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1  closely related to a schema (a visit to the doctor).
2 ry patient registered with a regional family doctor.
3 o inappropriately without first consulting a doctor.
4 ch and close involvement of the primary care doctor.
5 ence of recommendation by their primary care doctor.
6 etermined by sickness absence certified by a doctor.
7 05) and confidence (24% vs 20%; p<0.05) than doctors.
8 ss guidance that will help them to be better doctors.
9 t of these children without first consulting doctors.
10 f subjectivity and ambiguity from individual doctors.
11  care as a result of substantial shortage of doctors.
12 at lack sufficient facilities and specialist doctors.
13 rriers to receiving help for mood from their doctors.
14 sed to provide meaning for both patients and doctors.
15 ers or seniors influences practice of junior doctors.
16 the principles of antisepsis by the nation's doctors.
17 edical specialists-a total of 91,500 too few doctors.
18 f pharmacological enhancement on performance doctors.
19 imity, a professional networking website for doctors.
20 iage system, and a larger role for telephone doctors.
21                                   Who is the doctor?
22 ficantly higher if FGC is performed by a non-Doctor (15.4%) than a Doctor (4.2%; P < 0.001), and the
23                              326/361 (90.3%) doctors, 163/186 (87.6%) nurses and 3591 patients (41.8%
24 s across a wide cadre of health-workers (540 doctors, 260 nurses, 119 clinical officers, and 111 medi
25  1030 candidates (119 clinical officers, 540 doctors, 260 nurses, and 111 medical students) trained o
26  is performed by a non-Doctor (15.4%) than a Doctor (4.2%; P < 0.001), and the calculated population
27 eassessed as not having TB by their managing doctor (61 patients) or were switched to a different tre
28 line survey was conducted among 1,696 junior doctors (809 foundation and 887 core trainees).
29  1792, a priest in Germany consulted a young doctor about a buried corneal foreign body hidden in a s
30 ent of respondents indicated they had seen a doctor about their first positive HCV test result.
31 reness among the medical students and junior doctors about organ donation and transplantation (ODT) m
32  group (n=85) will receive advice from their doctors about physical activity as they would in usual p
33                                              Doctors achieved satisfactory scores on all key concepts
34                                      Patient-doctor agreement was 66%, within 1 category 92%, kappa 4
35                                              Doctors also reliably identify how patients assess thems
36 er receiving the vaccine if recommended by a doctor among those who received the shingles vaccine, 98
37 receding month, 913/3337 (27%) went to see a doctor and 600/913 (66%) of these students were prescrib
38 ad received a diagnosis of RW from a medical doctor and received antiasthma treatment (relative risk,
39 ase rate principle favors Jonathan to be the doctor and the fairness principle favors both individual
40                              One person is a doctor and the other is a nurse.
41  the past 12 months, wheeze during exercise, doctor and/or emergency room visits for wheeze, and use
42 , and attitudes of ODT among the U.K. junior doctors and attempts to identify their educational needs
43 aran Africa and was especially contagious to doctors and caregivers.
44 s on patient autonomy and the social role of doctors and directly impacts on current debates on ethic
45 dminister, and has been validated for use by doctors and nurses and for use over the telephone, allow
46                The most demanding aspect for doctors and nurses in this setting is not the management
47     To explore the culture and influences on doctors and nurses within the intensive care setting whe
48 ic inside Tahrir Square, manned by volunteer doctors and nurses, before they were evacuated to the Ca
49 -of-hours services, and task-sharing between doctors and nurses.
50 ct between medical teams, as well as between doctors and nurses.
51                                              Doctors and parents need to be aware that there is a sma
52                                   Surveys of doctors and patients have revealed the importance of ins
53  interviews and questionnaire responses from doctors and phlebotomists.
54 es (such as emergency departments and family doctors), and systems that rely on self-reporting by pat
55  group sizes, performance levels of the best doctor, and collective intelligence rules.
56 equent reason for consultation with a family doctor, and treatment options are limited.
57  general practitioners, emergency department doctors, and any other healthcare professional involved.
58  interactions with patients, family members, doctors, and nursing colleagues.
59       We could not mask participants, family doctors, and researchers to the treatment allocation.
60 e; comparison of care provided by nurses and doctors; and task shifting to invasive procedures.
61                                         1353 doctors answered the questionnaires.
62                                              Doctors are uniquely placed to opportunistically assess
63 ould be undertaken to ensure that our future doctors are well educated in the principles and practice
64 en with primary care visits described by the doctor as being for asthma (11%, 0%, 4%, P = 0.002), but
65 ntake of "a nutraceutical a day may keep the doctor away".
66 dividuating facts reveal who is actually the doctor, base rates and fairness become irrelevant, as th
67 more likely to have frequent visits to their doctor because of asthma and nine-fold (1.11-72.83) more
68 who had private health coverage, consulted a doctor because the 'symptom was serious', or who did not
69 ght be more acceptable to patients and their doctors because they restrict exposure to placebo or ine
70 k on the lands to be removed without using a doctor blade.
71 lectrophoretic deposition, hydrogel casting, doctor blading, and many others.
72 ense, smooth, 5.3-mum-thick PbSe QD film via doctor-blading.
73 sthma?" followed by "Was this confirmed by a doctor?" both received positive answers from 7.9% of men
74 nterpretations that engaged the attention of doctors but also resonated with popular health concerns.
75              SMC was delivered by specialist doctors but was not standardised; GES consisted of a sel
76 sidents used their extra income to go to the doctor, buy their medications, and alleviate their hunge
77 ning atopy with a diagnosis of asthma from a doctor captured the greatest socioeconomic variation, in
78             For many patients, families, and doctors, choosing the right time to move from medical ma
79 nd ex-smokers without MS in the male British doctors cohort (1.12 (95% CI 0.63 to 1.97) and 0.54 (95%
80                                    Emergency doctors completed a questionnaire for adult patients pre
81      This can provide data to clinicians and doctors concerning cytokines secretion at minute concent
82                                       Senior doctors consider themselves exempt from following policy
83 entially confounding patient and prescribing doctor covariates, this endline difference between the g
84 on referrals was feasible and indicated that doctors currently have better information transfer skill
85 ess susceptible cvs (Percoca Romagnola 7 and Doctor Davis).
86 hy (PhD) degree in addition to their medical doctor degree.
87 cs of excellence can help young students and doctors determine what they should strive for to become
88 otype (n = 296) was defined as self-reported doctor diagnosed hay fever or allergic upper respiratory
89 ng atopic asthma when having a mother with a doctor diagnosed history of asthma is 4.76, but the sens
90 els in 2-3 years-old wheezers do not predict doctors' diagnosed asthma at age 6 years.
91 ghest decile) were more likely in those with doctor-diagnosed asthma (P = .02) or BDR (P = .02).
92 6)) and between individuals with and without doctor-diagnosed asthma (p=6.06 x 10(-11)).
93 chromosome 17 and early wheezing phenotypes, doctor-diagnosed asthma and atopy at 7(1/2) years, and b
94 is at less than 6 months of age, the risk of doctor-diagnosed asthma at 11-13 years was about twice t
95 for multisensitized atopy at age 2 years and doctor-diagnosed asthma at age 4 years.
96  to a lesser extent GWG were associated with doctor-diagnosed asthma ever.
97  the presence and age at start of persistent doctor-diagnosed asthma in the child at the age of 5 yea
98 ent self-reported wheeze, chronic cough, and doctor-diagnosed asthma in women without baseline sympto
99      We defined current asthma at 7 years as doctor-diagnosed asthma plus wheeze in the past 12 month
100                                              Doctor-diagnosed asthma tended to be more common with hi
101                                              Doctor-diagnosed asthma was parent reported at age 6 yea
102                                              Doctor-diagnosed asthma was present in 13% of the former
103 with parent-reported wheezing phenotypes and doctor-diagnosed asthma were computed using a modified P
104                                      BMI and doctor-diagnosed asthma were modeled during the first 6
105    Asthma cases comprised women who reported doctor-diagnosed asthma with concurrent asthma medicatio
106 7 years of life, 10.4% of children developed doctor-diagnosed asthma, 25.8% AE, and 4.6% hay fever.
107 n pregnancy with hayfever, eczema, wheezing, doctor-diagnosed asthma, allergic sensitisation and tota
108 art 1: After completion by 482 patients with doctor-diagnosed asthma, each ICQ item underwent item re
109 omposition and specific wheeze phenotypes or doctor-diagnosed asthma.
110 mptoms and function were worse in those with doctor-diagnosed asthma.
111 antification) were twice as likely to report doctor-diagnosed asthma.
112 allergic wheeze as reporting both wheeze and doctor-diagnosed hay fever (n = 1,310, 6%) and non-aller
113                                          For doctor-diagnosed hay fever and current rhinitis symptoms
114                                              Doctor-diagnosed wheeze is not a prerequisite for the di
115 erformed a genome-wide interaction study for doctors' diagnoses of asthma up to 8 years in three Euro
116 olitan area and were interviewed about prior doctors' diagnoses of asthma, hay fever/nasal allergies/
117 her the participant's child has been given a doctor diagnosis of "eczema or any other kind of skin al
118 pic asthma in a child to a mother that has a doctor diagnosis of asthma (OR 4.76 P = 0.045), this is
119  life was assessed through interview, as was doctor diagnosis of asthma at ages 3-6 years.
120         Allergic rhinitis was defined with a doctor diagnosis or reported symptoms at age 7 or 8 year
121 symptoms 'ever' and 'in the last 12 months', doctor diagnosis, age of onset and treatments of asthma,
122                           Allergic rhinitis (doctor diagnosis/symptoms) and aeroallergen sensitizatio
123  doctors is relatively similar, but not when doctors' diagnostic accuracy differs too much.
124 prove the notes' contents, but 85% to 96% of doctors did not agree.
125                Approximately half of the eye doctors did not think that retained vision was a source
126 reveals that a significant proportion of eye doctors do not have adequate knowledge of the visual phe
127 s were taken as recommended by participants' doctors during the study.
128 atients wanted open notes to continue and no doctor elected to stop.
129 re either stereotypic (e.g., Jonathan is the doctor, Elizabeth is the nurse) or counterstereotypic (e
130 ments and surgeon's hands or fingers.The eye doctors estimated that 38.9% and 64.3% patients would se
131 tronic literature searches were performed by Doctor Evidence, a global medical evidence software and
132                                         With doctors experiencing no more than a modest effect on the
133 s serious', or who did not wait to consult a doctor for another reason were at significantly higher o
134 h Service hospitals referred by their family doctor for the investigation of colorectal cancer sympto
135 aware of their status, 225 (3.0%) had seen a doctor for their HCV, 79 (1.4%) had taken HCV treatment,
136  included 1- to 3-year-old subjects seeing a doctor for wheeze or cough and assessed the prevalence o
137 lth outcomes that are equivalent to those of doctors for patients with a range of chronic health prob
138 ntent-based image retrieval system to assist doctors for quick and reliable content-based comparative
139 ts workforce, ageing and turnover of village doctors, fragmented health information technology system
140 around-the-clock nature of medical practice, doctors frequently care for patients after periods of ex
141 en and women whose infants were delivered by doctors had extended lengths of stay, as did poorer wome
142 sed properly neurologically, in part as many doctors have limited neurological exposure and are hence
143                   Funds, insurance coverage, doctors, health-care workers, resources, and equipment w
144                                     However, doctors heavily rely on the visual feedback provided by
145 nt judgments of doctors outperforms the best doctor in a group whenever the diagnostic accuracy of do
146 nts of multiple doctors outperforms the best doctor in a group.
147 nt directly to the patient's primary medical doctor in only 25.5% of hospitals.
148 week day of admission, recruitment of junior doctors in August each year, European Working Time Direc
149                 Yealland was among the first doctors in Britain to incorporate electricity in the sys
150 e describe and analyse graduate education of doctors in China by discussing the country's health work
151 reased awareness of dementia by patients and doctors in more recent years may have influenced dementi
152 ician health professional working along with doctors in most countries although types and roles in pr
153  We assessed the knowledge of a group of eye doctors in Pakistan regarding these phenomena.
154                                       Junior doctors in the United Kingdom have limited knowledge abo
155 tals, specialised pulmonologists, and family doctors) in 21 countries.
156      During removal of the foreign body, the doctor inspected the corneal incision with a microscope
157 abetes receive dietary advice from nurses or doctors instead of individualized nutrition therapy (INT
158   Of 368 students, 279 (76%) were foundation doctors (interns) and had not commenced formal surgical
159 e) was obtained via parental questionnaires, doctor interviews or medical records.
160  a group whenever the diagnostic accuracy of doctors is relatively similar, but not when doctors' dia
161 r counterstereotypic (e.g., Elizabeth is the doctor, Jonathan is the nurse).
162 hey had been transferred from an established doctor-led to nurse-led service.
163 real-world datasets, involving more than 140 doctors making more than 20,000 diagnoses, we investigat
164              Regarding what they wanted from doctors, many respondents wrote in the section for their
165 reasing knowledge and awareness among junior doctors may help to improve the continuing organ shortag
166  about weight among a large group of medical doctors (MDs) to determine the pervasiveness of negative
167 duals from four professional groups: nurses, doctors, medical technicians, support staff.
168 ible (65%), whereas nearly half believe that doctors might not work as hard to save the life of a reg
169 emistructured interviews were conducted with doctors (n = 10), pharmacists (n = 10), and nurses and m
170                                      Men and doctors need to consider these additional potential harm
171 , even if that is expensive" (78%) and that "doctors need to take a more prominent role in limiting u
172 rom low-dose heparin administration, medical doctors need to take into consideration the potential bl
173 nd distinguishing characteristics (including doctor-nurse differences) of health care workers who did
174  Higher total clinically qualified staffing (doctors+nurses) per bed and a higher number of doctors r
175  Midlands hospitals, inviting a total of 350 doctors, nurses and midwives to participate.
176  error could predict their intentions to ask doctors/nurses about their hand washing compliance or no
177 bout their hand washing compliance or notify doctors/nurses if they are not wearing a hospital identi
178  the variance in patients' intentions to ask doctors/nurses if they have washed their hands (42%/37%)
179                                        HCPs (doctors/nurses in general practice and/or hospital) were
180                                  Physicians (doctor of medicine and doctor of osteopathic medicine),
181           Physicians (doctor of medicine and doctor of osteopathic medicine), advance practice provid
182     Among the K awardees, 40% (42/105) had a doctor of philosophy (PhD) degree in addition to their m
183 d controls were recruited through the family doctor of the children who had the meningococcal disease
184 oyment over a 6-month period from the family doctors of 260 consecutive patients with psychogenic non
185                                       Family doctors of each case were asked to identify healthy infa
186 le in teaching anatomy to the scientists and doctors of the future.
187  the ED setting underlines the need to train doctors of various backgrounds in prevention and treatme
188 rience if patients are invited to read their doctors' office notes.
189 ersonnel are in short supply, and for use in doctors' offices, clinics, and at home.
190                                          Eye doctors (ophthalmologists, residents and medical officer
191 e in decision making to be shared with their doctor or to have significant autonomy in the final deci
192 cess was initiated by an optometrist, family doctor, or ophthalmologist in 68.0%, 18.2%, and 13.8% of
193 ed adherence, and admitting to not following doctors' orders, were associated with being nonadherent
194 ce: Aggregating the independent judgments of doctors outperforms the best doctor in a group whenever
195 bining the independent judgments of multiple doctors outperforms the best doctor in a group.
196  to receive desired help for mood from their doctors (P = .02), regardless of sex.
197 , implementation of clinical guidelines, and doctor-patient communication.
198 ailed timing of physician actions during the doctor-patient encounter were measured, a survey of pati
199 exacerbate mood disorders and compromise the doctor-patient relationship.
200 s, female illiteracy, the number of licensed doctors per 1000 population, and the proportion of ethni
201  with a greater number of nurses per bed and doctors per bed in a bivariate analysis.
202 rs bias, the results demonstrate that junior doctors' perceptions and attitudes toward ODT were favor
203 including systematic medication titration by doctors, pharmacists, or patients; education; or lifesty
204  measured access to 4 basic services (family doctor, pharmacy, cardiac rehabilitation, and pathology
205 re community nurse teams or services, family doctor practices, leg ulcer clinics, tissue viability cl
206 s in various countries suggest 17% to 80% of doctors prescribe 'placebos' in routine practice, but pr
207                              The low rate of doctors prescribing adrenaline auto-injectors in the ED
208 , with meticulous workforce planning, senior doctor provisions and careful use of resources, it is po
209            Thirty-nine healthy male resident doctors received either lactose placebo (n = 19) or moda
210 rences regarding the power dynamics in nurse-doctor relationships, particularly in relation to the cu
211 ctors+nurses) per bed and a higher number of doctors relative to the number of nurses were both assoc
212                                 Primary care doctors rely on gastroenterologists for direction becaus
213 tice size having little effect; 3% to 36% of doctors reported changing documentation content; and 0%
214                  After the intervention, few doctors reported longer visits (0% to 5%) or more time a
215                     After having obtained my Doctor Rerum Naturalium degree in Budapest, Hungary, I w
216  unit was collected at patient's chest area, doctor's chest area, and assistant's chest area on blood
217  has always been and should remain part of a doctor's clinical toolkit.
218 valence ratios (PRs) of feeding patterns for doctor's diagnosed eczema/skin allergy in the first 6 ye
219 rovided data on feeding modes in infancy and doctor's diagnosed eczema/skin allergy in the first 6 ye
220  studied whether perinatal exposure to pets, doctor's diagnosed wheezy bronchitis (WB), and compositi
221 ociation of SNPs previously associated with (doctor's diagnosed) asthma to our GWAS of asthma with BH
222 l larger genetic effect size than analysing (doctor's diagnosed) asthma.
223 k women were more likely to have had a prior doctor's diagnosis of asthma (22.7% vs 16.0%, P = .04) a
224 gen-specific IgE level (>/= 0.35 IU/mL), and doctor's diagnosis of asthma (3-6 years).
225 ed group was significantly associated with a doctor's diagnosis of asthma after age 4 years (odds rat
226 ophil cationic protein levels; self-reported doctor's diagnosis of asthma or hay fever; or lung funct
227 ary care, adults (18-50 years of age) with a doctor's diagnosis of asthma who were prescribed inhaled
228            Key exclusion criteria included a doctor's diagnosis of asthma, chronic bronchitis or COPD
229 defined with at least two criteria positive: doctor's diagnosis of asthma, symptoms of asthma, and/or
230  [1.2-3.9]), FE symptoms (2.2 [1.2-4.3]) and doctor's diagnosis of atopic dermatitis (1.9 [1.0-3.4])
231 -life factors and onset of asthma based on a doctor's diagnosis or asthma medication (primary outcome
232           We defined depression as report of doctor's diagnosis or use of antidepressant medication.
233  The sensitivity of the four methods against doctor's diagnosis was 0.77-0.88, and the specificity wa
234 nation, spirometry, asthma control test, and doctor's diagnosis were collected.
235 ths and allergic rhinitis as a self-reported doctor's diagnosis.
236  age 6 was defined as ever having a reported doctor's diagnosis.
237  their availability and costs as well as the doctor's experience.
238 d food items and the grounds for avoidance ("doctor's instructions", "family's judgment", and "not co
239  unit eliminated specific foods according to doctor's instructions, a considerable proportion of them
240 at, peanut or shrimp, and avoided it without doctor's instructions, was 46%, 48%, and 34%, respective
241  least one in four cited "this was not their doctor's job" and a preference to "talk to another clini
242 A 36-point questionnaire explored the junior doctor's knowledge, perceptions, and attitudes toward OD
243 hat they should be able to add comments to a doctor's note.
244                                       One UK doctor says "I'd rather have HIV than diabetes" as life
245 r fragmentation of care (number of different doctors seen) was associated with high-intensity CT use.
246 ulation (0.7% of purchasers), presumed to be doctor shoppers, obtained 32 opioid prescriptions from 1
247      To close the information gap that makes doctor shopping and uncoordinated care possible, states
248                Physicians could also prevent doctor shopping by adopting procedures to screen new pat
249        Our study estimates the prevalence of doctor shopping in the US and the amounts and types of o
250 bsent adequate patient information systems, "doctor shopping" patients can obtain multiple opioid pre
251                                          Non-doctors showed a greater improvement in knowledge (22% v
252 icacy in knowing what questions to ask their doctor significantly improved at follow-up while control
253 s including poor health, illness requiring a doctor, somatic concerns, and any health problem at age
254 h American continent, sparked controversy as doctors struggled to understand the relationship between
255 s were similar to those of all registered UK doctors suggesting our results are generalizable.
256 t management was higher among MBBS-qualified doctors than other types of health-care provider (adjust
257  correct and incorrect decisions of the best doctor that are overruled by the collective.
258 st been tested for HCV because they or their doctor thought they were at risk for infection.
259 d acute primary care visits described by the doctor to be due to a cold, otitis media, an upper respi
260 cumentation is essential information for the doctor to make sound therapeutic decision.
261 those less than the median age, not having a doctor to order the test was a significant barrier, and
262 g, cow's milk or wheat were advised by their doctors to do so, while less than 49% of patients who av
263 ffectiveness of changing care providers from doctors to nurses and as the majority of cost data avail
264  physicians as well as encourage experienced doctors to rekindle the spark that initially motivated t
265 ns Prescriptions and Screening Tool to Alert doctors to Right Treatment (STOPP/START) criteria, a val
266 ified in clinics, and notes were reviewed by doctors trained in uveitis therapy.
267 risk of COPD exacerbation requiring an acute doctor visit (OR, 1.7; P = 0.04).
268 ; 95% CI: 1.1, 1.9) and fever resulting in a doctor visit (RR = 1.2; 95% CI: 1.0, 1.5).
269 ate the state-level prevalence of yearly eye doctor visit in the study population by race/ethnicity (
270 h significant changes in the likelihood of a doctor visit or overnight hospital stay or health status
271  wheezing lasting >/= 2 days, resulting in a doctor visit or prescription medication treatment (RR =
272 pe-based test that can be performed within a doctor visit.
273  disparities in the prevalence of yearly eye doctor visits among states.
274 ted height and weight records from well-baby doctor visits and also measured children during study vi
275 aucoma) and from NHIS, eye care use (ie, eye doctor visits and cannot afford eyeglasses when needed)
276 djusted state-level prevalence of yearly eye doctor visits ranged from 48% (Missouri) to 69% (Marylan
277 re controller use, reliever use, unscheduled doctor visits, emergency department (ED) visits, and hos
278  prevent as many as nine million unscheduled doctor visits, four million emergency department visits,
279 rall health status, number of sick days, and doctor visits, such that eczema and each of the sleep sy
280  predict the weekly percentage of outpatient doctors visits for influenza-like illness, and the seaso
281                                              Doctors volunteering to participate and patients using p
282 ing being better able to see their preferred doctor was associated with decreases in chronic obstruct
283 r monthly follow-up visits, and the managing doctor was recommended to switch patients with adherence
284 and contextual factors of practice influence doctors' well-being and therapeutic relationships.
285 ose who had received screening advice from a doctor were at significantly higher odds of ever seeking
286 ment with only one academic track, satellite doctors were a mix of tenure and mostly non-tenure track
287 ated AE reports only when patients and their doctors were aware that statin therapy was being used an
288 asked to their allocated treatment group but doctors were not.
289 s with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is, "Doctor, what should I eat?" Findings from epidemiology s
290 o cover relations between sickness funds and doctors, which in turn led to the right for insured indi
291                        A 43-year-old medical doctor who contracted an Ebola virus infection in Sierra
292  beyond the capability of the scientists and doctors who fought infectious diseases during World War
293 per year, many patients are still treated by doctors who usually manage epithelial ovarian cancer but
294 esented on routine examination to her family doctor with abnormal liver function tests.
295                   In total, 81% were medical doctors with 299 possessing additional qualifications.
296 in diagnosing types of diabetes and provides doctors with a scalar to classify diabetes of type 1 and
297           Medical education needs to provide doctors with the conceptual, developmental, and manageme
298      It consists of Practitioners for 49.9%, doctors working for hospitals with more than 100 beds fo
299 n Working Time Directives (EWTDs) for junior doctors' working hours and hospital size.
300 igher representing a level at which a family doctor would be concerned.

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