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1 , 26.8% hospital-based, and 24.6% in primary care).
2 e capacity of nurses to provide high quality care.
3 elayed therapeutic decisions at the point of care.
4 ill enable more effective personalisation of care.
5 nting with influenza-like illness in primary care.
6 ent utilization of outpatient ophthalmologic care.
7 s or a control condition consisting of usual care.
8 the control arm received placebo or standard care.
9  frequently obtained during routine clinical care.
10 ly among women with limited access to health care.
11  education to be a standard part of glaucoma care.
12 edite medical decisions for enhanced patient care.
13 cision services, and 15 received standard of care.
14 therwise go unidentified in routine clinical care.
15  blood spots (DBSs) has increased in medical care.
16 ence was associated with improved linkage-to-care.
17 nancial barriers prevent access to specialty care.
18 ke it difficult to provide ideal bereavement care.
19  into older people's experiences of hospital care.
20  the 'one-size-fits-all' approach to patient care.
21 s associated with variable effects on timely care.
22  best-evidence treatments recommended for OA care.
23 xperts had subspecialty training in critical care.
24 lose, disrupting care delivery and access to care.
25  for SAM and MAM is non-inferior to standard care.
26 ntrol group received only routine outpatient care.
27 ical professionals who can provide competent care.
28 tect equitable access to high-quality cancer care; (2) support safe delivery of high-quality cancer c
29 s patients, 60.8% were admitted to intensive care, 26.4% had new positive-pressure ventilation, and 1
30 support safe delivery of high-quality cancer care; (3) advance policies to ensure oncology providers
31                        Specialist palliative care (37% versus 27%, p = 0.002) and AD inclusion in hos
32 nt resources to provide high-quality patient care; (4) recognize and address threats to clinician, pr
33  all antibiotics, 54.1% were from ambulatory care (95% CI, 52.6%-55.7%), 38.0% were from the hospital
34  in women at two hospitals (a large tertiary care academic hospital and a National Comprehensive Canc
35                                       Health care access and exposure factors may underlie the observ
36                        Differences in health care access and exposure risk may be driving higher infe
37 nd magnifying existing disparities in health care access and treatment.
38 ter 2011 payment reforms and 2014 Affordable Care Act changes that influenced reimbursements.
39                               Pre-Affordable Care Act uninsured patients had the highest mortality (2
40                     Comparing pre-Affordable Care Act with post-Affordable Care Act, there was a 4.75
41 pre-Affordable Care Act with post-Affordable Care Act, there was a 4.75% increase in medicaid coverag
42 onavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act.
43 ooner on average than those managed by usual care alone.
44 functional outcomes at 90 days than standard care alone.
45 ters to promote early initiation of prenatal care among medically vulnerable and underserved populati
46 sgender or transgender) and (1) retention in care and (2) viral suppression using 2016 client-level R
47 ons with HIV must be consistently engaged in care and able to access uninterrupted treatment, includi
48                   To receive optimal medical care and achieve desired outcomes, persons with HIV must
49 sed from 2008 to 2017, especially in virtual care and among older adults.
50 eutic standards, which consist of supportive care and antibiotics.
51                   We measured patient's self-care and care partner contributions to self-care in dyad
52 he number of patients receiving personalized care and counselling on prognosis and recurrence risk.
53 e with mobility limitations admitted to aged care and neurological rehabilitation.
54 ity and may have implications for quality of care and patient-provider relationships.
55 ons was low or very low, intensified patient care and rechallenge with the same or a different statin
56 inctive clinical characteristics in clinical care and reduces methodological heterogeneity in definin
57 cute and critical care management, long-term care and rehabilitation.
58 tion of rapid diet screener tools in primary care and relevant specialty care prevention settings, di
59 ide, yet most attention has focused on acute care and the impact on long-term health is poorly evalua
60 tion of bacterial infections at the point-of-care and their usefulness in providing a hugely benefici
61 tiation in the hospital and retention in HIV care and viral suppression over a 12-month period.
62 ency of outpatient care visits, retention in care and viral suppression.
63  patients (only patients requiring intensive care and/or patients with septic shock), blending togeth
64   Helping nurses to be proactively more self-caring and self-compassionate may increase their ability
65 e AI recommendation (standard or nonstandard care) and the physician's decision (to accept or reject
66 gregation of the operating theater, critical care, and inpatient ward areas) or no defined pathway (i
67 thnicity was associated with less linkage-to-care, and Manhattan residence was associated with improv
68  involved in the management of participants' care, and monitored by an independent committee using an
69 mongst those with HIV who are not yet in HIV care, and who would thus be ineligible for a LAM test un
70 cancer taken prior to starting a standard-of-care approved therapy.
71 icipants commencing treatment in the primary care arm (75%, 43/57) was significantly higher than in t
72 VR12 was significantly higher in the primary care arm, compared to in the SOC arm (49% [28/57] and 30
73 g the way to simple and inexpensive point-of-care assays.
74 of extending the shifts of nurses and health care assistants from 8 to 12 hours.
75 erapy (ART)-eligible adults newly linking to care at 64 clinics in Zambia between 1 April 2014 and 31
76          Fourteen (45%) of 31 detainees with care at clinic A had colonization.
77 admission for ICU survivor care versus usual care: at 30 days (10.4% vs 26.3%; stabilized inverse pro
78 e made them some of the most common point of care biosensors in a variety of fields.
79  in adults, whether administered alone or as care bundles were included in the analyses.
80  exacerbations leading to significant health care burden and impaired quality of life.
81 days (adjusted ICU length of stay = 2.85 d), care by an intensivist working 3 or fewer consecutive da
82                                Compared with care by intensivists working 7+ consecutive days (adjust
83  2011 and December 2015 at a single tertiary care center were identified.
84 OvC-PDE cultures were exposed to standard-of-care chemotherapeutics agents for 2 weeks, attesting the
85 portance of raising awareness among critical care clinicians and key stakeholders, advocating for wor
86 ohort (N = 3308) was recruited from prenatal care clinics at the Instituto Nacional Materno Perinatal
87  lipodystrophy disorders in a large clinical care cohort.
88 ease of 9% to 93%) compared with standard-of-care communities (absolute increase of 2% to 88%; preval
89 m debriefing have higher rates of process-of-care compliance or survival.
90 ention and Treatment Through a Comprehensive Care Continuum for HIV-affected Adolescents in Resource
91  of 1 drug [intervention], n = 282) or usual care (control, n = 287), in which no medication changes
92 pioid use can inform surgeon prescribing and care coordination for pain management after surgery.
93 an site COC did, which indicated significant care coordination gaps within the same facility.
94 lity, quality of life, dementia and hospital care costs stratified by haematoma location.
95  As four NIH intramural women scientists who care deeply about scientific progress and the progress o
96  facing higher costs might close, disrupting care delivery and access to care.
97 ganized its recommendations regarding cancer care delivery around five goals: (1) promote and protect
98 rapid response strategies to optimize health care delivery in parts of the world who have not yet con
99 rapidly and comprehensively transitioned its care delivery model and administrative organization to c
100                    Absence of formal primary care diagnoses was a limitation since ascertaining depre
101 han chronic, or benefitting little from self-care (e.g. dementia) were excluded.
102 ticularly in species with prolonged parental care, e.g., [8, 9].
103 tures of Antidepressant Response in Clinical Care (EMBARC, n = 296), and Suicide Assessment Methodolo
104 correct diagnosis of diseases in prehospital care, emergency, and remote settings.
105    Overall, 92 187 individuals had a primary care EMR record of ccIIV4 and 1 261 675 had a record of
106               This challenging task requires care, especially in terms of statistical reliability and
107   Trauma resuscitations are complex critical care events that present patient safety-related risk.
108 ider COC had a greater effect on end-of-life care expenditures than site COC did, which indicated sig
109 d outbreaks have occurred in hospitals, aged care facilities and prisons.
110 Medicaid programs pay for medical and dental care for children from low-income families and support n
111  and could present an opportunity to improve care for HIV-2-infected individuals.
112 ost vexing challenges faced by providers who care for patients after allogeneic hematopoietic cell tr
113  services are likely to optimise end-of-life care for patients with haematological malignancies.
114 pair or replacement has been the standard of care for patients with valvular heart disease for many d
115 ordable digital devices in addition to usual care for people with mobility limitations admitted to ag
116 er services data should inform engagement in care for previously diagnosed partners.
117 operative, intraoperative, and postoperative care for these youngest patients are paramount.
118 h-care sites are prepared to provide quality care for transgender women.
119                  Data regarding the types of care for which opioid-naive patients are provided initia
120                                     Patients cared for at the most disadvantaged-serving practices (g
121  no more likely to acquire MRSA if they were cared for using standard precautions versus contact prec
122 ital and its association with linkage to HIV care, frequency of outpatient care visits, retention in
123 ated to treatment, follow-up, and palliative care from the 2018 version of this guideline.
124 domly assigned to prospective rapid point-of-care genotyping of CYP2C19 major alleles (*2, *3, *17) v
125  requirements (diet/exercise) than the usual care group (P < 0.05).
126 and a decline of 0.48 points in the standard care group (SD = 13.3).
127 cross the VCs, including 737 in the standard care group and 710 in the RFP group.
128 d 143 (2%) of 6531 participants in the usual care group, on further scrutiny, did not meet all eligib
129 ficantly influence the pace of tele-critical care growth and adoption.
130 onsequence towards developing novel point-of-care hematological analyzers for resource-constrained se
131 ent-level characteristics and transfer acute care hospitals (ACHs) as risk factors for colonization.
132 ified; cases were attributed mostly to acute care hospitals (ACHs; 141, 50%) and skilled nursing faci
133 40%), and less frequently to long-term acute care hospitals (LTACHs; 29, 10%).
134 ive bacteremia conducted in 3 Swiss tertiary care hospitals between April 2017 and May 2019, with fol
135 d, placebo-controlled study done in 48 acute care hospitals in eight countries, we enrolled patients
136 ive database of all discharges from US acute care hospitals.
137 have studied 10 patients treated at 12 adult care hospitals.
138 ey offer for advancing research and clinical care, hurdles to be overcome, and the need for multidisc
139 wborn screening into existing primary health-care immunisation programmes is feasible and can rapidly
140                                  Standard-of-care immunosuppression in the recipients in the RGT resu
141 ws describing older patients' experiences of care in acute hospital settings.
142 more complex cases-is unique from palliative care in adults given its focus on care of the child and
143 Toure, the main source of pediatric tertiary care in Bamako, Mali.
144 ation (ADA) updates the Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes annually to provide clinicians, patient
145 -care and care partner contributions to self-care in dyads using the Self-care of Chronic Illness Inv
146 ician perspectives on challenging aspects of care in managing coronavirus disease 2019 patients, curr
147 l care services were preferred over standard care in nearly all 10 000 samples, at willingness-to-pay
148 ogists to profoundly re-organize oncological care in order to dramatically reduce hospital visits and
149 trolled trial of adding oseltamivir to usual care in patients aged 1 year and older presenting with i
150 ving checkpoint blockade are now standard of care in patients with advanced RCC.
151 th Service is the sole provider of emergency care in Scotland.
152 iveness of cabozantinib with best supportive care in the second-line treatment of advanced hepatocell
153 be safely incorporated into routine clinical care, in some cases leading to surgery with intent to cu
154 ortant patient clinical determinants of self-care included cognitive status, number of medications an
155 ary clinical responsibilities for ophthalmic care independently.
156                                              CaRe is a time-saving procedure that can purify lectins
157 a of challenges including acute and critical care management, long-term care and rehabilitation.
158  12-month intervention consisting of a nurse care manager with an interactive electronic registry, op
159 ction of clinical documentation with patient care, measures of patient acuity, quality metrics, resea
160 itors at 31 respiratory, sleep, and critical care medicine journals to consolidate contemporary best
161 d Professional Practice Evaluation, critical care medicine, healthcare quality, and The Joint Commiss
162 hrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care methods were used to assess risk of bias for the gl
163 l Candida species, undetected by standard-of-care methods.
164 as swallowing assessments, bowel and bladder care, mobility assessments, and consistent secondary pre
165 ators of the effect of integrated palliative care models on patient-reported outcomes and on developi
166 eveloping less resource-intensive integrated care models to address the diverse needs of this populat
167  photography findings compared with standard care (odds ratio, 2.07; 95% confidence interval, 0.98-4.
168 butions to self-care in dyads using the Self-care of Chronic Illness Inventory and the Caregiver Cont
169 ntory and the Caregiver Contribution to Self-care of Chronic Illness Inventory.
170 nal fluid (CSF) samples in children impacted care of hospitalized neonates and young infants.
171                      Transfer of the medical care of individuals with pediatric IEIs to adult facilit
172 r, disease-specific therapies to improve the care of patients with CKD.
173 e risks could meaningfully improve long-term care of patients with DLBCL.
174 ns involved in the diagnosis, management and care of patients with LGMDR3-6 created a European Sarcog
175 palliative care in adults given its focus on care of the child and the larger family.
176 ated its clinical practice guideline for the care of transgender persons on the basis of the best ava
177 rs of established U.S. and Canadian critical care organizations and provides a research agenda.
178 g health care workers and in enabling health care organizations to succeed and thrive.
179 utcome set is lacking for pediatric critical care outcomes.
180                                The amount of care parents provide to the offspring is complicated by
181          We measured patient's self-care and care partner contributions to self-care in dyads using t
182 nificantly moderated the association between care partner depressive symptomatology and survivor psyc
183 <0.05) and moderated the association between care partner depressive symptoms and care partner physic
184 between care partner depressive symptoms and care partner physical (B=0.05, P<0.001) and psychologica
185 development of outpatient and periprocedural care pathways.
186                                      Primary care patients with influenza-like illness treated with o
187 blastoma between 1989 and 2017 at a tertiary care pediatric hospital were analyzed.
188                  Participants, whose primary care physician considered them appropriate for medicatio
189 djustment for characteristics of the primary care physicians (PCPs), patients, and types of visit and
190 ided by surgeons in 52% of cases and primary care physicians in 16% of cases.
191 ormance, we evaluate the accuracy of primary care physicians to categorize skin lesion morphology in
192 roduces a gel-based separation-free point-of-care (POC) device for whole blood glucose colorimetric d
193                                     Point-of-care (POC) immunodiagnostic tests play a crucial role in
194 such exemptions at a Yale New Haven Hospital care practice between 2011 and 2017.
195 s blood tests were recruited from 32 primary care practices across Derbyshire, United Kingdom between
196 tools in primary care and relevant specialty care prevention settings, discuss the theory- and practi
197 ients for whom multiple previous standard-of-care preventive treatments had failed.
198                             Our ICU survivor care process results in decreased mortality and a net an
199 t savings to the insurer compared with usual care processes.
200                                        Wound care professionals rely heavily on images and image docu
201 uch interventions can be integrated into HIV-care programs in low-income settings.
202 ive oncology-encompassing primary palliative care provided by the multidisciplinary oncology team as
203 logy team as well as subspecialty palliative care provided by the palliative care team for more compl
204 ue prophylaxis in consultation with a health-care provider within a specified follow-up period.
205                                         Burn care providers are, therefore, faced with a plethora of
206 ncome families and support nondental primary care providers delivering preventive oral health service
207                     Individuals with primary care providers were most likely to start treatment.
208 ent of patients and both pediatric and adult care providers.
209                            Compared to usual care, PSM significantly reduced the risk of stroke (risk
210 aiming to reduce spending and improve health care quality among "superutilizers," patients with very
211 between malpractice risk measures and health care quality and safety outcomes.
212 s for nurses and may also affect the nursing care quality for patients.
213 PANTS: Multicenter, noninferiority, point-of-care randomized clinical trial including adults hospital
214 stroke symptoms in conjunction with standard care resulted in better functional outcomes at 90 days t
215 urvey in each catchment area to characterize care seeking for febrile illness.
216 ronic health record data to describe primary care services offered by US community health centers in
217 itivity analysis confirmed that transitional care services were preferred over standard care in nearl
218 zers," patients with very high use of health care services.
219 only experience discrimination in the health care setting, and they may not have access to medical pr
220 s with COVID-19, especially in the intensive care setting, despite a high utilization rate of thrombo
221 m a large, community-based integrated health care setting, we examined the risks of CRC and related d
222 udies of patient mortality in nonobstetrical care settings, 15 found no evidence of an association wi
223                                    In health care settings, N95 and surgical masks were probably asso
224 o vaccinations done in other types of health care settings.
225                                         This care should include bone-targeted agents to inhibit tumo
226           Estimates of US spending on health care showed substantial increases from 1996 through 2016
227 d with white race), and more recent entry to care (since 2005 compared with 1994-2004).
228 rate information about PrEP, and that health-care sites are prepared to provide quality care for tran
229 tibiotic use across inpatient and ambulatory care sites in an integrated healthcare system to priorit
230 tion of analytes in the field or at point-of-care situations.
231  was similarly correlated with higher health care spending (+$1500 per patient, P < 0.001) compared w
232 stent opioid use returned to baseline health care spending within 6 months, regardless of other compl
233 ons with and without TB at enrollment in HIV care, starting 9 months after clinic enrollment.
234 n of PrEP medication costs across the health care system are unknown.
235                     High costs to the health care system may hinder PrEP expansion.
236 domized trial conducted in the public health care system of Brazil, endovascular treatment within 8 h
237  entire communities, and cripples the health care system.
238 nch (Taeniopygia guttata), with a biparental caring system.
239 cipients while maintaining safety for health care systems in the backdrop of a virulent pandemic.
240 ntexts (e.g.,community, school, home, health care systems) are reviewed.
241 y palliative care provided by the palliative care team for more complex cases-is unique from palliati
242 been demonstrated, ranging from on-site skin care testing, to food safety to the most frequent in vit
243 culture was performed as part of standard-of-care testing.
244               We concentrate on the point-of-care tests and discuss the basis for new serologic tests
245  poorer primary and secondary CVD preventive care than other high-risk patients, and an unmet need ex
246 BP) management is a crucial part of critical care that directly affects morbidity and mortality.
247 ntly severe complications requiring critical care that induced significant short- and long-term morta
248                         In addition to usual care, the intervention group used devices to target mobi
249              Because time is brain in stroke care, the speed with which a patient with large vessel o
250     Patient characteristics and processes of care; the number, type, and cost of each wish; and semis
251 vironment while still providing high-quality care to a large cohort of patients with heart failure, h
252 ches are important for providing appropriate care to all people with OA, but despite the scale of the
253 rthopaedic surgery and specialist palliative care to minimize the impact of metastatic bone disease o
254 he Health Center Program provided safety-net care to more than 27 million persons, including 573 026
255 gnostic tests as the first test in antenatal care to support efforts to eliminate MTCT of HIV and syp
256 ab (genotyped group) or no genotyping (usual care) to guide antiplatelet drug selection.
257  Elevating these techniques into standard-of-care tools will transform patient stratification, diseas
258 zes a fraction of GBM to current standard of care treatment through the upregulation of DNA MMR.
259 from 12 cAMR patients who failed standard of care treatment with intravenous immune globulin + rituxi
260 1 to FAi or sham (injection plus standard of care) treatment.
261 edition is expected to better drive clinical care, treatment recommendations, and future research.
262 1 domain following admission to an intensive care unit (ICU) for respiratory or cardiovascular organ
263                                    Intensive care unit (ICU) patients or patients requiring mechanica
264 and 26.8% (n = 30) admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU).
265 ung abnormality were predictors of intensive care unit admission or death.
266                                    Intensive care unit admission was required for 27 patients (8.8%)
267                                    Intensive care unit admissions increased for RSVH (from 54.5% to 6
268 s, admitted to the palliative and supportive care unit at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer
269  patients to the limited number of intensive care unit beds or facilities.
270 nts with SD admitted to a tertiary intensive care unit in Malaysia.
271  handgrip strength, delirium rate, intensive care unit mortality, hospital mortality, and physical fu
272 was noted between VL, admission to intensive care unit, length of oxygen support, and overall surviva
273 ent of up to 4% of children in the intensive care unit.
274 mprove the outcomes of patients in intensive care units (ICUs).
275 s old were recruited from 119 public primary care units, including all 26 state capitals and the Fede
276 c measures to avoid an overflow of intensive care units.
277 disconnection and characteristics and health care use of adults applying for such exemptions at a Yal
278 re were no significant differences in health care use or missed workdays.
279  inpatient professional fees, and post-acute care utilization.
280                 Readmission for ICU survivor care versus usual care: at 30 days (10.4% vs 26.3%; stab
281 mprove patient access to high-quality cancer care via telemedicine.
282 eceding 12 months were presumed not to be in care, viral load suppression (<200 copies per mL) was ba
283 an individual must continue to attend health-care visits or discontinue prophylaxis in consultation w
284 linkage to HIV care, frequency of outpatient care visits, retention in care and viral suppression.
285                  In reference to directives, care was adapted in 71% of European, 50% of Asian, and 4
286                                    Follow-up care was coordinated with local physicians.
287 l predictors, the financial burden of cancer care was highest for Turkey (euro 25.18 million), follow
288 ospital where the patient reported receiving care were acquired for adjudication, not just those for
289                     Patients receiving mixed care were also analyzed based on percentage of time in I
290 ercome social and structural barriers to HIV care will be required to reach national targets of the e
291 rates were calculated for each woman-year in care with testing.
292 these patients require specialised life-long care, with implications for their families.
293 t chemotherapy should remain the standard of care, with the OS rate being among the highest reported
294 that the BEM can be prepared at the point-of-care within 26 min using fresh blood, it can be easily d
295  generosity is critical in supporting health care workers and in enabling health care organizations t
296 PCR) in seropositive and seronegative health care workers attending testing of asymptomatic and sympt
297 onsiderations for exposed or infected health care workers, risk stratification and management strateg
298 rsons, such as exposed inpatients and health care workers.
299 yses and perspective of a survey of critical care workforce, workload, and burnout among the intensiv
300 mon cause of death for patients in intensive care worldwide due to a dysregulated host response to in

 
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