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1 rectives (ADs) in hospital files, and use of hospital care.
2 those with frequent exacerbations requiring hospital care.
3 standards at rates similar to those of acute hospital care.
4 g with the aim of shortening the duration of hospital care.
5 commended care for newer agents and early in-hospital care.
6 al agents to make judgments about quality of hospital care.
7 prove the quality of health care, especially hospital care.
8 ms consisting of antibiotic distribution and hospital care.
9 to testing only those whose symptoms warrant hospital care.
10 ied provides outcomes comparable to those of hospital care.
11 a sophisticated and influential appraisal of hospital care.
12 uickly and cost-effectively than did routine hospital care.
13 taining treatments or the consequent cost of hospital care.
14 umulatively expensive condition in pediatric hospital care.
15 entia, to become a more routine component of hospital care.
16 and potentially preventable complications of hospital care.
17 e prevented annually, depending on access to hospital care.
18 h studies into older people's experiences of hospital care.
19 e was associated with a higher likelihood of hospital care.
20 -limiting disease with little or no need for hospital care.
21 ed in the program and who received inpatient hospital care.
22 h similar diagnoses who received entirely in-hospital care.
23 ort, thereby reducing the overall demand for hospital care.
24 combined from either inpatient or outpatient hospital care.
25 nds in community responder, prehospital, and hospital care.
26 clinical course, outcome, and utilization of hospital care.
27 and a total of 91 675 episodes of inpatient hospital care.
28 alth Problems, Tenth Revision diagnoses from hospital care.
29 aving COVID-19 infection requiring inpatient hospital care.
30 mulatively expensive conditions in pediatric hospital care.
31 aints that undermine the quality of district hospital care.
32 ction in the high direct medical cost of SUD hospital care.
33 n of physician-level variation in the use of hospital care.
34 The setting was integrated institutionalized hospital care.
35 easing physical activity compared with usual hospital care.
36 bably is not a sufficient tool for improving hospital care.
37 s, lower 30-day mortality, and lower cost of hospital care.
38 may permit targeted treatment of patients in hospital care.
39 to patient SDH factors beyond the quality of hospital care.
40 of great concern, both for outpatient and in hospital care.
41 o developments in public health, primary and hospital care.
42 cy medicine are re-defining the scope of pre-hospital care.
43 mperature management during their postarrest hospital care.
44 e need to develop a masterplan for improving hospital care.
45 tion is often expressed about the quality of hospital care.
46 rience long-term bowel dysfunction requiring hospital care.
47 ove patient outcomes and experience in acute hospital care.
48 outpatient care, leading to increased use of hospital care.
49 that provided relevant information on acute hospital care (25 LMICs; 232,550 patients) and 11 studie
50 wer for hospital-at-home care than for acute hospital care (5081 dollars vs. 7480 dollars) (P < 0.001
53 e mortality rates to evaluate the quality of hospital care, although the usefulness of this metric ha
55 ation was associated with improved access to hospital care and an increase in avoided referrals to th
56 ation was associated with improved access to hospital care and avoidance of hospital referrals, it wa
57 introduction of pulse oximetry into routine hospital care and clinical and biomedical mentoring and
58 epresents a major increase in high-intensity hospital care and costs for one of the most common and c
59 become the means to exclude internists from hospital care and deprive them of an important source of
61 ital readmissions as a measure of suboptimal hospital care and have made reducing readmission rates a
64 real-time data on confirmed cases requiring hospital care and mortality to provide up-to-date predic
65 rial was conducted in Ontario, Canada, where hospital care and physician services are publicly funded
66 Acute care expenditures, principally for hospital care and physicians' services, increase at a re
68 table prehospital care, patient transfer, in-hospital care and rehabilitation systems for injured per
69 association of e-consultation with access to hospital care and the avoidance of hospital referrals, r
70 ported on outcomes associated with access to hospital care and the avoidance of hospital referrals.
74 cians and families, between primary care and hospital care, and provide medical education to patients
75 l rupture may be unrelated to the quality of hospital care, and rather associated with inadequate acc
76 r risk of complications or appendectomy than hospital care, and should be included in shared decision
78 n the enduring need for free or reduced-cost hospital care as a safety net for uninsured and underins
81 age with acute gastroenteritis who received hospital care at the Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in
82 anned escalations manifest as a breakdown of hospital care attributable to clinician error through mi
83 y measures across 4 domains of patient care (hospital care, avoidance of the emergency department [ED
84 , AND PARTICIPANTS: Cross-sectional study of hospital care between January 1 and December 31, 2004, f
86 deal with the increased demand for bed-based hospital care, but clinical effectiveness is uncertain.
87 th neither increased mortality nor increased hospital care, but the clinical features suggesting resp
88 ses in the use of Medicare-reimbursed non-VA hospital care by veterans eligible for both VA care and
91 ther physicians, and the question of whether hospital care constitutes a new medical specialty has be
93 ropiprant on quality-adjusted life years and hospital care costs (2012 UK pound; converted into US $
94 le Poisson regression estimated appendicitis hospital care costs associated with a delayed diagnosis
96 8 times) the adjusted increased appendicitis hospital care costs compared with non-Hispanic White pat
97 e, disability, quality of life, dementia and hospital care costs stratified by haematoma location.
104 014 was used to compare quality and costs of hospital care delivered by locum tenens and non-locum te
106 compare the cost-effectiveness of: standard hospital care-detoxification for opioids, no addiction c
108 = 21) required significantly less inpatient hospital care during follow-up than did those receiving
109 = 21) required significantly less inpatient hospital care during follow-up when compared to those re
110 There were 528 e-scooter injuries requiring hospital care during the unrestricted period and 318 inj
111 ; CathPCI enrolled 632,557 patients in 1,337 hospitals; CARE enrolled 4,934 patients in 130 hospitals
113 nd a public health concern, as they increase hospital care expenses and reduce patients' quality of l
115 quent, and the largest component of cost was hospital care for a small proportion of patients (5%).
116 ents for whom there were Medicare claims for hospital care for acute myocardial infarction in 1992.
117 rior to in-home physician visits during home hospital care for adverse events and patient experience,
118 Despite careful evaluation of changes in hospital care for community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), li
120 o not improve outcomes or reduce costs of in-hospital care for general populations of medical and sur
123 talized within 72 hours or to receive active hospital care for more than 6 hours than those with unal
125 ts; challenges or barriers in the area of in-hospital care for patients; and challenges or barriers i
127 ange of approaches to quality improvement in hospital care for people at the end of their lives and f
132 estimated that the aggregate cost of sepsis hospital care for the entire U.S. population was at leas
135 g death from trauma, and the standard of pre-hospital care for those surviving the primary injury is
136 erventions to improve access to high-quality hospital care for those with non-SARS-CoV-2 diseases.
137 ad the same treatment effectiveness as acute hospital care for urban, poor, acutely ill voluntary pat
139 nfected patients in a large urban safety-net hospital caring for patients with limited access to medi
143 pital cardiac arrest is likely to vary among hospitals caring for children,validated methods to risk-
144 r HF was similar across 11 of 14 measures at hospitals caring for high proportions of Black patients
147 l characteristics (safety net [as defined by hospitals caring for more than double their Medicaid sha
149 s (27.3% vs 25.6%, = -1.7 pp, P = .003), and hospitals caring for the most patients with disabilities
152 risk of long-term care admission than the in-hospital care group (RR, 0.16; 95% CI, 0.03-0.74; I2 = 0
153 ffer between the hospital-at-home and the in-hospital care groups (RR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.61-1.15; I2 =
159 e extent to which patients require follow-up hospital care, help inform patient choices, and assist i
160 though less procedurally oriented than acute hospital care, hospital-at-home care met quality standar
161 D PARTICIPANTS: An observational analysis of hospital care in 350 academic and nonacademic US centers
162 Furthermore, the telephone can provide supra-hospital care in Parkinson disease and manage patients w
163 In this randomized clinical trial of home hospital care in rural settings, cost and readmission we
168 ed hospital-at-home care chose it over acute hospital care; in the third site, 29% of patients chose
169 should target ART clinic, hospital, and post-hospital care, including differentiated care focusing on
171 hat integrating harm reduction services into hospital care increased access for populations unfamilia
172 e on the overall IM-ITE, the Dartmouth Atlas hospital care intensity (HCI) index of the program's pri
178 hat the availability of definitive pediatric hospital care is significantly more limited than adult c
180 ome and middle-income countries, barriers to hospital care lead to delayed, inadequate, or no treatme
182 There are lessons to be learned from out-of-hospital care, military medicine, humanitarian medicine,
183 Proper prehospital care, a basic low-cost hospital care model, and mental health counseling servic
186 program has occurred, since most psychiatric hospital care now takes place in community hospitals.
188 ortive care, specifically in relation to the hospital care of older people with frailty, to inform fu
189 ortive care, specifically in relation to the hospital care of older people with frailty, to inform fu
190 and invasive cardiologists may differ in the hospital care of patients with acute myocardial infarcti
191 her direct costs for linezolid, costs per in-hospital care of survivors, and posthospitalization cost
192 of the expenditure in the elderly for acute hospital care), of which $2.1 billion was incurred by ca
193 rty-seven studies were included; 28 examined hospital care only and 16 focused on obstetrical care.
194 icosteroids and/or antibiotics, a step-up in hospital care or readmission for respiratory reasons, or
195 eveloping psychiatric diseases that required hospital care or treatment with prescription medication.
196 termine whether for-profit status influenced hospitals' care or outcomes among non-ST-segment elevati
201 ho were discharged from 2 large urban public hospitals caring primarily for patients receiving Medica
203 As far as we know, there are no tested in-hospital care programmes for paediatric traumatic brain
205 home from the community as a substitute for hospital care provides superior outcomes and lower cost,
206 COVID-19 surges in 2020 caused concern over hospital care quality for patients without COVID-19.
207 ealth care costs while maintaining access to hospital care, quality of care, and a good work balance
211 e of the surge establishing a new normal for hospital care requires a considered balance of maintaini
212 of the surge, establishing a new normal for hospital care requires maintaining vigilance to detect e
214 Risk for Venous Thromboembolism in the Acute Hospital Care Setting (ENDORSE) survey, conducted in 358
215 Risk for Venous Thromboembolism in the Acute Hospital Care Setting) study is a multinational cross-se
216 sess the prevalence of VTE risk in the acute hospital care setting, and to determine the proportion o
218 with comprehensive health insurance use more hospital care than those who are uninsured or have high-
220 Advances continue in the organization of pre-hospital care, the techniques of trauma surgery and crit
221 nely collected administrative statistics for hospital care: the Hospital In-Patient Enquiry (data for
222 ce that home health care was substituted for hospital care; the metropolitan statistical areas with h
223 We then removed the effect of treatment and hospital care to estimate additional cases and deaths fr
224 h mortality rate; however, providing routine hospital care to low risk patients may not be time- or c
225 prove the potential of prehospital and early hospital care to pre-empt or more rapidly reverse hypoxa
226 The transfer of skills and procedures from hospital care to pre-hospital medicine enables early adv
227 surance claims of youth mental health ED and hospital care took place between March 2019 and February
230 tween January 11, 2021, and May 22, 2022, in hospital care units at Haukeland University Hospital in
232 olleagues that examined specialist-dominated hospital care versus community-based care in the United
233 he creation of surge capacity for supportive hospital care via expanded training of nonemergency care
234 Finally, only in the US, low quality of in-hospital care was associated with a higher 1-year cardia
243 s than patients receiving standard inpatient hospital care, with no significant increase in mortality
244 e death, many discussions occur during acute hospital care, with providers other than oncologists, an
246 nosocomial bloodstream infections (BSIs) and hospital care workers (HCWs) in the surgical and neonata
247 asmapheresis donors (n = 182), PCR-confirmed hospital care workers (n = 47), and a group of longitudi
248 e are intended to accelerate improvements in hospital care, yet little is known about the benefits of