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1 undamentally altered biological research and medical practice.
2 ablished, evidence-based standard of current medical practice.
3 onal and hotly debated issue in contemporary medical practice.
4 mes after a given therapy are fundamental to medical practice.
5 tablished evidence-based standard of current medical practice.
6 ong children and adolescents in office-based medical practice.
7 ractical method to enhance current ELISAs in medical practice.
8 nto appropriate lineages could revolutionize medical practice.
9 n of quality of care is a duty of the modern medical practice.
10 ies to lead the integration of genetics into medical practice.
11 ng condition that is prevalent in ambulatory medical practice.
12 he impact of legislation on patient care and medical practice.
13 inciples can be translated into personalized medical practice.
14 not always rapidly incorporated into routine medical practice.
15 e signs to ensure their relevance in current medical practice.
16  of illness and death, is underidentified in medical practice.
17  ethical to accept modest gifts that advance medical practice.
18 een the patient's background and traditional medical practice.
19 ey believe that they are fairly representing medical practice.
20  populations of resistant mutant bacteria in medical practice.
21 y reflect a worthwhile approach to improving medical practice.
22 , and thus translate basic neuroimaging into medical practice.
23 proposed as a model for humane and effective medical practice.
24 t in acute spinal cord injury within current medical practice.
25 SVR) of LDV/SOF+/-ribavirin (RBV) in routine medical practice.
26 ividual states' long-standing authority over medical practice.
27  the closest medical facility is appropriate medical practice.
28 licability of pharmacogenomic information to medical practice.
29 ife care can undermine good care and ethical medical practice.
30 trials is expensive and not part of standard medical practice.
31 and critical care--originated from trends in medical practice.
32 bring major advances to nearly every form of medical practice.
33 enhance our appreciation of both for guiding medical practice.
34 cumstances that conform to standards of good medical practice.
35 among committees that develop guidelines for medical practice.
36 diffusion of electronic communication within medical practice.
37 e the current boundaries of relationships in medical practice.
38 te genetic susceptibility testing into their medical practice.
39 have compared these approaches as applied in medical practice.
40 allel with prevailing scientific thought and medical practice.
41  the particular patient that is the heart of medical practice.
42 ine-has the potential to radically transform medical practice.
43 zability of these previous trials to current medical practice.
44 ers for the adoption of this technology into medical practice.
45  incorporating such a pipeline into everyday medical practice.
46  were all recruited through a single general medical practice.
47 o book a timely appointment with their local medical practice.
48 lved in the application of each treatment to medical practice.
49 rcome before they can be effectively used in medical practice.
50 pact of the flow cytometer in these areas of medical practice.
51 ietic stem cell therapies that may transform medical practice.
52 o the integration of genomic techniques with medical practice.
53 the goals of our patients and evidence-based medical practice.
54  and (iv) translating these discoveries into medical practice.
55 ized controlled trials is essential for best medical practice.
56 nstantly being developed and introduced into medical practice.
57 ile impaired or who are incompetent in their medical practice.
58 lectronic resources are increasingly used in medical practice.
59 ablished, evidence-based standard of current medical practice.
60 ranslating basic scientific discoveries into medical practice.
61  prevention of medical errors is critical in medical practice.
62 development of methods that reduce errors in medical practice.
63  in RA patients, heralding a major change in medical practice.
64 lenging populations to diagnose and treat in medical practice.
65 formation gap that has plagued this field of medical practice.
66 wartime is unique and distinct from civilian medical practice.
67 cision-making abilities is a routine part of medical practice.
68 rate and the characteristics of patients and medical practices.
69 ity with tasks that are compatible with busy medical practices.
70 nt for socioeconomic status (SES) of general medical practices.
71 terature examining the cost-effectiveness of medical practices.
72 prepaid than fee-for-service care in general medical practices.
73 cal record review and randomization of usual medical practices.
74 ng the evidence base up to date with current medical practices.
75 e of microarray technologies in research and medical practices.
76 physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia in medical practice: 1) the benefit or harm of death itself
77 ere least likely to be referred from general medical practices (11%; chi(2) = 96.80; P = .0001).
78                              In primary care medical practices, 30% to 60% of patients with PAD repor
79  studies, have converged with more defensive medical practice, a less informed regulatory system, a l
80 ect a subset of 334 patients from 73 general medical practices affiliated with an academic tertiary r
81 crobial therapy is a key component of modern medical practice and a cornerstone for the development o
82  by correcting courts' misinterpretations of medical practice and assisting in the development of leg
83 udies should have the potential to transform medical practice and be unlikely to occur without ARLG s
84 linical studies and of clinical studies into medical practice and health decision making in systems o
85             Despite the fact that changes in medical practice and in patient demographics have result
86 mination and sexual harassment are common in medical practice and may be even more prevalent in acade
87 g in developing countries impede advances in medical practice and public health knowledge.
88 ld for drug development, regulatory science, medical practice and public health.
89 position paper, initiated and written by its Medical Practice and Quality Committee and approved by t
90 sition paper, initiated and written by ACP's Medical Practice and Quality Committee and approved by t
91 rced would have substantial implications for medical practice and scientific research.
92            Reexamining the ethical tenets of medical practice and their application in new circumstan
93 specifically describes different features of medical practices and moral principles that affect the m
94 ively deal with impaired colleagues in their medical practice, and 64% (n = 1126) reported being so p
95 ssess how Islam as a religious system shapes medical practice, and how Muslims view and experience me
96 o facilitate the translation of science into medical practice, and remaining issues that need to be s
97 al and environmental context of contemporary medical practice, and these external forces need to be h
98  population screening, monitoring changes in medical practices, and assessing the effect of preventiv
99 ng "microbiome hypothesis" to home features, medical practices, and cleanliness behaviors that are su
100 ling effects, but the skills in this area of medical practice are understudied.
101                Changing human lifestyles and medical practices are disturbing the content and diversi
102 ials comparing the effectiveness of standard medical practices are risks of research that would requi
103 ative pathways in humans, which would change medical practice as much as the introduction of antibiot
104 care would improve the safety and quality of medical practice as they have so dramatically in the air
105 s of SVR to PEG-INF and ribavirin in routine medical practice at 121 Department of Veterans Affairs f
106 d systematic evidence of defensive medicine--medical practice based on fear of legal liability rather
107 /MBAs eventually choose to stay in full-time medical practice because financial and geographic stabil
108 ever, and often do represent the spectrum of medical practice better than the settings of randomized
109 C use in prior surgical procedures, years in medical practice, board certification, and specializatio
110        We focus on the ethical dimensions of medical practice, both because the difficulty of measuri
111 stem that not only helps allergists in their medical practice but also allows for the standardization
112 nal approaches to care outside of mainstream medical practice but frequently based on traditional pra
113  likely to yield dramatic changes in current medical practice but it offers an opportunity to gain sc
114 livery has made an important contribution to medical practice, but has yet to fully achieve its poten
115 a century ago has so far been slow to affect medical practice, but significant transformations are li
116 iated with prompt and substantial changes in medical practice, but the observed changes suggest that
117 nal and randomized research evaluating usual medical practices, but they are willing to accept less e
118  to be protected against the high demands of medical practice by maintaining or enhancing job satisfa
119 markers can add substantial value to current medical practice by providing an integrated approach to
120 of psychotropic medication use in outpatient medical practice changed dramatically during the study p
121 veloped countries, unsafe blood products and medical practices continue to increase transmission of H
122 t, because of the around-the-clock nature of medical practice, doctors frequently care for patients a
123        Using economic principles to evaluate medical practice does not uniformly mean that less money
124 a-lactamase inhibitors currently employed in medical practice (e.g., clavulanic acid) are significant
125 e in diabetic polyneuropathy for purposes of medical practice, epidemiology studies, and controlled c
126 ring this testimony against the standards of medical practice, especially when courts consider testim
127                                     Thus, as medical practice evolves and variation among individuals
128 luation (PHE) has been a fundamental part of medical practice for decades despite a lack of consensus
129 adaptation and active participation into the medical practice for maxi-K or other specific gene trans
130 The laws and policies regarding the standard medical practice for opioid prescribing are constantly s
131 ications as well as the current standards of medical practice for opioid prescribing.
132 hat nuclear medicine will be a major part of medical practice for the foreseeable future.
133 r humanitarian community as well as military medical practices for both recruiting and retaining medi
134 eat various malignancies in culture-specific medical practices for over 2,000 y, emerged as a hit.
135  era of predictive medicine, which will move medical practice from reactive therapy after disease ons
136 recent shift in the use of PET and PET/CT in medical practice has become evident.
137                                      Current medical practice has limited tools to routinely monitor
138 ilure and liver transplant, but contemporary medical practice has mainly focused on patient managemen
139 n of continuous quality improvement (CQI) in medical practice has not been carried out on a national
140                            These advances in medical practice have occurred while definitive therapie
141 us (HCV) transmission associated with unsafe medical practices have been increasing in the United Sta
142  to develop resistance to all antibiotics in medical practice heightens the urgency for vaccine devel
143 optimization provide the groundwork for best medical practice in an otherwise high-risk surgical popu
144 o test improvements can become part of daily medical practice in local settings.
145 eview of the literature to identify the best medical practice in pediatric iris lesions with atypical
146     Despite their widespread acceptance into medical practice in the ensuing 200 years, both the effi
147 e blood pressure cuff first appeared in U.S. medical practice in the first decade of the 1900s, it ge
148 otic use will always be an important part of medical practice in the intensive care unit.
149 antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) is now standard medical practice in the treatment of a wide variety of i
150  democracy had created an era of unregulated medical practice in the United States.
151 l centers composed of community settings and medical practices in 25 countries, mainly in the United
152 gust 1996 in clinics, hospitals, and private medical practices in nine United States cities.
153 base of 1,751,841 people registered with 314 medical practices in Scotland as of March, 2007.
154 routine clinical data from 314 (30%) general medical practices in Scotland.
155 n (911) subjects were recruited from general medical practices in the area.
156 nctivitis who were recruited from 12 general medical practices in the UK.
157 t an overview of contemporary unconventional medical practices in the United States.
158 asize some important domains of professional medical practice, including interpersonal skills, lifelo
159 and testing of new medical procedures; and a medical practice, including locations of care, billing,
160 kups still have a role when the direction of medical practice increasingly prizes a high volume of br
161      I swerved from an anticipated career in medical practice into continuing delight in those who be
162 anced by the realization that cost-effective medical practice is optimized by wider application of nu
163 and sleep medicine, as well as concerns with medical practice issues; and internationalization of the
164 f the increasing uses of radiation in modern medical practices, it is important to continue to monito
165 lure surpasses that of many cancers, prudent medical practice mandates that physicians learn more abo
166        Incorporation of these resources into medical practice may increase the provision of effective
167 are such a crucial feature of illness and of medical practice, much more investigation of these nonbi
168                                          The medical practice of critical care medicine has long been
169 works is that they are derived from a common medical practice of the day.
170 hypothesis carries many implications for the medical practices of cardiology, oncology, and neonatolo
171 whether differences in medical care seeking, medical practices, or risk factors contributed to geogra
172                                   In current medical practice, patients with refractory anemia with e
173 e introduction of organ transplantation into medical practice, progress and optimism have been abunda
174 ay eventually become an instrument of common medical practice, providing information that assists in
175  allow broader generalizations, better mimic medical practice, reduce complexity and costs, and permi
176  more available, but its clinical utility in medical practice requires careful definition.
177 al pastoral education training into clinical medical practice, research, and/or further training in c
178 h acute respiratory symptoms at a variety of medical practice settings (November 2006 through May 201
179  April 1998 as well as in urban academic and medical practice settings between April and October 1998
180 and female internists overall and in various medical practice settings.
181 nge: (1) the goal is value for patients, (2) medical practice should be organized around medical cond
182 icing physicians suggest that evaluations of medical practice should incorporate the views of a range
183 table cardioverter-defibrillators in routine medical practice significantly reduce cardiovascular and
184 he costs of the intervention and the average medical practice size were associated with ICERs ranging
185 se permanent cessation: 1) is an established medical practice standard for determining death; 2) is t
186                We outline recent advances in medical practice that have positively affected both the
187                                   Changes in medical practice that limit instruction time and patient
188 at professionalism is an essential aspect of medical practice that needs to be taught to those enteri
189 toms among adults attending an urban general medical practice that serves a low-income population and
190 atics, physical sciences, and engineering to medical practice that were largely equipment oriented.
191 however, propelled changes in educational or medical practices that improve people's lives.
192 o recognize the nursing home as a legitimate medical practice, the need for the nursing home industry
193 lation of Taiwanese citizens seen in general medical practice; therefore, the findings can be applied
194 tched 1:5 with control patients by age, sex, medical practice, time of entry into the dataset, and fo
195  impaired or incompetent colleagues in their medical practice to a relevant authority; however, when
196 jority of mental health care in office-based medical practice to children, adolescents, and adults is
197    Quality-of-life indices have been used in medical practice to estimate the impact of different dis
198                        This work complements medical practice to incorporate early diagnosis and new
199 n of the principles of nutrition science and medical practice to the diagnosis, treatment, and preven
200          This article examines the ethics of medical practice under managed care from a pragmatic per
201             He was critical of the empirical medical practices used during his youth, but he saw hope
202            Patients cared for in an academic medical practice were assessed for patient-derived PRO s
203                           Approximately 1800 medical practices were surveyed from a list of all pract
204  eligible African American women and general medical practices were the least effective.
205  one of the highest-prevalence conditions in medical practice, were unable to detect reliably true pr
206                                    Concierge medical practices, which advertise expanded access to ca
207  comparing reception of e-mail technology in medical practice with its historical analogue, reception
208  Many new technologies are introduced to our medical practice with the promise of being the ideal off
209 of variation in the interpersonal aspects of medical practice, with speculation that female physician

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