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1 fer long-lived protection if needed (eg, for health-care workers).
2 ributed to drug diversion by an HCV-infected health care worker.
3 ent stepped-care program led by a nonmedical health care worker.
4 ion of the parenteral narcotic fentanyl by a health care worker.
5  occupational exposures and infections among health care workers.
6 tified among close contacts or 2038 screened health care workers.
7 d with either MDR-TB or XDR-TB than were non-health care workers.
8 nlisted, female, White, Reservist, Army, and health care workers.
9 t is associated with illicit narcotic use by health care workers.
10 wing a needlestick is an important threat to health care workers.
11 th carriage of the organisms on the hands of health care workers.
12 nvironmental sources as well as patients and health care workers.
13 to prevent, control, and treat infections in health care workers.
14 ontacts of immunocompromised individuals and health care workers.
15 bstantial illness and occasional death among health care workers.
16 stantial illness and occasional deaths among health care workers.
17     The analysis included 3601 women and 176 health care workers.
18 denovirus diseases in vaccine recipients and health care workers.
19 rect contact or via the hands or clothing of health care workers.
20 ong females, children under age 5 years, and health-care workers.
21 ut and stress are common, linked problems in health-care workers.
22 o November for 2013 and 2014 and interviewed health-care workers.
23  happen rapidly, needing a rapid response by health-care workers.
24 n, particularly when identified in women and health-care workers.
25 uman mAb-based immunotherapy, especially for health-care workers.
26             Prospective study of 220 healthy health care workers (126 women, 94 men) at the Mayo Medi
27                       The AED was applied by health care workers (32%), lay volunteers (35%), police
28 t 31, 2011, and Dec 23, 2012, we sampled 198 health-care workers, 40 environmental locations, and 185
29                            Patients were 280 health care workers (50 in the baseline control phase, 1
30 t differ between health care workers and non-health care workers (55% vs. 57%); however, among HIV-in
31 tive, but cultures of the hands of 10 of 165 health care workers (6 percent) were positive for P. aer
32                             Fifty-nine of 90 health care workers (65%) had levels of antibodies to HB
33       Data were collected by locally trained health-care workers according to patient-based or unit-b
34         Among vaccinated groups (vaccine via health-care worker administered microneedle patch or int
35 reak of seven cases (in six patients and one health care worker, all of whom had AIDS) of multidrug-r
36                                              Health-care workers also need to work with service users
37 4 patients (65%) were men, and 14 (38%) were health care workers; among the health care workers, noso
38 ntrol strategies to 1) improve protection of health care workers and 2) enhance compliance with estab
39                                 Twenty-eight health care workers and 204 children were studied.
40 recognized as a serious health problem among health care workers and children with spina bifida.
41 laxis in susceptible individuals, especially health care workers and children with spina bifida.
42  collected cultures from the infants and the health care workers and from the health care workers' pe
43 (-)CD127(-) effector memory cells in exposed health care workers and in patients with acquired immuni
44         HIV infection did not differ between health care workers and non-health care workers (55% vs.
45 for handling body fluids are recommended for health care workers and patients and their family member
46                                         Both health care workers and patients receiving this therapy
47                         Prior vaccination of health care workers and the public would save lives in a
48 ety needle to reduce needlestick injuries to health care workers and the RPD to improve safety and ou
49 cacious for patients and pose fewer risks to health care workers and to the environment.
50 nt, and increased remuneration of specialist health-care workers and government support for childhood
51 t-prevalence survey, 9 additional infants, 1 health care worker, and 12 of the health care workers' p
52 ients, the 9 additional colonized infants, 1 health care worker, and 3 of the 12 dogs had identical p
53 tcoming in knowledge of influenza among many health care workers, and a paucity of clinical data and
54 d local leadership, including policy makers, health care workers, and funders, to propose an agenda t
55 ximally effective, increases in HIV testing, health care workers, and infrastructure are needed, in a
56  of professional activities for HCV-infected health care workers, and persons should not be excluded
57 fection control: handwashing, vaccination of health care workers, and prompt placement of infectious
58 fection control: handwashing, vaccination of health care workers, and prompt placement of infectious
59 vide accurate information to the lay public, health care workers, and the agricultural sector.
60 sis, diagnosis, management, implications for health-care workers, and ethical and medicolegal aspects
61 lls for nations to gather health data, train health-care workers, and raise awareness in regard to AS
62                                              Health care workers are at occupational risk for a vast
63 occupational postexposure prophylaxis (PEP), health care workers are increasingly receiving inquiries
64                                   Nurses and health care workers are under increasing scrutiny from t
65 ines or protocols articulating this role and health-care workers are trained in some settings, but ge
66 nization and disease stages for patients and health care workers, as well as an isolation ward and bo
67                                Trained local health-care workers asked validated questionnaires and a
68       PEP with antiviral agents was given to health-care workers assessed to have had substantial ris
69 d 12 months after the intervention among 176 health care workers at the included facilities.
70 le living with HIV/AIDS, family members, and health care workers at the target clinical sites.
71    Median nasal carriage rate of S aureus in health-care workers at 4-weekly timepoints was 36.9% (IQ
72 gement of neonatal resuscitation (skills) of health care workers before the intervention and after 6
73      A multicomponent intervention targeting health-care worker behaviour increased the probability o
74 (3 with laboratory-confirmed cases) and in 2 health care workers (both with laboratory-confirmed case
75 age of Staphylococcus aureus is common among health care workers, but outbreaks caused by such carrie
76 tion designed for clergy was adapted for the health care worker committed to developing skills in the
77 ong 217 household contacts and more than 200 health care worker contacts whom we identified, MERS-CoV
78  key attitudes and perceptions may influence health care workers' decisions regarding vaccination.
79                                None of these health-care workers developed Ebola virus disease.
80 nfidence interval (CI): 1.47, 7.17); correct health care worker diagnosis (OR = 2.59, 95% CI: 1.39, 4
81 andomized controlled trial (n = 20 clinics), health care workers either were trained in guidelines fo
82 person (e.g., a patient's family member or a health care worker) either before or after exposure to M
83 d by some, influenza vaccination rates among health care workers, even in pandemics, remain below opt
84                  Nasal swabs were taken from health-care workers every 4 weeks, bed spaces were sampl
85 s of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in health care workers exposed to a disaster, in order to f
86 vel tuberculosis (TB) vaccines and to screen health care workers for latent tuberculosis infection (L
87             Four recommended vaccination for health care workers, four for elderly persons, three for
88 fter accidental needlestick exposure in five health care workers, four of whom developed acute hepati
89 with exposures originating from a single ill health care worker from Guangdong Province, China.
90  67 clinical isolates from 44 patients and 5 health care workers from six different medical centers.
91                                  As a group, health care workers had rates of tuberculosis similar to
92                               The other four health-care workers had intermediate or maximum risk exp
93 nts was 36.9% (IQR 35.7-37.3), and 115 (58%) health-care workers had S aureus detected at least once
94 for surveillance cultures were obtained from health care worker hands, central venous catheter insert
95 ntroduced into the intensive care nursery on health care workers' hands after being colonized from pe
96 l environmental conditions, transmission via health-care workers' hands, contaminated medical product
97                               Vaccination of health-care workers has been claimed to prevent nosocomi
98                                              Health-care workers have been implicated in nosocomial o
99 primary health care facilities, and explored health care worker (HCW) perspectives on providing HIV t
100 nt- or parent-collected (self-collected) and health care worker (HCW)-collected pharyngeal swabs for
101 rately using pooled sera from latex-allergic health care workers (HCW) and spina bifida (SB) patients
102 ribed, as are the results of surveillance of health care workers (HCWs) and patients with potential e
103 patterns of dissemination among patients and health care workers (HCWs) and to quantify the contribut
104 onducted a cross-sectional study in low-risk health care workers (HCWs) at a single U.S. center to co
105 ol and Prevention to recommend that infected health care workers (HCWs) be reviewed by an expert pane
106  possibility of nosocomial transmission, 338 health care workers (HCWs) exposed and 288 HCWs unexpose
107 ompare the prevalence of H5N1 antibody among health care workers (HCWs) exposed to H5N1 case-patients
108 can offer graduate-level academic courses to health care workers (HCWs) in resource-limited settings
109           RSV-B genomes from 16 patients and health care workers (HCWs) suspected to be involved in t
110 cal attention and thereby potentially infect health care workers (HCWs) who would not, in turn, have
111 ed patients, contaminated and uncontaminated health care workers (HCWs), and bacterial load in enviro
112 lly safer environment for hospital patients, health care workers (HCWs), and visitors.
113 uvanted influenza vaccine (pH1N1 vaccine) in health care workers (HCWs).
114 or higher-level officials, rather than local health care workers (HCWs).
115                  Changes in the behaviour of health-care workers (HCWs) are required to improve adher
116                      Nosocomial infection of health-care workers (HCWs) during outbreaks of respirato
117             Infants who were exposed to this health care worker in August 1998 were at greater risk o
118                            The controls were health care workers in a prospective surveillance projec
119 covered from patients in Florida and Nevada, health care workers in Atlanta, Ga, and Miami, Fla, and
120 e rates of drug-resistant tuberculosis among health care workers in countries with high tuberculosis
121                                              Health care workers in intervention facilities received
122 is, or malaria, yet are virtually unknown by health care workers in North America, because they occur
123 ONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: While a majority of health care workers in one midwestern state reported rec
124     Clinical suspicion is highest for female health care workers in the fourth decade of life.
125                                              Health care workers in this HIV-endemic area were substa
126 spirator-fit testing program did not protect health care workers in this setting.
127                   In a parallel-group study, health-care workers in 20 long-term elderly-care hospita
128 blished literature on interventions to train health-care workers in Africa on mental health.
129      Tuberculosis is also a major problem in health-care workers in both low-burden and high-burden s
130 ually transmitted diseases (STDs) by primary-health-care workers in Mwanza Region, Tanzania.
131                                      Primary health-care workers in resource-poor settings usually di
132 ich likely reflects the higher percentage of health-care workers in this age group.
133                                   A hospital health care worker inadvertently exposed 32 neonatal int
134 lth care workers versus 11.9 per 100,000 non-health care workers (incidence rate ratio, 5.46 [95% CI,
135 alth care workers versus 1.1 per 100,000 non-health care workers (incidence rate ratio, 6.69 [CI, 4.3
136 cently emerged as a significant challenge to health-care workers, including those involved in dentist
137                           None of these four health-care workers, including two with maximum risk exp
138             The skill scores of intervention health care workers increased significantly compared wit
139                                        Thus, health-care worker instruction might be the preferred st
140 re randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either health-care worker instruction or induction to obtain sp
141 d 481 patients, of whom 213 were assigned to health-care worker instruction versus 268 assigned to in
142 e hospital population comprised patients and health-care workers, interacting with its larger communi
143 selors, parents of children with clefts, and health care workers involved in the treatment or follow-
144 n several days of exposure (to assess if the health care worker is already infected with HCV) and 6 m
145                A coordinated programme among health-care workers is advised to maintain the independe
146                Transmission via the hands of health-care workers is an important determinant of sprea
147 r screening for long-term carriage (e.g., in health care workers) is warranted.
148 gnosis more frequently than instruction by a health-care worker, it is more costly, does not result i
149  effective method to improve and sustain the health care workers' knowledge and skills in neonatal re
150  need to be targeted to physicians and other health care workers, laboratorians, administrators, paye
151  We aimed to find out whether vaccination of health-care workers lowers mortality and the frequency o
152  high burden settings-including shortages of health-care workers-must be considered.
153 14 (38%) were health care workers; among the health care workers, nosocomial transmission was implica
154 ies and other injuries from sharp objects to health care workers occur annually in the United States
155 ne than infants who were not exposed to this health care worker (odds ratio, 41.2; 95 percent confide
156                    Concern about the risk to health care workers of occupationally acquired tuberculo
157                    In seven acutely infected health care workers, only two developed a nAb response t
158 ty precautions are not overly burdensome for health care workers or for patients and their families.
159 tum obtained either under instruction from a health-care worker or through induction can improve case
160 rmine how often S aureus is transmitted from health-care workers or the environment to patients in an
161 regiver's reporting the child's fever to the health care worker (OR = 2.18, 95% CI: 1.32, 3.62).
162 ary care), other medical or social services, health-care workers, or agencies, and emergency referral
163 eedle patch, all administered by an unmasked health-care worker; or received a single dose of (4) ina
164 and hygiene compliance, and a lower ratio of health-care workers : patients.
165 ch factors, alone or in combination, improve health care worker performance.
166 infants, 1 health care worker, and 12 of the health care workers' pet dogs had positive cultures for
167 nts and the health care workers and from the health care workers' pets, since this organism has been
168                                     Liberian health care workers played a crucial role in documenting
169 h mental health problems and their families, health-care workers, policy makers, and funders.
170 risk assessment and management algorithm for health-care workers potentially exposed to Ebola virus a
171 method for risk assessment and management of health-care workers potentially exposed to Ebola virus a
172          They selected studies that targeted health care workers practicing in inpatient settings and
173 y and substantial mortality, are a threat to health-care workers, prohibitively expensive to treat, a
174 hese guidelines to help physicians and other health care workers provide optimal care for renal trans
175                   The local Kenyan community health care workers readily accepted the Peek Acuity sma
176  therefore poses the single greatest risk to health care workers regarding occupational transmission
177          Funds, insurance coverage, doctors, health-care workers, resources, and equipment were also
178 protection in children and adults (including health care workers) resulting from the hepatitis B vacc
179  Universal glove and gown use also decreased health care worker room entry (4.28 vs 5.24 entries per
180 n at the Stanford Hospital and Clinics for a health care worker screening program revealed a critical
181 m non-outbreak situations means that routine health-care worker screening and S aureus eradication ar
182                                    Women and health care workers should be aware of the negative asso
183 MR: 2.9; 95% CI: 1.2 to 6.0), and lower-paid health care workers (SMR: 1.3; 95% CI: 1.1 to 1.5).
184 on recommendations pertaining to susceptible health care workers, suggesting a need for provider educ
185                      Variable costs included health care worker supplies, patient care supplies, diag
186 ata inform how states might optimally enlist health care workers' support in achieving vaccination go
187                    Twenty-six percent of the health care workers surveyed demonstrated hand colonizat
188                       A higher percentage of health care workers than non-health care workers with MD
189 2008 study in Seattle, Washington, of female health-care workers that exclusively worked night or day
190                                Of 74 exposed health care workers, the 11 (15%) who had conversion on
191 inal cohort study, we systematically sampled health-care workers, the environment, and patients over
192 lized IgE from the serum of a latex-allergic health care worker to screen a cDNA library from Hevea l
193 n sulphate in vials or ampoules and requires health care workers to be trained in dose calculation or
194               Transmission from HCV-infected health care workers to patients is rare.
195 derable problem despite numerous attempts by health care workers to reduce risk of transmission.
196 ensive medical infrastructure who present to health care workers too late for postexposure prophylaxi
197                                              Health care worker training did not yield a statisticall
198 nces of transmission to patients (seven from health-care workers, two from the environment, and 16 fr
199     The analysis favors prior vaccination of health care workers unless the likelihood of any attack
200 tion of cases, were: hand-washing (11%-27%), health-care worker vaccination (6%-19%), prevaccination
201  XDR-TB hospitalizations was 7.2 per 100,000 health care workers versus 1.1 per 100,000 non-health ca
202  MDR-TB hospitalization was 64.8 per 100,000 health care workers versus 11.9 per 100,000 non-health c
203 ween the microneedle patch administered by a health-care worker versus the intramuscular route for th
204  acquisition, MRSA acquisition, frequency of health care worker visits, hand hygiene compliance, heal
205  Of 4624 women, 40 (0.9%) reported a trained health care worker was present at birth; 97% (4475/4612)
206                 Occupational transmission to health care workers was identified for numerous diseases
207 to detect latent tuberculosis in newly hired health care workers was performed.
208                              Transmission to health care workers was traced to single clinical contac
209                  Influenza vaccine uptake in health-care workers was 50.9% in hospitals in which they
210                               Vaccination of health-care workers was associated with a substantial de
211 and monitoring exposed patients and assigned health care workers were at the core of the control meas
212                                 The hands of health care workers were inspected and cultured, and ris
213 -TB were women (78% vs. 47%; P < 0.001), and health care workers were less likely to report previous
214 IV-infected patients, a higher percentage of health care workers were receiving antiretroviral medica
215                In the intervention ICUs, all health care workers were required to wear gloves and gow
216  to occupationally acquired infections among health care workers were reviewed.
217  to occupationally acquired infections among health care workers were reviewed.
218 lowing an air disaster, 355 military medical health care workers were studied over an 18-month follow
219                                Four of eight health-care workers were classified as having had low ri
220          Syndromic diagnoses made by trained health-care workers were compared with laboratory diagno
221 ence of standard infection control measures, health-care workers were infrequently sources of transmi
222 ence of standard infection control measures, health-care workers were infrequently sources of transmi
223 later in the emergence of MERS-CoV and among health-care workers were less serious.
224  demonstrated that 17 of these infants and 1 health care worker who had onychomycosis had the same cl
225  Multivariate logistic regression of data on health care workers who cared for victims of the air dis
226 tics (including doctor-nurse differences) of health care workers who did and did not receive the pand
227      Information of this nature will benefit health care workers who inform such communities.
228                                      Current health care workers who reported not using gloves were a
229 tors associated with improved performance of health care workers who treat ill children in developing
230               This would involve vaccinating health care workers who were previously vaccinated.
231 ed protective immunity is poorly defined for health care workers who were vaccinated as adults.
232  well as providing additional protection for health-care workers who are inadvertently exposed over t
233 thologists, radiation oncologists, and other health-care workers who are needed for cancer care.
234                 Although a few international health-care workers who have assisted in the current Ebo
235 rnational group of physicians and associated health-care workers who have expertise in therapeutic mo
236                         Prior vaccination of health care workers, who would be disproportionately aff
237                                              Health-care workers will need to be trained to recognise
238                                              Health care workers with a recent tuberculin skin test c
239  percent of spina bifida patients and 92% of health care workers with latex allergy have IgE specific
240 r percentage of health care workers than non-health care workers with MDR-TB or XDR-TB were women (78
241 c CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells were detected in health care workers with occupational exposure to HBV an
242 merase-specific CD8(+) T cells in vaccinated health care workers with occupational exposure to HBV.
243         We conducted a case-control study of health care workers with occupational, percutaneous expo
244 ong-term protection by the HBV vaccine in 90 health care workers with or without occupational exposur
245 , and respiratory protection, especially for health care workers with prolonged exposure to LHR plume
246 e UK government vaccinated approximately 300 health care workers with vaccinia virus (VACV) strain Li
247 e inadequate; is implemented by a variety of health care workers with varying levels of expertise; an
248 and October 7, 2014, including 8 cases among health care workers, with 49 deaths.
249 lti-drug resistant phenotype that challenges health care workers worldwide is caused by an array of r
250                         Prior vaccination of health care workers would be expected to save lives if t
251 rocedure in our screening program for 14,830 health care workers yielded an indeterminate result rate

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