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1 s familiar with an ICU elsewhere in the same hospital.
2 f Mycobacterium abscessus at a tertiary care hospital.
3 ose who were seen initially at a local rural hospital.
4 sick young infants who cannot be referred to hospital.
5 uary 2011 to August 2013 at Lurie Children's Hospital.
6  cardiology clinic of the Beatrix Children's Hospital.
7 econstruction at an academic ambulatory care hospital.
8 stance to a high noninvasive ventilation use hospital.
9 few patients (19.2%) sought care at teaching hospitals.
10 gh-volume hospitals compared with low-volume hospitals.
11 proportion of low-income patients) and other hospitals.
12 academic referral hospital and two community hospitals.
13 d CMS to adequately compare SSI rates across hospitals.
14 e included between 2010 and 2012 in 29 Dutch hospitals.
15   Cohort 3: five tertiary and four community hospitals.
16  and from 0% to 97% (OSR) between individual hospitals.
17 response rate was 38.1% (1793/4707) among 31 hospitals.
18               Thirteen ICUs at four teaching hospitals.
19  11, 2005, and December 31, 2008, from 24 US hospitals.
20                        In January 2008, mean hospital 30-day RARRs and 30-day RAMRs after discharge w
21 objective was to compare cost analyses using hospital accounting system data versus data in the Pedia
22 ommon cause of severe community-acquired and hospital-acquired infection worldwide.
23 llel-group, superiority trial was done in 18 hospitals across Europe.
24 ccess, CRACKLE II will expand the network to hospitals across the United States and Colombia.
25     Participants underwent assessment during hospital admission (n = 1388) and at 12 months after inj
26 om children aged <5 years within 24 hours of hospital admission during sentinel surveillance for seve
27 and these patients also had a higher rate of hospital admission for heart failure decompensation in f
28 served for myocardial infarction, stroke, or hospital admission for heart failure.
29 HS nebulization treatment would decrease the hospital admission rate among infants with a first episo
30 ell" were advanced age, male sex, university hospital admission, comorbidity, and low Simplified Acut
31  outcome was a composite of repeat ED visit, hospital admission, or death within 7 days of discharge.
32 ascertained outcomes (death, return to care, hospital admission, other hospital contact, alive but no
33 % representative sample of all United States hospital admissions.
34 s, we determined the relationship between in-hospital AKI and risk of post-discharge adverse events b
35 dary outcomes including 30-day mortality, in-hospital and 30-day death/stroke, procedural success, in
36  designation of outlier hospitals between in-hospital and 30-day RSMRs was 78%, but chance-corrected
37 o confidently confirm or refute outbreaks in hospital and community settings.
38                  One large academic referral hospital and two community hospitals.
39 phase 3 trial, we recruited patients from 87 hospitals and cancer centres across 11 countries.
40 open-label, single-arm study at six centres (hospitals and cancer clinics) in the USA.
41 tients with MCRPEC and mcr-1 negative at the hospitals and collected between May and December, 2015,
42 sed the rates of inclusion of CoC-accredited hospitals and NCI-designated centers.
43 as a multicenter prospective cohort study of hospitals and private practices in Germany and Austria e
44 ne 2010 to August 2013 at Primary Children's Hospital, and January 2011 to August 2013 at Lurie Child
45 valuation in the intensive care unit and the hospital, and mean days of physical therapy treatment as
46 nt with STEMI at primary care clinics, small hospitals, and PCI hospitals in the southern state of Ta
47 departments to seek emergency care in larger hospitals, and to measure the association between rural
48 nformation System for freestanding pediatric hospitals, annual risk-adjusted mortality rates were cal
49 sessed mood, PTSD symptoms, and QOL with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and Patient Health
50                        Local ERAS teams from hospitals are trained to implement ERAS processes.
51 ategies to prevent and control the spread of hospital-associated pathogens.
52 to hospital information in the 2011 American Hospital Association Annual Survey database.
53 est were perinatal mortality, preterm birth, hospital attendance for asthma exacerbations, and hospit
54 tal attendance for asthma exacerbations, and hospital attendance for respiratory tract infections.
55                 The annual rate of emergency hospital attendance with exacerbations was 27% lower in
56 ospital costs were measured uniformly in all hospitals based on time-driven activity-based costing.
57  accessed services through HIV/AIDS sentinel hospital-based and ART service delivery in China.
58      We conducted a case-control study using hospital-based cases (n = 127) and control subjects repr
59                We analyzed data from 249,010 hospital-based English Cancer Patient Experience Survey
60                          Person-to-person or hospital-based epidemiologic links were identified in 12
61 se the need for well resourced community and hospital-based mental health services for adolescents, w
62  administered to 129 patient-parent dyads of hospital-based pediatric oncology ambulatory clinics and
63                                      In this hospital-based surveillance and nested age-matched case-
64                                    This is a hospital-based, exposure-matched and retrospective longi
65 e compared among patients treated at outlier hospitals before and after public report of outlier stat
66 ospital-wide measure would result in 76 more hospitals being eligible to receive penalties.
67 s among children <5 years to Haydom Lutheran Hospital between 1 January 2010 and 31 December 2015 and
68 rall agreement in the designation of outlier hospitals between in-hospital and 30-day RSMRs was 78%,
69 onal cohort study in the ICU of two tertiary hospitals between January 2011 and January 2014.
70 or not on anticoagulation from 1289 registry hospitals between October 2012 and March 2015.
71 and to measure the association between rural hospital bypass and sepsis survival.
72 ng an instrumental variables approach, rural hospital bypass was associated with a 5.6% increase (95%
73                                       Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) commonly presents with no
74  higher proportion of black patients with in-hospital cardiac arrest achieved larger survival gains o
75 who experienced either in-hospital or out-of-hospital cardiac arrest between January 2005 and May 201
76 can deliver an AED to the scene of an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest for bystander use.
77                 All 939 patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest of presumed cardiac cause that h
78 31, 2014, a total of 112139 patients with in-hospital cardiac arrest who were hospitalized in intensi
79 hat the availability of definitive pediatric hospital care is significantly more limited than adult c
80 varied moderately between institutions after hospital case mix was accounted for, suggesting that dif
81 ) and control subjects representative of the hospital catchment area (n = 121).
82  suppressed, HIV-infected children from five hospital clinics in Uganda, the USA, and Thailand.
83 ek trial with 5-week follow-up at 100 sites (hospital clinics, general practices, and clinical resear
84 topical corticosteroids were enrolled at 161 hospitals, clinics, and academic institutions in 14 coun
85                                At Children's Hospital Colorado, savings justified the full cost of th
86 ], P < .001) were experienced in high-volume hospitals compared with low-volume hospitals.
87 was defined as use of antidepressants and/or hospital contact for PPD within 6 months after childbirt
88 lay from neurological symptom debut to first hospital contact was 20 days and significantly longer fo
89 h, return to care, hospital admission, other hospital contact, alive but not in care, no information)
90 isks were also found for women with previous hospital contacts for depression.
91  complications are associated with increased hospital costs following major surgery, but the mechanis
92                                   Ninety-day hospital costs were measured uniformly in all hospitals
93         Our primary outcome was 90-day total hospital costs.
94 posure versus patients' baseline factors and hospital course.
95              Demographic characteristics and hospital courses were similar in both groups, and birth
96 sease or abnormal serum creatinine levels on hospital days 0 to 2 were among those excluded.
97 ssociated with a reduction in the odds of in-hospital death among patients aged 18-49 years (adjusted
98               The strongest predictors of in-hospital death were cardiogenic shock (odds ratio, 6.01;
99 ary outcomes included ICU admission rate, in-hospital death, functional status, and quality of life (
100                      The overall survival to hospital discharge after OHCA treated with PAD showed a
101  other causes of death) up to 10 years after hospital discharge following adversity-related (self-inf
102 ctors of high-intensity statin use following hospital discharge for myocardial infarction (MI) betwee
103 eases in high-intensity statin use following hospital discharge occurred over this period among patie
104 ys) and 108472 hospital stays (2010 National Hospital Discharge Survey).
105  mortality were identified from 1 year after hospital discharge through December 2014.
106                         The survival rate on hospital discharge was remarkably high, with 15 cases (8
107            Benchmark values at 30 days after hospital discharge were </=55.7% and </=30.8% for overal
108              Forty-seven percent survived to hospital discharge, and 43% survived to discharge with f
109  A total of 75% of VTE events occurred after hospital discharge, with a 19.5-day median time to VTE.
110  swallowing examinations and follow-up until hospital discharge.
111 We performed a retrospective cohort study of hospital discharges from October 20, 2015, to October 19
112 onalize lung cancer surgery at 14 designated hospitals, enforced by economic incentives and penalties
113 ctice Research Datalink (CPRD) and linked to Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) and Office for Nationa
114                  METHODS AND We used English Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data collected between
115 patient eyes with diabetes mellitus at 19 UK hospital eye services were extracted at the initial and
116 ed, and only 5.4% (n = 731) bypassed a rural hospital for their emergency department care.
117 ificity of 79-81% for detecting top quartile hospitals for each other conditions.
118 unty residents hospitalized at a Mayo Clinic hospital from 2005 to 2010, the proportion of patients r
119 r at a Kaiser Permanente Northern California hospital from January 1, 2010, through December 31, 2015
120 nducted at a glaucoma clinic at a university hospital from March 1, 2016, to December 30, 2016, and i
121 mbination therapy at 1 of 6 large children's hospitals from January 1, 2007, through December 31, 201
122 owledge but thanks to new technologies, such hospitals have now been built downtown, next to the most
123 ites in South Africa and Tanzania, including hospitals, health centres, and clinical trial centres.
124 Consultants of Houston and Houston Methodist Hospital, Houston, Texas, and included 10 patients who w
125 e sepsis who were transferred to high-volume hospitals; however, case volume benefits for transferred
126  were performed at the Karolinska University Hospital, Huddinge.
127 uld have on average penalties for safety-net hospitals (i.e., hospitals that treat a large proportion
128 days and the number of days alive out of the hospital in 180 days.
129 risk for jaundice at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi.
130  among infertile women seen at St. Michael's Hospital in Bristol, United Kingdom, during the period 1
131 s outpatient clinic at Copenhagen University Hospital in Frederiksberg, Denmark; they had previously
132           Respiratory ICU of a tertiary care hospital in North India.
133 of 318 AII-eligible inpatients from a public hospital in Seattle, Washington, from March 2012 to Octo
134  Internal medicine residency at a university hospital in Switzerland, May to July 2015.
135 mergency hospital visits from the 28 largest hospitals in 26 Chinese cities from Sept 9, 2013, to Dec
136 730 surgical patients from 300 general acute hospitals in 9 countries, with survey data from 26,516 r
137 ospital inpatient discharges from US general hospitals in 9 states.
138 arative benchmark study, including eight eye hospitals in Australia, India, Singapore, Sweden, U.K.,
139                     SETTINGS: Eight tertiary hospitals in Australia.
140 e primary focus of this article is to assist hospitals in establishing a rapid response for identific
141 a cluster-randomised, controlled trial in 12 hospitals in Guangxi, China.
142 patients with CAP were enrolled at all adult hospitals in Louisville.
143 rates and trends of postoperative mortality, hospitals in South Carolina completing a voluntary check
144                                          Two hospitals in Tanga Region, Tanzania were included in the
145 6 patients with acute HF were enrolled in 14 hospitals in the Netherlands between 2009 and 2014.
146 imary care clinics, small hospitals, and PCI hospitals in the southern state of Tamil Nadu in India.
147 ars of the collaborative compared with other hospitals in the state.
148 ebo-controlled, phase 3 trial (TACE 2) in 20 hospitals in the UK for patients with unresectable, live
149 t 38 participating Children's Oncology Group hospitals in the USA and Canada.
150          Clusters were primary care township hospitals in two counties of Guangxi province in China,
151 MR/MSI-H from 31 sites (academic centres and hospitals) in eight countries (Australia, Belgium, Canad
152  clinicians, and (3) reported by families vs hospital incident reports.
153 mples of acute care hospitals (the number of hospitals included in the analyses ranged from 1364 for
154 ncy medicine physicians were conducted at 10 hospitals, including multiple from the public and social
155 ber 30, 2011, and matched patient details to hospital information in the 2011 American Hospital Assoc
156 nic user interfaces within the institutional hospital information system were created.
157 network data were available for 3,637 (90%); hospital information was available for 3,531 (87%).
158 ed using observational, longitudinal data on hospital inpatient discharges from US general hospitals
159                                    Pediatric hospital inpatients <25 years of age.
160            During the same time period, mean hospital length of stay decreased; nontargeted condition
161 f physical therapy treatment associated with hospital length of stay.
162  procedural success, intensive care unit and hospital length-of-stay, and rates of discharge to home.
163 adult neurology department of the University Hospital Leuven were identified via a search of the elec
164                                       At the hospital level, mean in-hospital RSMRs and 30-day RSMRs
165 cal isolates recovered from 24 tertiary care hospitals located in 10 cities throughout Colombia, betw
166                                 For GPI, the hospital LOS (14.64 versus 10.31 days; P = 0.002) and le
167                                           In-hospital major adverse cardiac and cerebral events occur
168  For complex, highly specialized procedures, hospital market consolidation may represent the best val
169 , 0.1% to 11.1%; P = .047) in unconcentrated hospital markets relative to moderately concentrated mar
170                                Controls were hospital-matched and selected by birth certificate.
171 , there was no difference between predicted (hospital mean of 6.18 deaths per 1000 admissions based o
172 entation trends) and actual mortality rates (hospital mean of 6.48 deaths per 1000 admissions; P=0.57
173 nit and postnatal wards of the Royal Women's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
174  P=0.001), and there was no difference in in-hospital morbidity.
175                                              Hospital mortality (2.5% in the intensive group vs 4.9%
176  was associated with higher risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality (odds ratio, 1.04 per hour; 95% confi
177 s had significantly greater risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality (odds ratio, 1.89 [95% CI, 1.79-2.00]
178 OR, 31.8; 95% CI, 4.3-236.3) and maternal in-hospital mortality (OR, 79.1; 95% CI, 23.9-261.8).
179 t delays in antibiotic administration and in-hospital mortality among patient encounters with communi
180                             Risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality declined slightly in the overall coho
181                                           In-hospital mortality for females declined from 61.0% in 20
182  of percutaneous coronary intervention or in-hospital mortality in New York.
183    Antipyretic therapy did not reduce 28-day/hospital mortality in the randomized studies (relative r
184                                           In-hospital mortality using clinical criteria declined (-3.
185                                   Overall in-hospital mortality was 17.8% (55 patients): 227 patients
186 entilation failure occurred in 15.2%, and in-hospital mortality was 6.5%.
187                                           In-hospital mortality was 8.8% and did not vary across the
188                                              Hospital mortality was 86.6% and 95.9%, respectively.
189                                              Hospital mortality was lowest among patients with severe
190                                           In-hospital mortality was significantly higher for those wi
191                                              Hospital mortality was similar (12.4% vs 10.3%; p = 0.63
192                                           In-hospital mortality, 30-day mortality, and 1-year mortali
193 imated incidence during the study period, in-hospital mortality, and 1-year mortality.
194 sfunction was associated with higher ICU and hospital mortality, and limb muscle weakness was associa
195 to-treat basis for the primary outcome of in-hospital mortality, and secondary outcomes including 30-
196 me to initial crystalloid resuscitation with hospital mortality, mechanical ventilation, ICU utilizat
197                        Overall mortality, in-hospital mortality, metabolic outcome, graft survival, a
198 lar, while those for major complications, in-hospital mortality, retrograde type A dissection and fol
199                                           In-hospital mortality.
200 of each score and the primary outcome was in-hospital mortality.
201 gery were older age, greater distance to the hospital, municipalities with fewer inhabitants and less
202                    Studies included academic hospitals (n = 10), community hospitals (n = 2), or both
203 luded academic hospitals (n = 10), community hospitals (n = 2), or both (n = 6).
204 e patients underwent IVCCM at Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust in London, England, and th
205 patients admitted for pneumonia) and control hospitals (number of hospitals ranged from 31 to 617).
206              We found no correlation between hospitals' observed or risk-adjusted DTN and D2B times.
207  documented as allergies from the University Hospital of Montpellier electronic database for the peri
208 pective consecutive cohort at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia between January 1, 2006, and Ja
209 om November 2006 to April 2014 at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, June 2010 to August 2013 at Prim
210  the Department of Endocrinology in People's Hospital of Zhengzhou University China, and an upper thr
211 ked with state vital statistics, stratifying hospitals on the basis of completion of the checklist pr
212 ral therapy combined with a short course (in hospital only) HBIG in liver transplant recipients with
213 a of 2233 subjects who experienced either in-hospital or out-of-hospital cardiac arrest between Janua
214 thy of further study in the context of a pre-hospital or pitch-side test to detect brain injury.
215                       We aimed to compare in-hospital outcomes of patients with CKD or ESRD with thos
216                 Procedural management and in-hospital outcomes were compared among patients treated a
217 c medications at a single, urban, safety-net hospital outpatient dermatology clinic.
218 a index was independently predictive of both hospital (p = 0.001) and 90-day mortality (p < 0.0001).
219 al resistance, particularly in Gram-negative hospital pathogens, which has led to renewed efforts in
220 cation is an important factor when comparing hospital performance across the United States.
221                  Model results revealed that hospital performance metrics for mortality showed signif
222 es a "blue pyjama syndrome" (whereby wearing hospital pyjamas results in an exaggerated impression of
223                    The findings suggest that hospital quality contributes in part to readmission rate
224 ccounted for, suggesting that differences in hospital quality may only partially account for readmiss
225                                      The top hospital quartile of ICU use for congestive heart failur
226  pneumonia) and control hospitals (number of hospitals ranged from 31 to 617).
227 is not associated with an increase in 30-day hospital readmission rates or wound complications when c
228 ney disease, conversion to chronic dialysis, hospital readmission, and long-term mortality.
229 ly implemented financial penalties to reduce hospital readmissions for select conditions, including c
230                                           US hospitals receive financial penalties for excess risk-st
231  staggered 3-month intervals, ASP teams at 3 hospitals received training by allergists to offer BLAST
232 significantly (0.9%-84.6%) across the 306 US hospital referral regions (median = 33%, interquartile r
233                                   University Hospital Regensburg, Germany.
234 roup on Pancreatic Fistula Grade B or C) and hospital-related inpatient costs for 90 days following P
235 toring is introduced with the aim to improve hospital residues management.
236       A total of 212 of 245 (86.5%) eligible hospitals responded.
237               At the hospital level, mean in-hospital RSMRs and 30-day RSMRs were 6.0% and 14.6%, res
238 stimate 2004-2013 trends in risk-adjusted in-hospital sepsis mortality rates by race/ethnicity to inf
239                  On the initial visit to our hospital, serum total IgE level was 545IU/ml.
240                                   Safety-net hospitals serve vulnerable populations with limited reso
241                                         Nine hospitals served by 21 emergency medical services agenci
242 8 to 2011 was used; states were divided into hospital service areas (HSAs).
243 2010, resulting in rising pressures on acute hospital services, and an increasing need for end-of-lif
244  to dermatologic care in a public safety-net hospital setting.
245 rt older patients (>65years) at mealtimes in hospital settings and rehabilitation units.
246                                     Multiple hospital sites of the Aravind Eye Care System, India.
247 ining and key equipment purchases as well as hospital-specific mentoring which focused on strengtheni
248 uries (AIS >/= 3), death within 72 hours, or hospital stay <48 hours were excluded.
249 peratively were more likely to have a longer hospital stay (2.9 d vs. 2.5 d, P <0.001) and were more
250 rdion grade >/=3, 23.05% vs 23.7%; P > .99), hospital stay (median: 8 vs 8.5 days; P = .31), 30-day r
251                                     The mean hospital stay for the moderate group was 12.4 days vs 10
252  duration of treatment and shorter length of hospital stay than treatment with oral morphine, with si
253 duration of ventilation, duration of ICU and hospital stay, 6-month recurrence, and rehospitalization
254 cessary antibiotic use, shortening length of hospital stay, improving influenza detection and treatme
255 er failure (LF) is associated with prolonged hospital stay, increased cost and substantial mortality.
256 as associated with longer duration of MV and hospital stay.
257 es, antimicrobial stewardship, and length of hospital stay.
258 pendent risk factor for mortality and longer hospital stay.
259 ions (odds ratio 1.51, P = 0.002) and longer hospital stays (+12%, P = 0.006).
260  Ambulatory Medical Care Surveys) and 108472 hospital stays (2010 National Hospital Discharge Survey)
261 lustering analysis using data from patients' hospital stays to retrospectively identify patient subgr
262 ve care use within and between the different hospital strata.
263 nal recovery rates varied considerably among hospitals, supporting the need to better determine which
264 ound no association between readmissions and hospital survival (hazard ratios: first readmission 0.88
265                                        Among hospital survivors, the 1-month, 3-month, 1-year, and 5-
266 f this study was to investigate whether post-hospital syndrome (PHS) places patients undergoing elect
267 ur knowledge, an inverse association between hospital TAVR volume and 30-day readmissions.
268         To evaluate the relationship between hospital teaching intensity, Medicare payments, and peri
269                The adjusted RR of HO-CDI for hospitals that both experienced a shortage and also show
270                                              Hospitals that experienced a PIP/TAZO shortage and respo
271 ge penalties for safety-net hospitals (i.e., hospitals that treat a large proportion of low-income pa
272  2011 through 2013 to evaluate the number of hospitals that were eligible for penalties, in that they
273 e assessed for matched samples of acute care hospitals (the number of hospitals included in the analy
274 atient variables and the correlation between hospitals, the intervention period was associated with a
275                           Ambulance scene-to-hospital transport times for pickups before noon were 4.
276           To date, the fiscal consequence of hospital variation for autologous free flap breast recon
277 tudy, we collected daily counts of emergency hospital visits from the 28 largest hospitals in 26 Chin
278                                              Hospital volume is significantly associated with improve
279                             Every 6 weeks, 1 hospital was randomly assigned to switch to "HEART care,
280  patient between lowest and highest quintile hospitals was $2160 ($12,960 vs $15,120; P < 0.005).
281 ing cost per additional surgery for these 25 hospitals was $5.39.
282 nal Readmission Database encompassing 722 US hospitals was used to identify index PCI cases in patien
283 ng chemotherapeutics consistent with a local hospital waste stream.
284 o initially chose a top-decile sepsis volume hospital were younger (64.7 vs 72.7 yr; p < 0.001) and w
285 f 282,710 rapid response team calls from 274 hospitals were included.
286 chemic stroke patients from 1494 GWTG-Stroke hospitals were included; mean age was 80 years, 59% fema
287 rarchical model was used to identify outlier hospitals where the odds of delayed fixation were signif
288 od cancer at the St Jude Children's Research Hospital who survived 10 years or longer from initial di
289 condition-specific readmission measures to a hospital-wide measure would have on average penalties fo
290                              Changing to the hospital-wide measure would result in 76 more hospitals
291 -year period for the cohorts included in the hospital-wide measure.
292 among patients at the Miami Veterans Affairs Hospital with a wide variety of dry eye symptoms and sig
293 ed with hospitals with fewer black patients, hospitals with a higher proportion of black patients wit
294                                Compared with hospitals with fewer black patients, hospitals with a hi
295 ted between March 2015 and May 2016 at 16 US hospitals with more than 100 births annually.
296 ts receiving ART from the DDFs than sentinel hospitals, with an adjusted HR of 3.3 (95% CI: 2.3, 4.6)
297                                           No hospital workload measure was independently associated w
298                                              Hospital workload was not associated with mortality.
299 and biochemistry test results or proxies for hospital workload.
300 ile gatekeeping at the level of the township hospital would retain correct management close to curren

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