戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。

今後説明を表示しない

[OK]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 t implementation of these recommendations in primary care.
2 to standardized family history assessment in primary care.
3 treatments because of poor access in routine primary care.
4 ith chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in primary care.
5 infection among 455 508 adults registered in primary care.
6 re are related to greater use of after-hours primary care.
7 g the cost-effectiveness of HIV screening in primary care.
8 after cancer treatment in both secondary and primary care.
9 ifestyle of overweight, middle-aged women in primary care.
10 ve the quality of allergy coding in Scottish primary care.
11 a proxy for exposure to the ACO's consistent primary care.
12 r survivors, with an emphasis on the role of primary care.
13 or deficiencies in allergy care provision in primary care.
14 edge of allergic conditions is suboptimal in primary care.
15 of type 2 diabetes is a practical target for primary care.
16 expensive, well tolerated, and applicable to primary care.
17 treatments because of poor access in routine primary care.
18 2.5% vs 56.5% (OR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.26-1.31); primary care, 50.9% vs 43.0% (OR, 1.38; 95% CI, 1.36-1.3
19 ce is needed to understand whether extending primary care access is cost-effective and sustainable.
20 rus (HCV) screening rates in baby boomers in primary care and access to specialty care and treatment
21 agement, advance care planning), provided by primary care and cardiology clinicians, may be a vehicle
22  rates indicate a need for targeted improved primary care and comorbid disease management.
23 lected by use of a patient questionnaire and primary care and hospital records.
24                          Routinely collected primary care and hospitalization datasets are useful res
25 ns>0.05), although mortality was very low in primary care and in patients with acute bronchitis.
26 te sore throat poses a significant burden on primary care and is a source of inappropriate antibiotic
27  criteria for major depressive disorder from primary care and psychological therapy services in Devon
28 t least 2 episodes of MDD (recruited through primary care) and among whom there was a biologically re
29 gration of palliative care with respiratory, primary care, and rehabilitation services, with referral
30 , particularly for those patients managed in primary care, and that nurse-led care may be more effect
31 ow accessibility and availability of daytime primary care are related to greater use of after-hours p
32  Among persons aged 50 to 64 years receiving primary care at a safety-net institution, mailed outreac
33 ients with type 1 or 2 diabetes who received primary care at the clinics and obtained retinal telescr
34                                  METHODS AND Primary care attendees aged 18-65 years screened with mo
35                             METHODS AND Male primary care attendees aged 18-65 years screening with h
36 lors, enhanced remission over 3 months among primary care attendees with depression in peri-urban and
37 sion and abstinence over 3 months among male primary care attendees with harmful drinking in a settin
38 ed HCV screening rates among baby boomers in primary care by 5-fold due to efficiency in determining
39  NPs can help meet the increasing demand for primary care by taking responsibilities as primary care
40  are searching for solutions to increase the primary care capacity.
41 can be an effective strategy to increase the primary care capacity.
42 ) and 19 age-matched healthy volunteers at a primary care center and a university hospital ophthalmol
43 om May 24, 2011, to November 14, 2014, in 32 primary care centers in the United Kingdom among 705 par
44 n 20% bronchodilator reversibility across 26 primary care centres and hospitals in the UK and Singapo
45 g of the Latin American population attending primary care centres in Europe.
46 o perform HCV screening for patients seen in primary care clinic (1) born between 1945 and 1965, (2)
47  2 sites, 31.6% (n = 572) were enrolled in a primary care clinic and 68.4% (n = 1237) were enrolled i
48 d ophthalmology technician is stationed in a primary care clinic away from the main hospital.
49 obable allergic disorders) from the Scottish Primary Care Clinical Informatics Unit Research (PCCIU-R
50  of those who underwent universal testing in primary care clinical settings, such as emergency depart
51 y Telemedicine Network, (2) the locations of primary care clinicians and ophthalmologists across the
52    The HNC treatment team should educate the primary care clinicians and patients about the type(s) o
53 ul literature search and two surveys: one to primary care clinicians and the other to a wider group o
54 code and the density of ophthalmologists and primary care clinicians by zip code relative to US Censu
55     Managing chronic pain is challenging for primary care clinicians for many reasons, including the
56         Algorithm-based treatment of acne by primary care clinicians may eliminate unnecessary appoin
57                                              Primary care clinicians should recognize symptoms of rec
58                                              Primary care clinicians were spread somewhat uniformly a
59 patients with pediatric psoriasis, including primary care clinicians, dermatologists, and pediatric s
60 ention strategies are often not addressed by primary care clinicians, even in older patients with rec
61 requires a team-based approach that includes primary care clinicians, oncology specialists, otolaryng
62 and adherence to follow-up appointments with primary care clinicians.
63 ementation, 52,660 baby boomers were seen in primary care clinics and 28% were screened.
64 ese obstacles constrain their utilization at primary care clinics and in remote settings, where resou
65                                            3 primary care clinics at the Veterans Affairs Medical Cen
66 Based Eye Care Services was established in 5 primary care clinics in Georgia surrounding the Atlanta
67        Around 44% of hospitals and 5% of all primary care clinics in mainly areas with a substantial
68 vel times associated with traveling to the 5 primary care clinics in our study.
69 m January 6, 2014, to November 1, 2015, at 5 primary care clinics serving rural and underserved popul
70 al, case-control study in U.S. pulmonary and primary care clinics that recruited subjects from primar
71 r 1, 2015, at 5 Area Health Education Center primary care clinics that serve rural and underserved po
72 h symptoms or signs consistent with STEMI at primary care clinics, small hospitals, and PCI hospitals
73 uke University Health System community-based primary care clinics.
74 An observational study of a population-based primary care cohort (all patients free of prevalent depr
75  We estimated that RSV is responsible for 12 primary care consultations (95% CI 11.9-12.1) and 0.9 ad
76                          Data from 2 014 551 primary care consultations in over 100 000 patients with
77 odel the incidence of MA-NGE associated with primary care consultations or hospitalizations according
78  INTERPRETATION: Nearly double the number of primary care consultations, and nearly five times the nu
79  and about half occur as part of a series of primary care contacts.
80 ult ADHD Program (NYU Langone) and 2015-2016 primary care controls (n = 300).
81 mary care records from a United Kingdom (UK) primary care database that covers approximately 6% of th
82 r antidepressant drugs in a large electronic primary care database.
83 d from The Health Improvement Network (THIN) primary care database.
84 were randomized to 1 of 2 arms: (1) enhanced primary care (eg, flagging of children with BMI >/= 85th
85 on of AE from The Health Improvement Network primary care electronic health records in the UK.
86          Cross-sectional analysis of routine primary care electronic medical records for 1 424 378 ad
87  they were and how best to meet them, in the primary care environment.
88 ors of sepsis and septic shock, the use of a primary care-focused team-based intervention, compared w
89 association between having regular source of primary care from General Practitioners and reduced hosp
90 95% CI, 0.22 to 0.35) higher in the enhanced primary care group and 0.22 units (95% CI, 0.15 to 0.28)
91                              In the enhanced primary care group, adjusted mean (SD) BMI z score was 1
92         INTERPRETATION: Screening for HIV in primary care has important public health benefits as wel
93 ty or growth in sick children presenting for primary care has not been assessed.
94           Integrating registered nurses into primary care has the potential to increase patient acces
95              Behavioral health homes provide primary care health services to patients with serious me
96      Data were collected via medical claims, primary care/hospital records, and national registries f
97                               We used linked primary care, hospitalization, disease registry, and mor
98 nts by targeting providers and caregivers in primary care hospitals in rural China.
99 ately severe to severe depression in routine primary care in Goa, India.
100 egy that offers a promising approach for the primary care in low resource settings, especially in les
101 pants aged 50 to 64 years who were receiving primary care in Parkland Health and Hospital System and
102 tified SQ-LNS to ill children presenting for primary care in rural Gambia had a very small effect on
103                                   Receipt of primary care in TBC practices compared with TPM practice
104 l practitioners (GPs) and practice nurses in primary care in the UK.
105 ening for OSA in asymptomatic adults seen in primary care, including those with unrecognized symptoms
106                                          The Primary Care Interest Group of the European Academy of A
107                               Development of primary care interpretation of guidelines to aid patient
108                         Screening for HIV in primary care is cost-effective and should be promoted.
109                                           As primary care is the first point of healthcare contact fo
110            Globally, healthcare systems with primary-care-led models of delivery must now examine the
111 cted using The Health Improvement Network, a primary care medical records database in the United King
112 izing the contributions of RNs in team-based primary care models.
113             The control group received usual primary care (n=361).
114 s to effectively deploy registered nurses in primary care needed to assure efficient, evidence-based,
115 al College of General Practitioners sentinel primary care network on consultations with patients aged
116  survey design was used to collect data from primary care NPs.
117 nactive adults, delivered by post or through primary care nurse-supported physical activity (PA) cons
118            Lack of knowledge about effective primary care nursing roles and responsibilities challeng
119 rated telemedicine screening intervention in primary care offices and Federally Qualified Health Cent
120                                              Primary care offices and Federally Qualified Health Cent
121                  Firm guidance is needed for primary care on the use of liver blood tests in detectio
122 0% received cardiology care and 60% received primary care only.
123 who had at least 1 outpatient encounter with primary care or cardiology within 90 days of the AF diag
124 ed patients with a zoster diagnosis from the primary care or hospital-based setting in 1997-2013 in D
125 0.7/1000 person-years for episodes involving primary care or hospitalizations, respectively.
126 creening children and adolescents for MDD in primary care or similar settings and depression or other
127 ent was measured with the Nurse Practitioner Primary Care Organizational Climate Questionnaire (NP-PC
128                                Data from 163 primary care organizations was obtained, which employed
129 obtained from a retrospective case series in primary care over the year following discharge.
130 crowded, leading to the desire to strengthen primary care, particularly after hours.
131 iagnosis and treatment of HCV infection in a primary care patient panel with and without the implemen
132                            Using a simulated primary care patient panel, we showed that Project ECHO
133  a mixed methods investigation of reports of primary care patient safety incidents involving sick chi
134 al study of iron status and HFE mutations in primary care patients at 5 centers in the United States
135 S symptom questionnaire was mailed to 23 700 primary care patients from Geisinger Clinic, a health sy
136 ned to detect prediagnostic heart failure in primary care patients using longitudinal electronic heal
137        METHODS AND Digital ECGs from 328 638 primary care patients were collected during 2001 to 2011
138                             A total of 1,672 primary care patients with hypertension (569 newly diagn
139 o assess the performance of the TAPS tool in primary care patients.
140 ized clinical trial included patients from 4 primary care pediatric clinics.
141                                            A primary care pedometer intervention delivered by post or
142                                            A primary care pedometer-based walking intervention in pre
143        Few collected the name of an existing primary care physician (14 [23%]) or offered to send rec
144 -hours primary care systems into large-scale primary care physician (PCP) cooperatives.
145 s seen in an office visit by a UPMC-employed primary care physician (PCP) in 2014.
146 agnosis; the association between visits to a primary care physician and increasing surveillance was v
147 ewly initiated depression treatment by their primary care physician and recruited within 10 days of t
148                          He presented to his primary care physician for further evaluation later that
149                                Findings: The primary care physician is often the first health care pr
150 e early adherence among older patients whose primary care physician newly initiated an antidepressant
151                                          The primary care physician plays a critical role in identify
152                                              Primary care physician practices in Ontario, Canada (Jan
153 tient clinic and concern a referral from the primary care physician to the national Center for Bliste
154           To explore the association between primary care physician volume and quality of diabetes ca
155                       Compared with 47.7% of primary care physicians (205830 of 431819), 61.0% of sur
156 -$7862) vs $2227 (95% CI, $2141-$2314) among primary care physicians (absolute difference, $4651; 95%
157  and specificity was 86.1% when conducted by primary care physicians (n = 16,383).
158 d Healthcare Professional Panel surveyed 200 primary care physicians (PCPs) and 100 cardiologists.
159                                            9 primary care physicians (PCPs) and 100 generally healthy
160 tudy included all patients regularly seen by primary care physicians (PCPs) at an urban academic medi
161 ently provided by nurse practitioners (NPs), primary care physicians (PCPs), or specialist physicians
162 ho provided diagnoses and treatment plans to primary care physicians (PCPs).
163                     The cohort included 8990 primary care physicians and 185 014 patients who present
164 ith a wide range of symptoms, and be seen by primary care physicians and physicians from most special
165  reported the availability of guidelines for primary care physicians and specialists, respectively.
166 hared decision making between paramedics and primary care physicians can prevent transport to the eme
167                                              Primary care physicians followed management recommendati
168                                              Primary care physicians recommended new clinical actions
169      Agreed pathways between specialists and primary care physicians were reported as existing in 32%
170                                              Primary care physicians with busier ambulatory patient p
171  in arrhythmias (60.0%, 62.4%, and 67.0% for primary care physicians, cardiologists, and electrophysi
172 mmendations aim to help CF adults, families, primary care physicians, gastroenterologists, and CF and
173 ug Administration and commonly prescribed by primary care physicians, randomized trials for effective
174 r primary care services due to a shortage of primary care physicians.
175 f inflammatory arthritis in patients seen by primary care physicians.
176 isted living facilities served by 1 group of primary care physicians.
177 diabetes in 2011 who received care from 9014 primary care physicians.
178                      Parents in the enhanced primary care plus coaching group, but not in the enhance
179                              In the enhanced primary care plus coaching group, the adjusted mean (SD)
180 95% CI, 0.15 to 0.28) higher in the enhanced primary care plus coaching group.
181 , and monthly text messages) or (2) enhanced primary care plus contextually tailored, individual heal
182 ber of registered nurses that participate in primary care policy making and research.
183 ented well-controlled asthma in this study's primary care population increased from 48% to 54%.
184 ate long-term outcomes in individuals from a primary care population with electrocardiographic preexc
185                       Nine were developed in primary care populations and six in secondary care.
186 creening pelvic examinations in asymptomatic primary care populations.
187 g test performance conducted in asymptomatic primary care populations; 14 studies of protein urine te
188 endar year, and accounting for clustering by primary care practice (valproate hazard ratio [HR] 0.56;
189 e Federally Qualified Health Center Advanced Primary Care Practice Demonstration provided care manage
190 ption of patient-centered medical homes into primary care practice, the evidence supporting their eff
191  years enrolled in TARGet Kids!, a multisite primary care practice-based research network in Toronto,
192 New Jersey and patients at 1 of 6 New Jersey primary care practices at age 12 years or older; and (3)
193       Child-parent screening was feasible in primary care practices at routine child immunization vis
194  index (BMI) of 28 kg/m(2) or higher from 23 primary care practices in England.
195 BMI in the 85th or greater percentile from 6 primary care practices in Massachusetts.
196 ve patients and 27 providers in 3 safety-net primary care practices in New York City.
197 dy between January 2011 and December 2014 at primary care practices in New York, New York, and Ann Ar
198  and April 2016 in a network of 31 pediatric primary care practices in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
199 bel, cluster-randomised trial (DiRECT) at 49 primary care practices in Scotland and the Tyneside regi
200 etrospective cohort study was conducted at 6 primary care practices of the Children's Hospital of Phi
201                                              Primary care practices that engaged in teledermatology h
202  cared for in Cincinnati Children's Hospital primary care practices), asthma-related hospitalizations
203 cess to electronic health records of daytime primary care practices, task substitution from physician
204  follow-up, in seven London, United Kingdom, primary care practices.
205 ast cancer prevention medications with their primary care practitioner.
206 ining and clinical skin examination (CSE) by primary care practitioners (PCPs) in large health care s
207  Physicians from many specialties as well as primary care prescribe dermatologic medications; as insu
208                   The USPSTF recommends that primary care professionals individualize the decision to
209 re implemented by 12 adolescent medicine HIV primary care programs and included targeted testing, uni
210 provider roles-oncology-directed care versus primary care provider (PCP)-directed care-were assessed
211 kers (OR, 2.42 [CI, 1.09-5.76]; P=0.03), and primary care provider (PCP; OR, 2.00 [CI, 1.08-3.75]; P=
212 he potential to increase patient access to a primary care provider because registered nurses can supp
213 ssed by their oncologist but also want their primary care provider to have a role.
214 ning increased from 7.6% for patients with a primary care provider visit in the 6 months prior to BPA
215                                              Primary care provider-delivered preventive dental care d
216  of care have been described, which focus on primary care providers (PCPs) as receiving cancer surviv
217 s of early preventive dental care or whether primary care providers (PCPs) can deliver it.
218 on on medication adherence among a sample of primary care providers and their black and white hyperte
219  NP work environments so NPs can practice as primary care providers can be an effective strategy to i
220               In some settings, NPs serve as primary care providers delivering ongoing continuous car
221                      Successful working with primary care providers is essential to scaling-up AIT pr
222 Task Force (USPSTF) makes recommendations to primary care providers regarding preventive services for
223 y Healthcare Outcomes (Project ECHO) enables primary care providers to deliver best-practice care for
224                Critical care nurses, are the primary care providers to patients and families at the e
225 "best practice advisory" (BPA) that prompted primary care providers to perform HCV screening for pati
226     The authors randomized cardiologists and primary care providers to receive either intervention or
227     Investigate the NP role in care delivery-primary care providers with the own patient panels or de
228 ubscale, the incidence of the NPs serving as primary care providers with their own patient panel doub
229                   About 45% of NPs served as primary care providers with their own patient panel.
230 r primary care by taking responsibilities as primary care providers, and organizations can assign NPs
231 n with regards to stewardship has focused on primary care providers, there is a significant opportuni
232 s with HCV infection at scale using existing primary care providers.
233 ice within organizations promotes NP role as primary care providers.
234 outpatient TTE ordering by cardiologists and primary care providers.
235        Key candidate areas for strengthening primary care provision and reducing the risks of systems
236 Patient Health Questionnaire-8 and four-item Primary Care PTSD Screen to assess for probable depressi
237 lation-based matched cohort study based on a primary care records database validated for research use
238 the age-specific dementia incidence trend in primary care records from a large population in the Neth
239            We analysed anonymised electronic primary care records from a United Kingdom (UK) primary
240 e of the Dutch population was composed using primary care records from general practice registration
241 dentified from hospital discharge reports or primary care records.
242                          Evidence exist that primary care referral to an open-group behavioural progr
243 , findings that may reflect better access to primary care relative to comparison sites.
244  The USPSTF reviewed the evidence on whether primary care-relevant counseling interventions to promot
245                                    To review primary care-relevant evidence on screening adults for O
246 conceptional folic acid supplementation is a primary care-relevant preventive intervention.
247                                              primary-care research network.
248 ansparency and innovation; and ensuring that primary care residents receive training in well-function
249 g in our study population of older people in primary care resulted in only a small reduction in diagn
250                                Adding WGS to primary care reveals new molecular findings of uncertain
251   To synthesize international evidence about primary care RN roles and responsibilities to make recom
252 ane Library) were searched using MeSH terms: primary care, roles, and responsibilities.
253 r chronic kidney disease (CKD) monitoring in primary care, serum creatinine with estimated glomerular
254  score-matched control practices in the same Primary Care Service Areas.
255 challenges of meeting the growing demand for primary care services due to a shortage of primary care
256 a, a public TB center in India, and an adult primary care setting in China.
257  of T2D screening practices in the pediatric primary care setting is uncommon.
258 aluation of diabetic retinopathy (DR) in the primary care setting may be useful in reaching rural and
259 -based DR screening using technicians in the primary care setting saves costs for Singapore compared
260                   INTERPRETATION: In China's primary care setting, pragmatic interventions on antimic
261                      When implemented in the primary care setting, retinal telescreening increased th
262                  By contrast, in the Chinese primary care setting, this ratio was much less favorable
263 ered nursing roles and responsibilities; (3) primary care setting.
264 , each implementing a unique intervention in primary care settings (repeated mailing, an electronic h
265  of 1% to 3%; however, it is often missed in primary care settings and frequently undertreated.
266 bing effective adolescent depression care in primary care settings include screening, assessment, tre
267 tive models of care for integrating MAT into primary care settings that could be considered for adapt
268 oung infants with isolated fast breathing in primary care settings where hospital referral is often u
269  (MAT) for opioid use disorder (OUD) in U.S. primary care settings would expand access to treatment f
270  scales for use in community, workplace, and primary care settings.
271  dried blood spot testing had high uptake in primary care settings.
272 tside North America or Europe, especially in primary care settings.
273 ry care clinics that recruited subjects from primary care settings.
274 ing previously undiagnosed HCV infections in primary care settings.
275 ) testing implementation on HCV diagnoses in primary care settings.
276       A better understanding of the needs of primary care should help guide the design of educational
277 , double-blind trial in 11 secondary and two primary care sites in the UK.
278 s were compared across specialties (surgery, primary care, specialists, interventionalists) and betwe
279 lue of payments to physicians in surgical vs primary care specialties and to male vs female physician
280 pidemiologic study, data were collected from primary care, specialty care, ED, urgent care, and inpat
281 sing athletic trainers, physical therapists, primary care sports medicine physicians, and orthopedic
282 lth systems for cancer, and more broadly for primary care, surgery, and pathology.
283                        The Dutch after-hours primary care system might offer opportunities for other
284 n nations are reorganizing their after-hours primary care systems into large-scale primary care physi
285 nurses are increasingly becoming embedded in primary care teams yet there is a wide variability in nu
286  at how to best utilize registered nurses in primary care teams.
287 CKD in this manner has not been evaluated in primary care, the setting in which most people with GFR
288 m questionnaire, CAPTURE (COPD Assessment in Primary Care to Identify Undiagnosed Respiratory Disease
289       We sought to gauge the preparedness of primary care to participate in the delivery of AIT in Eu
290                                Clusters were primary care township hospitals in two counties of Guang
291 probability of identifying HCV infections in primary care using targeted BC testing compared with usu
292              Models for integrating MAT into primary care vary in structure.
293                     Costs for medication and primary care visits increased, but overall annual costs
294                            Service use after primary care visits was evaluated for 3 conditions after
295                 To simulate the situation in primary care, we included participants reporting symptom
296 ults recruited on the day of presentation to primary care with acute sore throat not requiring immedi
297                   Among adults presenting to primary care with acute sore throat, a single dose of or
298  common and often treated inappropriately in primary care with antibiotics.
299                With rising concerns that NHS primary care workload has increased substantially, we ai
300 r intensive weight management within routine primary care would achieve remission of type 2 diabetes.

WebLSDに未収録の専門用語(用法)は "新規対訳" から投稿できます。
 
Page Top