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1 sufficient, condition for the improvement of population health.
2 resource setting), to improve individual and population health.
3 nd focus the health-care system on improving population health.
4 innovative approaches to effectively improve population health.
5 translate results of microbiota research for population health.
6 idemiology to reduce disparities and improve population health.
7 ant testable hypotheses that are relevant to population health.
8 d while leading in new and critical areas in population health.
9 ICF to efficiently use resources to optimize population health.
10 o increasing physical activity and improving population health.
11 ization, expenditures, patient outcomes, and population health.
12 the grounds that it leads to improvements in population health.
13 ll effect of non-fatal disease and injury on population health.
14 HIV care continuum compromise individual and population health.
15 atal outcomes in a single measure of average population health.
16 arch will remain a cornerstone for advancing population health.
17 ely used to study trends and inequalities in population health.
18  activities, and impact of investigations on population health.
19 robust and comparable approaches to tracking population health.
20 ffect on unemployment, will adversely affect population health.
21 xamining the impact of economic downturns on population health.
22 uctions in emissions by 2030 while improving population health.
23 stems to provide necessary information about population health.
24  may provide a unique opportunity to improve population health.
25 cerned with the role of genetic variation in population health.
26  governing parties affect some indicators of population health.
27  variable but nevertheless predicted overall population health.
28  environmental, and cultural determinants of population health.
29 oss countries is key to appraising trends in population health.
30 lux within populations) on epidemic size and population health.
31  in birth weight may be useful in evaluating population health.
32 s to improve the impact of ART programmes on population health.
33 chnology in relation to basic, clinical, and population health.
34  by deprivation dimension) and indicators of population health.
35 ogies are now common approaches to improving population health.
36 ific attempt to use it to measure and assess population health.
37 provided remarkable progress in the field of population health.
38 owards advancing health equity and improving population health.
39 cacy, science policy, clinical medicine, and population health.
40 cy of those interventions, thereby improving population health.
41 he field and what truly matters for changing population health.
42  abundance as a metric of habitat quality or population health.
43 volve towards more effective applications in population health.
44 raphic reality and the associated changes in population health.
45 ectancy (HALE) was used to summarize overall population health, accounting for both length of life an
46                                    Universal population health administrative databases were used to
47 of the eff ect of adopting a healthy diet on population health, agricultural production, trade, the e
48 r because this may have a material impact on population health among patients with HFrEF.
49 enough to effectively improve individual and population health and advance health equity.
50 scribe fine-grained local-level variation in population health and contribute to efforts to improve h
51 ends by subgroup is important for monitoring population health and developing interventions to elimin
52 hat high rates of obesity will affect future population health and economics.
53 tion's (Santa Monica, California) Center for Population Health and Health Disparities (median block l
54 first attempt to assess potential impacts on population health and health equity.
55 ons of what is known as structural racism on population health and health inequities.
56 value-based care initiatives and emphasising population health and innovative mechanisms to deliver c
57  social environment of neighborhoods affects population health and nutrition for whites, blacks, and
58  is evolving to a process of care focused on population health and patient safety that pays providers
59  DASH diet in the United Kingdom may improve population health and reduce diet-related GHGs.
60 mplications for individual food security and population health, and it may exacerbate social inequali
61 th the triple aim of improved care, improved population health, and lower costs per capita.
62 lucose metabolism is a substantial burden on population health, and our findings emphasise the need f
63 which is increasingly considered a threat to population health, and the unequal burden kinlessness ma
64 zheimer's disease (AD) are severe threats to population health, and their potential coexistence is an
65 has the potential to contribute to improving population health, and there is growing interest in inno
66 ssessing and comparing national and subgroup population health, and to assisting the transfer of rese
67             Applying risk prediction using a population health approach may improve CKD surveillance
68 es may evolve toward greater acceptance of a population-health approach to the implementation of a po
69 ecently proposed criteria designed to inform population health approaches to disease management: prop
70 routine surveillance efforts for transgender population health are scarce.
71 findings from such studies for individual or population health are unclear.
72 ealth have the potential to undermine future population health as well as global economic development
73 bring larger and more sustained benefits for population health at a lower cost to society.
74                        Background: The total population health benefits and costs of HIV preexposure
75 -walkability neighborhoods), suggesting that population health benefits from increased physical activ
76                             The clinical and population health benefits of offering immediate ART reg
77 ng scientific discoveries in order to impart population health benefits.
78 nd differentiate interventions for achieving population health benefits; 2) it could help identify ne
79 rtality, and disability to overall change in population health between 1990 and 2010.
80 em translated into improved patient care and population health, but also that the UK benefits from it
81 eys are an important resource for monitoring population health, but selective nonresponse may impede
82 lity care is a near-term target, but optimal population health cannot be achieved without considerati
83                                      In this population, health care quality appears to be suboptimal
84  relevant articles were summarized by target populations: health care professionals, parents, underse
85   Although much has been achieved to enhance population health, challenges remain, and approaches nee
86                           AF has substantial population health consequences, including impaired quali
87                              The benefits to population health could be substantial.
88 y implement change and informed by extensive population health data analysis.
89                                              Population health did not decline and indeed generally i
90                             The evolution of population health during the years 1920-1940 confirms th
91                               This potential population health effect may be overlooked in US hospita
92                     However, to estimate the population health effect of a proposed intervention, one
93 t levels and trends is essential to quantify population health effects and to prompt decision makers
94 mpact assessment framework, we estimated the population health effects arising from alternative land-
95  pollutants and many studies have documented population health effects from this exposure.
96                     We used results from the population health equivalence responses to anchor the re
97         The web survey added questions about population health equivalence, which compared the overal
98 ne the association between socioeconomic and population health factors and prescribing rates.
99 examine associations of economic growth with population health for the period 1920-1940.
100  may be a useful indicator of individual and population health for those working in primary care and
101                         Furthermore, overall population health has improved greatly on the basis of s
102 d technology into meaningful improvements in populations' health have had limited success.
103                    We therefore assessed the population health impact and cost-effectiveness of a str
104 y in translating scientific discoveries into population health impact.
105 country programmes to evaluate the costs and population-health impact in addition to the clinical ben
106      Our results suggest that differences in population health impacts among neighborhoods are simila
107          The methodology is needed to assess population health impacts of large-scale initiatives-inc
108               We start from the premise that population health improvement is conditional on a health
109                                              Population health improvements are the most relevant yar
110 duce corruption are more plausibly linked to population health improvements than are efforts to democ
111  distinct and useful to the understanding of population health in future.
112                           Efforts to improve population health in King County should focus on reducin
113                                   To improve population health in LMICs, more resources should be ded
114 How to harness the private sector to improve population health in low-income and middle-income countr
115 d States have not kept pace with advances in population health in other wealthy nations.
116 of the US health burden, and improvements in population health in the United States have not kept pac
117 at the population level is thus an essential population health indicator.
118 ization and features of the environment, and population health indicators.
119        Other articles in this Series address population health inequalities, and the health effects o
120 vity to timely detect substantial changes in population health, Influenzanet has the potential to bec
121  policy makers, and the public to facilitate population health interventions and quality improvement
122                                  Significant population health interventions are needed to reduce the
123 ealth implications, and explore clinical and population health interventions that aim to reduce FGF23
124 prevention and early detection services, and population health is improved and sustained by solidifyi
125                                Its effect on population health is less clear.
126   The effect of global health initiatives on population health is uncertain.
127 f IBD will only worsen this problem globally-population health management (PHM) strategies are needed
128 e providers to develop care coordination and population health management strategies to provide quali
129 ork is particularly valuable when addressing population health management within resource-constrained
130 ery uneven, as indicated by the wide gaps in population health (measured by life expectancy) between
131                                          The Population Health Metrics Research Consortium shortened
132  range of noninvasive diagnostic and general population health monitoring applications.
133  engagement in improving systems of care and population health, neither medical education nor the pra
134  with the intent to optimize feasibility and population health, not accuracy alone.
135                       The negative effect on population health of postponing the transition to dolute
136 o be a powerful strategy for improvements in population health on a permanent basis.
137 iological embedding emerged from insights in population health on the unique characteristics of socio
138 health surveys to generate reliable SAEs for population health outcomes at all administrative and leg
139 es of surgical care provision as a whole and population health outcomes have not been well described.
140   The association between surgical rates and population health outcomes is not clear.
141 s are needed to increase quality of care and population health outcomes while reducing health care co
142 centred fragmented delivery were to prevail--population health outcomes would suffer; health-care exp
143 the links between expansions in coverage and population health outcomes, with a focus on the health e
144 he impact of using candidate applications on population health outcomes.
145 e quality of care is insufficient to improve population health outcomes.
146 he probable effects of similar programmes on population health outcomes.
147  (CRVS) systems are associated with improved population health outcomes.
148  may be unsuitable for monitoring changes in population health over time.
149  been associated with systematic patterns in population health over time.
150 15 g/d), type of HR measure, population age, population health, parallel versus crossover design, typ
151 better access to necessary care and improved population health, particularly for poor people.
152 e integrated into medical communication in a population health perspective to assist clinicians in as
153 tial in health inequalities research and for population health policy.
154                                              Population Health Research Institute, the Canadian Insti
155                                              Population Health Research Institute, the Canadian Insti
156                                              Population health researchers share this cyclical intere
157          BD held an Medical Research Council Population Health Scientist Fellowship (G0902120).
158 ed healthy individuals ascertained through a population health screen.
159                                          The population health significance of these findings require
160 can help us better understand the drivers of population health so that we may intervene, paving the w
161 ood are being developed for correlation with population health studies.
162 e devices may be a useful addition to future population health studies.
163 ilizing existing big data sources to conduct population health studies.
164           We linked data from a longitudinal population health surveillance (which is maintained by t
165 ethodology with the monthly South Australian population health surveillance system report of randomly
166                              A challenge for population health surveillance systems using telephone m
167 d that 8 years after testing positive in the population health surveillance, 16% had died.
168                       Data from the National Population Health Survey cycles conducted between 1994/1
169 rence analysis of cross-sectional, quarterly population health surveys administered before and after
170 2 countries from individual-level records in population health surveys, systematic reviews, and data
171 wise Approach to Surveillance" framework for population health surveys.
172 as the passion that epidemiologists have for population health, tempered with concerns for remaining
173 her historical periods and market economies, population health tends to evolve better during recessio
174          To improve diet quality and overall population health, the need to develop nutritional ratin
175  suggest that, without major improvements in population health, the target of increasing participatio
176 nce is one of the greatest threats to global population health this century, and is a major contribut
177 on of the impact of targeted improvements in population health through strengthened surveillance of C
178 ance of both online and offline networks for population health today.
179 mic variables related to education, poverty, population health, urbanization, health infrastructure,
180 wards increasing food security and improving population health, various policies, programmes and regu
181  single-year duration, provide insights into population health vulnerability--even though most climat
182 behavior changes to improve a Maine county's population health were associated with reductions in hos
183 the relation between economic conditions and population health were often based on annualized data an
184 and consider the potential effect on overall population health when prioritizing care improvements an
185 ended or scaled up for purposes of improving population health without randomized evidence that they

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