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1 The control group received only routine outpatient care.
2 ing modality for providing highly convenient outpatient care.
3 ormance measures focused on long-term OMT in outpatient care.
4 ears for falls leading to hospitalization or outpatient care.
5 ll-payer, nationally representative audit of outpatient care.
6 s and services, and receipt of inpatient and outpatient care.
7 III antiarrhythmics may occur during routine outpatient care.
8 ing diagnoses from specialized inpatient and outpatient care.
9 up, and blood pressure assessment as part of outpatient care.
10 sions, efficiency improvements, or shifts to outpatient care.
11 inpatient treatment, and transition back to outpatient care.
12 isorders through hospital-based inpatient or outpatient care.
13 ), with most episodes requiring no more than outpatient care.
14 een 2006 and 2012 in hospitals or specialist outpatient care.
15 s of nurses in hospital settings and improve outpatient care.
16 able through better access to and quality of outpatient care.
17 he data available to patients presenting for outpatient care.
18 ot have a dedicated transplant pharmacist in outpatient care.
19 e, and no donor was readmitted and/or needed outpatient care.
20 ortant opportunity to improve the quality of outpatient care.
21 to be focused on both discharge planning and outpatient care.
22 l of disease activity--compared with routine outpatient care.
23 e at an outpatient geriatric clinic or usual outpatient care.
24 e at discharge, than those assigned to usual outpatient care.
25 rial to assess an alternative to traditional outpatient care.
26 rventions targeted to achieving linkage with outpatient care.
27 rvices and 14.6% for patients receiving only outpatient care.
28 ly by reducing inpatient care and increasing outpatient care.
29 dherence to discharge plan and connection to outpatient care.
30 coverage, and revenue generated per hour of outpatient care.
31 -as-usual (N = 12) during the first month of outpatient care.
32 day postdischarge costs were attributable to outpatient care.
33 hospital admission practices or in access to outpatient care.
34 cohol treatment, including full benefits for outpatient care; (2) a rational system of assessment and
36 tients were selected randomly during routine outpatient care after being referred to 1 of the 3 cente
38 cellulitis (cancer vs noncancer cohorts) and outpatient care and costs of APCD acquisition within a 1
39 epression and self-harm within inpatient and outpatient care and death by self-harm between ages 13 a
40 through diagnostic codes from inpatient and outpatient care and death certificates and were confirme
42 are from crisis-oriented services to ongoing outpatient care and produces better housing, clinical, a
47 arly (in <=3 days) and received standardized outpatient care, and high-risk patients were admitted to
48 f antidepressants or anxiolytics, specialist outpatient care, and hospitalization) between mothers re
50 direct medical costs (e.g., long-term care, outpatient care, and pharmaceuticals) as well as indirec
51 sh nationwide registers: hospital discharge, outpatient care, and primary care registers for the peri
52 higher rates of most coexisting conditions, outpatient care, and prior hospitalization for pneumonia
53 spital stay, administering the intervention, outpatient care, and readmission (-359 dollars [95% CI,
55 antibiotic and HCQ sales in inpatient versus outpatient care, and the suboptimal number of pre- and p
57 ich patients with obstructive CAD in routine outpatient care are treated with statins, nonstatins, or
58 ecords (all reimbursements for inpatient and outpatient care, as well as physician collections) of di
60 noninstitutional rural setting and receiving outpatient care at a rural-based clinic in Tennessee wer
61 during month 1, completed 30 and 90 days of outpatient care at higher rates, and experienced fewer p
62 ients aged 18 to 45 years who sought routine outpatient care at the otolaryngology clinic at Boston M
63 Modification [ICD-10-CM] codes) who received outpatient care at VHA facilities from January 1, 2005,
64 proportion of time that should be devoted to outpatient care (at least one third of the clerkship).
65 h Black decedents were more likely to access outpatient care before death (suicide: 595 [49.5%] compa
67 cted lower likelihood of using mental health outpatient care, but greater likelihood of receiving sub
68 dable if individuals have access to adequate outpatient care, but the extent to which individuals use
69 medical records (including all inpatient and outpatient care by any provider) until death or migratio
70 examined and included concurrent diagnoses, outpatient care by discipline, and emergency/urgent care
73 an tripled the odds of successful linkage to outpatient care: communication about patients' discharge
74 tients for whom they provide the majority of outpatient care, compared with 21.0% of medical speciali
75 16-51 y), identified from the inpatient and outpatient care components of the Swedish National Patie
76 of antibiotic use patterns in inpatient and outpatient care consistently demonstrate considerable in
79 In addition, the total hospitalization and outpatient care days was reduced by as much as 76% with
83 vings derived largely from lower spending on outpatient care (differential change, -$73; 95% CI, -$97
85 diabetes without heart failure that received outpatient care during 2010 at Veterans Affairs medical
86 patients used more inpatient and nonprimary outpatient care during the first 6-year period after und
88 ated all Medicare payments for inpatient and outpatient care during the six-month period after admiss
89 estimated from expenditure on primary care, outpatient care, emergency care, hospital inpatient care
90 ce readmission include planned transition to outpatient care, especially among patients with a high r
95 e needed to ensure high standards of care in outpatient care facilities, such as hematology/oncology
96 after 14 days of follow-up for those seeking outpatient care (FLU 002) or after 60 days for those hos
97 es enrolled patients aged >=6 months seeking outpatient care for acute respiratory illness with cough
98 ts (aged 55 years) receiving in-hospital and outpatient care for AMI at 127 centers in the US and Can
101 ean OOP expenditures per disease episode for outpatient care for diarrhea, pneumonia, pertussis, and
102 ics aim to facilitate a timely transition to outpatient care for inpatients with opioid use disorder
103 every behavioral health care dollar spent on outpatient care for patients with bipolar disorder, $1.8
104 uggest opportunities to improve longitudinal outpatient care for patients with HF after hospital disc
105 ardized approach to measuring the quality of outpatient care for schizophrenia and used it to evaluat
106 in Sweden examined patients who presented to outpatient care for the first time between 1 January 201
108 onal sample of privately insured patients in outpatient care from the IBM MarketScan Database and inc
110 zed with the burden of RSV disease including outpatient care, hospitalization, and death for adults a
111 g COPD was greater among nurses who provided outpatient care (HR, 1.24; 95% CI, 1.04-1.47) and nurses
112 tal readmissions, length of hospital stays), outpatient care (ie, outpatient surgery, physician visit
114 in study hospitals, who sought inpatient or outpatient care in a study hospital, and who resided in
117 mulation framework, nationwide inpatient and outpatient care in Sweden from July 1, 2006, to December
118 cially among individuals who did not receive outpatient care in the 6 months post incarceration.
119 atment of acute and chronic illness and from outpatient care in the office to inpatient care in the i
121 data at regular follow-up visits and during outpatient care, including complete blood counts and hep
122 tion of telehealth, our program restructured outpatient care, initiating a shared clinic model and in
123 ng surgery were $19,466 +/- 29,869, of which outpatient care, inpatient care, and pharmacotherapy rep
124 ians agreed that the most crucial element of outpatient care is clinical skill, but they disagreed ab
127 in transitioning patients from inpatient to outpatient care is one of the most salient themes in men
128 reased, elderly patients may forgo important outpatient care, leading to increased use of hospital ca
130 d care attempts to contain costs by limiting outpatient care may not affect total health care expendi
131 cility and physician services suggested that outpatient care may shift away from higher-cost facility
132 rect admission among children with access to outpatient care might be an effective strategy to reduce
133 The < 35 weeks GA protocol is essential, and outpatient care must be integrated into program planning
134 are alone (i.e., routine transition support, outpatient care; n = 342) or additional Sepsis Transitio
136 unprecedented shift to remote heart failure outpatient care occurred during the coronavirus disease
137 ractice, the authors characterized the usual outpatient care of acute-phase major depression in a pri
138 rus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in 2020 outpatient care of neovascular age-related macular degen
139 were measured for home health care, hospital outpatient care, office visits, emergency department use
141 lace coverage, which may reflect barriers to outpatient care or lower cost-sharing barriers to ED car
142 s, the odds remained elevated for specialist outpatient care (OR, 1.13; 95% CI, 1.02-1.24) and hospit
143 44; 95% CI, 1.37-1.51), receiving specialist outpatient care (OR, 2.27; 95% CI, 2.13-2.44), and being
145 nd TM, covering hospital inpatient services, outpatient care, Part D drugs, and hospice services.
146 879 [IQR, $52 498-$172 631]; P < .001), with outpatient care, pharmacy, and surgery-related costs con
148 medical records (including all inpatient and outpatient care provided by all local providers) regardi
149 representative surveys to examine trends in outpatient care provided by physicians and nonphysician
150 s using nationally representative surveys of outpatient care provision, supplemented by insurance cla
152 examined electronic medical-record data for outpatient care received between 2003 and 2006 by 250,62
153 at black patients may have reduced access to outpatient care, resulting in a higher number of hospita
155 V.1 and EG.5) differed between inpatient and outpatient care settings during periods of cocirculation
156 study in 11 ECT suites serving inpatient and outpatient care settings in seven National Health Servic
158 h services, but strategies are needed in all outpatient care settings to ensure accurate UTI diagnosi
160 ard ratio [sHR], 12.6; 95% CI, 10.5-15.2) or outpatient care (sHR, 7.5; 95% CI, 6.5-8.8), and prior s
161 ide registers of inpatient care, specialized outpatient care, sickness absence, and disability pensio
162 care registers of inpatient and specialized outpatient care, sickness absence, and disability pensio
163 ide registers of inpatient care, specialized outpatient care, sickness absence, and disability pensio
164 rom registers of inpatient care, specialized outpatient care, sickness absence, and disability pensio
165 ter databases of inpatient care, specialized outpatient care, sickness absences, and disability pensi
166 , to November 30, 2021, across more than 200 outpatient care sites in Pennsylvania and Maryland.
167 sychiatric treatments, such as inpatient and outpatient care, social interventions, psychological tre
168 I, 1.04-1.68) but lower levels of subsequent outpatient care, such as physician visits (decreased SCC
169 icaid (aOR 0.92; P < .001) patients had less outpatient care than their privately insured counterpart
170 imited in its capacity to affect outcomes of outpatient care, the setting of most medical activities.
171 , we aim to describe rapid transition in our outpatient care to a telehealth model in a general thora
174 n identified physicians who provided routine outpatient care to these patients using National Provide
175 rol conditions (standard of care referral to outpatient care) to intervention conditions (immediate t
177 y, health conditions, disability status, and outpatient care use among 2 groups of US adults aged 55
180 ol]) and preventable use outcomes, including outpatient care use, preventable emergency department vi
182 ore SCCE was associated with more dental and outpatient care utilization and reduced inpatient and co
184 ho did not had increased odds of SUD-related outpatient care visits (OR, 1.10; 95% CI, 1.02-1.20).
186 s associated with increased frequency of HIV outpatient care visits at 6-month (aOR=1.39, 95% CI [1.0
187 were used to identify maternal and paternal outpatient care visits for mental health (substance use
188 ation with linkage to HIV care, frequency of outpatient care visits, retention in care and viral supp
189 ation with linkage to HIV care, frequency of outpatient care visits, retention, and viral suppression
191 s with low-risk febrile neutropenia for whom outpatient care was feasible, comparing inpatient treatm
193 n diagnoses, inpatient care, and specialized outpatient care were obtained from the Hospital Discharg
194 At high risk for unsuccessful linkage to outpatient care were patients with a persistent mental i
196 voidance of disease-specific admissions, and outpatient care) were examined using logistic regression
197 fluoxetine or placebo and were discharged to outpatient care, where they also received cognitive-beha
198 022, from patients diagnosed with HF seeking outpatient care within 3 large practice networks in Conn
199 maging-confirmed hepatic steatosis receiving outpatient care within the national Veterans Health Admi