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1 ears during a 1-year period at a large urban pediatric hospital.
2 laryngology airway clinic at a tertiary care pediatric hospital.
3 ocedure types at a specialized tertiary care pediatric hospital.
4       Setting: Single-center, tertiary-care, pediatric hospital.
5 a unified framework for risk assessment in a pediatric hospital.
6 ethods, and 80 cases postintervention at our pediatric hospital.
7 s over a 27-day period in a large, tertiary, pediatric hospital.
8 rse triage for surge capacity in an academic pediatric hospital.
9 ory illness (ARI) surveillance at a large US pediatric hospital.
10                                Tertiary care pediatric hospital.
11 raphy laboratory at a tertiary care academic pediatric hospital.
12                       A single tertiary care pediatric hospital.
13 ilar MRSA populations than pairs including a pediatric hospital.
14  nasal aspirate specimens from children at a pediatric hospital.
15 ubmitted for analysis in this North American pediatric hospital.
16 al was conducted in an Australian quaternary pediatric hospital.
17 pril 2021 to March 2023 in a quaternary care pediatric hospital.
18 nd May 18, 2024, at a single center academic pediatric hospital.
19 ollaborative and was conducted across 106 US pediatric hospitals.
20 ars of age with DSP variants from 6 tertiary pediatric hospitals.
21 th EoE (7-18 years old) were enrolled from 2 pediatric hospitals.
22                   Setting: Two tertiary care pediatric hospitals.
23  help diabetes technology securely move into pediatric hospitals.
24 ) at 4 university-based academic centers and pediatric hospitals.
25 bservational cohort study at 3 tertiary care pediatric hospitals.
26 ood culture nucleic acid test (BC-GP) in two pediatric hospitals.
27  August 30, 2022, at 2 Australian quaternary pediatric hospitals.
28 d from May to December 2021 at tertiary care pediatric hospitals.
29                             Among a group of pediatric hospitals, 18.8% of admissions and 23.2% of in
30 atient adolescent SUD treatment program at a pediatric hospital, (2) an adolescent medicine program a
31 alth prospective surveillance registry in 39 pediatric hospitals across 27 US states.
32                                          All pediatric hospital admissions (aged <22 years) under inp
33 rus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases, including pediatric hospital admissions.
34                Hospitals were categorized as pediatric hospitals, adult hospitals with pediatric serv
35 ospitals and the outpatient departments of 1 pediatric hospital and 1 private consultation clinic.
36 dmitted to an Italian National Health System pediatric hospital and may act as a substitute for staff
37  analysis that took place at a tertiary care pediatric hospital and patient homes.
38 tomy for PTC from 2010 to 2020 at 3 tertiary pediatric hospitals and 2 tertiary adult and pediatric h
39 ded, randomized clinical trial at 3 tertiary pediatric hospitals and 2 tertiary general medical cente
40 -36%) reduction in antibiotic consumption in pediatric hospitals and a 28% reduction in World Health
41 iology laboratory personnel in free-standing pediatric hospitals and adult hospitals containing pedia
42 rformed in genetics clinics of tertiary care pediatric hospitals and biomedical research institutions
43 has conducted active surveillance for RVA at pediatric hospitals and emergency departments at 3-7 geo
44 March 1, 2012, to April 30, 2015, from 17 US pediatric hospitals and followed up for 1 year.
45 ndotracheal aspirate culture rates across US pediatric hospitals and pediatric intensive care units,
46 rough 2016 in the inpatient departments of 2 pediatric hospitals and the outpatient departments of 1
47 c Health Information System for freestanding pediatric hospitals, annual risk-adjusted mortality rate
48 imary or postsecondary DENV infection from a pediatric hospital-based study in Nicaragua using a Mult
49 14-21 years) and their family members from 4 pediatric hospitals between July 16, 2016, and April 30,
50                                              Pediatric hospital capability level, defined using laten
51                                              Pediatric hospital care has become increasingly concentr
52 pothesis that the availability of definitive pediatric hospital care is significantly more limited th
53 mon and cumulatively expensive conditions in pediatric hospital care.
54 and most cumulatively expensive condition in pediatric hospital care.
55 on with an outpatient CC clinic and tertiary pediatric hospital (Children's Memorial Hermann Hospital
56 ient center for substance use treatment at a pediatric hospital completed an electronic screening too
57 nducted at 2 large, Canadian, tertiary-level pediatric hospitals, comprised all 709 cases of RSV-asso
58 on ventilator/intermediate care unit/general pediatric hospital day, at 2:1:0.7:0.3, respectively.
59  included intermediate care unit and general pediatric hospital days, as well as ICU readmission duri
60  Association accreditation, and adult versus pediatric hospital designation.
61          A multidisciplinary task force at a pediatric hospital developed an evidence-based AP guidel
62 rom a nationally representative sample of US pediatric hospital discharge records collected every 3 y
63  lack of standards undermines the quality of pediatric hospital discharge, hinders quality-improvemen
64 lic intussusception treated in a third-level pediatric hospital during a 52-month period: during the
65  aged younger than 18 years in community and pediatric hospitals during a pandemic period compared wi
66                   Among children admitted to pediatric hospitals for asthma, there was high hospital-
67                                     Many use pediatric hospitals for their inpatient needs.
68 rgical intervention at a third-level Italian pediatric hospital from December 2013 to September 2014
69 tudy of children who presented to a tertiary pediatric hospital from December 2018 to December 2019.
70 hy to evaluate for keratoconus at a tertiary pediatric hospital from July 2018-January 2020.
71 Germany (SARS-CoV-2 KIDS) was performed in 9 pediatric hospitals from May 1 to October 31, 2021.
72 d clinical trial was conducted at a tertiary pediatric hospital in Adelaide, South Australia, from Ap
73 nd MRI in 35 children admitted to a tertiary pediatric hospital in April and May 2020 with a post-cor
74         The study took place in a quaternary pediatric hospital in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
75 h Columbia Children's Hospital, the tertiary pediatric hospital in British Columbia, Canada.
76 ildren's Hospital San Diego, a free-standing pediatric hospital in California.
77 nt nosocomial infections in an acute-setting pediatric hospital in children who were >1 y of age.
78 ollected from logbooks at a large, tertiary, pediatric hospital in Dakar.
79 ommunity settings in a large, urban academic pediatric hospital in Hamilton County, Ohio.
80 rus were detected in 18.6% of AGE in a large pediatric hospital in Kansas City.
81 influenza was small during 2007-2010 in this pediatric hospital in Kenya.
82 from the allergy referral clinic at a public pediatric hospital in Mexico City, together with their p
83  through March 13, 2015, in a large tertiary pediatric hospital in Ohio.
84 m the Cochlear Implant Program at a tertiary pediatric hospital in Ontario, Canada.
85 e outpatient department of a nongovernmental pediatric hospital in Siem Reap.
86 ent for rotavirus gastroenteritis at a large pediatric hospital in Texas in 2009-2010.
87  to May 2024 at a pain treatment clinic at a pediatric hospital in the Northeast United States.
88 mplants during clinical visits to a tertiary pediatric hospital in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, from Jan
89  546 RSV diagnostic tests occurring at 32 US pediatric hospitals in 2013-2023.
90 from 4 tertiary care hospitals in Karachi, 2 pediatric hospitals in Bangladesh, and 2 hospitals in Ne
91 were examined at or referred to two tertiary pediatric hospitals in North America from 1981 through 2
92                               We surveyed 13 pediatric hospitals in North America to obtain objective
93 en January 2000 and May 2014 at six academic pediatric hospitals in North America was performed.
94 lth administrative data from 165 general and pediatric hospitals in Ontario, Canada.
95                          Admissions from all pediatric hospitals in the state of New South Wales, Aus
96 medical emergency teams in a large sample of pediatric hospitals in the United States was not associa
97 ns administrative and laboratory data from 6 pediatric hospitals in the United States.
98 24-hour infusion or a 4-hour infusion at two pediatric hospitals in the United States.
99 pediatric hospitals and 2 tertiary adult and pediatric hospitals in the US.
100 58 hospitals, including 849 non-freestanding pediatric hospitals, in the analytic sample.
101 sociation hospitals contributing data to the Pediatric Hospital Information System (PHIS) database.
102 d patient-level administration data from the Pediatric Hospital Information Systems (PHIS) database,
103 rise, with the most recent analysis from the Pediatric Hospital Information Systems database in the U
104                  Statewide, 157 of 584 (27%) pediatric hospital inpatient deaths occurred in non-PICU
105                                              Pediatric hospital inpatients <25 years of age.
106 d prevalence of this skin integrity issue in pediatric hospitals is still widely unknown, perhaps bec
107 enters, comprising level 1 and 2 stand-alone pediatric hospitals, level 1 and 2 pediatric hospitals w
108 r, nose, and throat department of a tertiary pediatric hospital linked to the United Kingdom's nation
109                                    Across 38 pediatric hospitals, mean annual hospital admission volu
110                       The research agenda in pediatric hospital medicine has seldom considered the pe
111 ealth care professionals with experiences in pediatric hospital medicine in Canada were included.
112                        This patient-oriented pediatric hospital medicine priority setting partnership
113 vey collected unanswered questions regarding pediatric hospital medicine via 3 open-ended questions.
114  The top 10 unanswered research questions in pediatric hospital medicine were established at the fina
115 n children 5-18 y old admitted to a tertiary pediatric hospital (n = 152).
116 itted with suspected encephalitis at 5 major pediatric hospitals nationally between May 2013 and Dece
117 th professionals at an Australian quaternary pediatric hospital network.
118 sectional study was conducted at 36 tertiary pediatric hospitals participating in the Pediatric Healt
119                           In a tertiary care pediatric hospital, patients with first-episode optic ne
120         Little is known regarding changes in pediatric hospital resource use related to mental health
121 hysician (aOR, 3.22; 95% CI, 1.17-8.88) vs a pediatric hospital service.
122  million inhabitants, having 3 tertiary care pediatric hospitals serving the entire population with u
123 vaccination policy in a dedicated quaternary pediatric hospital setting by a multidisciplinary team.
124 osing errors but have not been tested in the pediatric hospital setting.
125 roved bacterial pathogen identification in a pediatric hospital setting.
126                           A recent survey of pediatric hospitals showed a large variability in the ac
127 observation status, a common designation for pediatric hospital stays.
128 : This cohort study was conducted at a large pediatric hospital system in San Diego County (Californi
129 riencing child abuse or neglect at a level I pediatric hospital system in the Southeastern US from Ju
130 t study included patients in a tertiary-care pediatric hospital system who had MIS-C per the Centers
131 cted asymptomatic children diagnosed in nine pediatric hospital testing programs.
132  blinded, prospective single-center tertiary pediatric hospital that included 60 pediatric patients (
133 sed by a 10-year retrospective review at two pediatric hospitals, The Hospital for Sick Children in T
134        Among patients admitted to acute care pediatric hospitals, the rate of unplanned readmissions
135 medical records and treating clinicians at a pediatric hospital to identify patients with unexplained
136                              The capacity of pediatric hospitals to provide treatment to large number
137 o 2004, respectively, at three tertiary-care pediatric hospitals (two American, one Australian).
138  RSV-associated hospitalizations in Canadian pediatric hospitals was substantial, particularly among
139                            At a freestanding pediatric hospital, we retrospectively assessed anti-inf
140 oma between 1989 and 2017 at a tertiary care pediatric hospital were analyzed.
141 omyelitis patients admitted to Angola's main pediatric hospital were examined.
142 n in the emergency department of 2 Brazilian pediatric hospitals were eligible to enter this study.
143  all consecutive patients at a tertiary care pediatric hospital who received ioversol contrast materi
144 2007, to March 31, 2020, in 36 tertiary care pediatric hospitals who participate in the Pediatric Hea
145  between 2/2014 and 2/2020 at two quaternary pediatric hospitals who received CRRT.
146 rd nosocomial transmission of norovirus in a pediatric hospital with a high proportion of immunosuppr
147 MICs for Staphylococcus aureus isolates in a pediatric hospital with a high rate of staphylococcal in
148 wardship programs (ASPs) at 2 combined adult-pediatric hospitals with existing ASPs was associated wi
149       The study included patients from 17 US pediatric hospitals with frontline chemotherapy start da
150         Using the experience of two tertiary pediatric hospitals with six sets of craniopagus twins,
151 and-alone pediatric hospitals, level 1 and 2 pediatric hospitals within an adult hospital, and level

 
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