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1 to be directly discharged from the emergency department.
2 ommunity-acquired pneumonia in the emergency department.
3 as conducted in an urban, academic emergency department.
4 the overall NIH funding environment of their department.
5 t radiographs were obtained in the emergency department.
6 y for NET patients being discharged from the department.
7 nts who presented with BAPT to the emergency department.
8 S underwent ambulatory follow-up at the same department.
9 r improving palliative care in the Emergency Department.
10 cotherapies and who boarded in the emergency department.
11 Zagazig university hospitals, Radiodiagnosis department.
12 outpatient clinic of the Otorhinolaryngology Department.
13 t pain in patients admitted to the emergency department.
14 hospitalizations originated in the emergency department.
15 n between the CDC and state and local health departments.
16  exceeds the number working in basic science departments.
17 rs but one primarily affiliated to radiology departments.
18 tralized laboratories and hospital emergency departments.
19 l of 111 chairs of US academic ophthalmology departments.
20 table for prompt administration in emergency departments.
21 el were race and pain level in the emergency department (3 months), and race and baseline depression
22 omputed tomographic imaging in the emergency department, 839 (5.5%) had ICI.
23 d from ischemic stroke patients at emergency department admission, and BBB permeability was assessed
24 mly selected from 1100 consecutive emergency department admissions for minor injury.
25 estimated by adjusting for routine emergency department admissions, was about 50% (range, 49.1%-52.6%
26 >100.4 degrees F documented in the emergency department; afebrile patients lacked both.
27  to present a major burden to U.S. emergency departments, affecting up to nearly 850,000 emergency de
28 d male patient was admitted to the emergency department after a car accident.
29 se rates from 93 NET patients on leaving the department after undergoing PET/CT or SPECT/CT in our ce
30 f exacerbations, and visits to the emergency department (all P </= .02) 3 and 12 months after BT.
31                  Increasing use of emergency departments among older patients with palliative needs h
32 llance data were collected from 1 outpatient department and 1 inpatient setting in Apac District, Uga
33 PTSD symptoms were assessed in the emergency department and 1, 3, and 6 months posttrauma.
34 ithin 6 hours after arrival in the emergency department and had all items in a 3-hour bundle of care
35                                    Emergency department and ICUs of an academic center.
36 ient-level linkage to California's Emergency Department and Inpatient Databases.
37 ted infection who presented to the emergency department and were admitted to the hospital between Jan
38 esented to a level 1 trauma center emergency department and who underwent dual-energy CT for suspicio
39 tion (<2wk) of health alerts to local health departments and community clinicians and to the public.
40 ovided by emergency medical services, police departments and surrounding hospitals.
41    A total of 30.6% were seen in >1 hospital department, and 85.6% were admitted during their course
42  pharmaceutical, nursing facility, emergency department, and dental care increased by $933.5 billion
43 a were also extracted from office, emergency department, and hospital records.
44   Radiography was performed in the emergency department, and the patient was released with a diagnosi
45 atients in eight Danish and Swedish surgical departments, and 112 patients were available for analysi
46 y faculty, in both the Chemistry and Biology Departments, and then 26 years on the Harvard Medical Sc
47 e patients received lower rates of emergency department antibiotic administration, lower mean IV flui
48 r than or equal to 24 breaths/min, emergency department antibiotics, and emergency department IV flui
49 turn of spontaneous circulation on emergency department arrival, and favorable neurologic status at d
50 , received antimicrobials prior to emergency department arrival, or were treated by an attending phys
51 d antimicrobials within 3 hours of emergency department arrival.
52 d their previous leadership roles within the department as invaluable to their effectiveness as chair
53 e as an initial triage tool in the emergency department as well as a method of determining the need f
54 ure </=65 mm Hg) presenting to the emergency department at a 1500-bed referral hospital in Zambia bet
55 ents had all been treated in the dermatology department at Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i Pujo
56 dult patients admitted through the emergency department at risk for acute respiratory distress syndro
57 ed febrile patients presenting to outpatient departments at 17 health facilities throughout Haiti fro
58 treated with antimicrobials in the emergency department between 2009 and 2015 for fluid-refractory se
59 patients with sepsis treated at 21 emergency departments between 2010 and 2013 in Northern California
60  delivery at 2 urban hospitals in Santa Cruz Department, Bolivia, were screened by rapid test.
61 nts with sepsis seek care in local emergency departments, but demographic and disease-oriented factor
62 hDs supports the academic mission of surgery departments by increasing both NIH funding and scholarly
63 e facility (45%-70%; P<0.001), and emergency department bypass for emergency medical services direct
64                                    Emergency department bypass was also associated with shorter media
65 ingle call transfer protocols, and emergency department bypass.
66 ypassed a rural hospital for their emergency department care.
67 administrator-moving from laboratory head to department chair and, finally, to institute director.
68                            Overall, academic department chairs are accomplished leaders in ophthalmol
69 xperiences of current academic ophthalmology department chairs.
70 ediatric Emergency Research Canada emergency departments, children receiving routine vaccinations at
71 , and in some cases, visits to the emergency department compared with those produced by susceptible s
72 analysis using data from the State Emergency Department Database and State Inpatient Database of 3 US
73     Both total medical contact and emergency department delay in antibiotic administration are associ
74  medical contact, prehospital, and emergency department delays in antibiotic administration and in-ho
75 We defined serious infection as an emergency department diagnosis of a serious infection or a triage
76 rtion of PhDs with NIH funding in the top 10 departments did not differ from those working in departm
77                 The practice for exiting the department differed according to whether the patient had
78 ck receiving antimicrobials in the emergency department, door-to-antimicrobial times varied five-fold
79  imaging, whereas SPECT/CT patients left the department earlier, just after radiopharmaceutical injec
80 th end-stage renal disease use the emergency department (ED) at a 6-fold higher rate than do other US
81 ere sepsis/septic shock (SS/SS) in Emergency Department (ED) has yet to be assessed.
82                       Although the emergency department (ED) is an opportune setting for initiating s
83                                The emergency department (ED) is used to manage cancer-related complic
84 algesic to treat acute pain in the emergency department (ED) lacks a clear evidence base.
85                  Physicians in the emergency department (ED) need additional tools to stratify patien
86 y using patients admitted from the emergency department (ED) of a large urban hospital with a diagnos
87 r adult patients presenting at the emergency department (ED) of the St. Pierre hospital in Brussels w
88  for suspicion of infection in the emergency department (ED) or hospital wards from November 2008 unt
89         Patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) represent a heterogeneous population com
90       The effect of vaccination on emergency department (ED) utilization for herpes zoster (HZ) has n
91              Primary outcomes were emergency department (ED) visit or hospitalization for skin and so
92 efined by at least 1 outpatient or emergency department (ED) visit with a primary diagnosis code of a
93 ific PM2.5 and respiratory disease emergency department (ED) visits and examined between-city heterog
94               Hospitalizations and emergency department (ED) visits for asthma are more frequently ex
95      To determine the frequency of emergency department (ED) visits for nonurgent and urgent ocular c
96                            Data on emergency department (ED) visits for selected cardiorespiratory ou
97 t on population morbidity, such as emergency department (ED) visits.
98 h 30-day inpatient readmission and emergency department (ED) visits.
99 ess (SMI), when they face extended emergency department (ED) waits, higher thresholds for admission t
100 d acute wheezing conditions in the emergency department (ED), and there is variation within and among
101  (CT) pulmonary angiography in the emergency department (ED).
102      A challenge for clinicians in emergency departments (EDs) is rapid identification of those patie
103  30 days following an inpatient or emergency department encounter listing an influenza International
104  precocious puberty, who was referred to our department for an ultrasound evaluation of the abdomen a
105 ing medical conditions came to the emergency department for evaluation of persistent pain over the vo
106  institution were submitted to our radiology department for interpretation.
107 ria including: presentation to the emergency department for medical care within 24h of a physical inj
108 ers evaluated 1282 patients in the emergency department for possible AMI from 2011 to 2013.
109 e oral cavity and were referred to radiology departments for MRI.
110            In the 30 participating emergency departments, for a 4-week period, consecutive patients w
111 ents enrolled in 25 North American emergency departments from 2004 to 2006.
112 fforts affecting multiple hospital emergency departments have ever been evaluated.
113 ple of patients with sepsis in the emergency department, hourly delays in antibiotic administration w
114 o clinicians 24/7 through their state health department in conjunction with CDC.
115  and methotrexate presented to the emergency department in December with worsening shortness of breat
116 e prognostic value of fever in the emergency department in septic patients subsequently admitted to t
117 ents with chest pain presenting at emergency departments in 2013 and 2014.
118                                    Emergency departments in 9 Dutch hospitals.
119 he model was tested at 3 pediatric emergency departments in level I pediatric trauma centers (Childre
120 ational cohort study comprising 26 emergency departments in the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Rese
121 lty in all 205 PhD-granting computer science departments in the United States and Canada.
122  serve as a useful example for public health departments in the United States and internationally, pa
123                     Large academic emergency departments in the United States.
124 rgency department antibiotics, and emergency department IV fluids volume, being afebrile remained a s
125       To evaluate the impact of an emergency department mechanical ventilation protocol on clinical o
126 e for drug-abuse-related visits to emergency departments, most of which are due to cardiovascular com
127 aculty working in US medical school clinical departments now exceeds the number working in basic scie
128 ors were inpatient boarding in the emergency department (odds ratio, 2.67; CI, 1.74-4.09), initial 3-
129 rticipants were recruited from the emergency department of a large level I trauma center within 24 ho
130 ients with suspected sepsis in the emergency department of a tertiary children's hospital from April
131 mented in highly urban counties, based on US Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service Urba
132                                    Emergency department of an academic medical center.
133 thy volunteers presenting at the Eye Clinic, Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, Luigi Sa
134 t academic clinical and research center, the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at New Yor
135        All concussive blast injuries met the Department of Defense definition of mild, uncomplicated
136                                      We used Department of Defense health insurance (Tricare) data (2
137 ed on antihyperglycemic agents within the US Department of Defense Military Health System between Apr
138                                          The Department of Defense Military Health System Data Reposi
139  on linked and consolidated data from the US Department of Defense's Central Cancer Registry and Mili
140 ing surgery at hospitals administered by the Department of Defense.
141  MCC specimens of 55 patients treated at the Department of Dermatology, University Hospital of Schles
142     Patients with HS were recruited from the Department of Dermatology, Zealand University Hospital,
143 nd ID (n=181) identified from the California Department of Developmental Services and general populat
144 ging (MRI) findings in pregnant women in the Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Institute of Mother an
145  1 and type 2 diabetics were acquired at the Department of Endocrinology in People's Hospital of Zhen
146 ates (U.S.) Renewable Fuel Standard and U.S. Department of Energy's research and development programs
147 le, the Acknowledgements section omitted the Department of Energy-funded Environmental and Molecular
148 s of liver enzymes (>/=6 mo) referred to the Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology at Linkopi
149                              In 2014, the US Department of Health and Human Services decided that its
150 nt of Public Instruction, and North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services vital records.
151             Utilizing the Western Australian Department of Health Data Linkage Unit records, all pati
152 out restrictions from 2002 to 2013 using NYS Department of Health's Statewide Planning and Research C
153 l of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Pfizer, UK Department of Health, Wellcome Trust, and Bill & Melinda
154 crobial susceptibility testing by the Hawaii Department of Health.
155 linic amyloidosis database maintained by the Department of Hematology.
156 -cTnT analyzed concurrently in the emergency department of Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm,
157 C) and/or delivered a child in the inpatient department of Kumudini Women's Medical College Hospital
158        Biopsy specimens were analyzed at the Department of Microbiology and Infection Control, Staten
159 etherlands) and the outpatient clinic of the Department of Neurology of the Leiden University Medical
160 e obtained from 176 patients admitted to the Department of Neurosciences of the University of Padua,
161  the local ethics committee and the research department of Nottingham University Hospitals.
162 53 p.R337H mutation from the database of the Department of Oncogenetics from the A.C. Camargo Cancer
163 rom March 1, 2014, to March 30, 2015, at the Department of Ophthalmology at Columbia University Medic
164              This study was conducted in the Department of Ophthalmology at Goethe-University, Frankf
165 mong patients seeking health services at the Department of Ophthalmology from January to April, 2016.
166                                              Department of Ophthalmology, Charite - Universitatsmediz
167 s-sectional case series was conducted at the Department of Ophthalmology, University Hospital Zurich,
168 eptember 3, 2013 and October 30, 2015 at the Department of Ophthalmology, University of Cologne.
169 EK from July 2011 through August 2015 at the Department of Ophthalmology, University of Cologne.
170 s referred by consultant eye surgeons to the Department of Parasitology, University of Peradeniya wer
171 es were obtained at autopsy performed in the Department of Pathology at the University of Kentucky fr
172  was performed by serology at the California Department of Public Health or at clinical laboratories.
173 h Defects Monitoring Program, North Carolina Department of Public Instruction, and North Carolina Dep
174              The patient was referred to the Department of Radio-diagnosis for ultrasound.
175          First, a survey designed by the WHO Department of Reproductive Health and Research was distr
176    Enucleated eyes received at the pathology department of the Retinoblastoma Center of Houston from
177 variant who presented to the adult neurology department of the University Hospital Leuven were identi
178 s between 2001 and 2013 at the ophthalmology department of the University Medical Center Groningen we
179                          Using data from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Corporate Warehouse
180 nd veterans' access to providers outside the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
181 ment agencies and departments such as the US Department of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Studies Progr
182 ion New Dawn, and who received care from the Department of Veterans Affairs during 2007-2012.
183 rovider intervention for osteoarthritis in a Department of Veterans Affairs medical center, this stud
184 e University (Cleveland, OH, USA) and the US Department of Veterans Affairs, Louis Stokes Cleveland V
185  the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Veterans Affairs, to build a cohort of US
186  patients evaluated for AMI in the emergency departments of 2 teaching hospitals in the Henry Ford He
187 et syndrome was conducted in the dermatology departments of 5 university hospitals and a private labo
188 =3 days of fever recruited in the outpatient departments of 6 hospitals in southern Vietnam between 2
189                                    Emergency departments of a rural Midwestern state.
190 gus and Pemphigoid Meeting, organized by the Departments of Dermatology in Lubeck and Marburg and the
191 incial mental health centers and psychiatric departments of general medical hospitals in 45 cities an
192 A cross-sectional study was conducted at the Departments of Neurology at Charite-Universitatsmedizin
193  uveitis, who visited 1 of the participating departments of ophthalmology, were included.
194  55 NIH-funded university and hospital-based departments of surgery were collected using NIH RePORTER
195 alth (NIH) funding from PhD scientists in US departments of surgery.
196  any severity who presented to the emergency departments of ten Australian and New Zealand hospitals.
197 ed 122 diabetic patients from the outpatient department (OPD) of the apex diabetic healthcare hospita
198                 For traditional microbiology departments, opportunities for improvement in the cultiv
199 ) within 24 h of presenting to the emergency department or acute medical unit of a large UK hospital
200 pants were all patients seen in an emergency department or admitted to a hospital from 2004 through 2
201     Patients evaluated through the emergency department or as inpatient consults were excluded.
202 years with no history of cancer visiting all departments or units of Tata Memorial Hospital during th
203  were admitted to the ICU from the emergency department, other wards, or directly from out of hospita
204 t priorities leading to changes in Emergency Department-palliative care processes.
205               After controlling for surgeon, department, patient demographics, and clinical indicator
206                                    Emergency department patients greater than or equal to 18 years ol
207                              Adult emergency department patients with moderate to severe acute distre
208 clinical risk model for evaluation emergency department patients with possible acute myocardial infar
209                                 In emergency department patients with septic shock, afebrile patients
210                                    Emergency department patients with suspected infection and low qui
211  suicide risk from the language of emergency department patients.
212 ribed inappropriately in pediatric emergency departments (PEDs), but little data are available in the
213                              General surgery department pilot projects were then implemented mid-FY 2
214 ment of office-based and hospital outpatient department practice.
215                 Clinicians and public health departments preparing for and responding to botulism eve
216  was TTA, defined as the time from emergency department presentation to appendectomy.
217 ctions in patients admitted in the emergency department, promoting antibiotics by oral route, checkin
218 rtments did not differ from those working in departments ranked 11 to 50 (P = 0.456).
219  require immediate transport to an emergency department regardless of the patient's condition.
220 ntibiotics given within 6 hours of emergency department registration.
221 ving antibiotics within 6 hours of emergency department registration.
222 in the proportion of NIH funding to surgical departments relative to total NIH funding from 2007 to 2
223 ings, and their added value in the emergency department remains unknown.
224 trol; sex-work legislation from the US State Department's Country Reports on Human Rights Practices a
225                     The Nationwide Emergency Department Sample data set was examined for temporal tre
226 December 2012) from the Nationwide Emergency Department Sample were analyzed.
227                Previous studies of emergency department sedation are limited by their single-center d
228 equential Organ Failure Assessment emergency department sepsis 318,832 (0.31%; 95% CI, 0.26-0.37); an
229 isits were as follows: 1) original emergency department sepsis 665,319 (0.64%; 95% CI, 0.57-0.73); 2)
230 95% CI, 0.26-0.37); and 3) revised emergency department sepsis 847,868 (0.82%; 95% CI, 0.74-0.91).
231 s may impact national estimates of emergency department sepsis epidemiology.
232             Adult (age, >/= 18 yr) emergency department sepsis patients.
233            The estimated number of emergency department sepsis visits were as follows: 1) original em
234       This study evaluates whether emergency department septic shock patients without a fever (report
235 ts undergoing blood cultures in an Emergency Department setting.
236 c Shock (Sepsis-3) criteria in the emergency department setting.
237 le Estimation of risk based on the Emergency department Spanish Score In patients with AHF) score.
238                              In an emergency department study we recruited 31 patients with acute ana
239 eyond that of the traditional health-focused departments such as health ministries; it is in the doma
240                      Government agencies and departments such as the US Department of Veterans Affair
241      Thus, when exiting the nuclear medicine department, the NET patients injected with (68)Ga-DOTATO
242           There was a reduction in emergency department tidal volume from 8.1 mL/kg predicted body we
243 ondary outcomes included time from emergency department to operating room, length of surgery, surgica
244 e of imaging techniques, time from emergency department to operating room, percentage of complicated
245 od and Drug Branch (FDB) of the state health department to test and identify lead in candy.
246 h) were recruited from a glaucoma outpatient department to undergo ocular response analyser (ORA) tes
247 l sepsis patients' bypassing rural emergency departments to seek emergency care in larger hospitals,
248 zing episode (90% hospitalized/10% emergency department treated) were followed for 7 years.
249                                 An emergency department ventilator protocol which targeted variables
250 ion (26262 [11.1%]), postdischarge emergency department visit (34204 [14.4%]), any predischarge (1385
251 rent biliary events (defined as an emergency department visit or unplanned hospitalization due to sym
252 ing, defined as hospitalization or emergency department visit with a primary diagnosis of intracrania
253 -related complications, defined as emergency department visit, hospitalization, or a urologic procedu
254 ostdischarge mortality, and 30-day emergency department visit.
255  14 days from death; more than one emergency department visit; and more than one hospitalization or i
256 increases than comparison sites in emergency department visits (30.3 more per 1000 beneficiaries per
257 counts for more medication-related emergency department visits among older patients than any other dr
258 ts, affecting up to nearly 850,000 emergency department visits annually.
259  amend these approaches to include emergency department visits as a further outcome.
260 egorizes hospital readmissions and emergency department visits as separate event types is proposed.
261 s), and adverse clinical outcomes (emergency department visits for hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia).
262                                    Emergency department visits for MVCs.
263 ecific fine particulate matter and emergency department visits for respiratory disease in four U.S. c
264 imates of the epidemiology of U.S. emergency department visits for sepsis.
265                                    Emergency department visits for skin infections in the United Stat
266 e patient has experienced multiple emergency department visits or hospitalizations, particularly thos
267 of substance-related events (i.e., emergency department visits related to substance use disorders) du
268 ted by summing costs for avoidable emergency department visits using the Billings algorithm plus inpa
269 national estimates of annual adult emergency department visits using updated sepsis classifications.
270                                    Emergency department visits were only significantly higher in meth
271 ponents of cost, and resource use (emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and intensive care
272                                    Emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and intensive care
273 a-related complications (including emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and urologic proced
274 enrollment characteristics (costs, emergency department visits, hospitalizations, intensive care unit
275 tion sites had larger increases in emergency department visits, inpatient admissions, and Medicare Pa
276 discharge, readmissions, recurrent emergency department visits, outpatient visits, or visits to gener
277 after-hours care and inappropriate emergency department visits.
278 here were 103,257,516 annual adult emergency department visits.
279 e, and (5) oral corticosteroid use/emergency department visits.
280  failure hospital readmissions and emergency department visits.
281 s study of ozone effects on asthma emergency department visits.
282 y injury, altered gas exchange, or emergency department (vs inpatient) presentation.
283 ted to our hospital, and the general surgery department was consulted.
284                                The emergency department was the main location of exposure.
285 ation myocardial infarction to the emergency department, we assessed the diagnostic performance of th
286                                 All surgical departments were eligible for a financial incentive if t
287 presented to the gastroenterology outpatient department with acute abdominal pain centered in the epi
288 A 30-year-old man presented to the emergency department with epigastric pain.
289 ions of children presenting to the emergency department with moderate to severe asthma.
290 ties presented to the Accident and Emergency Department with right ankle pain after an inversion inju
291     All patients admitted from the emergency department with sepsis or septic shock (defined: infecti
292 diatric patients presenting to the emergency department with signs and symptoms of pharyngitis.
293 ) in 1555 adults presenting to the emergency department with symptoms suggesting ischemia.
294 atients (N=1954) presenting to the emergency department with symptoms suggestive of AMI, concentratio
295      This suggests that research programs in departments with limited resources may be enhanced by th
296 nsecutive patients who visited the emergency departments with suspected infection were included.
297 ple, n = 31) were recruited in the emergency department within 24 hours of trauma exposure.
298 uration) were both delivered in an emergency department within 6 h of a motor vehicle accident.
299   The patient elected to leave the emergency department without undergoing treatment, and he returned
300 procedures is standard practice in emergency departments worldwide.

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