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1 , use of beta-blocker, and smoking cessation counseling.
2 ites, 4755 (22.6%) received predischarge ICD counseling.
3 n setting, without face-to-face or telephone counseling.
4 epilepsy is essential along with appropriate counseling.
5 re-symptomatic disease detection and genetic counseling.
6          All patients received low-intensity counseling.
7  daily placebo with weekly to biweekly brief counseling.
8 ired treatment and outcomes during pre-natal counseling.
9 pecific risk estimates should be included in counseling.
10 iate pre-conceptional patient evaluation and counseling.
11  herein, and should be considered in genetic counseling.
12 helpful in patient education and cancer risk counseling.
13 relevant background data in clinical genetic counseling.
14 ers to ensure accurate diagnosis and genetic counseling.
15  immediate impact on diagnostics and genetic counseling.
16 d implications for clinical surveillance and counseling.
17 scriptome (tumor RNA) sequencing and genetic counseling.
18 ications for preventive measures and patient counseling.
19 twice weekly observed exercise and lifestyle counseling.
20 HCWs without direct patient contact required counseling.
21  loss at 3 months than control/education and counseling.
22  additional year of telephone-based exercise counseling.
23 n syndromes (APSs) for optimal treatment and counseling.
24 ies risk factors to be considered in genetic counseling.
25 o 2.9% greater weight loss at 12 months than counseling.
26 loss at 12 months than control/education and counseling.
27 is can improve patient management and family counseling.
28 articularly affects treatment and prognostic counseling.
29 tacept, a CTLA-4 mimetic, and inform genetic counseling.
30 entially applicable for nutrigenetic dietary counseling.
31 tification of disease modifiers, and genetic counseling.
32 tanding this locus and to enhance predictive counseling.
33 ay be most likely to benefit from behavioral counseling.
34 ce-based risk reduction and adequate patient counseling.
35 ncing, with implications for recurrence risk counseling.
36          Post-exposure, 58.5% of them sought counseling, 16.3% took antiretroviral prophylaxis, 23.8%
37          Test uptake was lower for telephone counseling (27.9%) than in-person counseling (37.3%), wi
38  telephone counseling (27.9%) than in-person counseling (37.3%), with the difference of 9.4% (95% CI,
39 t those with QTc prolongation should receive counseling about drugs that may increase the risk for li
40 on current physician practices in asking and counseling about firearms, which are done far less commo
41                                              Counseling about reproductive genetics was to be patient
42 get at-risk adolescents for higher-intensity counseling about sun protection and skin self-examinatio
43   Our findings support the need for adequate counseling about the possibility of developing new sympt
44  risk populations should be used for patient counseling, advanced preoperative planning, and to imple
45 in development, and reinforce evidence-based counseling against binge drinking even at the earliest s
46 s prevention trial in which repeated dietary counseling aiming at reducing intake of saturated fat to
47                                 Rates of ICD counseling among eligible patients and ICD receipt among
48 on, which has implications for diagnosis and counseling among families of patients with SCA7.
49  telephone genetic counseling with in-person counseling among women at risk of hereditary breast and/
50                                        Brief counseling and a short-term quit attempt followed.
51                                Preconception counseling and access to specialist care are paramount i
52 24 hours, making this useful information for counseling and anticipatory planning.
53 etic professionals for gene testing, genetic counseling and cancer risk management; and could reveal
54               After diagnosis of T18 or T13, counseling and care have traditionally been based on ass
55 and morbidity warrant extensive prepregnancy counseling and centralization of care.
56  the point of diagnosis to subsequent expert counseling and clinical care for newly identified hypert
57     All participants received risk-reduction counseling and condoms and were regularly tested for HIV
58 appealing and relevant milestone for patient counseling and could be a surrogate end point in clinica
59 ed well-defined messages about water through counseling and daily text messages, a water bottle, and
60 urrent information not only on preconception counseling and diagnostic evaluation to determine matern
61 se leads to difficulty in providing clinical counseling and diminishes the power of clinical trials u
62                           A patient-centered counseling and educational intervention may help to addr
63 9), and high risk (>39) to assist in patient counseling and guide application of perioperative pulmon
64 ified with HBV (HBsAg-positive) for posttest counseling and hepatitis B-directed care.
65 pe and depth of reimbursement for prevention counseling and intervention services.
66  a readily available tool for individualized counseling and its preventive potential for a large doma
67 A (intensive) compared to standard nutrition counseling and less intensive MM, CM, and PA (non-intens
68  offers a window of opportunity for parental counseling and management using procedures such as EXIT
69 genetic characterization will aid in genetic counseling and management, critically required to curb t
70 ch an array may, thus, be useful for genetic counseling and may help clinical decision making in a fa
71 rvention group received individual lifestyle counseling and oral hygiene instruction.
72 findings have major implications for genetic counseling and patient management as new therapeutic opt
73 nsitive TGM1 genotypes should aid in genetic counseling and provide insights into the pathophysiology
74 has implications for diagnostics and genetic counseling and provides a rational basis for the develop
75 l) with usual treatment, consisting of brief counseling and referrals for community treatment program
76 ncidental genetic findings agreed to genetic counseling and screening.
77  setting the stage for both improved patient counseling and selection for second-line therapy.
78                       Efforts to improve the counseling and selection of living donors should focus o
79 and DR and will aid in more accurate patient counseling and selection of patients for adjuvant therap
80 eby ending the nominal goal of value-neutral counseling and setting the stage for further normative s
81 ) and lifestyle counseling (exercise or diet counseling and smoking cessation) were evaluated.
82 mily members, including the need for genetic counseling and sometimes particular types of surveillanc
83 pants received standard care with individual counseling and standardized, blinded, target-driven medi
84 mmunities, and other implementers to provide counseling and support to clients identified as being at
85 al intervention, supplemented with telephone counseling and tailored newsletters, to support weight l
86  examined patterns and correlates of genetic counseling and testing and the impact of results on bila
87 ally have not sought or been offered genetic counseling and testing and thereby contribute to a reduc
88                                  (3) Genetic counseling and testing clarify the risk for retinoblasto
89 s of age diagnosed with HIV in the voluntary counseling and testing clinics of participating health f
90 ency and wide spectrum of mutations, genetic counseling and testing with a multigene panel could be c
91 ncluding key stakeholders to address genetic counseling and testing, PCA screening, and management in
92 nificantly change the approach to ophthalmic counseling and therapeutic management in patients with d
93 ocedures to provide more individualized risk counseling and to better inform evidence-based algorithm
94 in women with breast cancer will help in the counseling and treatment of these women.
95 , POC blood tests, physical exam, education, counseling, and antiretroviral (ARV) dispensing.
96 n prescribed for depression, or referral for counseling, and as untreated if none of these 3 criteria
97 likely to receive statins, smoking cessation counseling, and defect-free care.
98 ng to self-esteem to improve identification, counseling, and external referrals for children in this
99 quisition forms and during post-test genetic counseling, and genetic ancestry predicted by a statisti
100 4% within a 1-month period following initial counseling, and improved by 22.8% (P < .001) after the s
101 treatment readiness and medication adherence counseling, and medication coordination.
102  medical (walking program, smoking cessation counseling, and medications) vs revascularization (endov
103 may aid early diagnosis, appropriate genetic counseling, and monitoring for potential complications.
104 h appropriate patient selection, expectation counseling, and preoperative retinal assessment.
105 can improve the clinical management, genetic counseling, and risk assessment of patients with Usher s
106 00 rupees, GKAS greater than 5 after initial counseling, and undergoing any ocular surgical procedure
107 ed to improved diagnosis, prognosis, genetic counseling, and, most importantly, new therapies.
108  oral health education, individual lifestyle counseling, application of a self-regulation manual, and
109 propion, as well as individual and telephone counseling, are efficacious for smoking cessation in CVD
110 r rural compared with urban dwellers in both counseling arms.
111 number of siblings should receive additional counseling as childhood infections occur in the home con
112  by pedigree review of families who received counseling at 1 of 12 participating clinical genetics ce
113 8 g NSP/d) diets and received individualized counseling at the start of radiotherapy to achieve these
114 has been the basis for legislation mandating counseling before obtaining an abortion and other polici
115  would be a significant advance for not only counseling, but also identifying those for whom interven
116 ast 4.0% greater short-term weight loss than counseling, but some attenuation of effect occurred beyo
117 tandard approach to weight loss is in-person counseling, but telephone counseling may be more feasibl
118 and respondents' report of receiving genetic counseling by a genetics clinician and its association w
119  uptake, our findings suggest that telephone counseling can be effectively used to increase reach and
120 DIS codes for nutrition or physical activity counseling (CDS arm, 45%; CDS + coaching arm, 25%; P < .
121 nsive Cancer Network (NCCN) recommendations, counseling clinicians to "strongly consider" PMRT for pa
122                                    Adherence counseling could maximize public health investment in Pr
123           The interventions included dietary counseling, daily text messages, and a cookbook with hea
124 patients with heart failure eligible for ICD counseling did not receive it, particularly women and mi
125 nstitutionalization is important for patient counseling, discharge planning, and resource allocation.
126 hanges to prescribing guidelines and patient counseling during the surveillance and survivorship phas
127 preoperative risk prediction models and when counseling EGS patients on the risks and benefits of ope
128 ockers [ARBs], and cilostazol) and lifestyle counseling (exercise or diet counseling and smoking cess
129  shifts in clinical reproductive genetics as counseling expands because of cell-free testing.
130            These findings may be valuable in counseling families and developing novel interventions.
131 ofessionals and planners, and for clinicians counseling families facing extremely preterm births.
132  CNV disorders and may have implications for counseling families regarding their children's developme
133 g center-specific risk-adjusted outcomes and counseling families.
134     Both groups received group and telephone counseling for 48 weeks.
135 ) found a modest effect of intensive dietary counseling for a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet on lipid
136  with change in treatment and family genetic counseling for a small proportion of patients.
137 hone counseling was noninferior to in-person counseling for all psychosocial and informed decision-ma
138  treatment for 14 patients (15%) and genetic counseling for future risk for 9 patients (10%).
139 HIV serostatus, along with reinforced condom counseling for HIV-serodiscordant couples.
140 trends in both medical therapy and lifestyle counseling for PAD patients in the United States from 20
141                        This tool may improve counseling for patients being evaluated for episcleral b
142 oarray analysis, to provide improved genetic counseling for phenotypic outcome in the prenatal settin
143 iated eye phenotypes can help inform genetic counseling for prognostic estimation of visual loss and
144 ic effects of maternal diabetes and improved counseling for risk of specific CHD phenotypes.
145 ntified risk alleles, allows precise genetic counseling for the first time.
146 has hindered clinical management and genetic counseling for the many affected individuals in the regi
147 s a positive but small benefit of behavioral counseling for the prevention of CVD in this population.
148 ence on the benefits and harms of behavioral counseling for the primary prevention of cardiovascular
149 P led to more accurate prognosis and genetic counseling for these patients in addition to increased i
150                         In modern pre-travel counseling for those visiting high-risk regions, travele
151 ticipants in the intervention group received counseling from a dietitian at baseline and 1, 3, 6, and
152 Only 1334 (36.8%) reported receiving genetic counseling from a genetics clinician prior to testing; t
153 lities, and will thereby improve the genetic counseling given to individuals with KITLG variants.
154                This is important for genetic counseling: given that VWS is rare compared to nsCPO, ou
155 tegies including provider advice, individual counseling, group programs, the national quitline, websi
156  there was no significant difference between counseling groups.
157 ul to assist clinical ascertainment, genetic counseling, guidance of symptomatic monitoring, and earl
158  provide accurate diagnoses, improve genetic counseling, help define disease mechanisms, establish di
159 % CI: 1.22, 4.58), and received relationship counseling (HR = 3.71, 95% CI: 1.44, 9.54) during milita
160 se, and a change in treatment beyond genetic counseling in 44%.
161                 RATIONALE: Smoking cessation counseling in conjunction with low-dose computed tomogra
162 out patterns of medication use and lifestyle counseling in patients with peripheral artery disease (P
163 o stratify risk and can guide management and counseling in the preclinical and clinical phases of GH
164                      In-person and telephone counseling included 11 30-minute counseling sessions ove
165 lts obtained shortly after exposure, and for counseling individuals on when to retest after an exposu
166 re (GKAS) improved by 77.6% with the initial counseling intervention (P < .0001), decreased by 17.4%
167 mproved by 22.8% (P < .001) after the second counseling intervention.
168                                              Counseling interventions result in improvements in healt
169 normal blood glucose to intensive behavioral counseling interventions to promote a healthful diet and
170 he evidence on whether primary care-relevant counseling interventions to promote a healthful diet, ph
171 rms of preventive medications and behavioral counseling interventions to reduce future symptomatic ep
172 ation, school-based programs, therapeutic or counseling interventions, and public policy.
173 ntary behaviors; and the harms of behavioral counseling interventions.
174  help guide the incorporation of weight loss counseling into breast cancer treatment and care.
175  practices through intensified interpersonal counseling (IPC), mass media (MM), and community mobiliz
176                                     Although counseling is a required part of office-based buprenorph
177 ve nontransplant therapy, whereas individual counseling is indicated for patients at intermediate-1 r
178 , the nature of what constitutes appropriate counseling is unclear and controversial.
179  face-to-face or telephone smoking cessation counseling, large financial incentives increased long-te
180 d accurate diagnosis, and facilitate genetic counseling, leading to directly benefiting families with
181                           Although telephone counseling led to lower testing uptake, our findings sug
182 del should be a valuable adjunct for patient counseling, local quality improvement, and national moni
183 rventions to traditional face-to-face health counseling may be an effective way to increase male smok
184 t follow-up, and reinforcement with repeated counseling may be beneficial with regard to both disease
185  loss is in-person counseling, but telephone counseling may be more feasible.
186 ion to modifiable risk factors and physician counseling may improve outcomes.
187                                  While all 3 counseling methods resulted in transient improvement of
188 syndrome so it can be used to make lifestyle counseling more effective; assessing residual risk in a
189 elines emphasizing the importance of genetic counseling, most US women undergoing BRCA genetic testin
190  kg/m(2) were randomly assigned to in-person counseling (n = 33), telephone counseling (n = 34), or u
191  to in-person counseling (n = 33), telephone counseling (n = 34), or usual care (UC) (n = 33).
192  to in-person (n = 495) or telephone genetic counseling (n = 493).
193 ll be valuable in the management and genetic counseling of a significant number of individuals.
194  this study and provide information to allow counseling of at-risk couples.
195 more specific guidance for the screening and counseling of families and may help inform future invest
196 ts may guide research efforts and inform the counseling of families.
197 nt for both analysis of patients and genetic counseling of families.
198     Our findings may inform the reproductive counseling of female AYA cancer survivors.
199 n, and modifying factors, with relevance for counseling of HSP families and planning of future cross-
200 he screen in clinical practice allows proper counseling of mutation carriers and treatment of their t
201 sis, direct patient care, and enable genetic counseling of patients and families.
202    These data are needed both for prognostic counseling of patients and for understanding potential t
203   This information may be useful in clinical counseling of patients with this loss-of-function mutati
204  in PFBC and that will also improve informed counseling of patients.
205 rtant public policy implications for genetic counseling of SCT carriers.
206 ires rapid, comprehensive risk screening and counseling of staff and timely PEP.
207 ipped for gene testing but less prepared for counseling of the large domain of familial cancer with u
208 nal impact that can assist clinicians in the counseling of their patients regarding risk and prognosi
209  gastric and breast cancer that will improve counseling of unaffected carriers.
210 mate the noninferiority effects of telephone counseling on 1-year psychosocial, decision-making, and
211 an be minimized by using RSM and predonation counseling on life style modifications postdonation.
212 lacebo (1244 patients); both groups received counseling on lifestyle modification.
213 g information to allow provision of informed counseling on the predicted outcomes of affected babies.
214 nderscore the need for patient education and counseling on the timing and nature of adverse effects w
215     Participants were treated with lifestyle counseling or bariatric surgery.
216  current smokers with PAD, smoking cessation counseling or medication was used in 35.8% (SE: 4.6%) of
217 ; 95% CI: 1.8 to 3.9), and smoking cessation counseling (OR: 4.4; 95% CI: 2.0 to 9.6).
218           No in-person counseling, telephone counseling, or medications were provided.
219 ng: traditional counseling, patient-centered counseling, or patient-centered counseling with audio co
220 ficant change in medication use or lifestyle counseling over time.
221  that map to this region, but also influence counseling paradigms and treatment options for such muta
222 tegories of glaucoma counseling: traditional counseling, patient-centered counseling, or patient-cent
223 gulations prohibit physicians from asking or counseling patients about firearms and disclosing patien
224 ients regarding ocular risks of smoking, and counseling patients about smoking cessation.
225 y benefit testing programs and clinicians in counseling patients about when the clinician and the pat
226 RATIONALE: Prognostication is important when counseling patients and defining treatment strategies in
227 Information from these PROs may be useful in counseling patients anticipating surgery for rectal canc
228                     Nevertheless, clinicians counseling patients before these procedures should discu
229 nt responses provided useful information for counseling patients both before and after implantation.
230 plication of clinical trial results, and for counseling patients on how disease progression may affec
231  providers should consider this benefit when counseling patients on IRD offer acceptance.
232  for death should be taken into account when counseling patients on whether to pursue a histologic di
233 F) therapy may provide information useful in counseling patients.
234 al melanoma may be useful to clinicians when counseling patients.
235 ared with provider-delivered HIV testing and counseling (PHTC), although the longer-term population-l
236  heterozygous carriers, assisting in genetic counseling, prenatal testing, and preimplantation geneti
237 ould have important implications for patient counseling, primary tumor treatment, clinical trial enro
238 isfaction among patients who receive genetic counseling provided by a genetics clinician, as well as
239 mines the effect of a psychosocial telephone counseling (PTC) intervention on QOL domains and associa
240 suggest that survivors of ALL should receive counseling regarding lifestyle and undergo screening for
241 ture review evaluating the current status of counseling regarding prenatal diagnosis of trisomy 18 (T
242                These findings may facilitate counseling regarding the comparative harms of contempora
243 e 35 years or younger should receive genetic counseling regardless of their family history and phenot
244 g, or patient-centered counseling with audio counseling reinforcement.
245 (RR: 1.47; 95% CI: 1.15-1.88) and individual counseling (RR: 1.64, 95% CI: 1.17-2.28) were both more
246 stratification including genetic testing and counseling serves as the basis for screening of children
247        Recently mandated coverage of genetic counseling services as a preventive service without pati
248 als into an RCT of a survivorship care nurse counseling session coupled with the provision of individ
249 ceived a single brief lifestyle modification counseling session with a brochure.
250 survivorship care plans coupled with a nurse counseling session, primarily on physician implementatio
251 participation in the individual teaching and counseling sessions and high retention rates support the
252 aucoma Knowledge Assessment before and after counseling sessions at the time of diagnosis and at 1-mo
253 d telephone counseling included 11 30-minute counseling sessions over 6 months.
254                                          Six counseling sessions were offered.
255 icipants will receive individualized dietary counseling sessions with a registered dietitian to achie
256  6 months, the interventions added telephone counseling sessions, text message prompts, and access to
257 ncreases in physical activity, and had group counseling sessions.
258 tion and are suitable for use in testing and counseling settings in Panama.
259             Psychosocial and/or psychosexual counseling should be offered to all patients with cancer
260                             Automated online counseling simulates face-to-face encounters and may be
261 tial to reduce harm when inadequate care and counseling strategies create conflicting values and unce
262 e suggest that EFS24 has utility for patient counseling, study design, and risk stratification in PTC
263 rvention combined individualized nutritional counseling targeting increased energy intake and trainin
264                                 No in-person counseling, telephone counseling, or medications were pr
265 the multigene testing era addressing genetic counseling, testing, and genetically informed management
266 thnic minorities were less likely to receive counseling than white patients (black 22.6%, Hispanic 18
267 feeding should be part of individual patient counseling that incorporates patient values and circumst
268  In addition to routine health and nutrition counseling, the intervention group received a package of
269 nd may assist providers in understanding and counseling their patients about likely outcomes on the w
270 ovement, and work impairment in some trials; counseling therapies also improved quality of life (low
271                                              Counseling therapies and graded exercise therapy compare
272                      Trials of rintatolimod, counseling therapies, and graded exercise therapy sugges
273 is after referral for in-depth diagnosis and counseling to 1 of 90 tertiary allergy centers in 10 Eur
274 posing the importance of tailoring adherence counseling to address psychosocial factors and mental he
275 drugs and facilitate targeted harm reduction counseling to prevent future complications.
276  Force (USPSTF) recommendation on behavioral counseling to promote a healthful diet and physical acti
277 od glucose levels, or diabetes to behavioral counseling to promote a healthful diet and physical acti
278  randomized to 1 of 3 categories of glaucoma counseling: traditional counseling, patient-centered cou
279 l colorectal cancer (CRC) is relevant to the counseling, treatment, and surveillance of CRC patients
280 ct of in-person versus telephone weight loss counseling versus usual care on 6-month changes in body
281           At the 1-year follow-up, telephone counseling was noninferior to in-person counseling for a
282 nternet-based acne education using automated counseling was not superior to standard-website educatio
283                             Exercise or diet counseling was used in 22% (SE: 2.3%) of visits.
284 ion of participants who viewed the automated-counseling website reported having maintained or adopted
285 standard educational website or an automated-counseling website.
286 icantly different from that of the automated-counseling-website group (0.17 [2.64] vs 0.39 [2.94]; P
287 the standard-website group and the automated-counseling-website group (0.20 [9.26] vs 3.90 [12.19]; P
288 the standard-website group and the automated-counseling-website group (21.33 [10.81] vs 25.33 [12.45]
289  proportion of participants in the automated-counseling-website group maintained or adopted a recomme
290                                  Condoms and counseling were available in most of the clinics.
291  visit, assessments, laboratory testing, and counseling were done.
292                 Both in-person and telephone counseling were effective weight loss strategies, with f
293 l cancer have increased demands for clinical counseling, which may be well equipped for gene testing
294 nance program that includes at least monthly counseling with a trained interventionist.
295 ent-centered counseling, or patient-centered counseling with audio counseling reinforcement.
296 mpared 1-year outcomes for telephone genetic counseling with in-person counseling among women at risk
297 ces in Bangladesh and Viet Nam than standard counseling with less intensive MM, CM, and PA.
298 of voice and swallowing function and receive counseling with regard to the potential impact of treatm
299 oves disease management, and fosters genetic counseling with respect to recurrence risks while assuri
300 outcomes data are important to consider when counseling women contemplating CPM as part of their brea

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