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1 alian hepatitis C virus-infected patients in care).
2 appropriately used to improve the quality of care.
3 fficient, evidence-based, and quality health care.
4 d important advance for future mental health care.
5  higher disease control are warranted in CRS care.
6 R at baseline and after 6-months of standard care.
7 logists for the growing challenges of kidney care.
8  the surveillance and survivorship phases of care.
9 common chromosomal anomalies during prenatal care.
10 ide users with more flexible choices in self-care.
11 ts to support its use over standard clinical care.
12 rect antibiotic prescription at the point of care.
13 CDEF bundle through team- and evidence-based care.
14 predictor of mortality and may aid in sepsis care.
15 ge, view a one minute nature video, or usual care.
16 ed cost, and the ability to link patients to care.
17  thrombectomy and 893 were assigned standard care.
18 ntral venous access as part of their medical care.
19 social, and accessibility barriers to health care.
20 ly alter the current paradigm of AHF patient care.
21 isplatin+pemetrexed, the current standard of care.
22 ices, and an increasing need for end-of-life care.
23 rvices to ensure they are receiving holistic care.
24 ronment for the timely escalation of patient care.
25 ence and risk factors in acute and long-term care.
26 ural hospital for their emergency department care.
27  better understanding of where patients seek care.
28 e of diagnosed ocular disease and use of eye care.
29 completed each stage of the HCV Continuum of Care.
30 ression and other aspects of post-transplant care.
31  might be integrated into enhancing clinical care.
32 ry 2005, and she received subsequent routine care.
33 ontacted in person by the tracer, and out of care.
34 ted with higher odds of reporting use of eye care.
35 vation myocardial infarction at the point of care.
36 further bridge the quality chasm in dialysis care.
37 either an NT-proBNP-guided strategy or usual care.
38 ness, cockroaches, and poor access to health care.
39    59 Dutch nursing home wards for long-term care.
40 600 mg intravenous zanamivir, or standard-of-care (75 mg oral oseltamivir) twice a day for 5-10 days;
41 fferences in socioeconomic status and health-care access play a key role.
42 ir offspring's demands, and adjust levels of care accordingly.
43 s major concerns in the delivery of critical care across Latin America, particularly in human resourc
44  newly diagnosed cancer after the Affordable Care Act (ACA).
45 of Medicaid eligibility under the Affordable Care Act is a state-level decision that affects how pati
46  counselling with those in people who sought care after counselling.
47 ics, incentives and policies, and quality of care, all of which diminish its preparedness to care for
48 ptide (NT-proBNP) levels compared with usual care alone.
49 ssociations between nurses' staffing, missed care and 30-day in-patient mortality.
50 of anaphylaxis would greatly improve medical care and advice for these patients as the parasite can b
51 xpensive molecular detection at the point-of-care and at home with minimal or no instrumentation, it
52 ith particular importance to routine patient care and clinical trial design.
53 ines the effectiveness of a patient-centered care and engagement program in the medical ICU.
54 cember 31, 2014, based on all Swedish health care and including 2655 patients who underwent laparosco
55 eviews, would contribute to improved patient care and inform future research.
56 are is significantly more limited than adult care and is decreasing disproportionately.
57 Effects of day shift length on continuity of care and relationships; Effects of day shift length on c
58 erum creatinine was not superior to standard care and resulted in more complications.
59  critical to the provision of quality health care and thus is an essential component of nurse educati
60                              Improvements in care and treatment have led to more young adults with li
61 supported high-need participants through HCV care and treatment, and SVR rates demonstrate the real-w
62  of recommendations for institutional animal care and use committees and institutional officials to e
63           There is a need to ensure that the care and welfare for fish maintained in the laboratory a
64 rol group in the domains of self-care, usual care, and anxiety and depression, and a lower EuroQol vi
65 ad to improved nurses' knowledge, quality of care, and patient outcomes.
66 inical practice guidelines to inform patient care, and those establishing policies for guideline deve
67 oxin administration and meticulous intensive care are essential for optimal outcome.
68                                    Inputs to care are poorly correlated with provision of evidence-ba
69 should be considered one of the standards of care as a less toxic alternative to WBRT for this patien
70 bacter baumannii is a common cause of health care associated infections worldwide.
71                                   770 health-care-associated infections were reported in 726 children
72                       We analysed linkage to care at 6 months (defined as 1-LTFU) as the primary outc
73 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.05-1.16), and care at a National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated cen
74 iduals discharged from inpatient psychiatric care at least once before their 15th birthday (n = 5882)
75                A few patients (19.2%) sought care at teaching hospitals.
76                          METHODS AND Primary care attendees aged 18-65 years screened with moderately
77  abstinence over 3 months among male primary care attendees with harmful drinking in a setting in Ind
78 h-care outcomes in people who sought medical care before IBCM counselling with those in people who so
79 rospective evaluation of the use of point-of-care BLAST by ASPs.
80 ed as necessary for the provision of quality care, but have not been examined in detail.
81 tic resonance promises to transform clinical care by advancing pathophysiologic understanding and fos
82 oughput has the potential to improve patient care by providing faster detection of drug-resistant inf
83 r respiratory viruses might improve clinical care by reducing unnecessary antibiotic use, shortening
84                 Work to close the gap in the care cascade by race is imperative, as are efforts to in
85   Enumerating the losses at each step in the care cascade enables appropriate targeting of interventi
86 atients with DR at a peripheral tertiary eye care center of Nepal.
87 am at the University of Michigan, a tertiary care center.
88 ed withdrawal phase 2a trial in 25 secondary care centres in Denmark, Estonia, France, Germany, Italy
89 m HCV screening for patients seen in primary care clinic (1) born between 1945 and 1965, (2) who lack
90 ms or signs consistent with STEMI at primary care clinics, small hospitals, and PCI hospitals in the
91 evelopment and commercialization of point-of-care combination tests capable of detecting markers of i
92              The median time from palliative care consultation to death was 10 hours (interquartile r
93 dom assignment 2:1 to CGM (n = 105) or usual care (control group; n = 53).
94 sociated with significantly increased health care costs after 4 common surgical procedures.
95 tes and are associated with increased health care costs.
96 d vision insurance, a usual place for health care, currently driving, a greater number of comorbiditi
97 eath, which was assessed via national health care databases.
98 patients should be offered specialist expert care delivered by experienced multidisciplinary teams in
99 ldhood obesity, with implications for health-care delivery and obesity prevention strategies.
100 ness of a wearable patient sensor to improve care delivery and patient outcomes by increasing the tot
101 nowledge of the role of insurance and health-care delivery systems in protecting the health of diabet
102 he effects of disease, the quality of health-care delivery, and treatment efficacy across various dis
103 ntation of amplification methods in point-of-care diagnostic devices and devices to be used in resour
104 n a wide range of fields, including point-of-care diagnostics or cellular in vivo biosensing when usi
105 requires that families who get needed health care do not suffer financial hardship as a result.
106 ter alia that families who get needed health care do not suffer undue financial hardship as a result.
107 h increased insurance coverage and access to care during the second year of implementation, but it wa
108 al was randomly assigned to switch to "HEART care," during which physicians calculated the HEART scor
109 rt appeared to be more likely to discontinue care early, and this outcome appeared to be independent
110 emes: Effects of day shift length on patient care; Effects of day shift length on continuity of care
111 1-28 day cycle for </=6 cycles]) or standard care (either fludarabine plus cytarabine plus granulocyt
112 , subsequent treatments received, and health care encounters, was determined.
113 ighlight the importance of prompt diagnosis, care engagement, and optimum management of comorbidities
114 ormation yielded will lead to better patient care, enhanced patient safety, and ultimately facilitate
115 ending physicians in a variety of ambulatory care environments.
116 randomised to either HAP plus enhanced usual care (EUC) (n = 247) or EUC alone (n = 248), of whom 95%
117 s from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence [NICE] and the pan-Canadian Oncology Dru
118 or skin cancer diagnosis compared with usual care (face-to-face [FTF] diagnosis)?
119 men and racial/ethnic groups across critical care fellowship types.
120 e, all of which diminish its preparedness to care for a fifth of the world's population, which is age
121 mary care providers to deliver best-practice care for complex conditions to underserved populations.
122 e data support ongoing efforts to centralize care for patients undergoing PD.
123 hether genotyping should be part of standard care for patients with age-related macular degeneration
124 real-world conditions, to improve quality of care for patients with serious mental illness and cardio
125 management (DCM) can increase the quality of care for people with dementia.
126 with intercalated surgery is the standard of care for resectable OS in those younger than 40 years.
127  and non-accommodation states) reported they cared for a pediatric patient whose family requested con
128 ht some of the more controversial aspects of caring for patients with anorectal malformation and offe
129 ebate by people living with cancer and those caring for them.
130 the intervention group (n = 174) or standard care group (n = 197); 89.2% of participants completed th
131 oup versus 28.7% (11.2-49.1) in the standard care group.
132 essed by IOM-compliant pulmonary or critical care guidelines were addressed by expert panels using a
133 ulate providers' adherence to evidence-based care guidelines.
134 fter diagnosis of T18 or T13, counseling and care have traditionally been based on assumptions that t
135                Respiratory ICU of a tertiary care hospital in North India.
136 eak of Mycobacterium abscessus at a tertiary care hospital.
137 ast reconstruction at an academic ambulatory care hospital.
138    We ascertained outcomes (death, return to care, hospital admission, other hospital contact, alive
139                       We used linked primary care, hospitalization, disease registry, and mortality d
140 P were assessed for matched samples of acute care hospitals (the number of hospitals included in the
141 ons for delivering high-quality dermatologic care, improving access, and capturing other telemedicine
142      The majority of Kenyans actively sought care; improving diagnostic and treatment capacity in the
143 gy consultation services may improve patient care in a cost-effective manner.
144 rmatology can improve access to dermatologic care in a public safety-net hospital setting.
145 ial requirement to guarantee optimal patient care in modern health care systems.
146 imely linkage and sustained retention in HIV care in Mozambique.
147  In April 2007, the agency overseeing cancer care in Ontario, Canada, implemented a policy to regiona
148 eting study criteria, 18 611 (5.9%) received care in patient-centered medical homes.
149 obalization of medical education on surgical care in Peru from the perspective of Peruvian surgeons w
150 Q-LNS to ill children presenting for primary care in rural Gambia had a very small effect on linear g
151 italized patients, including those receiving care in specialist palliative care units.
152 cialized surveillance compared with standard care in the community.
153 ffectiveness of patient- and family-centered care in the intensive care setting.
154 s observed on FCM, compared with standard of care in the primary analysis, this effect was highly sen
155  correlated with provision of evidence-based care in these 4 clinical services.
156 ual access to preventive services and cancer care in this setting, we found higher mortality for AIAN
157 recent findings regarding personalization of care, including factors that predict patient outcomes an
158  to Crh, likely contributed to the augmented care-induced phenotype, including diminished depression-
159 ingapore National Eye Centre, a tertiary eye care institute.
160 ed causes, attitudes toward early palliative care integration, and patient-parent concordance.
161 l care (UC) (n = 75) or UC plus a palliative care intervention (UC + PAL) (n = 75) at a single center
162 eir relationships to the receipt of critical care intervention and inhospital mortality were determin
163 n Failure Assessment for predicting critical care intervention was 38%.
164                            With CPG-directed care, intra-abdominal abscess rate decreased from 0.24 t
165 eir families may not need or want palliative care involvement early in the disease trajectory.
166 ized disease diagnosis anywhere that patient care is administered.
167 vailability of definitive pediatric hospital care is significantly more limited than adult care and i
168                                   As primary care is the first point of healthcare contact for most c
169 Technologic advances are leading to point-of-care kits that incorporate nucleic acid-based assays, in
170 ary analysis shows that, when added to usual care, liraglutide resulted in lower rates of the develop
171                                     Dementia care management (DCM) can increase the quality of care f
172                 Improving quality of medical care may be necessary, but not sufficient, to improve th
173 tify patients wishing to focus on palliative care measures.
174                           ICUs at a tertiary care medical center.
175 cantly younger and had more severe intensive care medical conditions (hemodynamic, biological, renal,
176  and risk factors for burnout among critical care medicine physician assistants.
177  A transition to a 24/7 in-house intensivist care model was associated with a reduction in postoperat
178 condition is a core component in the Chronic Care Model.
179 ing high cure rates using patient navigation care models.
180 payment methods evolve, these new systems of care must continue to serve the needs of children.
181 ectively deploy registered nurses in primary care needed to assure efficient, evidence-based, and qua
182 4 years and women 3.0 years with substantial care needs, and most will live in the community.
183 on, other hospital contact, alive but not in care, no information) after disengagement until 30 June
184 design was used to collect data from primary care NPs.
185  sensitivities (95% CI) for the two critical care nurses when using the Arabic CAM-ICU compared with
186    Lack of knowledge about effective primary care nursing roles and responsibilities challenges polic
187 ne provides recommendations for the clinical care of adult patients with astrocytic and oligodendrogl
188 uracy of billing claim codes used during the care of diabetic retinopathy is a necessary precursor to
189 ians and patients and improving the standard care of patients.
190 d precision medicine for optimizing clinical care of these individuals.
191 effect of high-dose spironolactone and usual care on N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-pr
192  data support nivolumab as a new standard-of-care option in this setting.
193 HRs) should be the standard for large health care organizations for delivering high-quality dermatolo
194           As insurance networks, accountable care organizations, and alternative payment methods evol
195                           We compared health-care outcomes in people who sought medical care before I
196 the United States and has improved access to care, outcomes, and patient satisfaction.
197 d specialty care program, to usual community care over 2 years.
198 atients' perspective of this disease and its care pathways.
199  and treatment of HCV infection in a primary care patient panel with and without the implementation o
200  produces modest fever reduction in critical care patients, along with clinically important reduction
201  which suggests that challenges in access to care persist.
202 n an office visit by a UPMC-employed primary care physician (PCP) in 2014.
203                                    9 primary care physicians (PCPs) and 100 generally healthy patient
204 cohort of all comprehensive Medicaid managed care plans (N = 390) during the interval 2006-2014.
205 intended to develop next generation point-of-care (POC) detection system.
206 is the lack of a rapid and accurate point-of-care (PoC) device that can perform these measurements fr
207                                     Point-of-care (POC) diagnostic testing platforms are a growing se
208 essive mobility program in the neurocritical care population has clinical and financial benefits asso
209 ll-controlled asthma in this study's primary care population increased from 48% to 54%.
210 sessed attitudes about specialist palliative care presence and integration into the ICU setting, as w
211 opeptides have been associated with parental care previously, but all have roles in predicted behavio
212 ronary intervention has become a standard-of-care procedure over the past 40 years.
213   Yet, machine learning, which supports this care process has been limited to categorical results.
214                              Uptake of 4 key care processes increased after prehospital catheterizati
215 rabens may be added to cosmetic and personal care products for preservation purposes.
216 -depth interviews were conducted with health care professionals based in the UK who prescribe cathete
217                                       Health care professionals do not adequately stratify risk or pr
218                                Dental health care professionals should consider CBCT imaging only whe
219 patients when planning their work, by health care professionals, and by social insurance officers.
220 mber of telephone calls and emails to health care professionals, patient-reported convenience and sat
221 , compared NAVIGATE, a coordinated specialty care program, to usual community care over 2 years.
222  as acceptability of 23 published palliative care prompts (triggers) for specialist consultation.
223 dren, we sought to investigate the safety of care provided to children in this setting.
224 are truly attributable to differences in the care provided.
225 f Clalit Health Services, the largest health care provider in Israel.
226 dication adherence among a sample of primary care providers and their black and white hypertensive pa
227 e, and therefore, also by total cost for eye care providers compared with all other providers (38% vs
228 care Outcomes (Project ECHO) enables primary care providers to deliver best-practice care for complex
229 actice advisory" (BPA) that prompted primary care providers to perform HCV screening for patients see
230 n outcome measures include proportion of eye care providers who assess patients' smoking status, educ
231  the incidence of the NPs serving as primary care providers with their own patient panel doubled.
232 cognition and immediate management by health care providers.
233 vice-level interventions intended to improve care quality.
234                                       Health care reform and surgical education are often separated f
235 Effective viral load monitoring and point-of-care resistance tests could help to mitigate the emergen
236  infarction (STEMI) in settings where health-care resources are scarce.
237                                          Eye care resources should be mobilized for EVD survivors in
238 ifestyle intervention compared with standard care resulted in a change in glycemic control that did n
239                          Perspective: Health care sector.
240 ystem towards realizing a reusable, point-of-care sensor that snugly fits around a smartphone and whi
241                       The delivery of health-care services generates considerable greenhouse gas emis
242 ession were recruited from health and social care services in the UK.
243           INTERPRETATION: In China's primary care setting, pragmatic interventions on antimicrobial s
244 t- and family-centered care in the intensive care setting.
245 or opioid use disorder (OUD) in U.S. primary care settings would expand access to treatment for this
246 ; however, its performance in routine health care settings, where adherence to drug treatment is unsu
247 e-led self-management interventions to usual care Seven electronic databases, including British Nursi
248 ld avoid the use of CT/angio, and particular care should be taken in the 30-50-year-old age group, du
249 e patients can choose to bypass any level of care, simulations suggest that a system of managed refer
250 ociations with individual and primary health-care site characteristics, using mixed models.
251 lvic physiotherapy (PPT) vs standard medical care (SMC) in children with FC.
252 rom the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Adult Patient Database and a nested cohort
253 isits (2010-2013 National Ambulatory Medical Care Surveys) and 108472 hospital stays (2010 National H
254 reening quality initiative in a large health care system and to determine if the intervention was ass
255 y initiative was conducted in a large health care system in western Pennsylvania (University of Pitts
256 el, which used a lifetime horizon and health care system perspective, was applied to the PITER cohort
257     Costs were assessed from the U.S. health care system perspective.
258   Multiple hospital sites of the Aravind Eye Care System, India.
259 l was associated with distrust in the health care system.
260  in quality of life, and costs to the health care system.
261 eening is widely implemented in large health care systems in the United States.
262 n substantial burden for patients and health care systems, and given the aging of the population worl
263 rantee optimal patient care in modern health care systems.
264  patients) interact with locoregional health care systems.
265 le solution is in highly demand for point of care test.
266 at potential for the development of point-of-care testing (POCT) devices that can be applied in healt
267                               Rapid point-of-care testing (POCT) for respiratory viruses might improv
268 y to develop inexpensive, reliable, point-of-care tests to diagnose infection.
269 an average of approximately 11 more hours of care than white stroke survivors without substantial dif
270 o provide speculative insight into models of care that attenuate the weekend effect.
271 ich they increase cost and the categories of care that drive this increase are poorly described.
272           As a proponent of patient-centered care, the American College of Physicians (ACP) is attent
273 ty, we used data from direct observations of care to calculate providers' adherence to evidence-based
274 onnaire, CAPTURE (COPD Assessment in Primary Care to Identify Undiagnosed Respiratory Disease and Exa
275 brain radiotherapy (WBRT) is the standard of care to improve intracranial control following resection
276 ment, evidence analysis, and family-centered care to revise the 2007 Clinical Practice Guidelines for
277                        Clusters were primary care township hospitals in two counties of Guangxi provi
278 ning for medical setbacks; and 5) disruptive care transitions.
279 d therefore, is not compatible with point-of-care treatment.
280 August 15, 2012, and June 25, 2015, to usual care (UC) (n = 75) or UC plus a palliative care interven
281  neurons as a novel contributor to intensive care unit acquired weakness.
282  death/stroke, procedural success, intensive care unit and hospital length-of-stay, and rates of disc
283 physical therapy evaluation in the intensive care unit and the hospital, and mean days of physical th
284           Duration of ventilation, intensive care unit stay, and mortality (6, 17, and 29% for the th
285 equal to 300 mm Hg admitted to the intensive care unit.
286                                Two Intensive Care Units in a large Academic Medical Center in Califor
287  children admitted to the pediatric critical care units on designated study days (n = 994).
288 ac arrest who were hospitalized in intensive care units or general inpatient units were studied.
289 iving mechanical ventilation in 36 intensive care units, with daily collection of ventilation and wea
290                                     Critical care units.
291 hose receiving care in specialist palliative care units.
292                 Clinical outcomes and health care use through 6 months were obtained from medical rec
293 iation between race/ethnicity and palliative care use within and between the different hospital strat
294 matched control group in the domains of self-care, usual care, and anxiety and depression, and a lowe
295 ided iCBT was compared with a control (usual care, waiting list, or attention control) in individuals
296 w-up HSCT (inotuzumab ozogamicin vs standard care) was 1.227 (97.5% CI 0.656-2.292; one-sided stratif
297 ning the impact of globalization on surgical care were developed as part of simultaneous data collect
298          18 089 adults receiving HIV medical care who participated in the Medical Monitoring Project
299           Among adults presenting to primary care with acute sore throat, a single dose of oral dexam
300 he best value proposition: better quality of care with lower costs.
301 tion to the emergency department for medical care within 24h of a physical injury, evidence of anatom

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