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1 the most common reasons why children visit a health care professional.
2 using e-mail to contact a physician or other health care professional.
3 it that has direct relevance to patients and health care professionals.
4 e an overview of measles and vaccination for health care professionals.
5 the patient with rectal cancer includes many health care professionals.
6 lth issue important for physicians and other health care professionals.
7 ould allow targeted support and education by health care professionals.
8 f nutrition care in collaboration with other health care professionals.
9 to be highly acceptable to both patients and health care professionals.
10 ac disease, and deficiencies at the level of health care professionals.
11 tion, training, and continuing education for health care professionals.
12 s report a similar frequency of contact with health care professionals.
13 approaches to mitigate risk to patients and health care professionals.
14 or issues that continue to pose problems for health care professionals.
15 Unit from both people living with trauma and health care professionals.
16 dent physicians, nurses, dentists, and other health care professionals.
17 rs with ongoing needs is a key challenge for health care professionals.
18 elated to DTC telemedicine services or their health care professionals.
19 mmunication skills training intervention for health care professionals.
20 the ideal method to improve the training of health care professionals.
21 ident physicians to burnout as they do other health care professionals.
22 nagement and the communication of results to health care professionals.
23 sits, use of pharmacotherapies, and types of health care professionals.
24 per day were recruited by targeted media and health care professionals.
25 follow-up and to report essential history to health care professionals.
26 ily members, and creates dissatisfaction for health care professionals.
27 they become the responsibility of pediatric health care professionals.
28 ge of DSM, access to care, and confidence in health care professionals.
29 team and ensured a continuum of education to health care professionals.
30 comparison of results across treatments and health care professionals.
31 d persons to receive assistance from trusted health care professionals.
32 been raised by parents, other caregivers, or health care professionals.
33 ves in industry, policy makers, funders, and health-care professionals.
34 to families, schools, physicians, and other health-care professionals.
35 ality, physical performance, and referral to health-care professionals.
36 research and education of both patients and health-care professionals.
37 low-up Study (1986-2012), followed up 135965 health care professionals (88084 women and 47881 men, re
38 nning to attempt is vital to the efficacy of health care professionals' ability to screen blacks at r
39 sened by greater education of the public and health care professionals about celiac disease symptoms,
40 about its use and lack of familiarity among health care professionals about modern ECT technique.
41 d the preferences of children, families, and health-care professionals about how to convey the diagno
42 ns, registered dietitians, nurses, and other health care professionals advise patients better on diet
43 r, 1, 2008, images were presented to 120 non-health care professionals aged 21 years or older from th
47 ber of deployed facility and community-based health-care professionals also increased, including for
49 ghlighting the need to raise awareness among health care professionals and at-risk populations about
50 ts comparable to those of similarly educated health care professionals and by providing financial inc
54 findings may have important implications for health care professionals and health care system leaders
55 nts included San Francisco VA Medical Center health care professionals and individuals responsible fo
57 Continued efforts are needed to ensure that health care professionals and parents understand the imp
58 ug can be used to enrich discussions between health care professionals and patients in primary ASCVD
62 t not enough cultural competency training of health care professionals and provision of linguisticall
63 anges that could drive enhanced training for health care professionals and recommend future direction
64 burden are discussed, including education of health care professionals and the public, modification o
67 to markedly improve nutrition education for health care professionals and to establish curricular st
68 trition and physical activity training among health care professionals and to explore opportunities f
69 uestionnaire without appropriate feedback to health care professionals and without the provision of a
71 gate the development of BOS in critical care health-care professionals and diminish the harmful conse
73 financial and sociobehavioural incentives to health-care professionals and institutions, regulation,
74 urnout syndrome (BOS) occurs in all types of health-care professionals and is especially common in in
76 , insufficient palliative care education for health-care professionals and volunteers, poor public aw
77 with a general practitioner, nurse, or other health care professional) and secondary care contact (in
78 ting, 28% reported discussing testing with a health care professional, and 19% reported test receipt.
79 these products without the supervision of a health care professional, and may be unaware that the FD
81 sed by patients when planning their work, by health care professionals, and by social insurance offic
85 ufacturing LMIC vaccines and the scientists, health care professionals, and policy makers in LMICs wh
86 ized and centrally allocated, with patients, health care professionals, and researchers masked to tre
87 changes in the United States, policymakers, health care professionals, and the general public seek i
88 the first 3 days of attendance by a trained health-care professional, and given advice on reducing s
89 ent access and compliance as well as public, health-care professional, and policy-maker awareness tha
91 ure effective communication with the public, health-care professionals, and patients about the optimu
92 munities who need these drugs with academia, health-care professionals, and pharmaceutical companies,
93 on was stratified by site with participants, health-care professionals, and research staff masked to
95 ncrease in the already alarming shortfall in health-care professionals; and failure to match inpatien
96 on studies performed for other indications, health care professionals are commonly confronted with t
98 d worldwide, patients, clinicians, and other health care professionals are faced with uncertainty abo
104 icians, radiologists, oncologists, and other health care professionals, as well as members of the gen
105 ed CPA scenario, including 324 CPR-certified health care professionals assigned to 3-person resuscita
106 s mellitus type (type 1/type 2) was based on health care professional assignment and, in a subset, fu
107 , clinicians, nurse practitioners, and other health-care professionals associated with patients' care
108 HOD: In-depth interviews were conducted with health care professionals based in the UK who prescribe
110 surgery were identified: Relationships with health care professionals; being prepared; and regaining
111 nalised risks has emerged as a challenge for health-care professionals beyond the need to explain rad
113 ction, and law enforcement; (b) the power of health care professionals; (c) the reimbursement of tran
114 article presents the practical approaches a health care professional can take when a reasonable susp
116 duals with arthritis and how communities and health care professionals can facilitate the uptake of e
117 of-life care planning and decision making by health care professionals, care home staff and family co
118 lueprint for the training and development of health care professionals caring for AYA patients with c
119 for curricula and programs designed to train health care professionals caring for AYAO patients.
120 71 eligible patients among 47 pediatricians; health care professional characteristics did not differ
125 ns about their behavioral health care, but a health care professional component might be needed to au
126 as well as ongoing exploration of family and health care professional concerns, may mitigate conflict
130 or when strabismus becomes detectable by non-health care professionals could influence the goals for
132 s: "Are you grateful today for anything that health care professionals did in connection with the bir
135 for bronchiolitis, including a visit to any health care professional due to concerns about respirato
136 iable indicator of the subjective fatigue of health care professionals during prolonged time-on-duty.
137 hat they had received practical support from health care professionals during the child's illness tra
138 .66; P < .001) and sent more emails to their health care professionals during the first 30 days after
139 of this narrative review will help pediatric health care professionals (eg, nurses, social workers, a
141 utrition and physical activity education for health care professionals, evaluates the current pedagog
142 alistic hopefulness was the process by which health care professionals facilitated the emotional and
145 tic reviews of educational interventions for health care professionals: finding reports of medical ed
146 e significantly higher for patients than for health care professionals for both experiments (>99.8 vs
147 mes at the time of survey: bitterness toward health care professionals for not having done everything
148 no clinical practice guidelines available to health care professionals for the safe hospital discharg
150 mbination drugs, given with supervision by a health care professional, for 3 months vs 270 daily dose
156 isk are still being defined, we believe that health care professionals have a responsibility to encou
157 the flight crew, public health officials and health care professionals have an important role in the
159 At the same time, many physicians and other health care professionals have argued that the quality o
160 nefits only individuals with celiac disease, health care professionals have struggled to separate the
163 ement with screening undertaken by a trained health care professional (HCP), and its test-retest reli
166 While there were examples of good practice, health care professionals in acute settings were not gra
168 ractive case-based training conferences with health care professionals in Africa, Asia, and the Carib
170 g less optimistic message content to support health care professionals in delivering less optimistic
171 It highlights the powerful influence of health care professionals in facilitating this process t
173 rehensive contemporary update of SCAD to aid health care professionals in managing these patients in
174 n even greater need for improved training of health care professionals in nutrition and physical acti
175 between US dermatologists and allergists and health care professionals in other areas of the world.
176 Both treatments were administered by trained health care professionals in small groups, twice a week
177 ons to train and credential large numbers of health care professionals in the use of pediatric POC ul
178 s the important role of friends, family, and health-care professionals in the sanctioning of consulta
179 r opioid use disorder, including training of health-care professionals in the treatment and preventio
180 ains a dearth of educational programming for health-care professionals in transgender health, althoug
181 ist-based teams to develop and use cadres of health-care professionals, including pharmacists, nurses
182 shop was convened to generate principles for health-care professionals, intended as practical guidanc
183 is study indicates the confidence with which health care professionals involved in meningococcal scre
186 ust be a high priority for policy makers and health care professionals involved in treating human imm
187 lex, and given the wide range and numbers of health-care professionals involved, an enormous potentia
188 ualities in care need to be addressed by all health-care professionals involved, including those from
189 ution of occupational exposures to asthma in health care professionals is not trivial, meriting both
191 on, one of the most challenging tasks facing health-care professionals is how to communicate this to
192 Collaboration across general and specialised health-care professionals is needed to fully address the
194 ithin the family (P = .00) and trusting that health care professionals made every possible effort to
195 a has been criticized based on a theory that health care professionals manage patient care to meet th
196 gests that careful attention to foot care by health care professionals may be more important than the
200 requently in the care of dying patients, yet health care professionals may not recognize them, may no
202 osure matrix (JEM) in a 2004 survey of Texas health-care professionals (n = 3,650), by asthma status.
203 n-line survey which was disseminated through health care professional networks whose members saw pati
204 rdisciplinary clinical scenarios, with other health care professionals (nursing, anesthesia, critical
206 insulin titration guidance with support from health-care professionals offers superior glycaemic cont
207 nditions and their management is suboptimal; health care professionals often have little diagnostic a
208 tion consisted of 4 key actions: training of health care professionals on nutritional recommendations
209 Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) people and health care professionals on reservations could improve
210 uded because bystander CPR was provided by a health care professional or the arrest occurred in a med
211 seroconversion in high-risk individuals (eg, health-care professionals or injecting drug users) previ
213 icles were summarized by target populations: health care professionals, parents, underserved and disa
215 the number of telephone calls and emails to health care professionals, patient-reported convenience
216 l development pipeline lacks new analgesics, health-care professionals, patients and medicine regulat
217 s are complicated by limited knowledge among health care professionals, persons at risk and in the pu
219 ls of routine child health care delivered by health care professionals (physicians, nurses, medical a
222 thritis were correctly diagnosed by treating health care professionals (range across centers, 0%-64%)
226 her psychological disorders in critical care health-care professionals remained relatively unrecogniz
227 n was to bring to the attention of patients, health-care professionals, researchers, funders, service
228 he primary care physician is often the first health care professional responsible for initiating the
229 ention rather than the hygienist since these health-care professionals saw most of the patients recru
230 f the ADA Board of Directors, which includes health care professionals, scientists, and laypersons.
231 f the ADA Board of Directors, which includes health care professionals, scientists, and laypersons.
238 To address these pervasive disparities, health care professionals should learn more about them a
245 of humor as a coping style and the level of health care professional support may moderate the impact
246 locked within each site, to either d-Nav and health-care professional support (intervention group) or
247 professional support (intervention group) or health-care professional support alone (control group).
249 ther the combination of the d-Nav device and health-care professional support is superior to health-c
250 has been developed in light of feedback from health care professionals, surgeons, and policy makers.
251 AIMS: This two phase study aimed to explore health care professionals' teaching and prescribing prac
252 lating to interventions by routine pediatric health care professionals that aim to reduce child expos
253 ncrease awareness among physicians and other health care professionals that DIC may be a rare but pot
254 n for artificial intelligence (AI), for many health care professionals the term and the functioning o
255 e dissimilarities can create confusion among health care professionals, the general public, and polic
256 al hepatitis education campaign that targets health care professionals, the public, and persons at ri
258 rtments need to continue efforts directed at health care professionals to ensure the recognition, pro
259 ied individuals, it is equally important for health care professionals to have the opportunity to ret
260 ion to surgeons of all disciplines and other health care professionals to help guide the treatment an
261 and general and family physicians and other health care professionals to help prevent the disease.
262 als are completed, an opportunity exists for health care professionals to improve their knowledge and
263 evidence and algorithms to aid patients and health care professionals to jointly determine treatment
265 self-centered individualism, the response of health care professionals to SARS reaffirmed dedication
267 their frequent coexistence should prompt all health-care professionals to embrace clinical practices
270 val and informed consent, 52 patients and 50 health care professionals undertook two discrete choice
275 spital managers, health officials, and other health-care professionals were done by a multidisciplina
276 pertise in neurology or neurosurgery for the health care professional who determines brain death, and
280 from the Other Side of Treatment) group are health care professionals who regularly communicate with
281 here the essential elements of training for health care professionals who work with adolescent and y
284 ibutable to falls, is a common concern among health care professionals, who are hesitant to prescribe
285 es in imaging technology are a challenge for health care professionals, who must determine how best t
286 The COVID-19 pandemic has placed front-line health care professionals-who were already at higher ris
287 cal Oncology (ASCO) is a global community of health care professionals whose stated purpose is to "ma
288 omputer program, which is designed to assist health care professionals with decision making tasks.
289 rnments and donors should focus on providing health care professionals with essential equipment and r
290 se findings provide health policy makers and health care professionals with evidence to help guide fu
293 ative intended to provide surgeons and other health care professionals with the necessary background
294 MSM, as well as the importance of providing health care professionals with training in how to addres
295 in decreasing stigma especially for general health-care professionals with little or no formal menta
298 is an intensive care model involving several health care professionals working together, typically a
299 by the AYA population that are critical for health care professionals working within AYA oncology (A
300 the diagnosis of ADHD relevant to practising health-care professionals working with adult populations