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1 s to engage the general public in monitoring community health.
2 oad investigative scope of basic research to community health.
3 which we argue are a good measure of general community health.
4  could greatly enhance individual as well as community health.
5 eficiency virus (HIV) infections and improve community health.
6 haring of resources help ensure survival and community health.
7 tier will become increasingly concerned with community health and social justice.
8  and blood pressure control may be important community health and treatment goals to prevent LV hyper
9  beverage intake and LUTS in the Boston Area Community Health (BACH) cohort (n = 4,144) between 2002
10  and Hispanic men and women, the Boston Area Community Health (BACH) Survey has added to our limited
11 ified during the census who did not attend a community health campaign were tracked using global posi
12 ch community, we did 2 week multiple-disease community health campaigns (CHCs) that included HIV test
13             Of these, 324 were enrolled from community health campaigns and 76 from the government cl
14 -positive individuals (aged >=18 years) from community health campaigns that included HIV testing ser
15                              52 multidisease community health campaigns were held throughout the prog
16 nity mapping, household census, multidisease community health campaigns, and home-based tracking in t
17     In 1996-2000, vaccine was distributed to community health care clinicians, who vaccinated eligibl
18 5 patients from hospice, long-term care, and community health care facilities near the end of their l
19 ion was undertaken in acute care and primary/community health care settings in Australia, Canada, Eng
20                             The local Kenyan community health care workers readily accepted the Peek
21 nt of scientific uncertainty in provision of community health care.
22  and play (early care and education, school, community, health care, home).
23 to raise awareness of acute kidney injury in community health-care settings, especially in LICs.
24 cular testing for symptomatic individuals by community health-care workers; and quarantine centres, f
25 of the jail staff (n=121), and patients at a community health center (n=214).
26 ross-sectional study were mothers visiting a community health center for their infants'/toddlers' imm
27 he usual-care group at a federally qualified community health center in Alabama.
28 gible, non-pregnant PLWH accessing care in a community health center in Gugulethu Township affiliated
29 r 450 women over 18 years of age attending a community health center in Gugulethu, South Africa.
30  were 328 middle-aged and older women from a community health center in Taiwan.
31 teria may detect approximately half of adult community health center patients with undiagnosed dysgly
32 mmendation in detecting dysglycemia among US community health center patients.
33                   Eighty infants attending a community health center received 16,700 IU weekly or pla
34 aged 6-23 mo, conditional upon attendance at community health centers (CHCs) during the first 1000 d
35 e US government is expanding the capacity of community health centers (CHCs) to provide care to under
36 dence interval, 1.02-2.06]); and small-sized community health centers (IC=51.1% versus UC=39.6%; odds
37  public health practice include investing in community health centers and organizations to ensure acc
38 mmediately increase the clinical capacity of community health centers and ultimately expand the prima
39  of the 9 hospital-affiliated practices or 4 community health centers between January 1, 2003, and De
40 ry artery disease or CHF, women and those at community health centers have less access to cardiologis
41 d a pragmatic randomized controlled trial at community health centers in 2 states.
42 describe primary care services offered by US community health centers in March through May 2020, incl
43                                       Twelve community health centers in rural Mali were randomly ass
44  and learning collaborative project with six community health centers in the New York City metropolit
45 n the western United States and a network of community health centers in the Northeast.
46 reintervention and postintervention study of community health centers participating in quality-improv
47 n US states during 2002-2009, mostly through community health centers that serve low-income populatio
48                       Similarly, patients at community health centers were less likely to receive a c
49                                    Visits to community health centers were more likely to be made by
50 luster-randomized clinical trial in which 30 community health centers were randomly assigned to the i
51                                    Expanding community health centers will likely improve access to p
52 ioid substitution treatment (OST) clinics, 2 community health centers, and 1 Aboriginal community con
53 ll ambulatory visits to physicians' offices, community health centers, and hospital outpatient depart
54 safety net is composed of a loose network of community health centers, hospital outpatient department
55  settings, such as emergency departments and community health centers, were sexual minority males (35
56 al education and care for the underserved in community health centers, where expansion will be necess
57 tion (HRSA) were designed to improve care in community health centers, where many patients from ethni
58 ary care teaching health centers in expanded community health centers, which have established a patie
59 Resources and Services Administration-funded community health centers.
60 ty net system are urban public hospitals and community health centers.
61 cademic safety-net hospital and 7 affiliated community health centers.
62 ally with 2011-16 data from Fenway Health, a community health centre specialising in sexual health ca
63  England, USA (two hospital settings and one community health centre).
64 o <100,000 per muL blood) were enrolled from community health centres and hospitals across seven site
65 ed phase 4 trial at six referral centres and community health centres in Bamako, Mali.
66 d SAM aged 6-59 months were enrolled from 10 community health centres in Burkina Faso.
67                              We surveyed 203 community health centres, 401 community health stations,
68 en born in 2003 or 2004 who attended regular community health checkups for 4-year-olds (97.2% attenda
69 copy was relatively low in a large sample of community health clinic adults who had an abnormal scree
70 n safety-net medical settings (hospitals and community health clinics serving low-income patients wit
71 , primary care offices, urgent care centers, community health clinics, and reproductive health clinic
72 take of CRC screening in federally qualified community health clinics.
73 o evaluate the effect of two versions of the community health club model on child health and nutritio
74 ub sessions (Lite intervention; n=50), or 20 community health club sessions (Classic intervention; n=
75 oups: no intervention (control; n=50), eight community health club sessions (Lite intervention; n=50)
76                                              Community health clubs are multi-session village-level g
77      In villages receiving the intervention, community health clubs were established, community healt
78                              INTERPRETATION: Community health clubs, in this setting in western Rwand
79 t uses a web-based health portal (Heart360), community health coaches, and physician assistant guidan
80 k individuals using physician assistants and community health coaches.
81                                  Evidence of community health concerns stemming from industrial food
82  2-group randomized safety trial involving 5 community health dental clinics in Boston, Mass, and 1 i
83  Stanford Five-City Project, a comprehensive community health education study conducted in northern C
84  gains, behavior-related productivity gains, community health externalities, community economic exter
85                          Little was spent on community health improvement.
86 penditures, approximately 5% were devoted to community health improvements that hospitals undertook d
87                           Finally, continued community health improvements will be predicated on faci
88 important focus for interventions to improve community health in low-resource settings.
89 tient has a unique ten-digit identifier, the Community Health Index, enabling us to link laboratory t
90 ndividuals (61 040 from the Geisinger MyCode Community Health Initiative (2007 to present) and 10 273
91                                          The Community Health Initiative involved community mapping,
92         Between Jan 11 and Aug 29, 2018, the Community Health Initiative programme reached 23 584 ind
93  of an organizational structure dedicated to community health initiatives, and (iv) involvement of co
94 ng hospital claims from the Rajiv Aarogyasri Community Health Insurance Scheme (RACHIS) that provides
95                                              Community health interventions often seek to intentional
96  innovative individual, family-centered, and community health interventions to reduce and ideally eli
97 its with the potential to inspire a positive community health legacy.
98 ment practices and violence and personal and community health necessitates treating these issues as p
99 ates (from a total of 7252) recovered at the Community Health Network of San Francisco from 2000 to 2
100                         Births attended by a community health officer constituted a cluster.
101                     We randomly allocated 54 community health officers (stratified on district and ca
102 rious disturbances, and may indicate whether community health or dysfunction is manifest after appare
103 nd scope of faith-based groups for improving community health outcomes suggest an intentional and sys
104 es of health care encounters from the Fallon Community Health Plan were used to identify 1,674 subjec
105 d group practice previously known as Harvard Community Health Plan, eliminated a gatekeeping system t
106 ving system readiness at all levels of care (community health, primary health centers, district hospi
107 in resource-constrained environments such as community health programs where it can be used to provid
108 ses such as limiting tourist access to apes, community health programs, and safety, logistic, and cos
109 eloped that made use of promotores de salud (community health promoters) to increase Latinx SARS-CoV-
110  The CHAMPION intervention package comprised community health promotion (including health education v
111 cs) will need to deliver primary prevention (community health promotion and clinical preventive servi
112 hether a package of interventions comprising community health promotion and provision of health servi
113 010 from the Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health (REACH) across the U.S., we assessed ra
114 d vaccination history was sought from GP and community health records.
115 cal cardiovascular disease, recruited from a community health registry, and had an ABI screening test
116  provide a valuable metric by which regional community health resources can be allocated to reduce br
117      The Sustainable East Africa Research in Community Health (SEARCH) study is a cluster-randomised
118                        The South East London Community Health (SELCoH) study is a population-based ho
119 by comparing data from the South East London Community Health (SELCoH) study with those from a nation
120        Responsive stimulation delivered in a community health service can improve child development a
121 dementia experienced disruption in access to community health services by June/July compared to 34.9%
122       We also assessed costs of hospital and community health services.
123 se epidemiology, environmental epidemiology, community health, spatial science, health geography, bio
124 e surveyed 203 community health centres, 401 community health stations, 284 township health centres,
125                      Data were obtained from Community Health Status Indicators Reports of the Health
126 is from the 1998-2004 Pregnancy Outcomes and Community Health Study (five Michigan communities) inclu
127 : 45 y, range: 18 to 76 y) from the Hispanic Community Health Study / Study of Latinos.
128 ispanics/Latinos ascertained by the Hispanic Community Health Study and Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL).
129 in in a Hispanic/Latino cohort, the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (>12 000 partici
130 e included 2010 participants of the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL) aged
131           An ancillary study to the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL) evalu
132 o 74 years, who participated in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL) from
133 of reference cohort to classify the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL) targe
134 ncluded 11,999 women and men of the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL), a po
135 panics/Latinos participating in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL), a pr
136 rticipants from four centers of the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL), aged
137 es cases and 5236 controls from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL), whic
138 69 cases, 9,384 controls) of the US Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL).
139 association studies (GWASs) for the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL).
140 ants, aged 18 to 74 years, from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL).
141 ANES) 2007-2010 and 11 964 from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL).
142 articipants aged >45 years from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL).
143 ts in 12,278 participants from the Hispanics Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL).
144 nic/Latino background groups in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL).
145 count in 12,491 participants of the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos by using a mixed
146 6 adults aged 18 to 64 years in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos ECHO-SOL Ancilla
147 nter, prospective, population-based Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos including indivi
148                                 The Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos is a population-
149 dmixture mapping analysis of 12,212 Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos participants, us
150 40 circulating metabolites in 3,926 Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos participants.
151                                 The Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos researchers recr
152 e included 7280 participants of the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos who aged 18-74 y
153 ion among 2,086 participants in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos who completed mo
154                       The HCHS/SOL (Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos) recruited a pop
155 083 participants from the HCHS/SOL (Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos), a population-b
156 ic ancillary study of the HCHS/SOL (Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos), enrolled 1818
157  in the Miami, Florida, site of the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos, a multisite epi
158  many as 12,558 participants in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos, Multi-Ethnic St
159        Using genotype data from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos, we find that Am
160  analysis of MetaboChip data in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos, which is the la
161  using data from 8774 adults in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos.
162 erence, using participants from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos.
163 rom the baseline examination of the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos.
164  SEARCH (Sustainable East Africa Research in Community Health) study.
165 1,974 men and 2,661 women in the Boston Area Community Health Survey (2002-2005).
166 60 women in the population-based Boston Area Community Health Survey (2002-2005).
167 ort included 3 pooled cycles of the Canadian Community Health Survey (2003-2008) linked to 6 years of
168  we conducted a longitudinal study [Anniston Community Health Survey (ACHS II)] 8 y after the baselin
169 ly 3 million per year) and biennial Canadian Community Health Survey (N approximately 5500 per cycle)
170 ectional, nationally representative Canadian Community Health Survey 2.2 were used.
171 eholds and adults who completed the Anniston Community Health Survey also underwent measurements of h
172 18 y of age) in the cross-sectional Canadian Community Health Survey cycle 2.2 were used in weighted
173              Participants were from the 2010 Community Health Survey Heart Follow-Up Study-a populati
174 adian population-based studies, the Canadian Community Health Survey on Healthy Aging (2008-2009), an
175                          By cohort, Canadian Community Health Survey results indicated a decreasing c
176 96 and 2009 who participated in the Canadian Community Health Survey were identified and followed unt
177 h incident asthma who completed the Canadian Community Health Survey, 630 were identified as ACOS cas
178             Data from the 2008 New York City Community Health Survey, a landline telephone survey of
179  age or older (n = 14,881) from the Canadian Community Health Survey-Healthy Aging (2008-2009).
180 ational population survey, the 2012 Canadian Community Health Survey-Mental Health (CCHS-MH 2012, n =
181  response rate, 79.8%) and the 2012 Canadian Community Health Survey-Mental Health (CCHS-MH) for the
182      Data came from the 2009 cross-sectional Community Health Survey.
183 from 1997 to 2010 (n = 447,058) and Canadian Community Health Surveys from 2000 to 2007 (n = 125,306)
184 patients was accomplished quickly in a large community health system and was associated with declines
185 ays after birth is achievable using existing community health systems if workers are available; linke
186 ultimetrics of algal, invertebrate, and fish community health, trimming away any environmental variab
187                                    A trained community health volunteer conducted home visits to ensu
188                                              Community health volunteers (CHVs) are being used within
189        We assessed the preventive effects of community health volunteers (CHVs), who receive no finan
190 ents (SQ-LNSs) at monthly screenings held by community health volunteers (CHVs).
191 ounselling intervention undertaken by female community health volunteers (FCHVs) in Nepal, against us
192 Parenting interventions delivered by trained community health volunteers in mother-child groups can e
193 cation intervention using Kenya's network of community health volunteers.
194                               We developed a Community Health-Vulnerability Index (CHVI) based on fac
195 re extracted from the Michigan Department of Community Health warehouse.
196           We matched prospectively collected community health worker (CHW) and health centre (HC) out
197 zed trial aimed to determine the impact of a community health worker (CHW) intervention on the propor
198                                              Community health worker (CHW) programs are believed to b
199                       We hypothesised that a community health worker (CHW)-led group-based education
200 heir sick children at home, with the present community health worker approach.
201                    13 (59%) of 22 unsalaried community health worker cadres and one (10%) of ten sala
202 12, using restricted 1:1 randomization of 14 community health worker catchment areas.
203  received care by a nurse practitioner and a community health worker in a community setting.
204 red by trial end and received a visit from a community health worker trained to provide supplementary
205                                        Of 68 community health worker trainees recruited between June
206 ned to receive a 1- to 2-hour session with a community health worker who used iDecide or printed educ
207 y health-care clinic or were identified by a community health worker with signs of clinical severe in
208 munity-level interventions should expand the community health worker workforce, assess general (rathe
209 ed as the contiguous area served by a single community health worker, and each cluster comprised seve
210 t (characterized by daily home visits from a community health worker, directly observed treatment, nu
211 ulticomponent intervention, which included a community health worker-led home intervention (health co
212  comprised community engagement and existing community health worker-led mobile health-supported earl
213                            To test whether a community health worker-led multicomponent intervention
214 ontrolled hypertension who participated in a community health worker-led multicomponent intervention
215 ed community engagement sessions and 138 347 community health worker-led visits to 20 819 (57.8%) of
216 s, each comprising the supervision area of a community health worker.
217 3333), general physicians (403 to 5990), and community health workers (2682 to 28 837).
218 up for surgical site infections (SSIs) using community health workers (CHWs) and smartphones is feasi
219                                              Community health workers (CHWs) are an important element
220                                              Community health workers (CHWs) are members of a communi
221 172 villages in 3 African countries, trained community health workers (CHWs) assessed and diagnosed c
222          We monitored performance of trained community health workers (CHWs) in adhering to this reco
223 ACTs, and rectal artesunate when provided by community health workers (CHWs) is uncertain.
224                                  In Nigeria, community health workers (CHWs) performed RDTs (SD-Bioli
225 f an intervention using home visits (HVs) by community health workers (CHWs) plus training in patient
226 es) and the household level in South Africa, community health workers (CHWs) provide a critical persp
227                                       Use of community health workers (CHWs) to increase access to di
228 tment (CSST) with artemether-lumefantrine by community health workers (CHWs) to standard intermittent
229                               Caregivers and community health workers (CHWs) were purposively sampled
230                                              Community health workers (CHWs) were trained in Burkina
231                             In all villages, community health workers (CHWs) were trained to treat ma
232 s and key informant interviews with parents, community health workers (CHWs), and facility staff to u
233 evidence demonstrating beneficial effects of community health workers (CHWs), few studies have examin
234 as 'test-and-treat' policies administered by community health workers (CHWs).
235            In July of 2016, we recruited 118 community health workers (CHWs; representing 10,384 hous
236 re plus structured support visits by trained community health workers (intervention group) according
237                 In the home-care arm, female community health workers (one per 4000 population) ident
238                                              Community health workers and cluster residents were not
239 ) monthly surveys and direct observations by community health workers and environmental health office
240                 Registered nurses supervised community health workers and offered mobile clinic servi
241 an slums could be achieved through deploying community health workers and supporting women and commun
242  article, we describe the perspective of the community health workers and the challenges they encount
243 greement between risk scores assigned by the community health workers and the health professionals.
244 ral African settings in which programmes for community health workers are in place.
245                                     However, community health workers are not a panacea for weak heal
246                                              Community health workers assessed neonates on postnatal
247       Each site recruited at least ten to 15 community health workers based on usual site-specific no
248 childhood diarrhea were collected monthly by community health workers between 2000 and 2006 in 142 vi
249             A community-based approach using community health workers can significantly increase cont
250                                              Community health workers can undertake various tasks, in
251  observational study we investigated whether community health workers could do community-based screen
252                In the intervention clusters, community health workers delivered the packages via coll
253  five sites in DR Congo, Kenya, and Nigeria, community health workers followed up all births in the c
254 n involved home visits by trained government community health workers for blood-pressure monitoring a
255                                        Using community health workers for this screening would free u
256                                              Community health workers had to reside in the community
257 rial of a home-visiting program delivered by community health workers in a black, isiXhosa-speaking p
258 lementation of this HTC approach by existing community health workers in Africa should be evaluated t
259 study assesses SARs-CoV-2 transmission among community health workers in India before and after insti
260    The term commonly used to refer to female community health workers in Latino communities is "promo
261 eriod underscores the limitations of tasking community health workers in public sector programmes wor
262 mobilisation and promotive care delivered by community health workers in reducing perinatal and neona
263 ommunication and mobile health (mHealth) for community health workers led to improved linkage to care
264                  Community participation and community health workers linked to strengthened primary-
265                              In both groups, community health workers made home visits to identify pr
266 intervention consisted of weekly visits from community health workers over a 2-year period that taugh
267 recently established camps, lower numbers of community health workers per 1000 persons, and camps wit
268 her to PM+ delivered in the community by lay community health workers provided with 8 days of trainin
269 ivities, through the work of widely deployed community health workers reaching all households.
270                 In the spring of 1990, local community health workers reported a measles outbreak in
271 e introduction of large-scale programmes for community health workers requires evaluation to document
272 eighted kappa=0.948, 95% CI 0.936-0.961) and community health workers showed that 263 (6%) of 4049 pe
273 ed interest in the potential contribution of community health workers to child survival.
274 elivery platforms and delivery options using community health workers to engage poor populations and
275 entralizing the health system and mobilizing community health workers to increase accessibility; long
276 y-based approaches, especially investment in community health workers using a doorstep delivery appro
277 lence trial in DR Congo, Kenya, and Nigeria, community health workers visited all newborn babies at h
278 harge, a team of nurses, social workers, and community health workers visits enrolled patients to coo
279                                          The community health workers were experienced in behavioral
280                                        Three Community health workers were given training on vision s
281 a-affected prefectures, 73 of 98 interviewed community health workers were operational (74%, 95% CI 6
282 on, community health clubs were established, community health workers were trained in case management
283 e intervention at scale into the routines of community health workers who delivered the THP when it w
284                                              Community health workers who successfully finished the t
285  proactive home visits by trained government community health workers who were linked with existing p
286 , -3.67 mm Hg (-4.58 to -2.77, I(2)=24%) for community health workers, and -4.85 mm Hg (-6.12 to -3.5
287 e phones to ease stockouts, task-shifting to community health workers, and inclusion of the informal
288 itional qualitative in-depth interviews with community health workers, childbearing women, and family
289              This study investigated whether community health workers, equipped with behavioral commu
290 ted approaches, including the integration of community health workers, may be required to promote hea
291 sources such as school-based health centers, community health workers, mental health professionals, a
292 ssionals, including pharmacists, nurses, and community health workers, to meet the needs of the globa
293 th personnel from the Ministry of Health and community health workers, were done in six health areas
294 chizophrenia can be successfully provided by community health workers, when supervised by specialists
295 220 mother-infant dyads by specially trained community health workers.
296 (ie, telestroke), and task sharing involving community health workers.
297 romised by the competing responsibilities of community health workers.
298 ange messages and delivery challenges facing community health workers.
299 a rule-out test, ideally suitable for use by community health workers; and (4) a rapid drug susceptib
300 rovision via antenatal-care appointments and community health workers; and 3) all interventions in pa

 
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