戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。

今後説明を表示しない

[OK]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 vels (ie, district, region, and national) of health care.
2 threat to public health and the provision of health care.
3 ayed a central role in the history of mental health care.
4 or dampness, cockroaches, and poor access to health care.
5 se of assisted referral to outpatient mental health care.
6 ihypertensive medications in Chinese primary health care.
7 ssure efficient, evidence-based, and quality health care.
8 iseases, imposing a costly burden on current health care.
9  prediction of psychosis in secondary mental health care.
10 with referral to outpatient community mental health care.
11  prediction of psychosis in secondary mental health care.
12 t burden and improve resource utilisation in health care.
13 hing and important advance for future mental health care.
14 dinal, social, and accessibility barriers to health care.
15 ortant factor to take into account in dental health care.
16 younger age, male sex, and lack of access to health care.
17 mportance of hearing loss and global hearing health care.
18 tential patient harms and excessive costs in health care.
19  prediction of psychosis in secondary mental health care.
20  adverse effects in sanitation, shelter, and health care access (including immunization), but a benef
21      Differences in socioeconomic status and health-care access play a key role.
22 eeded at the country level to understand how health-care access, service delivery, and ACT supply mig
23 expand coverage and bring about a new era of health-care access.
24 ummeted, and genomics has started to pervade health care across all stages of life - from preconcepti
25  age group globally, and are most in need of health care and assistance.
26           Thus, HRV represents a substantial health care and economic burden for which there are no a
27  and December 31, 2014, based on all Swedish health care and including 2655 patients who underwent la
28 ere associated with improved availability of health care and positive experience with coverage of hea
29                    Perceived availability of health care and positive experience with coverage of hea
30 fety is critical to the provision of quality health care and thus is an essential component of nurse
31 c-related air pollution remains a concern to health-care and environmental professionals, with mounti
32 ts points to the need for tailored long-term health-care and prevention services to curb the HIV epid
33  costs of screening or monitoring, access to health care, and the assessment of novel treatments that
34 Acinetobacter baumannii is a common cause of health care associated infections worldwide.
35                                              Health care-associated infection, over half of which can
36  lower-target group also had higher rates of health care-associated infections than those in the high
37 easurement of outcomes (such as readmission, health care-associated infections, and mortality).
38 ional and global capacity building to reduce health-care-associated infection and antimicrobial resis
39            We report adjusted prevalence for health-care-associated infections by clustering at the h
40                                          770 health-care-associated infections were reported in 726 c
41 o calculated risk factors for development of health-care-associated infections with use of a generali
42     392 microorganisms were reported for 342 health-care-associated infections, with Enterobacteriace
43                         The role of trust in health care at the end of life has been acknowledged as
44 form rules for access to and distribution of health care, benefits coverage, coordination of care acr
45  by the heavy toll they take on patients and health care budgets.
46                 To characterize the national health care burden of misdiagnosed cellulitis in patient
47  ten criteria to assess priority: mortality, health-care burden, community burden, prevalence of resi
48 ly patients had less IBD-specific outpatient health care but more IBD-related hospitalizations and ov
49 87.7%-105.9%; P < .001) and for acute mental health care by 25.1% (95% CI, 20.8%-29.4%; P < .001).
50 appropriate interventions to increase breast health-care capacity in a middle-income Latin American c
51 improvement program that linked the 35 spoke health care centers to the 4 large PCI hub hospitals and
52 d, with 1053 patients (43.5%) from the spoke health care centers.
53 V testing and counselling at a local primary health-care centre.
54          Acute Pancreatitis is a substantial health care challenge with increasing incidence.
55 d colorectal cancer (CRC) remains a critical health care challenge worldwide.
56 OC Xpert MTB/RIF test performed at a primary health care clinic.
57 0-59 days) who either presented at a primary health-care clinic or were identified by a community hea
58 ly assigned to receive decentralised primary health-care clinic-based HIV care (control group), accor
59 s tested HIV-positive at seven study primary health-care clinics and were screened for eligibility.
60 h care insurance plans at a large US managed health care company from January 1, 2008, through Februa
61                                  The overall health care cost could have decreased by $293.61 per pat
62          To evaluate geographic variation in health care cost for management of AKs and the associati
63 ve prostate cancer with consequent potential health care cost savings.
64    After 2 years of anticoagulation therapy, health care costs (excluding the study drug) of patients
65 were associated with significantly increased health care costs after 4 common surgical procedures.
66 e worldwide; in isolation, it doubles annual health care costs and, when associated with comorbid men
67                                         High health care costs encourage initiatives that avoid overu
68 impact of surgical site infections (SSIs) on health care costs following common ambulatory surgical p
69                                              Health care costs remain high at $3.2 trillion spent ann
70 leading causes of mortality, disability, and health care costs worldwide.
71 y experience financial burden as a result of health care costs, particularly because these patients o
72 reby improving patient outcomes and reducing health care costs.
73  that affects both clinical care and overall health care costs.
74 ted States and are associated with increased health care costs.
75 ive better outcomes in the setting of rising health care costs.
76                                              Health-care costs and, importantly, caregiver burden, ar
77 provide reliable up-to-date estimates of the health-care costs of excess weight and emphasise the nee
78  audiovisual programme, so might also reduce health-care costs.
79 f asthma control, patient acceptability, and health-care costs.
80 is associated with poor health and increased health-care costs.
81 alth and vision insurance, a usual place for health care, currently driving, a greater number of como
82 -led medical decision-making using available health care data.
83 ncer registry and linked to population-based health-care data.
84 ts or death, which was assessed via national health care databases.
85 ut forth to deal with vertically distributed health-care databases.
86 of the electrocardiogram (ECG), facilitating health care decision making and reducing costs.
87 nity to investigate and improve the value of health care delivery in the management of AKs.
88  associated with use of MAC in an integrated health care delivery system with a capitated payment mod
89 te Northern California (KPNC), an integrated health care delivery system, with health survey and clin
90  of childhood obesity, with implications for health-care delivery and obesity prevention strategies.
91 m our knowledge of the role of insurance and health-care delivery systems in protecting the health of
92 ssess the effects of disease, the quality of health-care delivery, and treatment efficacy across vari
93 ives comfortable and stress-free in terms of health care diagnostic assessments.
94 argely explained by differences in access to health care, diet, lifestyle, cultural barriers, and dis
95  (UHC) requires that families who get needed health care do not suffer financial hardship as a result
96 ires inter alia that families who get needed health care do not suffer undue financial hardship as a
97 t decision-making in a LIC with a cash-based health care economy.
98 he test, subsequent treatments received, and health care encounters, was determined.
99 s of involuntary commitment and acute mental health care exceeded savings by euro25.5 million (US$28.
100  in Europe and the USA and requiring 1-3% of health-care expenditure as a result of stroke, sudden de
101  with unclear effects on quality of care and health care experiences.
102 s necessary to interrupt their spread within health care facilities.
103 nd harms, and 2) the need for transport to a health care facility after reversal of overdose with nal
104                            Health care-onset health care facility-associated Clostridium difficile in
105 ess the effect of demographic, clinical, and health-care factors on costs, patterns of health-care us
106 derivatives for the safety of biomedical and health care fields in broad scales.
107  particular, continue to be used in personal health care, food, and pharmaceutical and cleaning indus
108  allocation models to improve the quality of health care for older people.
109 lth guidelines made recommendations for oral health care for people with mental health problems, incl
110 mprehensive care required to provide optimal health care for transgender individuals.
111                                 Financing of health care for UK citizens in the EU and vice versa is
112 f integrated programmes to align justice and health-care goals has great potential to improve long-te
113 gagement and involvement to co-production in health care holds the promise of revolutionising health
114 tered outcome measures to inform value-based health care in colorectal cancer was developed.
115 ve strayed from international law protecting health care in conflict and to effectively harness legal
116 elivering and maintaining maternal and child health care in Israel.
117 ing to 2008 to 2015 routine secondary mental health care in the South London and the Maudsley Nationa
118 , issues central to the future of health and health care in the United States transcend the ACA provi
119 ated by the Institute of Medicine to improve health care in the United States.
120 ation, the largest provider of liver-related health care in the United States.
121                                      Given a health care industry that has been slow to embrace advan
122 ACA are sorely needed to mitigate health and health-care inequalities and reduce the financial burden
123 t 1 diagnosis of ASD) enrolled in commercial health care insurance plans at a large US managed health
124 imbursement to payments linked to high-value health care is accelerating in the United States because
125 tiny over financial conflicts of interest in health care, it is important to understand the types and
126      A higher out-of-pocket price for mental health care may lead not only to cost savings but also t
127  These data are important to plan for ocular health care needs in the 21st century.
128 are and positive experience with coverage of health-care needs significantly worsened in 2013 compare
129 are and positive experience with coverage of health-care needs, whereas being employed was only assoc
130 y of all eligible veterans in the VA Capitol Health Care Network from 2007 to 2011.
131  Hospital of Philadelphia, a large pediatric health care network in southeastern Pennsylvania and sou
132                                              Health care-onset health care facility-associated Clostr
133 harlson comorbidity index, and need for home health care or rehabilitation facility upon discharge.
134 ations will form the foundation of precision health care, or care customized to an individual patient
135              Using allergy data from a large health care organization's EHR between 2000 and 2013, we
136  to share and extend best practices to other health care organizations and providers delivering HCV c
137 w discusses the financial drivers upon which health care organizations base investment decisions and
138  become a national standard soon, individual health care organizations could develop policies similar
139 ords (EHRs) should be the standard for large health care organizations for delivering high-quality de
140  providers to take a leading role within the health care organizations to enhance value and margin th
141 ression analyses were performed for 3 ocular health care outcomes.
142                                  We compared health-care outcomes in people who sought medical care b
143                     Disparities in access to health care, particularly specialist care, exist worldwi
144 t effect, expressed as the net costs for the health care payer over 50 years.
145                        In the era of bundled health care payment, strategies should be implemented to
146 Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC) health care plan, diagnosed with at least 1 NMSC from 19
147 the contribution of modeling to inform local health-care planning during an outbreak.
148                             The assertion in health care policy that nurses should be role models for
149 ommonly used antibiotics has become a global health-care problem.
150 ese conditions collectively pose significant health care problems, drug companies seldom develop drug
151 ure; national legislation governing cardinal health-care processes; cultural and religious histories
152 n-line survey which was disseminated through health care professional networks whose members saw pati
153 rijuana laws should receive consideration by health care professionals and the public.
154 HOD: In-depth interviews were conducted with health care professionals based in the UK who prescribe
155                                              Health care professionals commonly recommend increased w
156                                              Health care professionals do not adequately stratify ris
157 mes at the time of survey: bitterness toward health care professionals for not having done everything
158                                          The health care professionals involved in this care might pl
159                                              Health care professionals must maintain a high suspicion
160                                       Dental health care professionals should consider CBCT imaging o
161               To improve outcomes, pediatric health care professionals should recognize the importanc
162                 The primary finding was that health care professionals were concerned about 'minimisi
163                                              Health care professionals who worked in the acute settin
164                    These findings may assist health care professionals with interpretation of Child S
165 ative intended to provide surgeons and other health care professionals with the necessary background
166                       However, understanding health care professionals' perspectives is one of the ke
167  AIMS: This two phase study aimed to explore health care professionals' teaching and prescribing prac
168 sed by patients when planning their work, by health care professionals, and by social insurance offic
169  the number of telephone calls and emails to health care professionals, patient-reported convenience
170 ist-based teams to develop and use cadres of health-care professionals, including pharmacists, nurses
171  include targeted and culturally appropriate health-care programmes and services for communities with
172 ted no or little trust (ie, distrust) in the health care provided to their dying parents, we found st
173 transglutaminase and endomysium or on both a health care provider diagnosis and adherence to a gluten
174                          Participants with a health care provider diagnosis of celiac disease had a l
175 abase of Clalit Health Services, the largest health care provider in Israel.
176 d cost and high overhead cost environment of health care provider organizations, stakeholders must un
177 troduction of peanut-containing foods in the health care provider's office or at home.
178 est result and transmitting this to a remote health care provider.
179 dherence to infection control practices, and health-care provider awareness.
180                                        Using health-care provider preference as an IV method, we prop
181  the individual with type 1 diabetes and the health-care provider.
182 anuary 1, 2015, and December 31, 2015, by 84 health care providers (physicians, nurse practitioners,
183 international working group, comprised of 26 health care providers and patient advocates, to develop
184                                              Health care providers are not providing patient-centered
185                         To account for this, health care providers diagnose obesity using BMI percent
186 dosing and treatment content is critical for health care providers, payers, and policy makers, as wel
187 ompt recognition and immediate management by health care providers.
188  that reflect the priorities of patients and health-care providers.
189 become the most dangerous place on earth for health-care providers.
190 se patient access, reduce costs, and improve health care quality as payers turn to payment reform for
191 eatment for cancer is an important aspect of health care quality.
192                 The number of regular mental health care records opened for adults decreased abruptly
193                                              Health care reform and surgical education are often sepa
194 n association between the 2006 Massachusetts health care reform and thyroid cancer treatment, and par
195 ith rather than separate itself from overall health care reform measures and even individual hospital
196                                       Recent health care reforms aim to increase patient access, redu
197 by very low-volume surgeons also had greater health care resource use following both surgeries, inclu
198 arranted behavior changes and the overuse of health care resources in response to direct-to-consumer
199 e global ubiquity of overuse and underuse of health-care resources and the gravity of resulting harms
200 cardial infarction (STEMI) in settings where health-care resources are scarce.
201                      Meanwhile, the share of health-care resources devoted to care of the wealthy has
202 ritories affected by Zika virus need to plan health-care resources to manage GBS patients.
203                                The potential health care savings and out-of-pocket patient savings fr
204                                 Perspective: Health care sector.
205 n is needed, involving more than the primary health-care sector and adopting an ecological approach t
206 d iNTS disease incidences were corrected for health-care-seeking behaviour and recruitment.
207 gh 2013 were largely related to increases in health care service price and intensity but were also po
208 ember, 2015, to detect and verify attacks on health-care services and describe their effect.
209                              The delivery of health-care services generates considerable greenhouse g
210                                   A third of health-care services were hit more than once.
211 ildren, resulting in a substantial burden on health-care services.
212 usion of safe, effective, and cost-effective health-care services.
213 the community setting, preventability in the health-care setting, treatability, and pipeline.
214 ris to persist on plastic surfaces common in health care settings compared with that of Candida parap
215 alues of symptoms elicited in primary mental health care settings suggest that symptoms alone are not
216         Urinary catheter use is prevalent in health care settings, and polymicrobial colonization by
217  trials; however, its performance in routine health care settings, where adherence to drug treatment
218  be considered for adaptation across diverse health care settings.
219 % relative humidity), such as those found in health care settings.
220  was for harmful drinkers in routine primary health-care settings, and might be cost-effective.
221 A, especially when confronted with projected health-care shortages by 2020.
222 eir associations with individual and primary health-care site characteristics, using mixed models.
223       Our study sample included 3362 primary health-care sites and around 1 million people (613 638 p
224 ween changes in these factors and changes in health care spending and to estimate the variability acr
225                                   To provide health care spending estimates for children and adolesce
226                                              Health care spending estimates were extracted from the I
227 013, the largest health condition leading to health care spending for children was well-newborn care
228                              Increases in US health care spending from 1996 through 2013 were largely
229  and inpatient well-newborn care, had larger health care spending growth rates than other conditions.
230 d 2.9 billion patient records, disaggregated health care spending in the United States by condition,
231                                              Health care spending in the United States increased subs
232                           From 1996 to 2013, health care spending on children increased from $149.6 (
233 es has helped guide measures taken to reduce health care spending.
234                       Nutrition training for health care staff has been prioritized internationally a
235  studies suggest that nutrition training for health care staff has some positive effects.
236  studies suggest that nutrition training for health care staff may have a beneficial effect on staff
237 ncer screening quality initiative in a large health care system and to determine if the intervention
238 s with ASCVD treated in the Veterans Affairs health care system from April 1, 2013, to April 1, 2014.
239  integrated multihospital and multispecialty health care system headquartered in Detroit, Michigan-in
240  quality initiative was conducted in a large health care system in western Pennsylvania (University o
241 g antiviral regimens in the Veterans Affairs health care system nationally.
242 kov model, which used a lifetime horizon and health care system perspective, was applied to the PITER
243            Costs were assessed from the U.S. health care system perspective.
244                    Conclusion In a universal health care system, education level, but not income, aff
245  performed at the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, patients 35 years or older scheduled
246 et the needs of patients within our changing health care system, telemedicine should be incorporated
247  overall was associated with distrust in the health care system.
248  fibrillation from the perspective of the US health care system.
249 ut also poses a major economic burden to the health care system.
250 t the time and site of an encounter with the health care system.
251 ptimize laboratory test utilization in their health care system.
252 placing a substantial burden on the national health care system.
253 ed as having colon cancer in an equal-access health care system.
254 rements in quality of life, and costs to the health care system.
255 ociated with significantly lower cost to the health care system.
256 55 years at 3 sites in the Kaiser Permanente health-care system (1997-2012).
257 rce linked to electronic medical records for health care systems across the state of Utah, was used t
258                                              Health care systems globally are facing challenges of me
259 iyear multisite review at two of the largest health care systems in the United States.
260 ore screening is widely implemented in large health care systems in the United States.
261  and, based on recent evidence, propose that health care systems make the appropriate changes to incr
262  posttransplant survival, and differences in health care systems may, in part, explain the Canadian s
263                Implementing DCM in different health care systems should become an active area of rese
264   Keratinocyte cancer puts a large burden on health care systems worldwide.
265 esult in substantial burden for patients and health care systems, and given the aging of the populati
266 nt, multidimensional burdens on patients and health care systems.
267 y primary care practitioners (PCPs) in large health care systems.
268  to guarantee optimal patient care in modern health care systems.
269 (trauma patients) interact with locoregional health care systems.
270 an easier and simpler application in routine health care systems.
271 nflammatory bowel disease and innovations in health-care systems to manage this complex and costly di
272 patients and carers and put a huge burden on health-care systems.
273 th the patient, initiated by a member of the health care team, regarding sexual health and dysfunctio
274 ting hypotheses and driving new frontiers of health care; the idea that the data must and will speak
275 ase for studying novel approaches to improve health care; therefore, if we can better understand why
276 ontinuum, from populations lacking access to health care to inadequate supply of medical resources an
277 n of higher patient cost sharing with mental health care use and downstream effects, such as involunt
278 , we found no difference between regimens in health care use overall or for chemotherapy-related adve
279 ore IBD-related hospitalizations and overall health care use than adult patients with IBD.
280                        Clinical outcomes and health care use through 6 months were obtained from medi
281 h as involuntary commitment and acute mental health care use.
282 , and homicide); social health outcomes; and health care use.
283 nd health-care factors on costs, patterns of health-care use, and place of death in a national cohort
284 l 56 prespecified outcomes measured maternal health-care use, content of care, patient experience, an
285 and a major cause of hospital admissions and health-care utilisation globally.
286                        We also implemented a health-care utilisation survey in a sample of households
287    Stigma and challenges regarding access to health care were identified as barriers to tuberculosis
288 red by a hospital's volume, provides quality health care with fewer complications but is more costly.
289 l compared a simple form for monitoring oral health care with standard care (no form) for outcomes re
290 m non-outbreak situations means that routine health-care worker screening and S aureus eradication ar
291 ween the microneedle patch administered by a health-care worker versus the intramuscular route for th
292 ed patients, contaminated and uncontaminated health care workers (HCWs), and bacterial load in enviro
293 ensive medical infrastructure who present to health care workers too late for postexposure prophylaxi
294 denovirus diseases in vaccine recipients and health care workers.
295                  Nasal swabs were taken from health-care workers every 4 weeks, bed spaces were sampl
296                                              Health-care workers have been implicated in nosocomial o
297 rmine how often S aureus is transmitted from health-care workers or the environment to patients in an
298 inal cohort study, we systematically sampled health-care workers, the environment, and patients over
299 h respect and dignity is a core objective of health care, yet it is unclear how best to measure this
300 rders around the globe have access to mental health care, yet most have access to a mobile phone.

WebLSDに未収録の専門用語(用法)は "新規対訳" から投稿できます。
 
Page Top