コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
3 disease burden, and concerted regulatory and fiscal action by the UK Government is essential if the s
5 s of the effects of transportation, housing, fiscal and climate policies are needed to quantify coben
6 coronary intervention, but this strategy has fiscal and clinical costs and is not supported by robust
7 influence and conflicts of interest; and the fiscal and economic policies that leave governments with
8 ludes by assessing how nations have a strong fiscal and humanitarian incentive to invest in infectiou
9 the management of public-sector pay; and the fiscal and macroeconomic factors that impinge on pay pol
10 ortality in COVID-19 reinforces the need for fiscal and other long delayed regulatory measures to red
11 n childhood), governments have tried several fiscal and policy interventions such as lowering tax and
13 hensive food and alcohol strategies based on fiscal and regulatory measures (including a minimum unit
14 jections of the aging global society and its fiscal and social impact have depended on assumptions re
15 ed democracies should prepare for additional fiscal and social stress, some of which is already appar
16 ticipate and knowledgeably contribute to the fiscal aspects of income, expense, budget, and contracts
17 itures is of particular concern at a time of fiscal austerity as swelling fire management budgets lea
18 isis in LMICs, whereas the implementation of fiscal austerity measures could result in large numbers
19 0.77, 95% CI 0.72-0.84) when compared with a fiscal austerity response, and this strategy would avoid
20 ) hospitalizations up to 2030, compared with fiscal austerity scenarios that would reduce the coverag
21 ons pose risks to health, the interaction of fiscal austerity with economic shocks and weak social pr
22 Greece, Spain, and Portugal adopted strict fiscal austerity; their economies continue to recede and
24 nable population scale studies, reducing the fiscal barriers associated with large-scale spatial prof
25 reef conservation investment, we generate a fiscal baseline using the first global analysis of numbe
27 current investments in VMMC (e.g., within a fiscal budget period) rather than of investments spread
29 CER at the patient level and the cumulative fiscal burden of this cost variation when considering th
34 We modelled the health, macroeconomic, and fiscal consequences under different tax increase scenari
36 al health care needs of its patients, future fiscal constraints could affect most adversely the treat
37 issues within surgical training culture and fiscal constraints created obstacles against program dir
44 cal trials departments (CTDs) are in serious fiscal deficit and their sustainability is in jeopardy.
45 mber of patients on follow-up increases, the fiscal deficit grows larger each year, perpetuating the
48 studies that are at least as expensive, the fiscal dictates further warrant the use of this study as
50 isting evidence on the health, economic, and fiscal effects of such taxes in China is limited, which
51 overnments; on the other hand, a significant fiscal effort is needed to sustain the most fragile indi
53 weighing quality versus length of cow life, fiscal factors, legal obligations, and balancing the int
54 a high degree of analytic consensus for the fiscal feasibility of a single-payer approach in the US.
55 entified as vital to the nation's health and fiscal future, including 4 action priorities and 4 essen
57 ons following sepsis are common, the overall fiscal impact of these rehospitalizations and their vari
59 e assess deforestation and poverty outcomes (fiscal income, income inequality, sanitation and literac
64 onsibilities, and between hard regulatory or fiscal interventions and soft voluntary, education-based
67 ionwide scale-up would require a substantial fiscal investment, areas of highest HIV incidence may be
68 pite broad organisational, intellectual, and fiscal investments, no means for preventing or curing ty
70 identified interventions that acted through fiscal levers (n=5; eg, removing primary school fees), m
74 l financing mechanisms that bring short-term fiscal planning efforts into closer alignment with longe
78 ve focused on behavioral change, regulation, fiscal policies, consumer and citizen activism, and liti
83 Bs to increase prices by 10%, (c) a national fiscal policy to subsidise F&Vs to reduce prices by 10%,
84 d reduce consumption of SSBs, (b) a national fiscal policy to tax SSBs to increase prices by 10%, (c)
85 al policy reforms in critical areas of debt, fiscal policy, tax, trade, capital flows and credit rati
87 global HIV prevention efforts face mounting fiscal pressures and persistent coverage gaps, digital h
89 s will be enacted even though the underlying fiscal problems are thoroughly understood and recognized
91 strategic reprioritisation, and strengthened fiscal resilience in recipient countries to safeguard th
92 demic was a health emergency requiring rapid fiscal resource mobilisation to support national respons
93 transparency of reporting, and commitment of fiscal resources to clinical care predicted better menta
94 health system requires alignment of policy, fiscal resources, organizational structure, provider inc
95 manding of both personnel effort and limited fiscal resources, the allocation of experimental investm
97 nt budget constraint, we compare US monetary-fiscal responses to World Wars I and II and the War on C
98 ificant change was identified with total net fiscal revenue between the periods (median, -$44,372 per
99 ained (YLGs), deaths averted, and additional fiscal revenue were estimated using a cohort state-trans
100 the crisis is inducing a sharp reduction of fiscal revenues for both national and local governments;
101 ater health, economic, and equity gains, but fiscal revenues would decline beyond certain tax share l
105 e health systems need to expand and maintain fiscal space for health to move towards UHC while buildi
107 to contribute significantly to the long-term fiscal stability of the Medicare (and Medicaid) programs
110 imate the potential health effects of such a fiscal strategy in the middle-income country of India, w
111 e approaches, we believe that, even in tough fiscal times, the main drivers of cardiovascular epidemi
112 and policymakers because of the clinical and fiscal toll of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing, inc
113 Thus, it is possible that representation and fiscal transfers are both determined by other characteri
118 systematic review and categorization of the fiscal year (FY) 2008 NIH climate and health research po
122 C) Loan Repayment Program (LRP) expansion in fiscal year (FY) 2019 intended to improve access to medi
123 bined data from 9 unique cohorts, 1 for each fiscal year (July 1 to June 30) from 2012 to 2021, and u
127 cute care hospitals in the United States for fiscal year 1994 on the basis of data the hospitals subm
128 e of 26.0 percent of total hospital costs in fiscal year 1994, up 1.2 percentage points from 1990.
129 a total of 78 cadaveric renal transplants in fiscal year 1995, there were 38 kidneys (49%) transplant
131 ceived colonoscopies or sigmoidoscopies from fiscal year 1997 to a date 6 months before the diagnosis
135 rans Health Administration facilities during fiscal year 1999 who were alive at the start of fiscal y
138 gogastroduodenoscopy and/or colonoscopy from fiscal year 2000 through 2013, we found that even in a c
140 antipsychotic medication were followed over fiscal year 2000 to determine how often they were switch
142 9 VA facilities during the first 3 months of fiscal year 2001 (October 1 to December 31, 2000) (N=128
144 expenditures for tobacco-control programs in fiscal year 2001 in the context of the amount of tobacco
145 nt benzodiazepine use during the study year (fiscal year 2001) and evaluate patient demographic and c
149 he highest relative hospital margin (RHM) in fiscal year 2004 expressed as margin units (mu) was 1 mi
155 thin data science, a portfolio analysis from fiscal year 2008 to fiscal year 2017 was performed.
158 rspective discusses the NHLBI budget for the fiscal year 2009 and new policies for funding early stag
159 filed with the Internal Revenue Service for fiscal year 2009 that provide expenditures for seven typ
164 National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute in fiscal year 2009: these included 458 funded by meeting I
167 t time in 40 years, the NIH appropriation in fiscal year 2011 was 1% less than in the previous year.
172 Publicly available hospital-level data for fiscal year 2014 was obtained, including excess readmiss
174 ng military and civilian facilities, between fiscal year 2015 and 2019 and the calculated KSA metric
178 ents diagnosed with a depressive disorder in fiscal year 2017 in the U.S. Veterans Health Administrat
181 e VA through VACC programs were compiled for fiscal year 2018 from the VA Corporate Data Warehouse.
183 3 hospitals that participated in the HRRP in fiscal year 2019 compared performance on the readmission
184 n for hospitals participating in the HRRP in fiscal year 2019, using data from the CMS Hospital Compa
185 n Medical Colleges Faculty Salary Report for fiscal year 2019-2020 were used to evaluate disparities
191 search Project Grant data through the end of Fiscal Year 2020, confirming worsening inequalities begi
193 spitals participating in the HVBP program in fiscal year 2021, 1470 (54.9%) received bonuses and 1206
195 2235 in Mac Locality for Tennessee 10312 for fiscal year 2022 ($116.43; $76.11 [technical component]
200 the percentage of total drug costs for each fiscal year and adjusted for hospital volume (ICU patien
201 2001 for patients alive at the start of that fiscal year and with VHA use in fiscal years 2000-2001 (
202 included between 1200 and 1400 hospitals per fiscal year in 19 states with Medicaid expansion and bet
203 sion and between 2200 and 2400 hospitals per fiscal year in 25 states without Medicaid expansion (wit
204 guidance forms initially in 2013 and in the fiscal year of 2014 in Sagamihara city licensed nurserie
205 n income was CAD $42 600 (US $31 083) in the fiscal year prior to injury and 82% were employed at tim
207 th Insurance Plan (OHIP) in the 2017 to 2018 fiscal year to estimate differences in gross payments be
208 s approved $130 million funding for the 2019 fiscal year to support the development of a universal va
209 and admission-discharge-transfer data for 1 fiscal year were abstracted for analysis of admission an
210 a random sample (5% sample selected for each fiscal year) of 1 869 090 participants aged 55 years or
213 ing for length of hospitalization (>2 d) and fiscal year, pregnancy or postpartum (OR = 8.3; 1.0-68,
221 fter implementation of lean processes over 3 fiscal years (FYs) at a tertiary care Veterans Affairs m
223 the National Institutes of Health (NIH) from fiscal years 1986 to 1995 were obtained, and each medica
224 rom the National Cancer Institute (NCI) from fiscal years 1990 to 2016, the last year prior to implem
231 Veterans Health Administration database from fiscal years 1999 to 2010 to examine the risk associated
232 all ICU patients (n = 23,107) treated during fiscal years 1999-2002 were retrieved from the hospital'
233 rom the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (fiscal years 1999-2008) for dementia patients age 65 and
234 evaluation, NCCAM compared funding levels in fiscal years 2000 and 2003 for 18 diseases with a substa
237 n the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) in fiscal years 2000-2009 (n=1691) to characterize trends i
239 stan who separated from the military between fiscal years 2001 and 2011 and subsequently used VHA ser
240 ata from the Department of Veterans Affairs (fiscal years 2001-2005) on patients older than 65 years
241 ch surgery were investigated using 10 years (fiscal years 2001-2010; N = 894,943) of linked data.
243 S Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in fiscal years 2002-2012 with a discharge diagnosis of pne
246 Health Administration (VHA) services between fiscal years 2004 and 2013 was conducted using administr
248 Patients receiving a cardiac stent between fiscal years 2005 and 2010 were identified by Internatio
256 patients undergoing transfemoral PAVR during fiscal years 2009 and 2010 were prospectively evaluated
258 ral general medical or surgical hospitals in fiscal years 2011 through 2014, using data from the Amer
264 ross-sectional VHA employee survey data from fiscal years 2018 to 2022 to examine associations betwee