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1 t clinic A1 to 64.6% at clinic A2), and were English speaking.
2  stable relationships (1445/2114 [68%]), and English-speaking.
3 436 [58.3%]), Hispanic (14 809 [46.9%]), and English-speaking (22 519 [71.3%]), and had Medicaid insu
4 ars; female, 122 [43.3%]; male, 160 [56.7%]; English-speaking, 236 [83.7%]; LOE, 46 [16.3%]; American
5                 The study included 18 native English-speaking 7-13-year-old children with TS (M = 10.
6    Eligible patients were 70 years or older, English-speaking, able to communicate verbally, and sche
7 d 4 semistructured focus groups, with 3 to 6 English-speaking adolescents (aged 13-19 years) in each
8                                              English-speaking adult Katrina survivors (N=1,043) respo
9 experience of correctional control among 200 English-speaking adult patients presenting for care at t
10  this prospective longitudinal cohort study, English-speaking adult patients with a new diagnosis of
11 a cancer center in Houston, Texas, including English-speaking adult patients with advanced cancer who
12 ng lesions to these regions in right-handed, English speaking adults, who were investigated at least
13                           Participants: 3914 English-speaking adults (55% participation rate).
14                                              English-speaking adults 18 years old or older who were a
15                   Eligible participants were English-speaking adults 50 years or older with serious i
16 d sample that targeted noninstitutionalized, English-speaking adults aged 25 to 74 years in the conti
17                      This study compares how English-speaking adults and children from the United Sta
18 S: We placed online advertisements to target English-speaking adults in the United States searching f
19                              A total of 1200 English-speaking adults in the US were recruited from a
20 tology clinic with a nonrandom sample of 120 English-speaking adults presenting for first appointment
21                                              English-speaking adults scheduled for surgery from a sin
22 rom August 26 to October 28, 2020, US-based, English-speaking adults were recruited from the general
23                            Subjects included English-speaking adults who had an ICU experience or a f
24            The study population consisted of English-speaking adults who met American College of Rheu
25 n transplant center included Black and White English-speaking adults who were referred for KT and dee
26 emistructured interviews were conducted with English-speaking adults with HS (aged >=18 years) recrui
27 domized clinical trial randomly assigned 228 English-speaking adults with NF from around the world on
28 iary care centers across the US and included English-speaking adults with unilateral vocal fold immob
29 leted across two studies with a total of 299 English-speaking adults.
30     Spanish speakers (n = 335), non-Hispanic English-speaking African Americans (n = 156), and other
31 ench-English speaking, or neither French nor English speaking (allophone) children, the last 2 groups
32                          Data from 11 native English-speaking and 10 native Greek-speaking participan
33                            Overall, 33.9% of English-speaking and 53.9% of Spanish-speaking responden
34           We studied 12 patients with PPA (6 English-speaking and 6 Dutch-speaking), 7 patients with
35 among children 5 to 13 years of age who were English-speaking and did not report a lower leg injury w
36 d by judged-similarity tasks for monolingual English-speaking and monolingual and bilingual Japanese
37 ce in surgical delay beyond 24 hours between English-speaking and non-English-speaking patients (3321
38                                     In 2019, English-speaking and Spanish-speaking LEP patients with
39 nes) stratified sampling was done to recruit English-speaking and/or Spanish-speaking, cognitively in
40 e, 566 (78.9%) were female, 603 (84.1%) were English speaking, and 380 (53.0%) had attended college.
41 ological mothers who were 18 years or older, English speaking, and a legal and custodial guardian; an
42 gible to participate were 65 years or older, English speaking, and had at least 3 chronic conditions;
43 ccess to an Internet-accessible device, were English speaking, and lived in a hurricane-affected area
44 y were aged 18 years or older, HIV positive, English speaking, and met criteria for alcohol use disor
45 te, the proportion of the population that is English speaking, and the proportion of the population t
46 tobiliary and gastrointestinal cancers, were English speaking, and were 18 years or older.
47       Participants were older than 18 years, English-speaking, and able to provide informed consent.
48           English-speaking, bilingual French-English-speaking, and allophone children were more likel
49  a higher percentage of foreign-born and non-English speaking areas.
50 merican Indian/Alaska Native, 13 241 [25.0%] English-speaking Asian, 3588 [6.8%] English-speaking Bla
51                                              English-speaking Asian/Pacific Islander patients and Chi
52 common for each cancer among black patients, English-speaking Asian/Pacific Islander patients, Chines
53  following criteria: aged 18 years or older, English speaking, at least 6 months elapsed since neonat
54                   Eligible participants were English-speaking AYAs between ages 13 and 25 years with
55 children were classified as French speaking, English speaking, bilingual French-English speaking, or
56                                              English-speaking, bilingual French-English-speaking, and
57  [25.0%] English-speaking Asian, 3588 [6.8%] English-speaking Black/African American, 4744 [9.0%] Eng
58                                              English-speaking cancer patients (18 to 75 years old) wi
59                                Subjects were English-speaking cancer patients at least 18 years of ag
60 ed rubella control and CRS prevention in the English-speaking Caribbean and in Chile, Costa Rica, and
61 countries (Cuba, Chile, and countries in the English-speaking Caribbean and successfully controlled i
62                           Data were from 363 English-speaking children (52% male; 59.8% White) in the
63  four large, partially overlapping groups of English-speaking chronic left hemisphere stroke survivor
64 ld's 7000 languages and the preponderance of English-speaking cohorts.
65 ited consecutive surviving patients who were English speaking, consented to follow-up, and were rando
66 learners' affective experiences in immersive English-speaking contexts, (2) the neglect of routine cl
67 eo visits considerably less often than their English-speaking counterparts.
68  the commencement of vaccination programs in English speaking countries and across the United States.
69 evaluative wellbeing and age in high-income, English speaking countries, with the lowest levels of we
70 ed opportunistically;all were trained in non-English speaking countries.
71 US abstracts, during open review, 31.1% from English- speaking countries and 20.9% from non-English-s
72         These patterns are replicated in the English-speaking countries of the world, but not in othe
73 ts, favoring authors from the United States, English-speaking countries outside the United States, an
74 glish- speaking countries and 20.9% from non-English-speaking countries were accepted (RR, 1.49; 95%
75 mple (N > 700,000 online adults, mainly from English-speaking countries), Honesty-Humility and Agreea
76  experiences of physician shortages in other English-speaking countries; it also discusses why past f
77 es to a cross-sectional, anonymous survey by English-speaking dermatology patients (aged 18 years or
78          In a large-scale study (N = 4,497), English-speaking dog guardians reported on their dogs' l
79                                      Seventy English-speaking dyads and 63 Somali-speaking dyads play
80 similarly below optimal for both groups, and English-speaking dyads' MI did not improve with experien
81 ts: WFH is about twice as common in advanced English-speaking economies as in much of Asia.
82 the sensitivity of 5-month-old infants in an English-speaking environment to a conceptual distinction
83 ove communication with, and support for, non-English-speaking families of critically ill patients.
84 uate clinician-family communication with non-English-speaking family members.
85 in Chinese-speaking females in Taiwan and 35 English-speaking females in the United States.
86 ample included 2152 adult (aged >=18 years), English-speaking firearm owners residing in the US; the
87                       Participants had to be English speaking, full-time employees, aged 21-65 years,
88 n screening by race and ethnicity within the English-speaking group, a single language-race-ethnicity
89 ups with Latinx participants (n = 24), and 4 English-speaking groups with Black and Latinx participan
90  organized by race/ethnicity and language: 4 English-speaking groups with Black participants (n = 34)
91                                          Non-English-speaking Hispanic patients reported more problem
92 n-Hispanic white, 142 non-Hispanic black, 89 English-speaking Hispanic, and 47 Spanish-speaking Hispa
93  numerical concepts as a comparable group of English-speaking indigenous Australian children.
94                                              English-speaking individuals 18 years or older were recr
95 c/racial minorities, older patients, and non-English-speaking individuals were significantly less lik
96 d IQ-comparable groups of previously-studied English-speaking individuals with ASD (n = 45) and contr
97 ine hypersexuality and its impact among nine English-speaking individuals with PD.
98                     Individuals who were non-English speaking, lacked autonomous medical decision-mak
99 f the sample; blacks (OR, 2.6; P < .001) and English-speaking Latinas (OR, 2.2; P = .02) were signifi
100 by race: 9% of whites, 15% of blacks, 17% of English-speaking Latinas, and 10% of Spanish-speaking La
101 s ratios of 1.68, 2.44, and 7.39 for blacks, English-speaking Latinas, and Spanish-speaking Latinas c
102 ility, this study poses the question, Do non-English-speaking Latino parents of children with leukemi
103 speaking Black/African American, 4744 [9.0%] English-speaking Latino/Latina/Latinx, 760 [1.4%] Pacifi
104  Spanish-speaking Latinos differed from both English-speaking Latinos and Caucasians on most measures
105 th service use among Spanish-speaking versus English-speaking Latinos and Caucasians with serious men
106            There were no differences between English-speaking Latinos and native Spanish-speakers who
107 ere were 539 Spanish-speaking Latinos, 1,144 English-speaking Latinos, and 4,638 Caucasians initiatin
108 y need to differentiate between Spanish- and English-speaking Latinos.
109 guage barriers which disadvantage non-native English speaking learners across multiple dimensions in
110                 Native Mandarin-speaking and English-speaking listeners discriminated pitch patterns
111  the right hemisphere activated as it did in English-speaking listeners discriminating pitch patterns
112 ned individuals have higher performance than English-speaking listeners for the perceptual-cognitive
113 Panel members, all articles published in the English-speaking literature from June 1997 through Decem
114 h English-speaking minority parents and with English-speaking majority (ie, white) parents?
115              From January 2007 to July 2011, English-speaking males >/=16 years, attending a sexually
116   This study suggests that families with non-English-speaking members may be at increased risk of rec
117  affected minority communities with many non-English-speaking members.
118 d understanding of an RCT when compared with English-speaking minority parents and with English-speak
119 ological history were included: eight native English-speaking monolinguals and eight native Spanish-s
120                     Participants were adult, English-speaking, Muslim patients who were evaluated at
121 rting scores were lower in the US than other English-speaking nations and variation existed by publis
122                         The inclusion of non-English-speaking (NES) participants in pediatric researc
123 rved for Cantonese participants, relative to English-speaking nonmusicians.
124 ears, capable of providing informed consent, English speaking or having English comprehension, eligib
125                            Participants were English-speaking or Spanish-speaking caregivers accompan
126                                              English-speaking or Spanish-speaking caregivers of child
127 speaking, English speaking, bilingual French-English speaking, or neither French nor English speaking
128  [42.9%] English-speaking White, 4857 [9.0%] English-speaking other [including individuals who indica
129                   Included in the study were English-speaking parents (N = 471) of randomly selected
130 roup interviews with health visitors (n=10), English-speaking parents (n=6), and Sylheti-speaking par
131               The survey was administered to English-speaking parents and caregivers in the US, UK, C
132 ING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Prospective cohort of English-speaking parents of children aged 2 months and b
133 3 at outpatient otolaryngology clinics among English-speaking parents of children aged 2 to 17 years
134 uded a community-based convenience sample of English-speaking parents of typically developing childre
135                         Native Mandarin- and English- speaking participants each listened to both Man
136 ctive cohort study that enrolled 744 healthy English-speaking participants >= 18 years with a singlet
137  from a diverse convenience sample of 18,895 English-speaking participants in 125 countries (65.0% fr
138                                          All English-speaking participants in the Secondary Preventio
139 s were significantly lower than those of the English-speaking participants on four subscales: Ocular
140 se prior studies focus almost exclusively on English-speaking participants, a group that is not repre
141 our series of online experiments with 14,034 English-speaking participants.
142 erved based on language type, with simulated English-speaking patient callers significantly more like
143 as conducted on transcripts of 97 audiotaped English-speaking patient encounters from 3 clinics in Ne
144                                  Being a non-English-speaking patient was associated with an odds rat
145 reased the likelihood of follow-up among non-English speaking patients (P < .001).
146 tion included limited functionality with non-English speaking patients and lack of access for physici
147 aring for limited English proficiency versus English speaking patients as well as the relationship be
148 e considered the comparison group to the non-English speaking patients.
149 visit interactions/patient/mo; P < .001) and English-speaking patients (0.52 [95% CI, 0.47-0.58] vs 0
150       More eConsultations were completed for English-speaking patients (11 363 eConsultations [95.0%]
151 , 20.2%-31.1%], respectively; P < .001), non-English-speaking patients (3.2% [95% CI, 0.7%-5.6%] vs 1
152 nd 24 hours between English-speaking and non-English-speaking patients (3321 patients [51.7%] vs 14 4
153 nts (11 363 eConsultations [95.0%]) than non-English-speaking patients (597 eConsultations [5.0%]).
154 ed at the beginning of the pandemic for both English-speaking patients (change, 6.09% (95% CI, 4.82%
155 % (95% CI, 4.82% to 7.37%; P < .001) and non-English-speaking patients (change, 8.48% [95% CI, 5.79%
156  [95% CI, 31.4%-31.8%]), Spanish-speaking vs English-speaking patients (UHealth: 18.4% [95% CI, 17.2%
157                               All consenting English-speaking patients aged 18 years or older and ref
158         The study population included 95 623 English-speaking patients at least 25 years old with a p
159  determine whether the low-income mostly non-English-speaking patients in our S-OPAT program could ad
160 oportions of underinsured, minority, and non-English-speaking patients were associated with lower qua
161                                              English-speaking patients were considered the comparison
162            Interview participants were adult English-speaking patients who had experienced trauma res
163                                          All English-speaking patients who were physically and cognit
164 es between dyads of 1094 physicians and 4331 English-speaking patients, we assessed matching (concord
165  had a higher hospital readmission risk than English-speaking patients.
166 d 4.0% with missing race or ethnicity; 91.2% English-speaking patients; mean [SD] age, 51.9 [19.2] ye
167 care if infected was higher among males, non-English speaking persons, and those having health insura
168                                          All English-speaking persons older than 18 years of age were
169 TICIPANTS: In this prospective cohort study, English-speaking pregnant patients aged 18 years or olde
170                 A probability sample of 1043 English-speaking prehurricane residents of the areas aff
171  primary surrogate decision makers; more non-English-speaking primary surrogate decision makers (63%)
172  probability sample of noninstitutionalized, English-speaking respondents aged 25 to 74 y.
173                                     Nineteen English-speaking, right-handed children with a normal IQ
174 seeks to bridge this gap by investigating an English-speaking sample (N = 5198) comprising an age- an
175                                     In three English-speaking samples, younger individuals and women
176                                Compared with English-speaking simulated patient callers, the odds of
177  research personnel assigned to the roles of English-speaking, Spanish-speaking, and Mandarin-speakin
178 dmission within the preceding 5 years in the English-speaking subgroup of an international cohort of
179 ntify cortical regions that were active when English-speaking subjects produced nouns or verbs in the
180       Data were derived from a cohort of 982 English-speaking subjects with SLE.
181 irically observed age of acquisition data of English speaking toddlers.
182 imitation by modelling the mental lexicon of English-speaking toddlers as a multiplex lexical network
183                   In this qualitative study, English-speaking transgender and nonbinary adults using
184 n current I/NGO practice, we randomly assign English-speaking Twitter users who have sent messages co
185 litative telephone interviews were held with English-speaking US adults aged 18 years or older with a
186 e, population-based internet survey study of English-speaking US adults participating in KnowledgePan
187 ticipants were women aged 30 years or older, English-speaking, US residents, and had access to the in
188  cycles per individual), among international English-speaking users of a digital birth control applic
189                   We show that bilingual and English-speaking users play more central roles compared
190 5 males), and 19 healthy, age-matched native English-speaking volunteers (M = 10.33; 11 males).
191 ce imaging study on 21 healthy right-handed, English-speaking volunteers, we investigated activity wi
192 polis, were aged 13 years or older, and were English speaking were eligible.
193                Patients aged under 16 or non-English speaking were excluded.
194                        Patients who were non-English speaking, were unhoused, were long-stay resident
195 ss likely to be screened for depression than English-speaking White patients (Chinese language prefer
196                                          Non-English-speaking white patients reported more problems t
197  760 [1.4%] Pacific Islander, 22 689 [42.9%] English-speaking White, 4857 [9.0%] English-speaking oth
198                                              English-speaking women (aged >=18 years) who screened po
199                                              English-speaking women age >= 60 years, newly diagnosed
200 tification by nursing home and involving 185 English-speaking women aged 65 years or older, with or w
201 SC-RCT study, including 316 African American English-speaking women between ages 40 and 75 years with
202 owing intention-to-treat principles included English-speaking women with early-stage breast cancer pr
203 esentations as revealed through books of the English-speaking world from 1800 to 1999.
204 emigres now resident in various parts of the English-speaking world.
205  about Latin American social medicine in the English-speaking world.

 
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