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1 tating effect on patients, both physical and psychosocial.
4 , and their mothers completed assessments of psychosocial adjustment, breast cancer-specific distress
5 ed sword," facilitating academic success and psychosocial adjustment, while at the same time undermin
7 6 patients who developed clinically relevant psychosocial adverse effects, addition of hydrocortisone
9 is aimed to assess HIV prevalence as well as psychosocial and behavioral drivers of HIV infection amo
10 did a systematic review and meta-analysis of psychosocial and behavioural interventions aimed at prev
14 mes over deceased organ donation, but incurs psychosocial and ethical challenges for recipients becau
15 noninferior to in-person counseling for all psychosocial and informed decision-making outcomes: anxi
19 satisfied with their breasts and had greater psychosocial and sexual well-being than those who underw
25 in management, monitoring and documentation, psychosocial and spiritual aspects of care, health profe
31 Both groups self-reported sociodemographic, psychosocial, and caregiving characteristics; cancer cha
32 essential to obtain information on medical, psychosocial, and functional capabilities, and also on h
33 ed concerns about how to meet their medical, psychosocial, and health behaviour needs after treatment
34 upports the hypothesis that better material, psychosocial, and lifestyle conditions enable higher SES
39 ce (mean increase, 11.6 vs 3.6; P = .01) and psychosocial aspects (mean increase, 1.2 points in respo
43 relation between four aspects of management (psychosocial assessment, medical admission, psychiatric
44 ed with a self-harm episode and the costs of psychosocial assessment, together with identification of
46 etrospective chart review of social workers' psychosocial assessments for LVAD patients and (2) deter
48 We assessed time and resources allocated to psychosocial assessments through discussion with clinica
51 ychological and physical well-being; loss of psychosocial assets; social withdrawal; family disruptio
55 ychosocial needs, and similar guidelines for psychosocial care of patients with cancer are being exte
56 tlement-related stressors through augmenting psychosocial care programmes and social integration woul
57 recommendations for the provision of routine psychosocial care to survivors, as well as the challenge
58 ronted with a large number of biological and psychosocial challenges that greatly limit their develop
60 Y: To compare sociodemographic, clinical and psychosocial characteristics of children with AD, ADHD,
61 de attempt and SRB have similar clinical and psychosocial characteristics, this is the first study to
62 netic and phenotypic measures of biological, psychosocial, clinical, and health status characteristic
64 Different treatment options for pain and psychosocial conditions are discussed, and new models of
65 ew issues: long-term clinical complications, psychosocial consequences, risks of EVD reactivation, an
67 is also associated with physical, as well as psychosocial, consequences such as amputation and depres
69 or sociodemographic confounders and parental psychosocial covariates, the hazard ratio for all-cause
71 ty effects of telephone counseling on 1-year psychosocial, decision-making, and quality-of-life outco
72 ld examine how to best disseminate effective psychosocial depression treatments such as CBT-AD to peo
73 racial segregation and tract-level poverty), psychosocial (depressive symptoms), socioeconomic (eg, p
74 her in which children are exposed to extreme psychosocial deprivation in contexts of institutional re
75 review evidence linking early experiences of psychosocial deprivation to reductions in cognitive abil
76 hese factors might have a negative impact on psychosocial development and behavior and could increase
78 dulthood all family members were at risk for psychosocial difficulties as they mutually influenced ea
81 olymerase chain reaction (PCR) results, face psychosocial disorders and rheumatic, ear-nose-throat, n
83 implementation of a systematic protocol for psychosocial distress screening and referral as a condit
85 ning in the vasomotor, sexual, physical, and psychosocial domains of the MENQOL within 6 months of tr
87 t to examine long-term donation effects on 3 psychosocial domains: perceived physical, emotional, and
91 emed significant in the understanding of the psychosocial evaluation and outcomes of upper extremity
92 ptual framework of the essential elements in psychosocial evaluation of living donors which can serve
93 uniform basis for the selection of relevant psychosocial evaluation tools, which can be further test
94 ed by early life nutritional, microbial, and psychosocial exposures previously associated with levels
95 , 13.3-25.3 for top two tertiles vs lowest), psychosocial factors (2.20, 1.78-2.72; 17.4%, 13.1-22.6)
97 ever, after adjustment for health status and psychosocial factors (hazard ratio, 1.14; 95% confidence
101 to assess the association between caregiver psychosocial factors and subsequent patient-perceived QO
103 s unclear if the risk to the child is due to psychosocial factors associated with parental age or if
106 easing evidence supporting the importance of psychosocial factors in the pathophysiology of atheroscl
107 dose-response association between favorable psychosocial factors in youth and cardiovascular health
108 ciation between a higher number of favorable psychosocial factors in youth and greater ideal cardiova
110 source consisted of 311 individuals who had psychosocial factors measured at ages 12 years to 18 yea
111 the surgical decision-making process and the psychosocial factors that influence interest in CPM.
112 djustable correlates such as behavioural and psychosocial factors to promote HRQoL among patients aft
113 suggesting that each increment in favorable psychosocial factors was associated with improvement in
122 all cognition, individual cognitive domains, psychosocial function, and activities of daily living we
125 uropsychiatric condition, is associated with psychosocial functioning impairments that could become c
126 bal cognition, select cognitive domains, and psychosocial functioning in people with mild cognitive i
127 ofessional ice hockey players' cognitive and psychosocial functioning in relation to concussion expos
129 luding measures of mood and anxiety, general psychosocial functioning, age at mood disorder onset in
130 er groups) and insight, depressive symptoms, psychosocial functioning, and quality of life significan
132 h the exception of nonverbal memory, and for psychosocial functioning, including depressive symptoms.
134 discrimination associated with cognitive and psychosocial functioning, would predict gains in auditor
137 management, levels of anxiety, and balanced psychosocial functioning: balanced responders (n = 23; 4
138 nia, depression, anxiety, and mood lability; psychosocial functioning; and parental age at mood disor
139 ening for genital herpes was associated with psychosocial harms, including distress and anxiety relat
142 essionals should recognize the importance of psychosocial health, partner with on-site psychosocial s
144 Because of the significant emotional and psychosocial impact of chronic pruritus, it is important
145 therapy has a sustained beneficial effect on psychosocial impact of food allergy at 3 and 12 months a
146 4 subscales (mobility, activity limitation, psychosocial impact, and visual function) at 3 months.
148 r hearing dysfunction, (h) understanding the psychosocial interactions with technology and other huma
149 a-3 PUFAs in combination with a high-quality psychosocial intervention (cognitive behavioral case man
150 y assigned 470 patients to receive the brief psychosocial intervention (n=158), CBT (n=155), or short
151 ad no superiority effect compared with brief psychosocial intervention at weeks 36 (treatment effect
152 on therapy (CST) is a well-established group psychosocial intervention for people with dementia.
153 significantly between patients in the brief psychosocial intervention group (n=6 [IQR 4-11]), CBT gr
154 ychoanalytical therapy compared with a brief psychosocial intervention in maintenance of reduced depr
155 ychoanalytical therapy compared with a brief psychosocial intervention in maintenance of reduced depr
158 as effective as CBT and, together with brief psychosocial intervention, offers additional patient cho
159 e two psychological therapies with the brief psychosocial intervention, we first established whether
162 have limited efficacy in this population and psychosocial interventions are inadequately investigated
163 9, 2015, for randomised controlled trials of psychosocial interventions for adults after a recent (wi
164 ew and meta-analysis of the effectiveness of psychosocial interventions for self-harm in adults.
165 esting that opioid substitution coupled with psychosocial interventions is the best treatment option
166 ions of this study, but it is suggested that psychosocial interventions targeting appearance-related
167 ividuals not motivated to engage in existing psychosocial interventions targeting functioning, or who
168 hildren and families calls for comprehensive psychosocial interventions through which healing the psy
169 needs include effective pharmacological and psychosocial interventions to improve quality of life th
170 nidate, dexamphetamine, and atomoxetine, and psychosocial interventions, to those seen in children an
175 ned to treat developmental, behavioural, and psychosocial issues in children and their families, secu
177 rganizational safety practices, physical and psychosocial job factors, musculoskeletal symptoms, and
178 ship between changes in individuals' overall psychosocial job quality and variation in sickness absen
179 s psychosocial job quality, measured using a psychosocial job quality index (levels of job control, d
181 -response relationship between the number of psychosocial job stressors reported by an individual and
182 s, assessment and management of physical and psychosocial long-term and late effects of breast cancer
184 on a prospective study of patients with IBS, psychosocial morbidities are associated with increased l
188 or education, functional deficits, and unmet psychosocial needs predicted both endpoints, whereas pre
189 general survivorship care routinely address psychosocial needs, and similar guidelines for psychosoc
190 us assessment of the individual's health and psychosocial needs, thereby inadvertently reducing quali
191 loskeletal symptom comorbidity, physical and psychosocial occupational factors, body mass index (BMI)
193 n for medical conditions, comorbidities, and psychosocial or behavioral patterns that contribute to t
196 truments and evaluation protocols to predict psychosocial outcomes as well as to understand whether w
198 Adolescents with food allergy have poorer psychosocial outcomes compared with their nonallergic co
201 o self-harm are at increased risk of adverse psychosocial outcomes in the fourth decade of life, usin
203 or adult patients with cancer; and assessed psychosocial outcomes, including quality of life, depres
204 ely affect weight, behavior, biomarkers, and psychosocial outcomes, yet few target African Americans.
209 h they are predicted provide support for the psychosocial pathway being key in the SES-oral health re
210 Our results provide initial support for a psychosocial perfect storm conceptual model; the conflue
219 personal predictors of risk and developed a psychosocial program tailored to prevent depression.
220 ive, affective and behavioural impairment on psychosocial questionnaires and psychiatric diagnoses.
221 icit recommendations for complex medical and psychosocial risk factors might promote more equitable a
225 of psychosocial health, partner with on-site psychosocial services in their practices, and facilitate
228 ions of modifiable biological, neighborhood, psychosocial, socioeconomic, and behavioral factors in y
229 ter adjustment for biological, neighborhood, psychosocial, socioeconomic, and behavioral factors meas
230 for clinical factors, the poorer health and psychosocial state of women attenuated the difference.
231 ain, natural history, somatosensory profile, psychosocial status and olfactory testing of 13 subjects
234 rk highlights the importance of studying how psychosocial stress affects functional brain responses t
235 thers and their children related to prenatal psychosocial stress and assessed its role in the develop
237 adaptive immune system retain the memory of psychosocial stress and thereby alter mood states and CN
240 cantly blunted SNS and HPA axis responses to psychosocial stress compared with children randomized to
244 show that neuroinflammatory activation after psychosocial stress impairs spatial memory performance i
245 own emotional processing with high levels of psychosocial stress in individuals with greater conduct
252 inant aggressor in a murine model of chronic psychosocial stress when tested 1-2 wk following the fin
253 nalyses are first to link increased maternal psychosocial stress with reduced placental mtDNAcn and a
254 er-treated mice were also exposed to chronic psychosocial stress, and behavior, immune, and microbiot
255 ty to social defeat stress (SDS), a model of psychosocial stress, and prevents the fluoxetine (FLX)-i
256 h the transcriptional and splicing levels by psychosocial stress, suggesting that LSD1 is involved in
257 re the first to describe an operant model of psychosocial stress-induced relapse in rodents and lay t
258 at egr1 and c-fos promoters, dampening their psychosocial stress-induced transcription and resulting
262 social defeat stress, an ethologically valid psychosocial stressor in rodents that closely resembles
265 mmune system makes it possible for childhood psychosocial stressors to affect immune system developme
273 safety net and reassurance (availability of psychosocial support, confidence in kidney-focused care,
275 nked to lower risks of self-harm than was no psychosocial therapy (odds ratio [OR] 0.73, 95% CI 0.65-
276 compared with people who did not receive the psychosocial therapy intervention after deliberate self-
277 who, after deliberate self-harm, received a psychosocial therapy intervention at suicide prevention
282 ng 2668 participants, of pharmacological and psychosocial treatments for ADHD in adolescents aged 12
288 ter adjusting for demographic, clinical, and psychosocial variables, memory continued to predict medi
291 AMD, -0.68; 95% CI, -4.42 to 3.06; P = .72), psychosocial well-being (AMD, -0.59; 95% CI, -3.92 to 2.
292 ], -4.74; 95% CI, -8.21 to -1.28; P = .008), psychosocial well-being (AMD, -3.87; 95% CI, -7.33 to -0
293 ing (difference, 4.5; P = .003), and greater psychosocial well-being (difference, 3.7; P = .02) at 1
294 with breasts (difference, 8.0; P = .002) and psychosocial well-being (difference, 4.6; P = .047) comp
295 rt higher breast satisfaction (P = .046) and psychosocial well-being (P = .017), but no difference wa
296 an independent association between childhood psychosocial well-being and reduced coronary artery calc
297 at grafting may improve breast satisfaction, psychosocial well-being, and sexual well-being in patien
299 We explored the medical complications and psychosocial wellbeing of the donors during the first po
300 present study supports the effect of adverse psychosocial work factors from the ERI model on BP contr
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