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 g and completing an advance directive with a social worker.
2 psychiatrist or split with a psychologist or social worker.
3 ersion interviews administered by a research social worker.
4 ed standard discharge planning from hospital social workers.
5 h year from psychiatrists, psychologists, or social workers.
6 uding 71 percent of nurses and 78 percent of social workers.
7  ICU team, including physicians, nurses, and social workers.
8 6-0.79, respectively; adjusted P = .002) and social workers (0.15 visits; IQR, 0.07-0.31, vs 0.11 vis
9           Of 545 eligible hospice nurses and social workers, 397 (73 percent) returned the survey, in
10                     With the assistance of a social worker, 59% of children requiring continuous trea
11 isciplinary communication, the vital role of social workers and other psychosocial providers with exp
12 telerehabilitation program implemented using social workers and psychology technicians with the goal
13 ss of other professionals--including nurses, social workers, and clergy--to participate and even take
14 ews with the responsible physicians, nurses, social workers, and families of patients assigned to the
15 221 participants, physicians, psychologists, social workers, and nurses.
16 l or occupational therapists, psychologists, social workers, and others.
17 atric health care professionals (eg, nurses, social workers, and physicians) move forward to better u
18 ment sessions, conducted by the same nurses, social workers, and psychologists who provided psychothe
19 st, a neonatologist, and experienced nurses, social workers, and psychologists.
20 ive care unit team members, with physicians, social workers, and respiratory care therapists showing
21 pecific members, such as physicians, nurses, social workers, and the chaplain, as patient care evolve
22 linicians, specialist nurses, psychologists, social workers, and, in some countries, non-governmental
23 horter duration, and direct participation by social workers, chaplains, and care coordinators was les
24 e participants-including physicians, nurses, social workers, chaplains, hospice volunteers, patients,
25 AND We retrospectively reviewed and recorded social workers' clinical assessments of adult patients i
26       A home-based intervention delivered by social workers could reduce depressive symptoms and enha
27                        Thirty-six nurses and social workers from two Michigan Medicaid Waiver Sites p
28 legalized in Oregon, many hospice nurses and social workers have provided care for a patient who requ
29     Foster care was created and supported by social workers in Bucharest who received regular consult
30 ed a questionnaire to all hospice nurses and social workers in Oregon.
31                                              Social worker intervention is useful in overcoming commo
32 inic, compared with 2% in prior years before social worker intervention.
33                                              Social workers interviewed families of patients deemed a
34 ptoms and psychosocial service use (pastors, social workers, mental health workers, support groups) a
35 l psychologists, psychiatrists, and clinical social workers (N=187 and N=191) were presented case pro
36 s/urologists [n = 17], coordinators [n = 7], social workers [n = 5], ethicists [n = 2], psychologist
37 uding pulmonologists, gastroenterologists, a social worker, nurse coordinator, surgeon, epidemiologis
38  multidisciplinary approach with physicians, social workers, nurses, and transplant coordinators is a
39 l rehabilitation over a 3-month period via a social worker or master's level psychology technician ut
40 ponent, home-based intervention delivered by social workers or a wait-list control group that receive
41 y group sessions were facilitated by trained social workers or social auxiliary workers from a local
42 ther nonphysician health workers (OR = 2.9), social workers (OR = 2.9), and homemakers (OR = 2.4).
43 rovided by a generalist (intensivist, nurse, social worker) or palliative care specialist.
44 patient (as determined and documented by the social worker; P=0.01), a caregiver who has identified a
45 care providers, mental health professionals, social workers, physical therapists, and dieticians), pr
46 utes through a retrospective chart review of social workers' psychosocial assessments for LVAD patien
47 the same or less than split treatment with a social worker psychotherapist; it was usually less expen
48 % CI, 14.1%-29.4%]), had a higher patient to social worker ratio (difference, 22.5 [95% CI, 9.7-35.2]
49                        Participants were 407 social worker-referred homeless adults with chronic medi
50 ional disciplines responding to this survey, social workers report the largest percentage of patients
51                              At t2, oncology social workers reported types and intensity of psychosoc
52 ren, sites accruing low numbers of subjects, social worker responsible for retention, young age (1-2
53                     Brief psychotherapy by a social worker was the least expensive treatment.
54  care management by a nurse practitioner and social worker who collaborated with the primary care phy

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。