, host-associated lineages of bed bugs are reproductively compatible, and aggregation
157 icture of the olfactory coding mechanisms of bed bugs that will ultimately contribute to the design a
158 ere mainly medical-surgical (75%); number of beds was evenly distributed in the entire cohort; 77% ha
159 charges, teaching hospital status, number of beds, percentage of joint replacements performed on Afri
160                   We described the number of beds, teaching status, ownership, intensive care occupan
161 f surge capacity measured as a percentage of beds newly available in each unit and in aggregate.
162 omoted by the collaborative included head-of-bed elevation, use of subglottic secretion drainage endo
163  pressure, 3) oxygen weaning, and 4) head-of-bed elevation.
164 ory rate, oxygen administration, and head-of-bed elevation.
165 ation of early mobilization increased out-of-bed activities during hospital stay but did not improve
166 ies: nothing in bed, in-bed activity, out-of-bed activity, and walking.
167 rongly associated with progression to out-of-bed mobility (odds ratio, 29.1; CI, 15.1-56.3; p </= 0.0
168 ts on mechanical ventilation achieved out-of-bed mobility on 16% (n = 90) of the total patient-days.
169 irium were negatively associated with out-of-bed mobility.
170 s were used to identify predictors of out-of-bed mobility.
171 ravel bedded channels through its control on bed surface grain size.
172                                   Thirty-one-bed medical-surgical ICU.
173 ipophilic balance (HLB) coating, and an open bed configuration with an octadecyl silica-based (C18)co
174                                      In open bed form, a one-calibrant kinetic calibration technique
175 l of loading via microgravity, paralysis, or bed rest leads to rapid loss of muscle mass and function
176                        The extent of outflow beds accessed was measured with canalograms.
177 n which can either be considered as a packed bed with perfectly ordered and uniform flow paths or as
178 ed to that of a conventional, agarose packed bed, pepsin IMER column commonly used in LC-MS based pro
179 ecatalyst Pd-PEPPSI-IPent loaded onto packed bed columns shows high catalytic activity for the room-t
180                                       Packed beds of basalt powder with large specific surface areas
181 n of carbonates varied between powder packed beds with different powder sizes.
182 essure regulators, static mixers, and packed-bed reactors.
183 e PBT-2 catalyst in a continuous-flow packed-bed reactor achieved nearly 60000 turnovers with no appa
184 nded growth (SGR) and attached growth packed-bed (AGR) anammox reactors after 220 days of operation.
185 igh static scan with a 2-min acquisition per bed position was obtained.
186 ction from the vertex to thighs at 3 min per bed position.
187      Chloride ion accumulated in the planted beds corresponding to the TCE loss, suggesting that cont
188 esult that the flow of sand through a porous bed or multiple parallel pipes cannot be simplified to f
189 the height of the sand column (H) and porous bed (h) and the diameter of the glass beads (D) and sand
190 ver, the flow of sand through a fixed porous bed could be regarded as parallel flow through multiple
191 the flow of fine sand through a fixed porous bed of packed glass beads under various conditions, incl
192  and moderate projections from the posterior bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, mesocortical struct
193  to micro-droplet ejection in a laser powder bed fusion AM is not from laser induced recoil pressure
194 cribed using simulations of the laser powder bed interactions to elucidate the experimental results.
195                              Metallic powder bed additive manufacturing is capable of producing compl
196 topolymerization (stereolithography), powder bed fusion (SLS), material and binder jetting (inkjet an
197 s additively manufactured via a laser powder-bed-fusion technique exhibit a combination of yield stre
198 cal target volume consisting of the prostate bed alone (CTV) (64.8-66.6 Gy).
199 nsensus CTVs that included both the prostate bed and the pelvic lymph nodes were contoured on the CT
200 revealed unsuspected disease in the prostate bed in 27% of patients, locoregional lymph nodes in 39%,
201 oline for exploring the pelvis and prostatic bed.
202    Low numbers of hospital-based psychiatric beds create problems for people with severe mental illne
203 ompulsory admission to inpatient psychiatric beds vary significantly between local areas and services
204 oration of the mastectomy scar and radiation bed.
205 erative complication was a chronic radiation bed seroma, which required periodic percutaneous drainag
206 ong HIV-infected pregnant women who received bed nets, daily trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and combi
207 risk among pregnant women with HIV receiving bed nets, daily trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and combi
208 uding (1) deep trephination of the recipient bed 450 to 550 mum in depth and 9 mm in diameter; (2) pn
209                      We find that marine red beds are a prominent feature of the sedimentary record s
210 ermodynamic modelling reveal that marine red beds formed when deep-ocean Fe-concentrations were > 4 n
211 ord of banded iron formations and marine red beds, which indicate deep-ocean oxygenation occurred in
212 ding with the onset of widespread marine red beds.
213 ord of banded iron formations and marine red beds.
214 umbers of acute, forensic and rehabilitation beds needed to reduce these risks.
215                Contrary to previous reports, bed bugs were found to be reproductively compatible at b
216 le of ICUs so as to enrol the total required beds in 1690 Brazilian adult ICUs.
217       EVP cells arose from vascular-resident beds that could not be transferred by bone marrow transp
218                                        River bed-load transport is a kind of dense granular flow, and
219                           While gravel-river beds typically have an "armoured" layer of coarse grains
220      Our experiments suggest that some river-bed armouring may be due to granular segregation from be
221 he contribution of granular physics to river-bed armouring has not yet been investigated.
222                                We show a sea-bed landform imprint of a shelf-wide last glacial advanc
223  mangroves, sand beaches and dunes, seagrass beds, and coral and oyster reefs.
224 ering by centimetre-thick mussel and seaweed beds eliminates differences in stress-inducing high temp
225                        Six hundred fifty-six bed urban academic medical center.
226                                   Twenty-six-bed tertiary hospital ICU.
227                                      Sixteen-bed, general ICU at a tertiary academic medical center.
228  topography of the area; the steeply sloping bed allowed glaciers here to stabilise during retreat.
229 erence, 12.4% [95% CI, 9.3%-15.1%]), no soft bedding use (79.4% vs 67.6%; adjusted risk difference, 1
230 tressor, such as prone/side sleeping or soft bedding, during a critical developmental period.
231 ion (room sharing without bed sharing), soft bedding use (none), and pacifier use (any); data were co
232 nfants include prone and side sleeping, soft bedding, bed sharing, inappropriate sleep surfaces (incl
233 cked under high pressure to achieve a stable bed.
234 ly discharge), a strategy that creates surge bed capacity while conserving resources, has been modele
235  findings on the damaging effects of tanning bed exposure on women, particularly young women.
236 olicy initiatives designed to reduce tanning bed use among young women.
237 ndings highlight that in addition to tanning bed avoidance, it is critical to emphasize sun protectio
238  evidence of the negative effects of tanning beds and provides further justification for stronger pol
239 ling evidence that early exposure to tanning beds advances the date of diagnosis of melanoma by at le
240 ICU size (ten or fewer beds vs more than ten beds), finally generating 40 strata.
241 nsional entangled states and provides a test bed for fundamental tests of quantum science.Entanglemen
242 of single-carbon compounds represents a test bed to establish this paradigm, enabling rapid, mobile,
243 Our system can serve as an experimental test bed for diffusion of 2D objects in confined geometry.
244 lloidal system provides an experimental test bed to probe the unconventional properties of mixed-orde
245  molecular nanomagnets provide an ideal test bed for investigating entanglement between complex spin
246 n phase transition is proposed as a new test bed, which deserves more attention in the future.
247 using fast-to-transform model plants as test beds.
248           Three hydraulically contained test beds were planted with 12 transgenic poplars, 12 wild ty
249  of multimodal measurements as critical test-beds for theoretical descriptions of complex systems.
250 Field surveys and experiments suggested that bed-mobilizing floods scour away overwintering grazers,
251                                          The bed bug Cimex lectularius is a blood-feeding re-emerging
252                                          The bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) is critical i
253  traction, the resistance to ice flow at the bed.
254  timescales, isostatic adjustment causes the bed to uplift, isolating the terminus from subsurface wa
255 ng the complexity of odorant encoding in the bed bug odorant receptors.
256 se-activating peptide (PACAP) systems in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) mediates many
257  associated with increased metabolism in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, a key component of
258 articles from the surface to deep inside the bed, and find that armour develops by two distinct mecha
259               The anterolateral group of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNSTALG ) is a crit
260 eurons participate in specific nuclei of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, which plays essenti
261 acquired using ice-penetrating radar, of the bed topography across parts of PIG.
262 ove the median-sized gravel particles on the bed surface (D50).
263 gard to the extended amygdala (primarily the bed nucleus of stria terminalis; BST), on the whole, the
264 d input from basal forebrain structures, the bed nucleus of stria terminalis, the lateral preoptic ar
265                  Among these structures, the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) has been impl
266 c healthcare worker activities (touching the bed rail [odds ratio, 2.19; 95% CI, 1.00-4.82], performi
267                   Here we tested whether the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) mediates anxi
268                                       Thirty-bed neuro-ICU in an academic medical center.
269 e cleared quickly in almost all other tissue beds, their removal appears to be significantly impaired
270  of data processing, from sra-fastq files to bed files; and unifies the processing of multiple replic
271 rom waking until being assaulted or going to bed.
272 teaching hospitals) based on the resident-to-bed ratio.
273 e insecticide class recommended for treating bed nets, threatens the control of major malaria vectors
274 l of TCE was enhanced in the transgenic tree bed, but not to the extent of the enhanced removal obser
275 e levels were reduced in the transgenic tree bed.
276 st sites of relapse were lung (n = 5), tumor bed (n = 4), and abdomen (n = 2), with one metachronous
277 se of a radiotherapy (RT) boost to the tumor bed after whole-breast RT (WBRT) for ductal carcinoma in
278 gs suggest that a DCIS RT boost to the tumor bed could be considered to provide an added incremental
279  evidence that driving NK cells to the tumor bed relied on the ability of autophagy-defective tumors
280 ity and altered vascularization in the tumor bed.
281  rapidly than wild-type lymphocytes at tumor beds expressing PD-1 ligand (CD274), and these differenc
282                              Analysis of two bedding surfaces preserving large numbers of Parvancorin
283  85% in the WT bed, and 34% in the unplanted bed in 2012.
284  transcription factors in one large vascular bed, that underlying the skin, influences cardiovascular
285 he skin or lung, thereby uncovering vascular bed-specific differences in the prevention of inflammato
286    The hepatic sinusoid is a unique vascular bed lined by hepatic sinusoidal endothelial cells (HSECs
287  infected erythrocytes (IE) in deep vascular beds, but the endothelial receptors involved in severe m
288 ins differentiated smooth muscle in vascular beds, and its synthetic enzyme cystathionine-gamma-lyase
289 athway is an important regulator of vascular beds, but its role in the survival and function of trans
290 tially expressed in tissue-specific vascular beds, but its expression is induced in hematopoietic vas
291  engineering results in an s.c. vascularized bed that enables the transplantation of pancreatic islet
292 aken from health-care workers every 4 weeks, bed spaces were sampled monthly, and screening swabs wer
293 nalyses of seabed sediments, the period when bed shear stress due to combined current-wave action und
294  [95% CI, 5.3%-11.7%]), room sharing without bed sharing (82.8% vs 70.4%; adjusted risk difference, 1
295 upine), sleep location (room sharing without bed sharing), soft bedding use (none), and pacifier use
296                          Postresection wound bed fluorescence was significantly less than preresectio
297 shock protein (Hsp) 90alpha inside the wound bed.
298 ve tissue matrix components within the wound beds compared to wounds treated with chitosan scaffolds
299 val was 87% in the CYP2E1 bed, 85% in the WT bed, and 34% in the unplanted bed in 2012.
300  306 (1155 to 1751) per 10 000 person-years (bed-years) and did not change significantly.

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