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1 mortality even in the modern era of critical care management.
2 ith disease management, case management, and care management.
3 th emphasis on information enhancing primary care management.
4 function; it was severe, requiring intensive care management.
5 ous important sequelae that require critical care management.
6 tent depressive symptoms after usual primary care management.
7 rns of staff interaction and styles of child care management.
8 reassessment, activities of daily living and care management.
9 0.001) were significant determinants of self-care management.
10 ty were associated with lower levels of self-care management.
11 cacy and self-care maintenance, but not self-care management.
12 (50% versus 7%; P<0.01), requiring intensive care management.
13 ble information facilitating optimal patient care management.
14 mprove outcomes compared with usual HF nurse care management.
15 patients who require anaesthesia or critical care management.
16 in reversing the current culture of critical care management.
17 pport holds promise as a method for diabetes care management.
18        Resource barriers complicate diabetes care management.
19  facilitated access and continuity via nurse care management.
20 ing plans for the quality of chronic disease care management (76.2% vs 77.1%; difference, 1.0% [95% C
21                             Nurses conducted care management activities.
22      Only 40% of patients required intensive care management after surgery.
23 are management alone, and psychotherapy plus care management all had lower costs per quality-adjusted
24                         Psychotherapy alone, care management alone, and psychotherapy plus care manag
25                Comprehensive care and proper care management also substantially benefit institutions
26 t participation rates were 97% for telephone care management and 93% for telephone care management pl
27 ce, a structured telephone program including care management and cognitive behavioral psychotherapy h
28                   With advances in intensive care management and goal-directed interventions, early s
29 l were associated with the need for critical care management and longer hospitalization.
30 re associated with greater use of structured care management and performance feedback.
31  determinants of self-care maintenance, self-care management and self-care confidence in patients wit
32 betes influences self-care maintenance, self-care management and self-care confidence of heart failur
33   (1) To compare self-care maintenance, self-care management and self-care confidence of patients wit
34                  Self-care maintenance, self-care management and self-care confidence were measured w
35 t treatment, a telephone program integrating care management and structured cognitive-behavioral psyc
36                          Promising models of care management and team approaches to coordination and
37 ervices should plan for appropriate critical care management and/or transfer of women with severe mor
38 gram, which provides assessment, monitoring, care management, and brief therapies for MH symptoms and
39 ce of the primary care setting in concussion care management, and demonstrate the potential for EHR s
40 of quality (preventive care, chronic disease care management, and maternity care).
41 v.6.2 to measure self-care maintenance, self-care management, and self-care confidence.
42 imary care expert and who offered education, care management, and support of antidepressant managemen
43                      To document pathways of care, management, and interval from onset of symptoms to
44       The HQP model of community-based nurse care management appeared to reduce all-cause mortality i
45                        Patients in the nurse care management arm attended a nurse practitioner-led se
46 isms by which critical illness and intensive care management associate with depressive symptoms merit
47      Patients received 2 years of home-based care management by a nurse practitioner and social worke
48     Intervention patients received 1 year of care management by an interdisciplinary team led by an a
49 ithm-based recommendations to physicians and care management by care managers.
50 hobia, obsession, compulsion, posttraumatic, care management, case management, collaborative care, en
51                                      Chronic care management (CCM) has been proposed as an approach t
52    A new non-visit-based payment for chronic care management (CCM) of Medicare patients took effect i
53               Patients who received critical care management (CCM) were generally sicker, received mo
54 ent guidelines tailored for the elderly with care management compared with usual care.
55                                     Critical care management components such as the initial fluid res
56                                     Dementia care management (DCM) can increase the quality of care f
57 ether use of a collaborative-care depression care management (DCM) intervention could improve outcome
58                     Collaborative depression care management (DCM), by addressing barriers disproport
59                                      Primary care management decisions for patients with symptomatic
60  evaluations and making well-informed health care management decisions.
61                          Monitoring alone or care management delivered by an MH professional.
62                                   Pharmacist care management delivered through secure patient Web com
63 re patient Web site training plus pharmacist care management delivered through Web communications.
64 ciodemographic and medical attributes, nurse care management did not statistically significantly redu
65 translate into increased involvement in self-care management (e.g. adjusting diuretic dose) or the ab
66 score and 6 subscales: access/communication, care management, external coordination, patient tracking
67 Primary Care Practice Demonstration provided care management fees and technical assistance to a natio
68 een initiative and comparison practices when care-management fees were not taken into account (-$11;
69  Medicare Parts A and B after accounting for care-management fees, nor have they shown an appreciable
70            Support included the provision of care-management fees, the opportunity to earn shared sav
71 ceived a median of $115,000 per clinician in care-management fees.
72          Patients received standard critical care management for intracerebral hemorrhage.
73 sought to evaluate whether enhancing primary care management for persistent asthma with telephone-bas
74 rmalities, nutritional support, and critical care management for respiratory and renal failure were n
75 n care consisting of a depression screen and care management for those depressed vs usual care.
76 cietal perspective, screening and depression care management for workers result in an incremental cos
77 to the monitoring alone group and 509 to the care management group; 377 and 401 completed >/=2 resear
78 tention-to-treat analyses, the RPS and nurse care management groups did not differ in time-to-first a
79 itoring alone) or MH symptom monitoring plus care management (hereafter care management) provided by
80  Of 109 patients, 16 (15%) required critical care management in the early postoperative phase (group
81                                      Chronic care management included longitudinal care coordinated w
82                               Protocol-based care management, including structured assessment, action
83 cian, and care coordination; usual care plus care management integrated with a structured 8-session c
84  were randomly assigned to a telephone-based care management intervention (n = 116) or to notificatio
85 he authors tested a population-based medical care management intervention designed to improve primary
86 s, and financial sustainability of a medical care management intervention for community mental health
87                                The telephone care management intervention included up to 5 outreach c
88 e Trial (PROSPECT) evaluated the impact of a care management intervention on suicidal ideation and de
89 were randomly assigned to either the medical care management intervention or usual care.
90 omparing a telephone-delivered collaborative care management intervention vs usual care in 250 patien
91                                     Dementia care management is a model of collaborative care, define
92                  These findings suggest that care management is a promising approach for improving me
93 e level of care (ie, symptom monitoring plus care management) is associated with more favorable indiv
94                    Over 24 months, telephone care management led to a gain of 29 depression-free days
95  determine if modified approaches to primary care management may be more effective.
96     To test the effectiveness of a geriatric care management model on improving the quality of care f
97 home occupational therapy to a collaborative care management model slowed the rate of functional decl
98 home occupational therapy to a collaborative care management model slowed the rate of functional decl
99 ority examined the impact of care on patient care management (n = 17), six focused on comparisons of
100 omized by physician to receive collaborative care management (n = 84) or augmented usual care (n = 69
101 s and Sexuality," and "Economic Constraints, Care & Management of Disease").
102 s and Sexuality", and "Economic constraints, Care & Management of Disease").
103  as a clinically useful tool in the critical care management of aSAH patients by allowing for early p
104 acterize the timing, severity, and intensive care management of cytokine release syndrome after chime
105 ed-care programme with usual care in primary-care management of depression in low-income women in San
106 ted a study to determine whether coordinated care management of multiple conditions improves disease
107                                      Primary care management of obstructive sleep apnea vs usual care
108 articipate in the resuscitation and critical care management of patients soon after they have suffere
109 ge about the anesthesiological and intensive care management of patients undergoing HIPEC.
110 in the perinatal and perioperative intensive care management of patients with a single ventricle.
111  The present consensus details the intensive care management of patients with acute liver failure.
112 rize recent concepts regarding the intensive care management of patients with subarachnoid haemorrhag
113           Unfortunately, traditional primary-care management of pediatric mental disorders is charact
114 h care costs, suggesting that more effective care management of psychiatric and medical disease contr
115 e., based on good evidence) of the intensive care management of severe head injury with the developme
116                                Neurocritical care management of traumatic brain injury continues to e
117  anticoagulation, quality of anticoagulation care, management of major and minor bleeding, and treatm
118 s were demonstrated in studies of preventive care, management of osteoarthritis, cardiac rehabilitati
119 inders, performance feedback, and structured care management on a survey; their responses were used t
120       Noninvasive ventilation, a standard-of-care management option for sleep-disordered breathing, c
121                               More intensive care management or specialty treatment may be needed to
122 fluence self-care maintenance (p=0.12), self-care management (p=0.21) or self-care confidence (p=0.51
123 ed this was not associated with greater self-care management, particularly if the patient's emotional
124                                              Care management plus psychotherapy led to a gain of 46 d
125 ephone care management and 93% for telephone care management plus psychotherapy.
126                                          The care management plus telephone psychotherapy interventio
127                                    Organized care management processes (CMPs) can improve health care
128                    A telephonic outreach and care management program encouraged workers to enter outp
129                                The telephone care management program had smaller effects on patient-r
130 al primary care; usual care plus a telephone care management program including at least 3 outreach ca
131                             Also, costs of a care management program under fee-for-service reimbursem
132                         A targeted telephone care-management program was successful in reducing medic
133                                        Nurse care management programs for patients with chronic illne
134 e that primary care depression screening and care management programs with staff assistance, such as
135 e II trial to assess whether a neurocritical care management protocol could improve brain tissue oxyg
136                                     Dementia care management provided by specifically trained nurses
137                                        Nurse care management provided structured telephone surveillan
138 m monitoring plus care management (hereafter care management) provided by an MH professional.
139 ls and then randomized to a stepped combined care management, psychopharmacology, and cognitive behav
140 centage point improvement in chronic disease care management quality (95% CI, -5.8 to 6.2); 0.7-perce
141          Integrated and home-based geriatric care management resulted in improved quality of care and
142 l materials and information on how to access care management services.
143  monitoring alone, individuals randomized to care management showed greater improvements in the 3 dom
144                                     Dementia care management significantly decreased behavioral and p
145                                     Dementia care management significantly increased quality of life
146                        Current neurocritical care management strategies are focused on the prevention
147 tudy was to compare the effects of two acute-care management strategies on the frequency of jugular v
148               PT is a cost-effective primary care management strategy for low back pain.
149 ts to assess the effect of a telephone-based care-management strategy on medical costs and resource u
150                Electronic health records and care management systems can improve care, but interventi
151 nce base on cost-effective and generalizable care management techniques to reduce readmission is stil
152 gic treatment, nonpharmacologic therapy, and care management; to summarize the results of these studi
153 udies suggest that a strategy of standard-of-care management together with a goal to suppress BNP or
154 inpatients with cardiac disease as part of a care management trial, an iterative 3-step screening pro
155                                      Medical care management was associated with significant improvem
156                                      Primary care management was noninferior to specialist management
157                                     Dementia care management was provided for 6 months at the homes o
158                                     Dementia care management was targeted at the individual patient l
159 ion in practices that implemented depression care management were less likely to die over a 5-year pe
160 edication adherence, sodium intake, and self-care management) were collected from 109 patients with h
161 ics, and integrated environmental and health-care management will be needed to ensure elimination.
162 ian, provided guideline-based, collaborative care management, with the goal of controlling risk facto
163 have already become integrated into critical care management without adequate evaluation.

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