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1 ual-level predictors including age, sex, and education.
2  top priorities in simulation-based surgical education.
3 iated with lower income yet higher levels of education.
4 res is thus vital to scientific research and education.
5 regnant women, VDD was positively related to education.
6 vance the field of simulation-based surgical education.
7 ts of PFAS related to child sex and maternal education.
8 sis of covariance adjusting for age, sex and education.
9 re black, and 94% had at least a high-school education.
10 rent recording system, and to a poor allergy education.
11 ssociated with BMI-for-age Z >1 and maternal education.
12 f trainees that minimize disruption of their education.
13 els are: polygenic risk score, sex, age, and education.
14 s for survivorship care planning and patient education.
15 of CRRT deliverables, and (e) enhancement of education.
16 interface and surface anatomy for procedural education.
17 y responses by interest in colonoscopy after education.
18 utside world and, therefore, lacks antigenic education.
19  are birth weight, maternal age and maternal education.
20 ile blended learning was superior to digital education.
21  increased among patients who attended NAFLD education.
22 nal strategies can increase equity in higher education.
23 d learning was superior to exclusive digital education.
24 expertise is augmented through comprehensive education.
25 ealth inequalities reflecting differences in education.
26  of digital education for health professions education.
27 n between sexual abuse, age, urbanicity, and education.
28 kely confounded by a third trait influencing education.
29 fection prevention was patient and caregiver education.
30 hirds of participants had completed tertiary education.
31 ing and success of students at all levels of education.
32 an additional risk factor was lower level of education.
33 -15% for 4+ ACEs and 1%-19% for low maternal education.
34 h-school education, 1.00; beyond high-school education, 0.61).
35 tional meetings (1 study), interprofessional education (1 study), and clinician reminder (1 study).
36 .90; Whites, 0.50; up to/through high-school education, 1.00; beyond high-school education, 0.61).
37 reduction in open defecation (13%), parental education (10%), maternal nutrition (5%), economic impro
38 c improvement (19.5%), increases in parental education (14.9%), and better piped water access (8.1%).
39 %, 64.0%, 50.4% respectively) than treatment education (18.4%, 17.9%, 10.7% respectively).
40 The NAFLD Care Pathway includes: (1) patient education (2) vibration controlled transient elastograph
41                                  After brief education, 20 (37.7%) patients requested colonoscopy.
42 n to treatment education (72.3%) and disease education (23.6%).
43 ears); 63.9% were women, 19.4% had no formal education, 28.1% were diabetic and 56.9% were hypertensi
44  HIV care program, (2) program 1 + nutrition education, (3) program 1 + food supplement, and (4) all
45 pants, 157 citations), personalized glaucoma education (38 participants, 149 citations), electronic r
46 rsity can predict the enrollment in tertiary education 5 y later.
47 ty (61%), maternal nutrition (14%), paternal education (6%), fertility (6%), maternal age (3%), and w
48  searches more commonly pertained to disease education (69.5%, 64.0%, 50.4% respectively) than treatm
49  searches most commonly pertain to treatment education (72.3%) and disease education (23.6%).
50                We also provided brief verbal education about diagnostic colonoscopy.
51   The mainstays of treatment include patient education about the condition, dietary changes, soluble
52 h an interactive electronic registry, opioid education, academic detailing and access to addiction sp
53 ly reduce the wide disparities in health and education across populations.
54     Amid the impromptu upheaval of in-person education across the world, this article aims to articul
55 ered standards for patient relationships and education, adherence, safety, collection of data, docume
56  with and without HIV were adjusted for sex, education, age, country of birth, father's occupation, e
57 e predictive power of socioeconomic markers (education, age, income, marital status, employment statu
58 chopathology subscale, total cholesterol and education (all p < 0.05) were the influencing factors of
59 based, is well established within healthcare education, allowing rehearsal and refinement of clinical
60 from the field of artificial intelligence in education, an emerging interdisciplinary area.
61 rval: 0.52, 0.63) in those with some primary education and 0.29 (95% confidence interval: 0.25, 0.34)
62 ehaviours and neurological traits, including education and body mass index (BMI).
63 edictors of risk for symptom onset may guide education and clinical management of individuals with RI
64          All models were controlled for age, education and cognitive function.
65                            PRS for increased education and diastolic blood pressure were associated w
66 nd the influence of transplant societies for education and disseminating current information.
67          Part I of this series emphasizes my education and early studies highlighted by the isolation
68 ions were made in the domain of training and education and eight recommendations regarding profession
69 ians maintain core skills through continuous education and evaluation.
70 much as on demographic investments including education and family planning.
71 orithm detailing indications for BCx use and education and feedback to providers about BCx rates and
72                   A combination of nutrition education and food supplements provided to women living
73  that the demographic dividend is related to education and has suggested a dominance of improving edu
74                                              Education and health are both constituents of human capi
75 s by which LXRalphabeta governs T lymphocyte education and illuminate LXRalphabeta's indispensable ro
76 prove consumers' nutrition knowledge through education and labeling, and monitor the nutritional stat
77 tion health researchers through experiential education and mentorship.
78  a low-cost program using CHWs to deliver an education and monitoring intervention is effective in co
79 nt appears to be less effective than blended education and more effective than no intervention in imp
80  positive response to the in-person glaucoma education and motivational interviewing intervention use
81 vative pricing schemes, regulatory policies, education and organisation of a skilled workforce to del
82 at reduce workforce readiness, including low education and poor mental health.
83                          The National Asthma Education and Prevention Program Coordinating Committee
84  selected update to the 2007 National Asthma Education and Prevention Program guidelines based on pre
85                    In addition to supporting education and research in this area, the American Heart
86 halmological health should be reviewed, with education and self-help techniques provided.
87 Appropriate remedial measures such as health education and strengthening vision care services will be
88 teraction with regulators, interventionalist education and sufficient funding.
89 exercise and physical activity, weight-loss, education and support for self-management.
90 novel delivery methods, and providing remote education and support to existing community providers ar
91 ractices for communication, and the roles of education and system intervention.
92 sion after correcting for age, sex, level of education and tau levels (hazard ratio = 2.5; 95% confid
93                                              Education and training campaigns are needed to improve b
94 h is potentially a consequence of changes in education and training facilities related to digitizatio
95    System challenges include: the suboptimal education and training of primary health-care practition
96                  Investing in young people's education and training potential could reduce health and
97 ey areas: (1) professional healthcare worker education and training, (2) technical support for the im
98 perience base rates, organizational factors, education and training, and personal factors, and lastly
99                 Further work should focus on education and training, especially for elements requirin
100 istics, supply chain, regulatory issues, and education and training.
101  (e) discussing any implications for further education and work.
102 ly assigned to UC were provided 1 session of education, and 110 participants randomly assigned to ear
103 s regarding science, public and professional education, and advocacy.
104 bjective tool for surgical planning, patient education, and as a means for clinical outcome measureme
105 dicated that delirium, non-White race, lower education, and civilian hospitals (as opposed to VA), we
106 nd plaque burden, thereby enabling planning, education, and decision making on bifurcation stenting.
107 r depressive symptoms at baseline, age, sex, education, and income (PROSPERO CRD42018091627).
108 oeconomic factors (e.g., moods, personality, education, and income levels).
109 ICs, household air pollution, poor diet, low education, and low grip strength had stronger effects on
110 med collaborations with occupational health, education, and other sectors.
111 nearly all countries, adjustment for wealth, education, and place of residence did not affect ethnic
112                           Multiple research, education, and policy needs remain of importance.
113 line data on body mass index (BMI), smoking, education, and previous disorders.
114 ment, research and scholarship, training and education, and professional development.
115              ASCO strives, through research, education, and promotion of the highest quality of patie
116 ary measures of income, inequality, poverty, education, and race.
117 , including economic, political, healthcare, education, and research systems.
118 lts with preHD and controls matched for age, education, and sex to ensure each group had at least 60
119  height, systolic blood pressure and college education, and that the impact of selection is stronger
120 ity to adjust for household wealth, maternal education, and urban-rural residence.
121 d to estimate associations between age, sex, education, APOE genotype, amyloid and tau PET standardiz
122 educational resources, and 3% used intensive education approaches.
123 the SES inequalities, in particular parental education, are related to global aspects of cortical dev
124                  The goal of this continuing education article is to provide an introduction to the f
125  patient factors, such as female sex and low education, associated with worse recovery.
126 h Foundation Investigator Awards and Medical Education Award; Boston Children's Hospital Faculty Care
127 nt staff participated in a designated sepsis education before the model was introduced.
128 r age of sexual debut, having some secondary education, being unmarried, and having begun childbearin
129 odds were four times higher in subjects with education below GCSE O-levels, compared to higher educat
130 d not differ by acculturation, regardless of education (beta = 0.00 (standard error, 0.00) and hazard
131  using PRS and MR supports a causal role for education, blood pressure, cholesterol levels, smoking,
132 usally influenced by factors correlated with education but is not strongly causal for coronary artery
133 e to rising demand for higher and continuing education, but many online students struggle to achieve
134  regression, with covariates of age, sex and education, CAIDE score >6 was the only significant predi
135 ard regression models adjusted for age, sex, education, cardiovascular risk factors and APOE epsilon4
136                  Management of MNA comprises education (cognitive) and counseling (behavioral) that r
137 19 factors: 10 with Level A strong evidence (education, cognitive activity, high body mass index in l
138 s a national consensus undergraduate medical education critical care content outline.
139 elopment of a national undergraduate medical education critical care curriculum.
140 aged 14 to 48 years (262,535 person-years of education data from 1979 to 2014).
141 " vs "full treatment"), age, race/ethnicity, education, days from POLST completion to admission, hist
142                Covariates included age, sex, education, depressive symptoms, nonmilitary trauma, alco
143     Associations were adjusted for age, sex, education, diabetes status, and cardiovascular risk fact
144 ions adjusting for age; sex; race/ethnicity; education; diet; smoking status; body mass index; self-r
145               Socioeconomic status (SES) and education (EDU) are phenotypically associated with psych
146 s and transplant patients to enhance patient education efforts.
147 ct problems; marijuana use; optimism; not in education, employment, or training (NEET) status; and cr
148 y may be overestimated in modern programming education environments.
149 n global extracorporeal membrane oxygenation education exist.
150 nearby neighbors during a period when higher education expanded.
151 onmental variation of height in low parental education families.
152 une adults living in outbreak ZIP codes, (b) education focused on risk reduction for patients from ou
153 s were case isolation, treatment, and health education, followed by environment disinfection, symptom
154        However, the effectiveness of digital education for chronic wound management training has not
155 of a series of reviews on the use of digital education for health professions education.
156 d information on disease basics or treatment education for the disease.
157 ent index and the expected length of time in education for women and the three outcomes: sexual activ
158                          Counterintuitively, education genetically associates with an increased risk
159  exposed vulnerabilities in graduate medical education (GME).
160 on (graduated high school), and 23% had high education (graduated college), with the sample becoming
161 tion (less than high school), 40% had medium education (graduated high school), and 23% had high educ
162  in the previous 12 months across wealth and education groups, and quantified socioeconomic inequalit
163 in outbreak areas received a measles patient education handout.
164 ing predictive power of polygenic scores for education has led to their promotion by some as a potent
165 e disciplines, their support of data science education has significantly helped in coping with the sp
166 istent differences across levels of parental education, household income, and household food security
167     Maternal age at birth, maternal level of education, household income, as well as sex, chronologic
168 oeconomic components (e.g., income, poverty, education, housing characteristics) based on census bloc
169 for urological surgical planning and patient education, however published methods are costly which li
170  along with improvements in poverty, women's education, hygiene practices, and accessibility to healt
171 nt research focuses on the effects of public education, implementation of protocols for emergency med
172 s in health service access, women and girls' education, improved agricultural production, and improve
173 se findings shed light on the role of higher education in an era of political polarization.
174 cantly related to rural residence and higher education in both univariable and multivariable analyses
175 tudy was to investigate associations between education in early life and cognitive impairment in late
176                     This study suggests that education in early life markedly reduces the probability
177 ation is ideal for hypothesis generation and education in research and large-classroom settings.
178 ited from the great expansion of free higher education in Sweden (1960s to 1970s), the large inequali
179 afety of students and staff, the Ministry of Education in Taiwan established general guidelines for c
180 ual-level interventions (e.g., sleep hygiene education, incentives for behavioral change), suggesting
181 AY group, adjusted for age, race, WIHS site, education, income, smoking status, and baseline ART regi
182         Controlling for age, race/ethnicity, education, income, smoking, alcohol, menopausal hormone
183 nt outline is meaningful for medical student education, independent of medical specialty.
184 presented, which includes clinical radiology education, infrastructure implementation, and phased AI
185 a drugs are needed alongside improved health education initiatives.
186 ing interventions including patient/provider education, inreach (e.g., reminder and recall systems),
187 el can be easily implemented at other higher education institutions to globally enhance science outre
188 cal and health sciences faculty at US higher education institutions who had sexual misconduct accusat
189 e conclude the review by evaluating existing education interventions and research using the dual deve
190                                       Online education is rapidly expanding in response to rising dem
191 ications; (d) Self-management-facilitated by education, knowledge and a positive attitude; and (e) Su
192 in the study, 37% of household heads had low education (less than high school), 40% had medium educat
193 ugh the single largest risk factor was a low education level (12.5% of the PAF).
194 was below what would be expected for age and education level in stroke patients as measured by the or
195 as well as children whose mother had a lower education level or smoked during pregnancy.
196  for migrants with different age, income and education level, and also differs from the aggregated ne
197 onfounders such as smoking status, sex, age, education level, and dental visit.
198 adjusting for age, sex, smoking status, FPL, education level, and dental visit.
199 ry of Chagas disease, home conditions, lower education level, and history of living in a rural area w
200 ration of coma, delirium, hypoxemia, sepsis, education level, hospital type, insurance status, discha
201 trolling for maternal age, prepregnancy BMI, education level, kilocalories, infant age, sex, and birt
202  are reported, the latter adjusting for age, education level, marriage length, polygamy, socioeconomi
203 gression, adjusting for age, sex, ethnicity, education level, smoking, BMI, and diabetes.
204 tenatal exposure to smoking, higher maternal education levels, and wheezing at age 36-72 months.
205 ng for maternal age, race/ethnicity, parity, education levels, prepregnancy BMI, previous history of
206 y that strategies to retain adults in higher education may help reduce the risk for a major source of
207 f early presentation; thus, focused maternal education may promote earlier detection and presentation
208                           A survey of PASSIO Education membership examined preferred video duration.
209  and newborn health care, increased parental education, migration to urban areas, and reduced fertili
210 nge in four diverse areas: pursuit of higher education, migration, trauma and resilience, and recover
211                                     Parental education mostly showed a positive association with offs
212 e, modern biochemistry and molecular biology education must be informed by, and integrated with, cutt
213                               Sustainability education needs to be considered as part of the curricul
214                                       Health education of "Facial cleanness" and related factors is r
215                                This includes education of physicians and other health care providers,
216 ansmission in dialysis facilities, including education of staff and patients, screening for COVID-19
217  process of change could be facilitated with education of staff/patients by opinion leaders and prena
218 All patients with anaphylaxis should receive education on anaphylaxis and risk of recurrence, trigger
219                                      Digital education on chronic wound management appears to be less
220 t 4 time points, with standard of care (SOC) education on improving readiness to pursue DDKT and LDKT
221 l training programs should provide all-level education on sexual harassment and delineate the best me
222  the need for appropriate patient and public education on the various aspects of cell and gene therap
223  clinicians provide interventions, including education or brief counseling, to prevent initiation of
224 feasible behavioral interventions, including education or brief counseling, to prevent tobacco use in
225 al increases were higher in those with lower education or income levels, those enrolled in the urban
226 h just under half (46%) having up to primary education or less.
227 al: 0.25, 0.34) in those with some secondary education or more.
228 .1%, n = 7, p = 0.010) in trials of diabetes education or support alone.
229 tion below GCSE O-levels, compared to higher education (OR = 3.94; 95%CI: 2.74, 5.67), after adjustin
230 tatus (SES), often conceptualized as income, education, or occupation, is associated with risk for di
231 tensive global effects (eg, hypertension and education), others (eg, household air pollution and poor
232 ancer research and clinical oncology through education, outreach, and collaboration.
233                             Phase 1 involves education, outreach, and preparation, and phase 2 focuse
234 gesting that arguments of clear dominance of education over age structure are unwarranted and lead to
235 n and has suggested a dominance of improving education over age structure.
236                       Individually tailoring education over time may help more patients, especially r
237  0.11), body mass index (P = 0.68), level of education (P = 0.26), smoking (P = 0.11), alcohol consum
238                     When provided with brief education, participants expressed interest in diagnostic
239 l and a video-based learning website, PASSIO Education (passioeducation.com), were examined from 2011
240 which an intervention comprised of clinician education, peer comparisons, and computer decision suppo
241 sted models, male sex, underweight, obesity, education, poor self-rated health, television-viewing ti
242 d race/ethnicity, poverty, insurance status, education, population and household density.
243 domized to an early arm where organ donation education preceded a control educational workshop or a l
244 stigated how accurately polygenic scores for education predicted pupils' test score achievement.
245 l determinants including age, race, sex, and education predicted the MELD at delisting for "too sick"
246 sed, classroom-based life skills Adolescence Education Program (AEP), compared to AEP alone (control
247         These findings call for an effective education program about this practice, which does not ha
248 (YPT), an individually tailored coaching and education program delivered at 4 time points, with stand
249 ole of traditional healers through awareness education programme with respect to the treatment of dog
250 mmunicated effectively by physicians, nor is education provided.
251                                Inequality in education reached a peak globally in 2017 and is project
252 igger avoidance, self-injectable epinephrine education, referral to an allergist, and be educated abo
253                       There were significant education-related inequalities in the use of dental care
254 n medicine and changing standards in medical education require new, efficient educational strategies.
255 inders involving lay health workers; patient education; risk assessment, counseling, and decision aid
256 upport, Neonatal Life Support, Resuscitation Education Science, and Systems of Care Writing Groups dr
257 esponse to humanitarian crises that includes education, screening, treatment, and palliative care for
258 matic Reviews to identify reviews of patient education, self-management, and self-care studies.
259 early physical therapy (EPT) were provided 1 education session and then referred for 4 weeks of physi
260 others to adopt in both secondary and higher education settings.
261 childhood body mass index z scores, maternal education, smoking in pregnancy, and prenatal particulat
262 to information and vital services on health, education, society, and the economy.
263 vary ADMA levels were hs-CRP (P < 0.001) and education socioeconomic status (P = 0.042).
264  Strategies to improve fill volumes included education, standardized data collection, novel and unbli
265 s were associated with reduced odds of using education strategies leading to increased wait-listing.
266       Educators should prioritize transplant education strategies shown to be associated with increas
267 l Surgery Residency and the Graduate Medical Education Survey of residents completing general surgery
268  socioeconomic and psychosocial factors (ie, education, symptoms of depression), grip strength, and h
269 ysician community and apply innovative adult education techniques.
270 helor's degree, we find, for those with less education, that each successive birth cohort has a highe
271           Compared with participants with no education, the fully adjusted odds ratio for cognitive i
272 twins 30 years or older to confirm finalized education, the heritability was higher in the older coho
273 y in effect estimates by patients' sex, age, education, timing of HIV diagnosis and ART initiation.
274 Patients expressed a desire for personalized education to be a standard part of glaucoma care.
275 oughout all aspects of life, from housing to education to employment.
276 ystems, enhance land use design, and provide education to support policies and environments to promot
277 ls of cognitive development (and likely also education) to account for the role of multisensory proce
278                  We constructed year-by-year education trajectories for 7,501 National Longitudinal S
279           The 5-day regimen included hygiene education, twice-daily intranasal mupirocin, and daily b
280 m dog control programs including monitoring, education, veterinary care, and other measures.
281 n leaflet) or usual care plus the codesigned education video delivered via a handheld tablet device a
282        Key risk factors include poverty, low education, violence, alcohol and drug use, human immunod
283                           Increased parental education was also a strong predictor of improved child
284 0.178 to 0.302), and the polygenic score for education was associated with cognitive change from chil
285                        Increasing income and education was associated with higher outpatient ophthalm
286                       MR indicated that only education was causally associated with reduced risk of A
287 nowledge retention up to six months, digital education was more effective than no intervention, while
288 ention knowledge, and indicated that digital education was more effective than no intervention, while
289                                              Education was removed from the individual LC-SES score a
290 ion greater individual LC-SES score, without education, was associated with a 10% (HR = 0.90, 95% CI:
291   Following community sensitisation and PrEP education, we did HIV testing and offered PrEP at health
292                                Age, sex, and education were associated with long-term outcomes, while
293                       Higher income and more education were significantly associated with better adhe
294 RSs for coronary artery disease and years of education were significantly associated with psychiatric
295 s (HC) matched on gender, ages, and level of education, were recruited in the test group.
296  and negative social attitudes toward girls' education, which suppresses college enrollment in both s
297 mly matched by age (+/-4 years), gender, and education with 5 HIV-uninfected individuals from the CON
298 elopment Goals (SDGs) prioritize progress in education, with a new focus on inequality(5-7).
299 state of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation education worldwide, noting current limitations and chal
300 ich interventions (such as patient/caregiver education) would be most effective to prevent infections

 
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