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1 (43.9%) received treatment by the emergency medical service.
2 al health/substance use disorder and general medical services.
3 will increase demand for surgical and other medical services.
4 rge county with a single system of emergency medical services.
5 symptoms, prompting action to call emergency medical services.
6 ay a key role in patient access to emergency medical services.
7 l shock treated by out-of-hospital emergency medical services.
8 defibrillator had been used by nonemergency medical services.
9 llness may need assistance with coordinating medical services.
10 er factors that affect access and quality of medical services.
11 asized personal assistance, medications, and medical services.
12 s, race, era of military service, and use of medical services.
13 and substance use services than for general medical services.
14 pression treatment might reduce use of other medical services.
15 have important implications for delivery of medical services.
16 phy is in keeping with the general growth in medical services.
17 tment gaps that may lead to increased use of medical services.
18 uman services, and complementary-alternative medical services.
19 ion by persons outside traditional emergency medical services.
20 rehabilitation, addictions, psychiatric, and medical services.
21 itals, MRSA was most frequent in the general medical services.
22 alth providers had no effect on the costs of medical services.
23 ho were consecutively admitted to university medical services.
24 ompares favorably with that of many accepted medical services.
25 nagement of patients with STEMI by emergency medical services.
26 al in hospital after activation of emergency medical services.
27 ossible systematic differential valuation of medical services.
28 hcare have renewed the focus on the value of medical services.
29 with lower total claims payments for common medical services.
30 efibrillated before the arrival of emergency medical services.
31 s, particularly for patients using emergency medical services.
32 in malaria-endemic areas that lack effective medical services.
33 2003) were limited to the sectors of general medical services (2.59 times as high in 2001 to 2003 as
36 cility, including 640 arriving via emergency medical services, 267 self/family driven, and 83 already
37 ere longer than for patients using emergency medical services (76 versus 51 minutes; P<0.001), but si
41 tion; notification and response of emergency medical services; acute stroke treatment; subacute strok
45 lder, female, and treated by rural emergency medical services agencies and experienced longer transpo
47 trial involving 114 North American emergency medical services agencies within the Resuscitation Outco
49 ence in which each institution and emergency medical services agency will define an optimal approach
51 authors examined the barriers to receipt of medical services among people reporting mental disorders
52 was coordinated by the prehospital emergency medical service and encompassed the public emergency sys
53 ducted at the Philadelphia VA Medical Center medical service and Oncology Unit of the Hospital of the
54 are infected will not have any contact with medical services and are highly unlikely to have a sampl
55 ent education, improvements in the Emergency Medical Services and emergency department components of
56 onsideration within the manuals of emergency medical services and emergency department managers to a
57 Mutuelles on achieving universal coverage of medical services and financial risk protection in its fi
58 s at risk for hospital readmissions focus on medical services and have found chronic conditions as co
60 on prisoner suicide, older prisoners, prison medical services and inmate mental health are highlighte
61 rease associated costs to the US economy for medical services and lost productivity, and contribute t
63 ther the control response (calling emergency medical services and performing cardiopulmonary resuscit
65 dual goals of protecting patients' access to medical services and protecting the moral integrity of c
66 ure between the evaluations of the Emergency Medical Services and the emergency department among both
68 ies, and improvements in access to emergency medical services and timely orthopaedic care are critica
69 atients were assessed by organized emergency medical services, and had field-based physiologic criter
70 n public health insurance schemes, emergency medical services, and health information technology.
71 aphic characteristics, health status, use of medical services, and hospital-level characteristics.
72 ilities, and transports, denial of access to medical services, and misuse of medical facilities and e
74 rs to improve patient outcomes, the value of medical services, and patient experiences will thrive an
75 ry hospitals, a lack of integrated emergency medical services, and the medical community's limited ex
76 is the home, a situation in which emergency medical services are challenged to provide timely care.
77 of which aspects of the helicopter emergency medical services are responsible for any salutary effect
78 is high among substance abuse patients, yet medical services are seldom provided in coordination wit
79 tion between time from 911 call to emergency medical service arrival (response time) and survival acc
81 locations registered with Toronto Emergency Medical Services as of September 2009 were plotted geogr
82 70 years who were discharged from a general medical service at a tertiary care hospital (mean age, 8
83 sharing is associated with increased use of medical services, at least for patients with congestive
84 timepoint at which the helicopter emergency medical services availability ceased, reached opposite c
85 s but received no resuscitation by emergency medical services between December 2005 and March 2007.
93 s and data sources results in differences in medical service costs, care and treatments, and limited
95 h the Guidelines() and a statewide emergency medical services data system from June 2008 to September
96 t out-of-pocket spending for drugs and other medical services decreased (relative change: statin user
97 ntains information on utilization of covered medical services, diagnoses, episodes of illness, and Me
98 nd emergency department bypass for emergency medical services direct presenters (48%-59%; P=0.002) an
99 edical contact-to-device times for emergency medical services direct presenters (84 versus 88 versus
100 ts (RACE) project, transported via emergency medical service directly to 21 North Carolina hospitals
101 met health needs (2.1 % vs 5.9%), and use of medical services (eg, > or =1 physician contact in past
102 were asked about visits for 12 complementary medical services (eg, chiropractic services and herbal r
106 ing the following: 1) citywide 911 emergency medical service (EMS) calls and ambulance responses; and
108 eedback for 484 hospitals and 1253 emergency medical services (EMS) agencies in 16 regions across the
109 bystander resuscitation; 2) a new emergency medical services (EMS) algorithm; and 3) aggressive post
111 ts with STEMI were assessed by the emergency medical services (EMS) and referred for primary PCI: 822
112 received resuscitative efforts by emergency medical services (EMS) and were enrolled in the Cardiac
113 as performed before the arrival of emergency medical services (EMS) and whether early CPR was correla
114 vidence suggests that people value emergency medical services (EMS) but that they may not use the ser
115 f pre-hospital severe sepsis among emergency medical services (EMS) encounters, relative to acute myo
117 illators (AEDs) beyond traditional emergency medical services (EMS) into the community has not been f
119 eous 12-lead ECG transmission from emergency medical services (EMS) personnel in the field to the eme
121 years) were assessed by organized emergency medical services (EMS) personnel, did not have traumatic
122 arrests that were not witnessed by emergency medical services (EMS) personnel, the rate of bystander
124 iew the incident reports logged by emergency medical services (EMS) technicians arriving with intenti
125 iew the incident reports logged by emergency medical services (EMS) technicians arriving with intenti
129 % when the arrest was witnessed by emergency-medical-services (EMS) personnel, 35% when it was witnes
131 patients arrived at hospitals via emergency medical services (EMSs), yet since then, there have been
133 ical illnesses, are frequent users of costly medical services, especially emergency department and ho
134 balanced by decreases in the use of general medical services, especially for patients with comorbid
135 les for medical comorbidity and use of prior medical services, few examined variables associated with
138 nts for outpatient mental health and general medical services for 302 Medicare health plans from 2001
141 l insurance payments were higher for covered medical services for individuals with bipolar disorder t
142 therings like the 1996 Olympic Games require medical services for large populations assembled under u
146 ts undergoing scene HEMS or ground emergency medical services (GEMS) in the National Trauma Databank
149 ideration of fibrinolytic therapy, emergency medical services hospital bypass protocols, and improved
150 ulation study to date, set in the UK Defence Medical Services' Hospital Simulator and the conflict zo
151 vices, other mental health services, general medical services, human services, and complementary-alte
152 pared with waiting for traditional emergency medical services, immediate use of automated external de
153 ss casualties and the provision of emergency medical services; implementation of strategies for the p
156 all patients with STEMI managed by emergency medical services in the greater Paris area (11.7 million
157 controls for pharmaceuticals, like those for medical services in the Medicare system, would also tend
158 ritis (RA) do not receive optimal preventive medical services, including cancer screening tests.
159 with the pretriage period, use of emergency medical services increased from 30.2% to 38.1% (P < .001
160 tion period, the rate of fall-related use of medical services increased from 68.1 to 83.3 per 1000 pe
162 needed to evaluate the efficacy of Emergency Medical Services interventions to reduce this early clin
166 ission previously demonstrated that time for medical services is the dominant element in valuing phys
168 hock, heart arrest, resuscitation, emergency medical services; keywords: automatic external defibrill
169 is challenge is the recognition by emergency medical service leaders that prehospital airway manageme
171 case-crossover design using 11 677 emergency medical service-logged OHCA events between 2004 and 2011
172 dary outcomes: individual serious illnesses, medical services, Medicaid payments, and medical school
173 emically authoritative, grassroots emergency medical services medical directors and trauma chiefs, pr
174 ensed antiasthma prescriptions and on use of medical services: mild controlled, mild uncontrolled, mo
175 s already hospitalized in the DUMC inpatient medical service, most of whom had indwelling intravascul
177 I Alert Team, which, together with emergency medical services, offers support for thrombolysis or imm
178 a patient's or surrogate's timely access to medical services or information or create excessive hard
180 to secondary and tertiary care, use of other medical services, or sickness absence, but the consumpti
181 ac arrest data from Rochester, MN, emergency medical services over a 6-yr period was retrospectively
182 luation II score (p < .0001), admission by a medical service (p = .009), and use of pressure-controll
184 ons, key differences exist between emergency medical services patients with traumatic and nontraumati
186 joint dislocations) and fall-related use of medical services per 1000 person-years among persons who
187 n time was noticeably shorter when emergency medical service personnel requested prehospital activati
188 ency department physicians than by emergency medical service personnel, but door-to-balloon time was
189 with cardiac arrests witnessed by emergency medical services personnel (n = 2253), leaving a study p
190 In certain venues, out-of-hospital emergency medical services personnel are highly skilled at managin
192 d businesses; 2) retraining of all emergency medical services personnel in methods to enhance circula
193 rnal defibrillation) and timing of emergency medical services personnel on OHCA outcomes according to
194 For successful implementation, emergency medical services personnel should be involved in study d
195 nagement from the first contact by emergency medical services personnel through initial admission to
196 ve criteria (OHCA not witnessed by emergency medical services personnel, nonshockable initial cardiac
198 were transported to a hospital by emergency-medical-service personnel, 8.6% were admitted, and 0.3%
199 e with additional data provided by emergency medical services, police departments and surrounding hos
200 e with additional data provided by emergency medical services, police departments and surrounding hos
201 from 30.2% to 38.1% (P < .001) and emergency medical services prenotification increased from 65.5% to
202 ed adjustment for mode of arrival, emergency medical services prenotification, and onset-to-arrival t
203 abstracted from data collected by emergency medical service programs in Seattle and King County, Was
206 lects differences in the overall quantity of medical services provided rather than differences in ill
207 are payments to ophthalmologists, ophthalmic medical services provided, and the most common Medicare-
208 ons of pediatric trauma affect the emergency medical services provider, emergency physician, trauma s
209 resuscitation or defibrillation by emergency medical service providers and/or received bystander auto
210 pment, training, and experience of Emergency Medical Services providers in the care of children, and
211 with OOH cardiac arrest treated by emergency medical services providers participating in the Resuscit
212 be chest compression rates used by emergency medical services providers to resuscitate patients with
213 suite, and prompt data feedback to emergency medical services providers were used less frequently.
214 research, resuscitation research, emergency medical services, public health, and development of guid
215 development of biomedical devices, emergency medical services quality assurance, and clinical practic
216 Analyses compared health process (use of medical services, quality of care, and satisfaction) and
217 rdiac Arrest is a population-based emergency medical services registry of out-of-hospital nontraumati
218 integrated database on all mental health and medical services reimbursed by Medicaid and Medicare as
220 d written dispatch report, written emergency medical services report, hospital record, and telephone
222 0.005) and to have presented after emergency medical services rerouting in July 2005 (96% versus 94%,
224 e of assessing the distribution of emergency medical services resources to make the trauma care syste
225 rs of age) of OHCA were treated by emergency medical services responders, for an overall incidence of
226 thesized factors such as delays in emergency medical service response or differences in the likelihoo
227 ace in a community with a 2-tiered emergency medical services response and an established system of c
228 egression accounting for age, sex, emergency medical services response time, clustering of county, tr
229 irst monitored cardiac rhythm, and emergency medical services response time, compared with daytime an
233 roviding potentially inappropriate or futile medical services should not be considered sufficient jus
234 r readmission rates include discharge from a medical service, site of malignancy, and emergency prima
235 Taking the patient to CT on the emergency medical services stretcher, registering the patient as u
237 vices grew at a rate similar to that for all medical services subject to Medicare's sustainable growt
238 dology and findings of a statewide emergency medical service surveillance initiative, which is used t
239 , shockable rhythm as a measure of emergency medical services system efficacy and all emergency medic
240 nsensus on the need to account for emergency medical services system factors, increasing availability
243 l services system efficacy and all emergency medical services system-treated arrests as a measure of
245 e adopted as metrics against which emergency medical services systems can measure their performance.
246 ected on patients' encounters with emergency medical services systems should include descriptions of
247 cardiac arrest patients in 2 urban emergency medical services systems were treated with automated ext
249 inpatients used more hospital and outpatient medical services than nondepressed patients, but they di
250 veruse, which is defined as the provision of medical services that are more likely to cause harm than
251 and differences may exist among surgical and medical services that could impact the use of palliative
252 dical disorders who are attending specialist medical services that is feasible, acceptable, and poten
253 l societies to develop lists of the top five medical services that patients and physicians should que
255 stigated extensively in patients admitted to medical services, the incidence and risk factors for the
256 er outcomes such as decreased utilization of medical services, the maintenance of employment, consume
257 nters with the necessary supportive care and medical services to address the specific needs of this p
258 aborative efforts by hospitals and emergency medical services to provide timely reperfusion in the Un
261 cipants' intentions to extend their military medical service (total model R (2) = .37), with the stro
262 t-elevation myocardial infarction, emergency medical service transport from the field directly to the
263 roup competition (n = 81, 21%) and emergency medical services transport and finances (n = 99, 26%).
265 ts an argument that the helicopter emergency medical services transport is associated with significan
269 2 patients (22%) showed PND during Emergency Medical Services transport, with a mean decrease in the
274 mber and utilization of Helicopter Emergency Medical Services transports has occurred in the manageme
276 ation was a retrospective study of emergency medical service-treated, nontraumatic, out-of-hospital c
278 secutive adults with nontraumatic, emergency medical services-treated out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
280 , a randomized controlled trial of emergency medical services treatment of people with symptoms sugge
284 ted in significant improvements in emergency medical services use and prenotification and more than d
285 ospice at low rates, and data on their acute medical service utilization after hospice enrollment is
286 d HF who enrolled in hospice had lower acute medical service utilization after their enrollment.
287 bset of beneficiaries to compare their acute medical service utilization before and after enrollment.
288 g those with drug abuse problems, outpatient medical service utilization, disability, and sexually tr
289 association between the helicopter emergency medical services utilization and trauma outcome, and thr
290 studies addressing the helicopter emergency medical services utilization in terms of triage were cha
291 and hospital-level factors, management by a medical service was independently associated with longer
292 condom catheters for hospitalized adults on medical services was assessed in 299 scenarios, includin
293 re ascertained at the scene by the Emergency Medical Services was compared with the subsequent evalua
294 ients admitted via emergency department to a medical service were admitted under high ICU congestion
296 the least prestigious section of the Indian Medical Service, which put him directly in contact with
299 transplantation is among the most costly of medical services, yet few studies have addressed the rel
300 e and depression can affect the use of other medical services, yet there is little information on how
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