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1 fically adapted treatment setting, including psychosocial support.
2 e mortality, suggesting a potential role for psychosocial support.
3 dverse-event management, and nutritional and psychosocial support.
4 potential treatments, including the value of psychosocial support.
5 ntrol, a comfortable setting, and continuous psychosocial support.
6 that included a comprehensive assessment of psychosocial support.
7 ort message service (SMS) notifications, and psychosocial support.
8 Patients coping with rare diseases need psychosocial support.
9 patients with AGA may need psychological and psychosocial support.
10 treatment, monitoring, patient education and psychosocial support.
11 s assessing coping style, health status, and psychosocial supports.
12 ime of survey, 56.0 [14.1] years) requesting psychosocial support, 3480 (68.5%) reported cognitive sy
13 t strongly endorsed were general care (78%), psychosocial support (73%), and health promotion (73%).
14 ce by reviewing reports of mental health and psychosocial support activities (2007-10); funding by an
15 nd optimization of supportive care measures, psychosocial support, adherence interventions, oncoferti
16 bereaved families without access to crucial psychosocial support and at risk for illnesses that exac
19 erizing quality measures assessing their own psychosocial support and their child's hospital resource
20 tool for symptom management, (3) barriers to psychosocial support, and (4) external factors magnifyin
22 , PCPs' beliefs about who is able to provide psychosocial support, and oncologist and PCP preference
23 ts are working to integrate symptom control, psychosocial support, and palliative care into the routi
24 idence, beliefs about who is able to provide psychosocial support, and preferences for shared respons
25 idence, beliefs about who is able to provide psychosocial support, and preferred models for survivors
26 childhood interventions (health, nutrition, psychosocial support, and water, sanitation, and hygiene
27 provision of practical training, medication, psychosocial supports, and, when appropriate, work with
28 access to health care services, and limited psychosocial support are vulnerable to experience mental
29 rehabilitation, including physiotherapy and psychosocial support, are essential components of Buruli
30 roper and prompt treatment/access, including psychosocial support, are needed to better understand, p
32 elihood of survival among patients receiving psychosocial support compared to control groups receivin
33 for several interventions (psychotherapy and psychosocial supports) compared with usual care or waiti
34 safety net and reassurance (availability of psychosocial support, confidence in kidney-focused care,
35 inical assessment, management, and aftercare psychosocial support could therefore potentially reduce
36 ive care as usual, which may include routine psychosocial support, daily structure provided by caregi
37 essment, care planning, symptom control, and psychosocial support delivered on inpatient wards or at
40 apy (0.33 [95% Cr, 0.21-0.45]), provision of psychosocial support for parents (1.01 [95% Cr, 0.57-1.4
41 tute a promising source of informational and psychosocial support for patients, caregivers, and candi
42 donor and recipient advocacy and continuing psychosocial support for the family unit postdonation.
43 diatric issues after transplantation include psychosocial support for the patient and family with reg
46 ychotherapy, school-based support, and other psychosocial support) for internalising symptoms (six RC
47 diagnoses who endorsed interest in receiving psychosocial support from a health care team member.
48 rent possible models of service delivery for psychosocial support, from fully integrated gastropsycho
49 entions have predominated historically(1,2), psychosocial support has attracted substantial interest(
51 e training and educational, nutritional, and psychosocial support, improves symptoms and exercise tol
52 Prior reviews of interventions augmenting psychosocial support in medical settings have reported m
54 lowing risk communication, but some may need psychosocial support in the short term following predict
55 al organizational-level solutions to enhance psychosocial support, including respite services, online
58 nics, and health organizations have provided psychosocial support interventions for medical patients
59 addresses the questions of how effective are psychosocial support interventions in improving patient
60 uated randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of psychosocial support interventions in inpatient and outp
62 nsplant programs should ensure that adequate psychosocial support is available to all donors who need
63 nce psychiatric diagnosis, coping style, and psychosocial support may contribute differently to predi
65 -based research agenda for mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) interventions in humanitari
66 hort study, we used longitudinal data from a psychosocial support programme in which 1376 caregivers
70 t of symptoms and 'Care beyond medicines' of psychosocial support to accommodate decline and maintain
71 ustaining programming, and the importance of psychosocial support to mediating students' mental healt
72 behaviours, nutrition, and weight; providing psychosocial support to reduce maternal stress and preve
73 tions of caregivers might need more targeted psychosocial support to reduce the long-term effect of t
74 iables, the child's medical characteristics, psychosocial support use, and the World Health Organizat
75 d (4) the clinician-patient relationship and psychosocial support were key to shared decision-making
76 of differentiated care models and providing psychosocial support will be key in reaching populations
77 cal impact of a possible radiation exposure, psychosocial support will be required for those exposed,