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1 olving issues of nonbeneficial treatment and rationing.
2 posal could lower costs by 90% and eliminate rationing.
3 cticed and the lack of a clear definition of rationing.
4 st allocation of these services will require rationing.
5  measures such as quarantine, isolation, and rationing.
6 r a physician's action to quality as bedside rationing.
7 ions of scenarios requiring NYVAG ventilator rationing.
8 gthening are required to reduce the need for rationing.
9 n programmes, and the ending of postwar food rationing.
10 esources at times of high demand may lead to rationing.
11 ach may represent an explicit alternative to rationing achieved through the use of patient copayments
12 fing and turnover levels were not related to rationing activities.
13 ved this triage inefficiency, and ventilator rationing after a time trial, when most ventilator ratio
14                               In utero sugar rationing alone accounted for about one-third of the ris
15 attending senior ICU physicians ( n = 13) in rationing, an impending ICU congestion was simulated.
16  the government implemented was a system for rationing and distributing surgical masks to the public
17   Cost containment is necessary but requires rationing and limitations on a patient's right to consum
18       Furthermore, both groups perceive that rationing and other cost-related practices sometimes occ
19 ir whole population in a sustainable manner, rationing and setting priorities for the selection of in
20                                              Rationing and variation of access are ethically and poli
21 s more religious, more opposed to healthcare rationing, and more protective of patients, tended to pr
22                                    We define rationing as "the allocation of healthcare resources in
23                                Few perceived rationing as occurring "frequently" (occurring >75% of t
24 hips could ever survive a frank admission of rationing at the bedside.
25 morbid elderly patients, indicating possible rationing based on chronologic age.
26                     This study suggests that rationing by clinical severity contradicts the evidence.
27 is article reviews the concept of healthcare rationing by exploring the many different definitions an
28 physicians should consciously participate in rationing by saying "no" to patients' requests for some
29  patient autonomy; third, an extreme fear of rationing by the general public; and fourth, fee-for-ser
30 reatly hampered by the fact that identifying rationing can be very subjective given the relatively in
31 rtension jointly mediated 31.1% of the sugar rationing-cardiovascular disease association, whereas bi
32 peat); contingency planning (surge capacity, rationing care, and resource distribution); and strategi
33          We have developed a taxonomy of the rationing choices faced by intensivists as a framework f
34 ics, nonbeneficial treatment in the ICU, and rationing considerations.
35 ve, and it is therefore a likely place where rationing could occur.
36 ficacy influence the propriety of disclosing rationing decisions in the intensive care unit.
37                        This taxonomy divides rationing decisions into three categories.
38  and ethical analysis can further inform the rationing decisions that arise in the taxonomy described
39                              First are those rationing decisions that may be justified by external co
40                             NYVAG ventilator rationing did not exacerbate existing health disparities
41 d patients experiencing simulated ventilator rationing during the apex of the New York City COVID-19
42                            Exposure to sugar rationing during the first 1000 days of life was associa
43 paring adults conceived just before or after rationing ended, we found that early-life rationing redu
44 consumption nearly doubled immediately after rationing ended.
45                                 Many vaccine rationing guidelines urge planners to recognize, and ide
46                                 As a result, rationing has been an unfortunate focus in recent decade
47 s Standards of Care (CSC) are guidelines for rationing health care resources during public health eme
48 s has led many to wonder if we are, in fact, rationing health care.
49 s of birth date relative to the end of sugar rationing in 1953.
50 tinent literature on resource allocation and rationing in intensive care units.
51 n from the end of the United Kingdom's sugar rationing in September 1953.
52  nonmaleficence, paternalism, justice, duty, rationing, informed consent, and withdrawing treatment.
53 the treatment costs of this common disorder, rationing is applied in many health care systems, often
54  language distinction between allocation and rationing is morally meaningful and can help oncologists
55 g of health care is unethical, we argue that rationing is not only unavoidable but essential to ensur
56                                              Rationing is seldom required in high-income settings but
57  conditions to identify instances of bedside rationing; leaders of the medical profession, ethicists,
58 ts (eg, the Omicron variant) emerge, further rationing may be required.
59 atients unless the healthcare system pursues rationing, more effective advanced care planning, and au
60 g from the drought affecting Lake Urmia, and rationing must be applied to the upstream water demands.
61 tic differentiation, 94.8% of all ventilator rationing occurred after a time trial.
62                         Simulated ventilator rationing occurred for 163.9 patients over 15.0 days, 44
63 ing after a time trial, when most ventilator rationing occurred.
64                            When asked if any rationing occurs in their ICUs (using a prestated defini
65  comparative effectiveness research promotes rationing of cancer care.
66 ally significant factors related to implicit rationing of care were the perception of lower staffing
67  ICU beds (to reduce demand through implicit rationing of care).
68 oth poor children and girls this may reflect rationing of care, which may result in increased risks o
69  does not itself determine policy or promote rationing of care.
70 linicians' perceptions of scarcity influence rationing of critical care resources, which may lead to
71 nicians' perceptions of scarcity may lead to rationing of critical care resources.
72 ntensivists have little to guide them in the rationing of critical care services.
73 Global Fund is under pressure to improve its rationing of financial support.
74 viduals." Although some have maintained that rationing of health care is unethical, we argue that rat
75 urces even in wealthy nations, necessitating rationing of limited resources without previously establ
76  from established scales to measure implicit rationing of nursing care (Basel Extent of Rationing of
77 hows a negative association between implicit rationing of nursing care and patient-centered care: i.e
78 le is known about the occurrence of implicit rationing of nursing care and possible contributing fact
79 her research on the relationship of implicit rationing of nursing care and resident and care worker o
80                                     Implicit rationing of nursing care does not occur frequently in S
81 evels and patterns of self-reported implicit rationing of nursing care in Swiss nursing homes and (2)
82                                     Implicit rationing of nursing care refers to the withdrawal of or
83 e work environment and the level of implicit rationing of nursing care should be taken into considera
84       Furthermore, higher levels of implicit rationing of nursing care were associated with lower lev
85 t rationing of nursing care (Basel Extent of Rationing of Nursing Care), perceptions of leadership ab
86 ed care: i.e.the lower the level of implicit rationing of nursing care, the better patients understoo
87 ressors could possibly lead to less implicit rationing of nursing care.
88 r, and work environment factors and implicit rationing of nursing care.
89 ng, leadership ability and level of implicit rationing of nursing care.
90 ch as the nurse work environment or implicit rationing of nursing care.
91  nurse work environment factors and implicit rationing of nursing care.
92                                              Rationing of scarce health-care resources is distressing
93 ffordability might have prevented deaths and rationing of scarce resources, such as intensive care un
94                  This study does not support rationing of TKR based on increased BMI.
95 re unfounded against the interests of a just rationing program and the broader population it serves.
96 er rationing ended, we found that early-life rationing reduced type 2 diabetes and hypertension risk
97                                              Rationing restricted sugar intake to levels within curre
98 encounters serious ethical dilemmas, such as rationing scarce resources, influencing individuals to c
99 ons or practices that may be associated with rationing showed that a substantial minority respondents
100 h much has been written about the concept of rationing, there are few data about the practice, with t
101                        Medicaid, however, is rationing these drugs, and other insurers have restricte
102        Compared with people never exposed to rationing, those exposed in utero plus 1-2 years had haz
103               While economists use the word "rationing" to describe all limitations on resource utili
104 ady limited health care resources and forced rationing, triage, and prioritization of care in general
105                                        Sugar rationing was also associated with a modest increase in
106                     Longer exposure to sugar rationing was associated with progressively lower cardio
107  But even physicians who endorse the idea of rationing wonder whether patient-physician relationships
108 2.1%-28.4%] of those selected for ventilator rationing would have survived if provided a ventilator).

 
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