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1 ding anemia and rash must be embraced by the healthcare provider.
2 microbial use is the responsibility of every healthcare provider.
3 orking knowledge of the topic is required by healthcare providers.
4 uled examinations, placing a great burden on healthcare providers.
5  and comparison of clinical outcomes between healthcare providers.
6  publications identifying new challenges for healthcare providers.
7 ed and require minimal resources and time by healthcare providers.
8  to permit direct side-by-side comparison of healthcare providers.
9  clinical challenge for patients, donors and healthcare providers.
10  and unnecessary administration of oxygen by healthcare providers.
11 escents expressed less confidence in generic healthcare providers.
12 y resuscitation quality deficits exist among healthcare providers.
13 for this vulnerable group is highlighted for healthcare providers.
14 temporary resources for first responders and healthcare providers.
15 ered systems utilizing the skills of various healthcare providers.
16 edural sedation as practiced by a variety of healthcare providers.
17 ons leads to a confusing, mixed message from healthcare providers.
18 ecially as performed by non-anesthesiologist healthcare providers.
19 and status of reimbursement to hospitals and healthcare providers.
20 demographics, household characteristics, and healthcare providers.
21  likely to be preferred by both patients and healthcare providers.
22 patient outcomes, at an affordable level for healthcare providers.
23 e by older patients and their families or by healthcare providers.
24 rs is not easily identified by parents or by healthcare providers.
25 important clinical benefits for patients and healthcare providers.
26 rged liver and cirrhosis, was validated with healthcare providers.
27 s, and a large and often disparate number of healthcare providers.
28 s: arts activities; healthcare settings, and healthcare providers.
29 s condition creates a considerable burden on healthcare providers.
30 reat, some simple solutions are available to healthcare providers.
31 ion and treatments have associated costs for healthcare providers.
32 e or inaccurate classification systems among healthcare providers.
33  result in additional costs and workload for healthcare providers.
34 ove symptom recognition in both patients and healthcare providers.
35  perspective or actions of family members or healthcare providers about the active participation.
36 a systematic review of women's access to and healthcare provider adherence to WHO case management pol
37 d control of infections will be dependent on healthcare provider advocacy, patient education, impleme
38 reasingly more complex, physicians and other healthcare providers also face increasing administrative
39                                              Healthcare provider and caregiver attitudes and practice
40 nation within the black community and change healthcare provider and organ procurement organization a
41 nd interventions are needed to increase both healthcare provider and patient adherence to recommendat
42 ivers and difficulties accessing appropriate healthcare providers and ancillary services after discha
43 es the transfer of the burn casualty between healthcare providers and facilities and is now being int
44 s to provide a summary of the perceptions of healthcare providers and family members toward their rol
45 icles that contained the perceptions of both healthcare providers and family members were considered
46 ort, level of pain, ability to interact with healthcare providers and family, feelings of agitation a
47 nitoring results in increased efficiency for healthcare providers and improved quality of care for pa
48 issues and questions raised are pertinent to healthcare providers and individuals around the world.
49 believe more attention should be paid to how healthcare providers and intensive care units can promot
50 conflict appears to impose moral distress on healthcare providers and limits acceptance of organ dona
51 in HRQoL evaluation is being fuelled by both healthcare providers and official bodies such as the Foo
52 hone interviews were conducted with involved healthcare providers and organ procurement organization
53 hors agree that personal interaction between healthcare providers and patients (or surrogates) is cri
54                                         Both healthcare providers and patients need to stay abreast o
55 cal progress is outpacing the ability of the healthcare providers and patients to incorporate these n
56                 Furthermore, the majority of healthcare providers and patients/surrogates agreed that
57                                              Healthcare providers and policymakers should use this in
58 ) and cerebrovascular disease (CeVD) can aid healthcare providers and prevention programs.
59 r to the calibration statistics for both the healthcare providers and PRISM III models.
60 tegrating program building with education of healthcare providers and research have proven to be succ
61 oach will involve multidisciplinary teams of healthcare providers and scientists with the big challen
62 aid Services Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Services (HCAHPS).Hospitals wer
63                 Using Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS) survey data cov
64              Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) is a publicly
65 ata from the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) survey provide
66 les were the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) Total and Base
67      We used Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems 2008 data to compare ov
68 ared against Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems pain management metrics
69  one adapted from the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey ("Would you reco
70  We used the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey data from 2010 a
71 lts from the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey of patients' hos
72 mance on the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey.
73 our measures from the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems were combined into a co
74 d by HCAHPS (Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems) surveys correlates wit
75      The purpose of this review is to inform healthcare providers and the public about a condition th
76 ose corn syrup, should be of concern to both healthcare providers and the public.
77 over end-of-life care, the ramifications for healthcare providers and the role played by politicians,
78 ectations with patients, families, and other healthcare providers and to aid in hospital discharge pl
79 very, access, and use of IPTp and ITNs among healthcare providers and women.
80                     Barriers at the patient, healthcare provider, and health system level prevent the
81 oper guidance and supervision from families, healthcare providers, and community recreation staff.
82 ialties, the baseline personalities of these healthcare providers, and easy access to drugs in these
83 tients and caregivers, physicians and allied healthcare providers, and healthcare delivery systems.
84  creates unnecessary confusion for patients, healthcare providers, and researchers.
85                                      Patient healthcare providers appear to be in a unique position t
86                                              Healthcare providers are encouraged to practice primary
87                                              Healthcare providers are encouraged to work with public
88                                              Healthcare providers are facing the challenge of creatin
89 URPOSE OF REVIEW: At present, clinicians and healthcare providers are increasingly urged to advance t
90    Recent research has identified that child healthcare providers are not typically adhering to the r
91 affecting potential enrollees, insurers, and healthcare providers are offered.
92                                              Healthcare providers are recommended to facilitate the i
93                                     But many healthcare providers are reluctant to participate when t
94                                Additionally, healthcare providers are uncertain about effective scree
95                                              Healthcare providers are uncomfortable at the clinical j
96 medical or surgical care are compared across healthcare providers, are being published with increasin
97  ethical challenges, from the perspective of healthcare providers as well as patients and their famil
98 ection and analysis of information regarding healthcare providers' attitudes and beliefs.
99  the Bayesian AUCs were higher than both the healthcare providers' AUCs (p < or = .09 for all) and PR
100 nagement and includes patient, hospital, and healthcare provider barriers to understanding end points
101 resented an exciting first step in convening healthcare providers, behavioral researchers, and profes
102 ses regarding a surrogate's request for what healthcare providers believe are unreasonable requests,
103  knowledge at the point of care can help all healthcare providers better treat their patients' infect
104 nomic factors, insurance status, access, and healthcare provider biases.
105 ported comfort in discussing prevention with healthcare providers, but only 38% of women reported tha
106                                              Healthcare providers can be taught to increase anxiety-r
107 identification, regulatory pathways, and how healthcare providers can choose a specific strain to rec
108                                    Pediatric healthcare providers can help patients with chronic medi
109              Jordan Greenbaum discusses ways healthcare providers can identify children trafficked fo
110 e availability of patient-related charges to healthcare providers can result in changes in practice p
111                                              Healthcare providers can use key aspects of the examinat
112 ogists, hospitalists, and any clinicians and healthcare providers caring for hospitalized patients wi
113 l ingestion is warranted, particularly among healthcare providers caring for persons with a history o
114                        Judicial rejection of healthcare providers' claims in the decided cases is exp
115 ent care rounds are a key mechanism by which healthcare providers communicate and make patient care d
116 rchers, and cardiologists to work with other healthcare providers, community agencies, schools and ca
117 of maternal depression remains considerable, healthcare providers continue to underrecognize and unde
118 d allergy was defined as caretaker report of healthcare provider-diagnosed allergy to the above foods
119  in the pediatric ICU were made available to healthcare providers during the intervention period of t
120 rformance measure, automatic notification to healthcare providers, electronic reminders, and a system
121 nt and retention rates through community and healthcare provider engagement.
122                                        Then, healthcare provider estimates were combined with PRISM I
123 the Disability Questionnaire was provided to healthcare providers experienced in CMT attending nation
124 ctive antiretroviral therapy, clinicians and healthcare providers experienced in the care of HIV pati
125 individuals and 437 unspecified sex) and 994 healthcare providers, family members and community membe
126                                 In addition, healthcare providers for newborns, especially those who
127  methods may be inadequate to properly train healthcare providers for rare but potentially lethal eve
128 le in developing countries will prevent most healthcare providers from following the recommendations.
129                          Studies report that healthcare providers have adequate knowledge of the etio
130                                 Because many healthcare providers have inadequate knowledge about hyd
131 ility as part of the rationale for products, healthcare providers have increasing incentive to reduce
132 e frontline prescribers and other unit-based healthcare providers have the potential to expand stewar
133 bjectives of this study were to (1) describe healthcare provider (HCP) knowledge and practices, (2) e
134 nizations recommend regular follow-up with a healthcare provider (HCP).
135 ely referral of potential donors by hospital healthcare providers (HCPs) to organ procurement organiz
136 ent studies have highlighted the role of the healthcare provider in improving patient adherence to an
137 agnosis then can be returned directly to the healthcare provider in the field.
138 August 2010 through July 2011, 57 outpatient healthcare providers in 12 US sites reported weekly the
139 well as a pilot project to engage unit-based healthcare providers in antimicrobial stewardship.
140 h assessing the role of physicians and other healthcare providers in facilitating improvements in pat
141  cause or exacerbate heart failure to assist healthcare providers in improving the quality of care fo
142 be useful in improving communication between healthcare providers in the multispecialty care setting,
143  who do not speak the same language as their healthcare providers including nurses.
144                                           25 healthcare providers (including nurse managers, nurses a
145  a strong commitment to excellence among all healthcare providers, including consistent use of proven
146  Delivery personnel describes the network of healthcare providers involved in the delivery of disease
147                                              Healthcare providers involved in the treatment of MS hav
148                                              Healthcare providers involved in the treatment of MS mus
149  is a challenging and exciting field for all healthcare providers involved with children who have end
150 ts profound psychological responses from the healthcare providers involved with these children.
151     Current and looming shortages of all ICU healthcare providers is a barrier to universal implement
152                                 Education of healthcare providers is a fundamental measure to prevent
153 lity of CPR as actually performed by trained healthcare providers is largely unknown.
154 ignificant positive changes were measured in healthcare provider knowledge of adverse events followin
155               Prior to roll-out, we explored healthcare providers' knowledge, attitudes and practices
156 tified in open narratives, 3 were related to healthcare providers-lack of timely attention, poor skil
157 mary should provide a practical resource for healthcare provider-led discussions with patients, it hi
158 sufficient knowledge or skills of front-line healthcare providers, limited hospital resources, and la
159                                              Healthcare providers may encounter HPV-related OPCA more
160                        Although a variety of healthcare providers may see this clinical entity, ophth
161                                              Healthcare provider messaging should build client unders
162                         Physicians and other healthcare providers must be aware of these health impli
163 dates seek medical clearance for diving, and healthcare providers must be knowledgeable of the enviro
164 dresses three critical areas where pediatric healthcare providers must employ effective screening tec
165                                              Healthcare providers must take an active role in the eva
166 ent resuscitation research with families and healthcare providers of critically ill patients.
167 m was introduced in September 2011 to remind healthcare providers of HBV testing when prescribing che
168 nd pay-for-performance programs may penalize healthcare providers of patients with multiple chronic c
169  was introduced in the CPOE system to notify healthcare providers of the potential risk of viral reac
170 e shows that young people, their parents and healthcare providers often have different expectations o
171                                              Healthcare providers often rely on surrogates to make de
172 ver, there is a need to educate patients and healthcare providers on appropriate and safe use of CAM
173 proach that engages policymakers, educators, healthcare providers, online health information provider
174                                              Healthcare provider opinions about family witnessed resu
175 ssons learned from this study will also help healthcare providers optimize implementation of the rece
176  opportunities to consider the decision with healthcare provider or organ procurement organization st
177 e and if the article involved perceptions of healthcare providers or family members.
178 dence interval [CI], 1.4-5.5) and to visit a healthcare provider (OR, 2.8; 95% CI, 1.02-7.7) during t
179                                              Healthcare providers' own discussions of adverse events
180                          Recent studies with healthcare providers, parents, and adolescent/young adul
181  with the acceptability of these vaccines by healthcare providers, parents, and adolescents/young adu
182 elopment programs, but they will also affect healthcare providers participating in clinical trials an
183 amatically, and the pharmaceutical industry, healthcare providers, patient advocate groups, governmen
184  less frequently dosed medications, and more healthcare provider-patient interaction may improve adhe
185      We thus aimed to identify what barriers healthcare providers perceive.
186 terruptions, long rounding times, and allied healthcare provider perceptions of not being valued by r
187 ation, leading to poor quality of care; poor healthcare provider performance, including confusion ove
188                   Frequencies of women's and healthcare providers' practices were explored using narr
189                                              Healthcare providers prescribed 262.5 million courses of
190 s in tuberculosis and HIV care, researchers, healthcare providers, public health experts, and industr
191 ients using CAMs, only 53.5% had spoken to a healthcare provider regarding CAM therapy.
192                                              Healthcare provider reliance on clinical diagnosis and p
193                                              Healthcare providers' reported levels of collaboration,
194 (ECA) Definity and Optison after spontaneous healthcare provider reports of 4 patient deaths and appr
195 romotion and cultivate a larger workforce of healthcare providers, researchers, and allies with the f
196 ting SIA activities and materials to improve healthcare providers' RI knowledge and practices through
197 rent practices, facilitators, or barriers to healthcare provider rounding in the ICU.
198      In the hemodynamically unstable patient healthcare providers should be aware of arterial miscanu
199                                              Healthcare providers should have a low threshold for ini
200                                              Healthcare providers should monitor oxygen saturation an
201                                    Pediatric healthcare providers should pay careful attention to the
202 nd Attitudes about Antiretroviral Therapy', 'Healthcare providers', 'Significant others', 'Motherhood
203 ct costs of POFP from the perspective of the healthcare provider (specifically, the UK National Healt
204  The results of this study demonstrated that healthcare providers' subjective mortality predictions a
205      This scientific statement, intended for healthcare providers, summarizes relevant scientific and
206 d the pertinent pediatric studies to provide healthcare providers supplemental information regarding
207  adjusted analyses of Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers & Systems (CAHPS) survey responses
208 ives include improving communication between healthcare providers through a survivorship care plan, d
209 gnostic applications, multiplexed tests save healthcare providers time and resources by performing ma
210 It is necessary for pediatric and adolescent healthcare providers to be aware of TDV and its potentia
211         These results highlight the need for healthcare providers to ensure guidelines are followed w
212                 We engaged interprofessional healthcare providers to explore their perceptions of the
213  pressure to provide value-based care compel healthcare providers to improve efficiency and to use an
214             Technological advances now allow healthcare providers to improve the prevention and treat
215 simple 'decision-making checklists' can help healthcare providers to make the correct decisions by mo
216  Differences in the effectiveness of diverse healthcare providers to promote health behavior change a
217                        Advocacy by pediatric healthcare providers to promote intelligent dose reducti
218    This places an enormous responsibility on healthcare providers to protect their patients.
219 een the guidelines can make it difficult for healthcare providers to provide standardized care in dif
220             It is important for professional healthcare providers to realize their interventions ofte
221 require databases of genes and mutations for healthcare providers to reference in order to understand
222                             The EUA required healthcare providers to report medication errors, select
223 nmental exposure and 2) practical advice for healthcare providers to share with concerned families.
224    Various barriers and challenges exist for healthcare providers to successfully implement the vacci
225 on is explained by oncologists (and/or other healthcare providers) to patients and/or their authorize
226  it is imperative that patient education and healthcare provider training on ART adherence be enhance
227 miology of HCV infection is important for US healthcare providers treating foreign-born patients from
228     Rarely is punitive action taken when the healthcare provider undergoes successful treatment and o
229 easing international migration may challenge healthcare providers unfamiliar with acute and long late
230   In this review we hope to bring practicing healthcare providers up to date with the literature on b
231 ns, the number of deaths could be reduced if healthcare providers used evidence-based therapies, whic
232 e mail-order hatchery industry, feed stores, healthcare providers, veterinarians, and backyard flock
233 unications to DES patients and their primary healthcare providers was associated with a significant i
234 the private sector; however, when unlicensed healthcare providers were excluded from the analysis, th
235            Articles including perceptions of healthcare providers were grouped separately from articl
236                     Although the AUCs of the healthcare providers were not significantly different fr
237                            discuss with your healthcare provider,what you are taking or doing to decr
238 ch is essential, administration of oxygen by healthcare providers when it is not necessary is a foe a
239 nation sessions, interviews with the primary healthcare provider who administered vaccines at each fa
240 iders; this document will be relevant to all healthcare providers who are involved in resuscitation a
241         The guideline is intended for use by healthcare providers who care for adult and pediatric pa
242       The guidelines are intended for use by healthcare providers who care for HIV-infected patients.
243                          It is important for healthcare providers who care for patients with frontote
244 hospital-based infection preventionists, and healthcare providers who collaborate to collect relevant
245  updated and best evidence-based guidance to healthcare providers who diagnose and manage Kawasaki di
246 eated a provider-patient network to identify healthcare providers who jointly participated in patient
247 for education and training for laypeople and healthcare providers who perform cardiopulmonary resusci
248            Increased awareness of HBVr among healthcare providers who prescribe ISDT, adoption of rou
249                                              Healthcare providers who treat individuals with cardiova
250 d audience is physicians and other emergency healthcare providers who treat patients within the first
251                    As a consequence of this, healthcare providers will be challenged to provide advan
252 e from the research to the clinical setting, healthcare providers will need to reshape the clinical d
253 ulations and provide patients, families, and healthcare providers with necessary information to plan
254 umber of female patients who will present to healthcare providers with pelvic organ prolapse, we need
255 ent care in the ICU and compare the views of healthcare providers with those of relatives of critical
256                                          For healthcare providers, witnessed cardiopulmonary resuscit
257 in on both treatment options and budgets for healthcare providers worldwide.
258 mon and a heavy burden on patients and their healthcare providers, yet the recipient of relatively li

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