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1                  The patients indicated they are willing to accept elevated SAE risks in exchange for
2 erences, despite evidence that some patients are willing to accept increased side-effect risk in exch
3 evaluating usual medical practices, but they are willing to accept less elaborate approaches than wri
4 nty-two percent reported that their patients are willing to accept poor QOL for a small chance of cur
5               People value such contacts and are willing to accept some disease risk to gain contact-
6 The findings suggest that these stakeholders are willing to accept the coerciveness of outpatient com
7 tive impact on quality of life that patients are willing to accept the risks and inconvenience of rad
8 d preferences among treatment attributes and are willing to accept tradeoffs among attributes.
9 e intensive general medical intervention and are willing to accept voluntary treatment, the alternati
10 ents who have serious mental illness and who are willing to accept voluntary treatment.
11 lness in need of hospital-level care and who are willing to accept voluntary treatment.
12 its of treatment, how much risk IBD patients are willing to accept, and to introduce ideas to facilit
13 erioration of VA, patients with nAMD seem to be willing to accept a high treatment burden with regula
14 orsening VA, patients in our study stated to be willing to accept a very long time needed per physici
15 h Africa limits the price that payers should be willing to accept for CAB-LA with a modest markup ove
16 to have high weight loss expectations and to be willing to accept high risk.
17             Fortunately, some landowners may be willing to accept management costs in return for othe
18 s and parents of children with IBD appear to be willing to accept the known risks associated with IBD
19 th minimum thresholds of coverage they would be willing to accept when managing these patients.
20 e evidence that it may be cost saving if one is willing to accept poorer outcomes.
21 veys suggest that the majority of the public is willing to accept the use of animals in research if h
22    Respondents who preferred flap appearance were willing to accept a mean (SD) increase of 14.9% (2.
23 ychiatrists/psychologists and social workers were willing to accept a remote completion of mental sta
24 alf of respondent nephrologists and surgeons were willing to accept a remote completion of physical e
25 an risk was only 0.1%; 19.5% of all patients were willing to accept a risk of at least 10%.
26 n median of 6 minutes (IQR, 5-8 minutes) and were willing to accept additional time (median, 5 minute
27 atified into 2 cohorts based on whether they were willing to accept HCV+ donor offers.
28 mance related to these monitors and just 13% were willing to accept incentives/risk for their perform
29                             Most respondents were willing to accept interception therapy and viewed r
30  mobility as "very important" outcomes, they were willing to accept loss of attachment of up to 1 mm,
31 d that almost all relevant households (>98%) were willing to accept this commitment.
32  who experienced an illness exacerbation and were willing to accept voluntary treatment were randomly
33 ther barrier and this has kept patients from being willing to acknowledge their psychological problem
34                                     While we are willing to act for one victim, we often become numb
35 s unless customers have such information and are willing to act on it.
36  that conservationists and resource managers be willing to act despite the uncertainties.
37 st this proposal by examining whether people were willing to allocate greater control and thereby exp
38                Neonatal intensive care units are willing to apply environmental enrichment via music
39 tiously adhere to standardized technique and be willing to assume clinical responsibility, including
40                 Only half of the respondents were willing to attend a hands-on course on CBCT interpr
41 rimary health care facility for patients who are willing to be treated.
42 ical society policies, many physicians would be willing to be involved in the execution of adults.
43  and effective vaccines and most people must be willing to be vaccinated.
44  with regular screening, and most would have been willing to be recalled more often for either a noni
45 ology practices from Belgium and Canada that were willing to be assigned to either of the study group
46 reported drug injection in the past 30 days, were willing to be interviewed for about 1 hour and test
47 86.5%]), and COVID Collaborative respondents were willing to be preceded in line by teachers and chil
48 ess of influenza vaccination program status, were willing to be vaccinated against influenza if the v
49 t rendered depending on the risk the patient is willing to bear.
50 eet the study criteria but also to those who are willing to begin a medication treatment and disconti
51                                    If owners are willing to bring dogs to central point campaigns at
52  underlying value proposition and physicians being willing to change established practices.
53                                  The service is willing to collect it, analyse its meaning and redesi
54  predicted the duration of time that viewers were willing to commit to narrative videos.
55 l screening services at the two clinics, who were willing to comply with study procedures and able to
56 o be successful with these lenses, they must be willing to compromise somewhat on the quality of visi
57 tuned to the burden of health care costs and are willing to consider alternative options based on a p
58  with older cancer patients, given that most are willing to consider them.
59                          Nearly all patients were willing to consider ART, and 40% of the sample went
60 t high risk of lung cancer, most respondents were willing to consider interception therapy.
61 direct choice experiments, most participants were willing to consider prophylactic indomethacin (36 [
62                            Most participants were willing to consider taking PrEP (39.2% "yes, defini
63    Overall, members of potential user groups were willing to consider taking PrEP (61% reported that
64                            Some participants were willing to consider the vaccine once the safety pro
65                  Patients were considered to be willing to contemplate assisted suicide if they agree
66                          Participants had to be willing to continue their pre-study ART during cohort
67 with the ESR found 100% (95% CI: 87 to 100%) were willing to continue submitting future projects to t
68                               45 (73%) of 62 were willing to continue with the study for a 12-month t
69                                       If you are willing to contribute, please contact us.
70                                A "good" male is willing to court for longer than a "bad" male; in thi
71            However, we also show that groups are willing to curtail their ability of self-reliance.
72                     One-third of women (32%) were willing to decrease mammogram frequency (as consist
73 In support of this view, we show that adults are willing to destroy others' resources to avoid inequa
74 to select chemical fragments that they would be willing to develop into a lead compound from a set of
75  discuss ADs with their oncologist but would be willing to discuss them with an admitting physician.
76                       Victims and assailants were willing to discuss their histories of family violen
77 ciated with the extent to which older adults are willing to do it.
78  extent that they believe opposing partisans are willing to do the same.
79 ternatives, express to the patient what they are willing to do, discuss the relevant legal issues, an
80 attention to whether people around the world are willing to donate their data that are then subsequen
81  suggesting that one-third of patients might be willing to donate at imminent death, we estimate that
82 he users asking for data were more likely to be willing to donate.
83     The degree to which the US voting public is willing to donate a kidney and the perceptions of cur
84                                        67.3% were willing to donate their corneas after death.
85                          82% of the subjects were willing to donate their eyes and this was unaffecte
86                          Also, most veterans were willing to donate their face (57%), hands/arms (81%
87                 The proportion of people who were willing to donate their organs did not differ betwe
88 ty of participants (66.04%) stated that they were willing to donate their organs for transplant purpo
89 's legislation, the proportion of people who were willing to donate their organs was greater in opt-o
90                         Pregnant women might be willing to eat more fish if this were advised by thei
91 he US Food and Drug Administration approval, are willing to employ gene transfer therapies in their p
92       Recent evidence shows that many people are willing to engage in altruistic punishment, voluntar
93 s of commons dilemmas have found that people are willing to engage in costly punishment, frequently g
94 fers pleasant experiences for users, so they are willing to engage in repeated interactions in daily
95 e to uninjured animals, but disbudded calves are willing to engage in this cost.
96 e how much cognitive or physical effort they were willing to engage in return for reward.
97                                              Being willing to exert effort to obtain rewards is a key
98  amount of both types of effort participants were willing to exert for rewards.
99 een to reduce their own carbon footprint and were willing to explore alternatives to the traditional
100 d whether, and under what conditions, people are willing to forgo monetary reward for the sake of inf
101 ue on extending their overall survival, they are willing to forgo overall survival to avoid risks of
102        In addition, 66% indicated they would be willing to forgo a portion of their income to provide
103                            Even patients who were willing to forgo cancer treatment (n = 38; 13%) pre
104                        Moreover, individuals were willing to forgo money to disclose about the self.
105 imum amount of financial resources that they are willing to give up in exchange for the object being
106 llingness to be a donor: to get, you have to be willing to give.
107 f respondents (57-71% depending on scenario) were willing to give leeway to future surrogate decision
108  life as excellent or very good, 284 (68.6%) were willing to give up at most 1 month of 12 in exchang
109 nt device for another), or (c) if they would be willing to go to the clinic for the given increase in
110                           The majority (83%) were willing to grant advance consent to a blood draw st
111                                  Most people were willing to grant leeway to their surrogates, and th
112 proxy for research decision making, and most were willing to grant their proxy leeway over their adva
113            Under such conditions, males that are willing to guard young become preferred mates for gr
114 there were circumstances in which they would be willing to hasten a patient's death by prescribing me
115  family conferences among family members who are willing to have a family conference recorded.
116                       Some gamete donors who are willing to help women and couples bear children may
117 Society of Critical Care Medicine membership is willing to help support them and work to further shap
118                                   Most (96%) were willing to identify a proxy for research decision m
119 rd schedule, the incentives that researchers are willing to impose on themselves are inadequate to mo
120  implemented by fair-minded individuals, who are willing to impose the cooperation norm at a personal
121 2% less for mussels with evidences of OA and are willing to increase the price they pay to avoid nega
122  demonstrate experimentally that chimpanzees are willing to incur a material cost to deliver rewards
123                                       Humans are willing to incur personal costs to punish others who
124 ol by determining the monetary cost a person is willing to incur in order to eliminate the need for s
125                                        63.9% were willing to indicate their donor statuses on drivers
126              Many long-term smokers with PAD are willing to initiate a serious quit attempt and to en
127 ocietal cost reflects the time that patients are willing to invest to attend the high-risk clinic.
128 ung professionals of outstanding promise who were willing to join me in "betting the house" that, wor
129 s smart, motivated students and postdocs who were willing to join my search for molecular understandi
130                            The physician who is willing to learn about the nature of systems, how to
131  we show that the brain controls how much it is willing to learn from the current error through a pri
132              At the other extreme, 25 (6.0%) were willing to live 2 weeks or less in excellent health
133 ng room waste is a problem and most say they are willing to make individual changes to improve operat
134 ) estimators have been used when researchers are willing to make parametric assumptions.
135  need to provide care to the underserved and are willing to make personal sacrifices to meet that nee
136                                      Smokers are willing to make repeated pharmacotherapy-assisted qu
137 earch on the effort contributions volunteers are willing to make to crowd science projects is lacking
138 mokers 18 years and older who are assumed to be willing to make a quit attempt during a year's time.
139                Most respondents (n=243, 98%) were willing to make at least one of the sustainable pra
140                                       By not being willing to mate immediately the female achieves a
141 nician variability; however, clinicians must be willing to modify personal styles of clinical managem
142 n, only 14% to 53% of participating surgeons were willing to offer exploration following neoadjuvant
143 predictive value for pathCR at which one may be willing to omit surgery, there was no clear increment
144 nt indicate that substantially more patients are willing to participate than are actually accrued.
145 ation-weighted respondents stated they would be willing to participate in a biobank; willingness and
146 elve patients (80.0%) stated that they would be willing to participate in clinical trials.
147                          Most patients would be willing to participate in trials after learning confl
148 risk study, only 79.75% of respondents would be willing to participate.
149  and 36 of 38 (92%) reported they would have been willing to participate in KPD.
150 nificantly associated with increased odds of being willing to participate (odds ratio, 1.14 per 1-poi
151      In this study, 39 APPs (50.6%) endorsed being willing to participate in MAID either as a consult
152 experience in assessing psychopathology, and is willing to participate in ongoing care.
153 1974 validation study; were still alive; and were willing to participate again in 1994.
154 at high risk for acquiring an infection, and were willing to participate in a behavioral intervention
155 % (gene transfer scenario) to 92% (drug RCT) were willing to participate in future dementia research.
156   Over 90% of directed donors and recipients were willing to participate in KPD.
157   The majority of respondents said that they were willing to participate in research if they lost the
158 R within the prior irradiated breast and who were willing to participate in the current study.
159 ents that fulfilled the desired criteria and were willing to participate in the study were asked to f
160 completed the randomised controlled MGTX and were willing to participate.
161        Underserved African American families were willing to participate.
162                                    Consumers are willing to pay a higher price for food with geograph
163                           If decision makers are willing to pay a maximum of $50,000/QALY, the probab
164  For example, studies have shown that people are willing to pay more for a small set of high-quality
165              Findings suggest that consumers are willing to pay more for products with both biodegrad
166                                    Consumers are willing to pay on average 52% less for mussels with
167 results suggest, for example, that residents are willing to pay roughly $127 per household and $54 mi
168 rting bid were then asked whether they would be willing to pay 200% and then 400% of this initial bid
169                    When should an individual be willing to pay a cost in order to help or harm anothe
170 range of amounts that a decision-maker might be willing to pay for an additional outcome.
171 ed ceiling, we calculate how much one should be willing to pay for emitting an additional unit of eac
172    We examine how much more society ought to be willing to pay for TAF over TDF, in exchange for its
173 mate the monthly US dollar amount they would be willing to pay to obtain for their child the followin
174  in using them were asked whether they would be willing to pay, and if so, how much.
175 ssociated with gains for which society would be willing to pay.
176 erred over alternative strategies if society is willing to pay $50,000/QALY and statins cost $1.54 to
177  on the cost of statins and how much society is willing to pay for better health outcomes.
178 esource value - meaning the amount a partner is willing to pay for it - by mediating where and when i
179 ay, a maximum probability of 0.61 if society is willing to pay pound 1,800 per minute less sedentary
180 ompared with the comparison group if society is willing to pay pound 1.50 per extra step/day, a maxim
181 ry time/day, and 0.13 probability if society is willing to pay pound 30,000 per quality-adjusted life
182 rge and effective marine reserves if society is willing to pay the costs.
183                                   If society was willing to pay $100,000 per quality-adjusted life ye
184 sensitivity analysis, if a third-party payer was willing to pay 150 000 dollars per QALY gained, then
185 real-money auction), although a modest share was willing to pay the actual or expected retail price f
186                                 If hospitals were willing to pay $100,000 per survival-to-discharge,
187 H would be cost effective if decision makers were willing to pay $4550 for an additional diagnosis.
188 sual primary care was 90% if decision makers were willing to pay 1,900 pounds for improvements in fun
189            If the UK National Health Service were willing to pay 10,000 pound per additional QALY, th
190                      On average, respondents were willing to pay 11 birr ($0.65 USD) per injection.
191                                     Patients were willing to pay 29.56 Thai Baht (THB) and 41.84 THB
192                         Conversely, patients were willing to pay 52.04 THB, 145.18 THB and 164.23 THB
193                                  Respondents were willing to pay an average of $1445 to avoid taking
194 increased the opportunity cost most subjects were willing to pay for a reward of a given intensity.
195 imulation also elevated the effort cost rats were willing to pay for cocaine and made associated cues
196                                  Respondents were willing to pay for dental packages that generated l
197 eel at least "moderately clean." Respondents were willing to pay more (+E145/y) for improvements in a
198  -0.69; 95% CI: -0.78, -0.60; p < 0.001) and were willing to pay more, from up to 798 RMB to 536 RMB
199      Patients reported high satisfaction and were willing to pay out of pocket for access to such ser
200 pital (48%) or physician's office (39%); 77% were willing to pay out-of-pocket for FMT.
201                         Overall, respondents were willing to pay pound 39.52 to reduce a 6-wk wait fo
202 concrete latrine SanPlats, 60% of households were willing to pay US$0.48 and 10% of households were w
203 willing to pay US$0.48 and 10% of households were willing to pay US$4.05, yet the average cost of sup
204 centage of available family income) families were willing to pay was $395 ($300; 15%) for ARTHRO and
205                                         They were willing to pay, on average, $997 for testing.
206 splant centers surveyed currently perform or are willing to perform NDLD (14/25), and although only t
207 ort, defined as the amount of work an animal is willing to perform for a given reward, but little is
208 me cases, and nearly half (46 percent) might be willing to prescribe a lethal dose of medication if i
209 .44 (95% CI, 1.56-3.82) times more likely to be willing to prescribe medication abortion and to expre
210  pediatrics (13 clinicians [1.6%]), and none were willing to prescribe MOUD to adolescents.
211 decreased the amount of effort that patients were willing to produce for a given reward and (2) slowe
212  contacted authors to determine whether they were willing to produce new predictions for standardised
213 sia or assisted suicide for themselves, they are willing to provide these interventions for their pat
214   Participants were asked whether they would be willing to provide additional data by means of survey
215  confidence of paternity, the more he should be willing to provide care.
216 euthanasia themselves and whether they would be willing to provide patients the same interventions.
217 ng and able to provide informed consent, and being willing to provide a dried blood spot for anonymou
218 an; not having a positive HIV diagnosis; and being willing to provide name, email address, date of bi
219  adults in the continental United States who were willing to provide DNA from buccal swabs through th
220 he absence of such institutions, individuals are willing to punish defectors, even at a cost to thems
221                1045 adults who smoked daily, were willing to quit smoking, and were receiving a gover
222 monary TB in the past 4 weeks, smoked daily, were willing to quit, and had access to mobile phones.
223             Of 393 participants, 266 (67.7%) were willing to receive COVID-19 vaccines and 127 (32.3%
224  and older with genotype 1 HCV infection who were willing to receive HCV therapy on site in the OAT p
225            Most pregnant persons (6323, 74%) were willing to receive influenza vaccine if it was offe
226 negative at that visit or within a month and were willing to receive PrEP counselling were interviewe
227 re aware of COVID-19 vaccines, of whom 61.1% were willing to receive them.
228                              Respondents who were willing to recruit additional respondents from thei
229 may not be ready to quit immediately but may be willing to reduce cigarette consumption with the goal
230 d to patients with one exception: physicians were willing to refuse surrogate requests for resuscitat
231              A higher proportion of patients were willing to repeat split-dose vs day-before cleansin
232 nteraction, the results indicate that people are willing to replace a real human coach with a virtual
233 54% of black women and 59% of Hispanic women were willing to return for a second noninvasive procedur
234                                  Individuals are willing to sacrifice their own resources to promote
235                        Notably, participants were willing to sacrifice a more tangible reward, money,
236                      Some physicians seem to be willing to sanction deception of insurance companies.
237 mm Hg despite antihypertensive treatment and were willing to self-manage their hypertension.
238             Recognising that most scientists are willing to share this material on a collaborative ba
239 e effect on the veracity of news that people were willing to share across countries, as did minimal d
240 mportantly, a majority of survey respondents were willing to source-separate their wastes and support
241 ive teams in any setting is when each member is willing to speak up to share thoughts and ideas to im
242            The implication is that we should be willing to spend up to $1,086,000 ($1.3 million - $21
243 vigor may be characterized by the energy one is willing to spend to save a unit of time, which explai
244  to fasting in both conditions, participants were willing to spend more money on food items only afte
245 ent did not have central access, respondents were willing to start vasopressors through a peripheral
246 ive treatment for cancer, and even those who are willing to stop treatment, express a clear preferenc
247 eks, who smoked tobacco on a daily basis and were willing to stop smoking.
248 study (N = 1,973), we find that US partisans are willing to subvert democratic norms to the extent th
249 o are not at increased risk for bleeding and are willing to take low-dose aspirin daily are more like
250  a life expectancy of at least 10 years, and are willing to take low-dose aspirin daily for at least
251  a life expectancy of at least 10 years, and are willing to take low-dose aspirin daily for at least
252  a life expectancy of at least 10 years, and are willing to take low-dose aspirin daily for at least
253 t urban coyotes, especially western coyotes, are willing to take more risk (i.e., be closer to the at
254 s multiple challenges, MSM in Thailand would be willing to take PrEP, even if they had to experience
255 aximal risk to her own life that the subject is willing to take in order to save the recipient's life
256 s of COVID-19 vaccines than their population is willing to take.
257  or Spanish, were age 15 years or older, and were willing to take misoprostol buccally.
258                                  Around half were willing to take part in a PrEP study (n = 695; 49.9
259           Whereas over half of MSM said they were willing to take PrEP, only about 4% reported using
260 ,026), we showed that a majority of subjects were willing to test despite mistrust and ignorance rega
261       Patients and health care professionals are willing to tolerate high rates of false-positive dia
262                           Additionally, most are willing to tolerate pain.
263 more clearly effective treatments and should be willing to tolerate fewer associated complications be
264                          In particular, they were willing to tolerate higher rates of dissatisfaction
265                At least half of the patients were willing to tolerate mild-moderate and severe IFN al
266                      Psychiatrists appear to be willing to trade off more constraints for higher inco
267 ime-trade-off question again at 1 year, they were willing to trade less time for better health than a
268                        Among AMB + AMD, 80 % were willing to trade lifetime in exchange for cure.
269                                     Patients were willing to trade significantly less time for a heal
270           Of study group patients 23 (67.6%) were willing to trade time, on average 158 +/- 180 s (me
271                             Among BAMD, 75 % were willing to trade, utility was 0.917.
272          94% of all patients of either group are willing to under go a repeat liver biopsy (NS).
273                                     Patients are willing to undergo treatments that have small benefi
274 rticipants in 2009 to ask whether they would be willing to undergo MRI.
275 ssment showed that more than 65% of patients were willing to undergo 6 months of chemotherapy for a 5
276 ed 18-65 years) were previously untreated or were willing to undergo a 1-week medication washout befo
277 risk of dying to undergo WLS, but only 57.5% were willing to undergo a hypothetical treatment that pr
278  slept in the household the night before and were willing to undergo home-based HIV testing, answer d
279 articipants included adults with low SES who were willing to undergo smoking cessation treatment.
280 pendent but is more precise for patients who are willing to use digital apps.
281 ienced, it is important to know whether they are willing to use immersive virtual reality.
282                        Furthermore, 14 (88%) were willing to use a system to allow the substitution o
283 to-face consultation, but 151 of 394 (38.3%) were willing to use a TC/VC again.
284  a promotional item but a further 10%(n=172) were willing to use an item.
285 using AI, after this study 95% of clinicians were willing to use the platform in their clinical workf
286 recruiting probands who had a smartphone and were willing to use the QR-code to message their FDRs a
287 d reluctance said, in spring 2021, that they were willing to vaccinate.
288                                   If society is willing to value a QALY at pound30,000 there is a 62.
289  greater cost, as evidenced by how long they are willing to wait for a rewarding outcome.
290 ient when it comes to money, but chimpanzees are willing to wait longer than humans for food, suggest
291 choice confidence by the amount of time they were willing to wait for reward.
292                                         They were willing to wait longer to see trained practitioners
293                    We measured how long they were willing to wait to obtain the better odds and how m
294 e endpoint to overall survival), respondents were willing to wait up to 21.68 months (95% CI 17.61 to
295 juries, the public has yet to show that they are willing to wear eye protection during recreational a
296  and ask for the maximum amount of time they are willing to work for that pay.
297 ural communities resulted in greater odds of being willing to work in a rural area.
298                           We found that rats were willing to work for cues that evoked either outcome
299 % of the total surveyed reported they "might be willing to write a lethal prescription," (50% Oregon
300                     Of the 73 physicians who were willing to write a lethal prescription and who had

 
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