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1 ssive exercise at home managed by a physical therapist.
2 ssion visited a complementary or alternative therapist.
3 , statistical method, measure, occasion, and therapist.
4 encies presents special difficulties for the therapist.
5 plies," depression, and hostility toward the therapist.
6 d few involved the supervision of a physical therapist.
7 r advice alone, both delivered by a physical therapist.
8 es in OCD symptoms when conducted by trained therapists.
9 itative data and the relevance of its use by therapists.
10 nts and for use by physical and occupational therapists.
11 receive little attention from clinicians and therapists.
12 f individual HT (iHT) performed by qualified therapists.
13 among nurses vs. physicians and respiratory therapists.
14 lt patients were examined by three different therapists.
15 n experiences following probing by different therapists.
16 be controlled by using multiple, experienced therapists.
17 hological treatment were provided by trained therapists.
18 to orthopedists and physical or occupational therapists.
19 f 18 home visits from the study occupational therapists.
20 and consultation with the patients' previous therapists.
21 schools, was taught by experienced physical therapists.
22 randomized to treatment delivered by trained therapists.
23 tal health workers or CBT from psychological therapists.
24 s for up to 10% of all referrals to physical therapists.
25 ible to delegate a range of tasks to hygiene-therapists.
26 rican Academy of Orthopaedic Manual Physical Therapists.
27 and language pathologists, and occupational therapists.
28 rapists had better results than first-cohort therapists.
29 0.40 mm probe were observed for patients of therapist 1, and for the quartile of all 60 patients tha
31 I], 0.61-0.90), experience of peer violence (therapist, -10.4%; control, +4.7%; RR, 0.70; 95% CI, 0.5
32 n [SD] age, 36.2 [12.1] years) treated by 20 therapists (19 women and 1 man; mean [SD] age, 40.0 [14.
34 ercise program at home managed by a physical therapist 2 months after the stroke (home-exercise progr
35 % CI, 0.52-0.95), and violence consequences (therapist, -30.4%; control, -13.0%; RR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.
36 reported reductions in alcohol consequences (therapist, -32.2%; control, -17.7%; odds ratio, 0.56; 95
37 ctions in the occurrence of peer aggression (therapist, -34.3%; control, -16.4%; relative risk [RR],
38 mple included 19 agencies with 23 sites, 130 therapists, 36 supervisors, and 22 executive administrat
39 tory therapists (adjusted odds ratio for one therapist, 6.7; P=0.002; adjusted odds ratio for the oth
41 he authors wished to obtain information from therapists about their reactions to the suicides of pati
44 fentanyl and exposure to the two respiratory therapists (adjusted odds ratio for one therapist, 6.7;
46 rall effect size of the relationship between therapist affect focus and outcome, statistical signific
48 sician, critical care nurse, and respiratory therapist along with the supplies and equipment to opera
49 tion and swallowing by a speech and language therapist), an off-hours pattern (door-to-needle time fo
52 linical evaluation by a trained occupational therapist and an on-road driving evaluation by a masked
54 the initial therapeutic alliance between the therapist and patient, as a predictor of the risk of vio
55 chair, climbing a step) taught by a physical therapist and performed independently by the participant
56 at hospital discharge by a licensed physical therapist and rated based on qualitative categories adap
57 s is difficult because of limited numbers of therapists and because of the disabling effects of OCD s
58 -quality qualitative articles indicated that therapists and clients considered art therapy to be a be
61 onphysician mental health professionals (eg, therapists), and (4) mental health facility or office-ba
63 ing included a physician, nurse, respiratory therapist, and driver--all with extensive critical care
65 862 physicians, 941 nurses, 968 occupational therapists, and 879 respiratory therapists (n=3,650).
66 claims experience of chiropractors, massage therapists, and acupuncturists for 1990 through 1996.
68 alth professionals, social workers, physical therapists, and dieticians), providing their patients (C
69 s, gastroenterologists, nurses, occupational therapists, and dieticians, can make a major contributio
70 care unit nurses, 24 (44%) were respiratory therapists, and four did not indicate their profession.
71 piratory function by physicians, respiratory therapists, and nurses to identify those possibly capabl
72 ents, including nurses, parents, respiratory therapists, and nursing assistants from a medical intens
73 of all Texas physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, and occupational therapists with active lice
78 titioners, physician assistants, respiratory therapists, and registered nurses who elect to receive e
79 linical representativeness of their samples, therapists, and settings, suggesting a need for increase
81 States, the evidence clearly suggests dental therapists are clinically competent to safely perform th
83 muscle strength obtained independently from therapists are highly related (r = -0.77), but estimates
85 The type of PT identified by the physical therapists as having the most positive impact also signi
87 dental injections, lack of access to trained therapists, as well as dentists' lack of training and ti
88 treatment, the therapist-led (51.7%) and the therapist-assisted (33.3%) conditions had higher binge e
89 waiting list (81.2%) conditions than in the therapist-assisted (68.3%) and self-help (59.7%) conditi
90 roup treatment compared to therapist-led and therapist-assisted group cognitive-behavioral therapy.
91 , controlled proof-of-concept trial of a new therapist-assisted, Internet-based, self-management cogn
92 domly assigned to 20 weeks of therapist-led, therapist-assisted, or self-help group treatment or a wa
93 ian or fellow and an experienced respiratory therapist attempted to obtain both static pressure-volum
96 zational factors are important in explaining therapist behavior and use of evidence-based practices,
97 cal therapy is appropriate, because physical therapists can assess mobility limitations and devise cu
98 removal, delirium, and nurse and respiratory therapist clinical workload (on a 10-point visual analog
99 the value of adding LV rehabilitation with a therapist compared with LV services without intervention
100 the value of adding LV rehabilitation with a therapist compared with LV services without intervention
101 response to the suicide, severely distressed therapists, compared to others, reported a significantly
103 , skills training, telephone coaching, and a therapist consultation team, and little is known about w
108 atic review aimed to determine dentists' and therapists' current lesion threshold for carrying our re
110 r generated and unmasked to participants and therapists delivering treatment after randomisation.
113 ingle sessions, high session frequency, more therapist direction, flexible use of musical activities,
115 large-scale implementation of a respiratory-therapist-driven protocol (TDP) that included 117 respir
118 relative experience levels of the cognitive therapists each appear to have contributed to this inter
119 also work in conjunction with rehabilitation therapists, educators, nurses, social care providers, an
120 sponse Questionnaire to identify patterns of therapists' emotional response, and the Shedler-Westen A
121 tudy was to examine the relationship between therapists' emotional responses and patients' personalit
123 ly, these patients were evaluated by an RTCS therapist evaluator whose respiratory care plan was base
128 atistically significant relationship between therapist facilitation of patient emotional experience/e
129 ematically examined the relationship between therapist facilitation of patient emotional experience/e
130 self-monitoring diaries with individualized therapist feedback via e-mail, and an online bulletin bo
131 ient who then died, a treatment decision the therapist felt contributed to the suicide, negative reac
134 ss of CBT delivered online in real time by a therapist for patients with depression in primary care.
135 ween psychiatrists and cognitive behavioural therapists for 12 months, followed by graduated transfer
139 erning staffing and availability of physical therapists for ICU patients, and the utilization of PT f
140 after suitable training, are very effective therapists for patients with health anxiety in medical c
146 therapy under the supervision of a physical therapist has been shown to improve posture, fitness, mo
147 Various interventions provided by physical therapists have been shown to decrease dizziness and imp
153 ical care nurse, nursing assistant, physical therapist) initiated the protocol within 48 hrs of mecha
155 Compared with controls, participants in the therapist intervention showed self-reported reductions i
157 identified: poor communication with another therapist involved in the case, permitting patients or r
158 ve-behaviour therapy (CBT) from a specialist therapist is current "best practice." However, access is
160 tion, as performed by nurses and respiratory therapists, is safe and led to extubation more rapidly t
162 g period completion rates were higher in the therapist-led (88.3%) and waiting list (81.2%) condition
163 acy of self-help group treatment compared to therapist-led and therapist-assisted group cognitive-beh
169 sorder were randomly assigned to 20 weeks of therapist-led, therapist-assisted, or self-help group tr
170 though the attitudes and beliefs of physical therapists may help to explain differences between curre
171 re to: (1) describe treatments that physical therapists may use to supplement exercise programs to en
172 nnaire previously validated against physical therapists' measurement-based clinical criteria, we assi
173 delivered by either a computer (n = 237) or therapist (n = 254) in the ED, with follow-up assessment
177 anxiety or standard care delivered by naive therapists (not randomised) who were trained in advance
179 urses, patient care technicians, respiratory therapists, occupational/physical therapists, and physic
180 e been exposed to two particular respiratory therapists (odds ratios, 13.1 and 5.1; P<0.001 for both
181 tional objects into adulthood may inform the therapist of possible transference paradigms that may de
182 anxiety in medical clinics and should be the therapists of choice for patients in these settings.
183 nsive to conventional therapy, attraction to therapists or alternative modalities suggested by friend
187 ask participants, general practitioners, CBT therapists, or researchers to the treatment allocation.
188 RP; trial 2) to compare four sessions with a therapist over 3 months with standard care and lifestyle
190 with separation anxiety by using the dyadic therapist-patient relationship to recapture and better u
191 ve care unit, an increase in the respiratory therapist:patient ratio, and the addition of a clinical
194 d of experienced ICU staff and a respiratory therapist performed the evaluation, treatment, and triag
196 rounds as rounds that included a respiratory therapist, pharmacist, physician and nurse; and protocol
197 s, dentists, dental hygienists, occupational therapists, physical therapists, speech and language pat
198 me measures were obtained by unblinded study therapists, possibly leading to reporting bias and the o
199 teams comprising athletic trainers, physical therapists, primary care sports medicine physicians, and
202 patient safety, proponents argue that dental therapists provide treatment that is as technically comp
204 therapy or LV devices with a rehabilitation therapist providing instruction and homework on the use
205 rmacists, case workers, dietitians, physical therapists, psychologists, and information systems speci
206 ysician assistants, physical or occupational therapists, psychologists, social workers, and others.
208 inally tested Fit and Strong! using physical therapists (PTs) as instructors but have transitioned to
210 chotherapy, focuses on exploring the patient-therapist relationship, with the idea that this may lead
213 clinical psychologists (N=203) completed the Therapist Response Questionnaire to identify patterns of
216 re several significant relationships between therapists' responses and patients' personality patholog
219 ctive or coercive actions resulting from the therapist's anxieties about a patient's potential suicid
221 to the suicide, negative reactions from the therapist's institution, and fear of a lawsuit by the pa
222 gh one emotion was sometimes dominant in the therapist's response to the suicide, severely distressed
225 sphagia assessments by a speech and language therapist (SALT) were associated with patients' risk of
227 The association between the respiratory therapists' scores and lower mortality rate (p =.025) al
228 consist of direct 'reward exposure', but the therapists search for barriers in three behavioral domai
230 selected live music (LM) preoperatively with therapist-selected recorded music intraoperatively (n=69
231 cted recorded music (RM) preoperatively with therapist-selected recorded music intraoperatively (n=70
235 aximize internal validity by controlling for therapist sex, availability, expertise, allegiance, trai
239 of their presumed persecutor, voiced by the therapist so that the avatar responds by becoming less h
241 ns, including physician assistants, physical therapists, speech and language pathologists, and occupa
242 ygienists, occupational therapists, physical therapists, speech and language pathologists, and others
243 nvolvement, 12% (95% CI, 6%-22%) of dentists/therapists stated they would intervene, increasing to 74
244 should focus on dissemination and optimizing therapist support methods to maximize the public health
245 (written or web-based materials with limited therapist support) can be provided remotely, which has t
246 s evaluated the efficacy and durability of a therapist-supported method for computer-assisted cogniti
247 id the patient voluntarily inform one of the therapists that cocaine had been regularly applied to th
248 mailed to 2,000 UK-based chartered physical therapists that included 23 attitude statements derived
250 n training group, 69% for the group in which therapist time and environmental changes were controlled
251 -up plus a condition designed to control for therapist time and provide environmental changes unrelat
254 hat would prove of interest to biologist and therapist to get real time informatics needed to evaluat
257 these more sophisticated studies will allow therapists to tailor treatments to individuals to maximi
262 ocedures that emphasized center examiner and therapist training and adherence to protocol and procedu
264 e as follows: (1) repetitive training with a therapist twice weekly during a 6-week period, (2) simpl
265 ons were found with physical or occupational therapist use, physician visits for arthritis, chronic o
266 n the UK, differences exist between physical therapists' use of exercise for patients with knee osteo
268 y room visits, chiropractic visits, physical therapist visits, and nights in hospital), and self-effi
271 ity of hospitals (89%) at which the physical therapists were employed require a physician consultatio
278 pare the diagnostic test accuracy of hygiene-therapists when screening for dental caries and periodon
279 ith preferred selections tailored by a music therapist whenever desired while receiving ventilatory s
280 ic training under the guidance of a physical therapist, whereas control patients received no formal e
281 "standard care plan" generated by an expert therapist who was blind to the patient's actual orders.
283 while credit is due to the nurses and music therapists who pioneered the idea in nursing care, consi
284 s greater than that achieved by occupational therapists who provide their patients with psychosocial
286 nary meetings of specialized consultants and therapists will improve communication and maximize outco
290 on each tooth with each instrument by the 3 therapists with differing experience levels was recorded
293 dy that directly compared the work of dental therapists with that of dentists found that they perform
295 There were two cohorts of schema therapy therapists, with the first trained primarily with lectur
297 hysicians, nurses, housekeepers, respiratory therapists) working full time in the intensive care unit
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