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1 specially among women with limited access to health care.
2 s investigating the clinical impact of ML in health care.
3 has broadly impacted biomedical research and health care.
4 and enabling digital dictation platforms for health care.
5                                              Health care access and exposure factors may underlie the
6                               Differences in health care access and exposure risk may be driving high
7 ities and magnifying existing disparities in health care access and treatment.
8 ity-derived solution simultaneously improved health care access for local and indigenous communities
9 ve opportunistic diseases, or those who have health care access issues.
10     Our capitated system with more equalized health care access may explain the absence of effect of
11       Furthermore, we estimate that ensuring health-care access for all Americans would save more tha
12 , as well as social and economic barriers to health-care access that can delay intervention until aft
13      This is particularly relevant to tackle health care accessibility inequality, which is not only
14 ttings may narrow the gaps in access to oral health care across the life course.
15 e Swedish Cancer Register and other national health care and census registers.
16 he best interests of patients and to achieve health care and coverage that are adequate, accessible,
17 nd, concurrently, programmes for integrating health care and long-term care services in selected sett
18  demonstrates the potential benefit of ML in health care and offers opportunities to enhance care qua
19 ened by this new paradigm, for the future of health care and personalized medicine.
20 ilities of payers and escalating spending on health care and pharmaceuticals, transparency and commun
21                        Because resources for health care and research are already overstretched, prio
22                 The importance of developing health care and research which enables narrative and the
23    Coordinated strategies at the individual, health-care and policy levels are urgently required to i
24 econd, not all dental care is essential oral health care, and not all essential care is also urgent,
25 p and implement action plans for prevention, health care, and research to tackle the growing challeng
26 impact of extending the shifts of nurses and health care assistants from 8 to 12 hours.
27  true impact on postoperative complications, health care associated costs, and to investigate patient
28  hospital in the United States will suffer a health care-associated infection (HAI).
29  Staphylococcus aureus is a leading cause of health care-associated infections in the neonatal intens
30                                              Health care-associated infections were defined as those
31 hether the InfA infection met criteria for a health care-associated influenza A infection (HCAI).
32 r-income countries resulting from the poorer health care available.
33 t acute exacerbations leading to significant health care burden and impaired quality of life.
34 nt of hepatitis delta virus (HDV) associated health care burden in the United States is an important
35 eriority trial involving children at primary health care centers in low-income communities in Karachi
36 ened for sickle cell disease at five primary health-care centres using the ELISA-based point-of-care
37 rospective feasibility study at five primary health-care centres within Gwagwalada Area Council, Abuj
38 g is done only for individuals presenting to health-care centres; contact tracing in households of ca
39 of coronavirus disease 2019 presents a major health care challenge of global dimensions.
40  growth in some areas, particularly with non-health-care consumers, digital health technology has not
41  interval 1.17, 1.48) times the total annual health care cost.
42 n the first-line led to significantly higher health care costs (incremental cost of $612 700), result
43                                   Mean total health care costs among patients with CKD without comorb
44                                              Health care costs are growing faster than the rest of th
45 the major cause of morbidity, mortality, and health care costs in the United States, and possibly aro
46 herapy may be a reasonable strategy to limit health care costs without compromising clinical outcomes
47 llowing postoperative adjustability, reduced health care costs, and less likelihood of inducing aller
48 rates of 6 to 30% and significantly increase health care costs, because of increased length of stay a
49 substantially, with exponential increases in health care costs, given the limited and expensive treat
50 condition is causing a substantial burden on health care costs.
51 rtunities to enhance care quality and reduce health care costs.
52  centres reduced mortality by 94%, increased health-care costs by 33%, and was cost-effective (ICER $
53 Finally, out-of-pocket expenses for indirect health-care costs were a key barrier to accessing surgic
54 dels adjusting for confounding by age, race, health care coverage, housing, and poverty level, overal
55 lidity of indicators of maternal and newborn health-care coverage around the time of birth in survey
56                               Essential oral health care covers the most prevalent oral health proble
57 care resources in this unprecedented time of health care crisis.
58  study using population-based administrative health care data from Ontario, Canada (2000-2017).
59 ations include utilizing routinely collected health-care data and disease-specific registries to iden
60 gers behavior change and effectively informs health care decision making, to ultimately improve carie
61 include decreased mortality rates, decreased health care delivery costs, and faster delivery of appro
62 inform rapid response strategies to optimize health care delivery in parts of the world who have not
63 ta are scarce on the effectiveness utilizing health care delivery platforms.
64 hese recommendations have focused largely on health care delivery practices and occasionally on gener
65    Reorganization of existing post discharge health care delivery resources to form an ICU survivor c
66 fferent ethnic groups is set to generate new health care disparities through data-driven, algorithm-b
67  commonly used restorative materials in oral health care due to its strength and longevity (ref. 2).
68 ternal morbidity, chronic health conditions, health care encounters from discharge through 12 weeks p
69 timated proportions of adults with CHD-coded health care encounters varied greatly by location, with
70 e nonfermenting bacterium can persist in the health care environment, which can lead to prolonged HAI
71 ircumstances, and a complex and highly fluid health-care environment.
72 rvivor, predicted more barriers to receiving health care, especially in the first six weeks after the
73 s are infrequently recognized during routine health care even though they are common in adolescent gi
74 -report as a principal method of identifying health care events.
75                                     Although health care expenditure per capita is higher in the USA
76 result in significant patient disability and health care expenditure.
77 ove quality of life and symptoms, and reduce health-care expenditure.
78  for assessing the optimal allocation of new health care facilities and assessing hospitals expansion
79 loratory longitudinal study was conducted in health care facilities and community support groups from
80 nical cases and 350 colonized cases from 151 health care facilities, including 59 hospitals, 92 nursi
81 relative to the level of service provided by health care facilities.
82 the test-negative design, routine testing at health-care facilities is leveraged to estimate the effe
83 ttacks, 77% of which required treatment at a health care facility and/or hemin administration (median
84 enced attacks often requiring treatment in a health care facility and/or with hemin, as well as chron
85 ctions were defined as those with onset in a health care facility or associated with recent admission
86 ity or associated with recent admission to a health care facility; all others were classified as comm
87 fully or partially functional public primary health-care facility, and more than 12.1 million (42.4%)
88 ups for adults with ESKD and more thoughtful health care for aging adults would promote successful ag
89 eals that critical structural inequities and health care gaps have historically contributed to and co
90                                     However, health care has been relatively late to adopt them.
91 m in an affluent country with free access to health care, higher IQ was seen with greater size at bir
92 n of newborn screening into existing primary health-care immunisation programmes is feasible and can
93 Coverage indicators for newborn and maternal health care in exit surveys had low accuracy for specifi
94 vocated for universal access to high-quality health care in the United States.
95 ehensive estimates of geographical access to health care in Yemen since the outbreak of the current c
96 ystem, and interpersonal barriers to optimal health care, including palliative care.
97 efforts to integrate oral health and primary health care, incorporate interventions at multiple level
98 ternal height, improved maternal and newborn health care, increased parental education, migration to
99  factors and outcomes of social, health, and health-care inequity.
100 ralisable because of regional differences in health-care infrastructure, individual circumstances, an
101 gthening of the coordination between primary health-care institutions and hospitals.
102  of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) have led health-care insurers to limit access worldwide.
103 " This personalized or precision approach to health care involves correctly diagnosing and properly c
104 from paediatric to adult sickle cell disease health care is unlikely to address the challenges.
105 ctive and safe treatment of pain is an unmet health-care need.
106 cines, i.e., those that satisfy the priority health care needs of the population and are selected wit
107 ould address the complex physical and mental health-care needs of people living with HIV and mental i
108 ng for changing age structures, resource and health-care needs, and environmental and economic landsc
109 e in part to advances in medical technology, health care options, and population health interventions
110                         The study at a large health care organization comprised: (1) incidence estima
111 hered practice guidelines and resources from health care organizations and professional societies wor
112 pporting health care workers and in enabling health care organizations to succeed and thrive.
113 rvention can be applied or exported to other health care organizations.
114 ion strategies remains a major challenge for health-care organizations globally.
115                                              Health care personnel (HCP) at Cleveland Clinic diagnose
116 ed coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) among health care personnel in King County, Washington.
117 ration of antibody response to SARS-CoV-2 in health care personnel over a 60-day period in Nashville,
118 ng, including 152 community contacts and 195 health-care personnel.
119 ement of the quality of training for primary health-care physicians, (2) establishment of performance
120                                              Health-care policies advocate that individuals at high r
121 suboptimal education and training of primary health-care practitioners, a fee-for-service payment sys
122 aureus (MRSA), has become a worldwide, major health care problem.
123 hat they had received practical support from health care professionals during the child's illness tra
124 tion consisted of 4 key actions: training of health care professionals on nutritional recommendations
125 ents while simultaneously trying to minimize health care provider exposure and use of personal protec
126  with the simplified monitoring approach and health care provider exposure was reduced.
127 ivors at risk for not reporting receipt of a health care provider HPV vaccine recommendation.
128                                     From the health care provider perspective, the estimated average
129 er with parental report of AD diagnosis by a health care provider through age 24 months.
130 ning/memory problems (as identified by their health care provider) was used for model replication.
131 cost-effectiveness analyses were done from a health-care provider perspective using a decision tree m
132 scontinue prophylaxis in consultation with a health-care provider within a specified follow-up period
133 o the forefront with the emergence of EVALI, health care providers and concerned parents are also ask
134                Consumers, patients, and most health care providers are not able to discern the underl
135 , the hospital offered the author, and other health care providers at high risk, the option to opt ou
136            What should the surgeon and other health care providers do?
137                                              Health care providers must be sensitive to older adults'
138 d policymakers are rewarding high-performing health care providers on the basis of summaries of overa
139                      Psychiatrists and other health care providers treating patients with pain should
140 monia and aid their communication with other health care providers, assisting management of patients
141 of infection and have extensive contact with health care providers, has not been investigated.
142 s includes education of physicians and other health care providers, patients and their families, scho
143 hared care delivered by TFH and conventional health-care providers for people with psychosis was effe
144  safely provide patient care meant that many health-care providers rapidly implemented and integrated
145                                              Health-care providers showed their resilience and the sp
146 elines and provide a narrative to help guide health-care providers through the complexities of non-su
147                                              Health-care providers volunteered and tried their best t
148 e potential events and, in consultation with health-care providers, must weigh the potential benefits
149  recommendations for individuals with OA and health-care providers.
150                      Insurance providers and health care purchasers should review policies to influen
151 ograms aiming to reduce spending and improve health care quality among "superutilizers," patients wit
152 ations between malpractice risk measures and health care quality and safety outcomes.
153 ations due to its advanced use of electronic health-care records and the development of disease-speci
154 uctive sleep apnea, resulting in significant health care resource use and decreased health-related qu
155 and improved OS, and increased investment in health care resources in high risk areas may have produc
156 manage the appropriate allocation of limited health care resources in this unprecedented time of heal
157 They cause significant morbidity and draw on health-care resources.
158 acks a clear visible mission, adds to modern health care's onerous bureaucracy, and thus pulls physic
159 ts for diagnostic tests and drugs, including health-care savings, and implementing a simplified treat
160                                          The health care sector has a leadership role in adopting pol
161                               Studies in the health care sector indicate that good work time control
162                      Patients in the primary health care sector should be tested with the ELF test fo
163 residential sectors but only recently in the health care sector.
164 tal cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER; from the health-care sector perspective, 3% annual discount rate)
165        In this manuscript, we summarized the health-care seeking behavior of FNY participants who rep
166 association between physical multimorbidity, health-care service use, and catastrophic health expendi
167 statement on the transition process to adult health care services for patients with IEIs.
168 ood systems, incomes, and social protection, health care services for women and children, and service
169  presented by opportunity costs, spending on health care services versus biomedical technologies, pha
170 rs that drive need, and utilization rates of health care services.
171 erutilizers," patients with very high use of health care services.
172 g, increasing the reliance of individuals on health-care services and contributing to a rise in the s
173                                              Health-care services are rapidly transforming their orga
174 ngthening and in the quality and quantity of health-care services, especially in rural and remote are
175        Maternal and newborn characteristics (health care setting and timeframe; maternal health facto
176 ts commonly experience discrimination in the health care setting, and they may not have access to med
177 ata from a large, community-based integrated health care setting, we examined the risks of CRC and re
178                                           In health care settings, N95 and surgical masks were probab
179 the findings to other low- and middle-income health care settings.
180 zable to vaccinations done in other types of health care settings.
181 he generalizability of the findings to other health care settings.
182 ortality, especially after antibiotic use in health care settings.
183  existing immunisation programmes in primary health-care settings.
184                  Estimates of US spending on health care showed substantial increases from 1996 throu
185 ars [interquartile range, 15 years]) from 54 health care sites in 28 countries were evaluated.
186 ve accurate information about PrEP, and that health-care sites are prepared to provide quality care f
187 sease transitioning from paediatric to adult health care: skills transfer, increasing self-efficacy,
188 oid use was similarly correlated with higher health care spending (+$1500 per patient, P < 0.001) com
189 ew persistent opioid use was associated with health care spending (+$2700 per patient, P < 0.001) com
190 her conditions estimated to have substantial health care spending in 2016 were ischemic heart disease
191                                        Total health care spending increased from an estimated $1.4 tr
192  an estimated 48.0% (95% CI, 48.0%-48.0%) of health care spending was paid by private insurance, 42.6
193 back and neck pain had the highest amount of health care spending with an estimated $134.5 billion (9
194 t persistent opioid use returned to baseline health care spending within 6 months, regardless of othe
195  of tafamidis and its potential effect on US health care spending.
196      Outcomes included 6-month postoperative health care spending; proportion of spending attributabl
197 tigma from family and friends," "anticipated health-care stigma," and "general social stigma," with i
198 r, widespread gaps in the quality of primary health care still exist.
199 ribution of PrEP medication costs across the health care system are unknown.
200            Low-income countries have reduced health care system capacity and are therefore at risk of
201 nosis of cancer has a negative impact on the health care system due to high treatment cost and decrea
202 study of adults receiving care at a tertiary health care system from January 1, 2013, to December 31,
203  health care workers and patients in a large health care system in Massachusetts.
204  public health department officials, and (c) health care system interventions that can be implemented
205                        The nation's existing health care system is inefficient, unaffordable, unsusta
206 ions that can be implemented by hospital and health care system leaders.
207                            High costs to the health care system may hinder PrEP expansion.
208 his randomized trial conducted in the public health care system of Brazil, endovascular treatment wit
209 vention delivered through the Chilean public health care system under standard operating conditions r
210 eatment offered within the Kaiser Permanente health care system was permitted for participants assign
211 rable policies for strengthening its primary health care system with core responsibilities in prevent
212 ine-practice health coaches in a nonacademic health care system yields reductions in symptoms and imp
213 obtained information from outside the formal health care system, so how has the internet changed peop
214      The study was conducted within a single health care system, which may limit generalizability.
215 e delivery process is a concern for the U.S. health care system.
216 ubstance use disorders in a large integrated health care system.
217 ies and entire communities, and cripples the health care system.
218 in the Kaiser Permanente Southern California health care system; women were followed from January 1,
219 hina should consider modernising its primary health-care system through the establishment of a learni
220 e 2019 (COVID-19) in Hubei, China, the local health-care system was overwhelmed.
221 ent continuity of care throughout the entire health-care system.
222 irus 2) pandemic has massively distorted our health care systems and caused catastrophic consequences
223 cluding those associated with disruptions in health care systems and the economic and social hardship
224 ical resources, leading to the prospect that health care systems have faced or will face difficult de
225  stable ranks of ambulatory care quality for health care systems in Minnesota and California, and thi
226 cted recipients while maintaining safety for health care systems in the backdrop of a virulent pandem
227                            Ninety percent of health care systems now offer patient portals to access
228  for their correlation, and does not require health care systems to report every measure.
229  use of these medications forced overwhelmed health care systems to search for ways to effectively mo
230 monly red blood cells (RBCs), is integral to health care systems worldwide but requires careful match
231 vice contexts (e.g.,community, school, home, health care systems) are reviewed.
232 exibility in implementation across different health care systems.
233 e Nordic countries which have similar public health care systems.
234 vide equitable and consistent service across health care systems.
235 cancer remains a heavy burden on society and health care systems.Mounting evidence show that driver g
236 al diseases, probably due to the weakness of health-care systems and services, as evidenced by the al
237 rucial as they have a considerable impact on health-care systems and society as a whole because of re
238 is commentary argues that all members of the health care team need training on how to integrate key e
239 re the risks of treating the patient for the health care team?
240 ccess to and quality of services, and create health care teams that provide patient-centered care in
241  hospital path, high level of protection for health-care teams, prompt diagnosis of suspicious sympto
242                                Compared with health-care testing alone, a combination of health-care
243 nations of five public health interventions: health-care testing alone, where diagnostic testing is d
244  health-care testing alone, a combination of health-care testing, contact tracing, use of isolation c
245 y recommendations from ACP's vision for U.S. health care that can advise how we can act now during th
246    We propose a definition of essential oral health care that includes urgent and basic oral health c
247 th policies and interventions or amenable to health care to create a list of avertable NCD causes of
248 lth care that includes urgent and basic oral health care to initiate a broader debate and stakeholder
249 llenges and opportunities to deliver optimal health care to senior citizens.
250                                        Acute health care use (hospitalizations and emergency departme
251 roadway also had significantly less reported health care use (odds ratio, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.47-0.85; P
252          In this study, we characterized the health care use and cost burdens of HDV in the United St
253 lly significantly associated with less acute health care use and modestly lower symptom burden, but t
254                  Secondary outcomes included health care use and physical activity during the acute c
255 ssessed the demographics, comorbidities, and health care use of adults ages 20 to 64 years with CHDs.
256 tility disconnection and characteristics and health care use of adults applying for such exemptions a
257     There were no significant differences in health care use or missed workdays.
258 tensity, patient-reported treatment success, health care use, and missed workdays.
259 stitutive home hospitalization reduced cost, health care use, and readmissions while increasing physi
260 iles was obtained from regional databases of health care use.
261 ptoms persist for years and lead to frequent health care use; for some, fibromyalgia and its symptoms
262     However, little is known about trends in health-care use and health outcomes across different soc
263       As patients take more control of their health care, use of TM is likely to increase because a l
264 number of defects/slice had a higher rate of health care utilization (r = 0.48; P = .03) and oral cor
265 pact of improved quality of life and reduced health care utilization may help with shared decision-ma
266 ated with increased odds of symptom days and health care utilization only among boys.
267             It is not associated with excess health care utilization or worse short or long-term tran
268 (129)Xe MRI correlates with asthma severity, health care utilization, and oral corticosteroid use.
269 biobanked biospecimens and data on symptoms, health care utilization, and pulmonary function and infl
270 f defects/slice were predictive of increased health care utilization, asthma, and severe asthma.
271 ant has an unknown effect on post-transplant health care utilization.
272 common, with a major effect on morbidity and health care utilization.
273            In the hospital catchment area, a health-care utilization survey (HCUS) was conducted to e
274 kely to have had a mood and anxiety disorder health care visit, more than three times as likely to ha
275  the prevalence of mood and anxiety disorder health care visits and antidepressant and anxiolytic pre
276 nally, an individual must continue to attend health-care visits or discontinue prophylaxis in consult
277 ination of the use of dental amalgam in oral health care was discussed.
278                    We prospectively compared health care worker-collected nasopharyngeal swabs (NPS)
279                                              Health care workers (HCWs) are at risk for severe acute
280 ts (n = 64) and PCR-positive and PCR-negtive health care workers (n = 109).
281    We analyzed serologic data collected from health care workers and first responders in New York Cit
282 utional generosity is critical in supporting health care workers and in enabling health care organiza
283  a policy requiring universal masking of all health care workers and patients in a large health care
284 onavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) seropositivity among health care workers at a New York City-based health syst
285                                              Health care workers at high risk can contribute in other
286 ction (PCR) in seropositive and seronegative health care workers attending testing of asymptomatic an
287                          It is concerning to health care workers because of its high mortality rate,
288 scribes SARS-CoV-2 PCR test positivity among health care workers before, during, and after implementa
289                                              Health care workers experience significant burdens from
290 (SARS-CoV-2) antibodies in some patients and health care workers in a pediatric dialysis unit after c
291 itically ill COVID-19 patients, reallocating health care workers to targeted medical tasks beyond the
292 sibility of rapidly training and fit testing health care workers to use elastomeric half-mask respira
293  contamination of uncovered skin and hair of health care workers wearing personal protective equipmen
294                          Interestingly, some health care workers with negative SARS-CoV-2-specific se
295 ional-research program that brought together health care workers, manufacturers, and scientists to em
296 -work considerations for exposed or infected health care workers, risk stratification and management
297 risk persons, such as exposed inpatients and health care workers.
298                            Training improved health-care workers' (HCW) infection control practices a
299 ing for symptomatic individuals by community health-care workers; and quarantine centres, for househo
300                   This shift to single-payer health care would provide the greatest relief to lower-i

 
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