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1 sicians, nurses, therapists, and respiratory therapists).
2 r advice alone, both delivered by a physical therapist.
3 .8%) a chaplain, and 8 (34.8%) a respiratory therapist.
4 ssive exercise at home managed by a physical therapist.
5  physical exercises supervised by a physical therapist.
6 d few involved the supervision of a physical therapist.
7 s for up to 10% of all referrals to physical therapists.
8 ible to delegate a range of tasks to hygiene-therapists.
9 rican Academy of Orthopaedic Manual Physical Therapists.
10  and language pathologists, and occupational therapists.
11 rapists had better results than first-cohort therapists.
12 itative data and the relevance of its use by therapists.
13 nts and for use by physical and occupational therapists.
14 receive little attention from clinicians and therapists.
15  among nurses vs. physicians and respiratory therapists.
16 lt patients were examined by three different therapists.
17 n experiences following probing by different therapists.
18 be controlled by using multiple, experienced therapists.
19 hological treatment were provided by trained therapists.
20 to orthopedists and physical or occupational therapists.
21 he special needs of these diagnosticians and therapists.
22 tcome assessors but not from participants or therapists.
23 st twice daily" screening led by respiratory therapists.
24 iologists, pain specialists, and nutritional therapists.
25 es in OCD symptoms when conducted by trained therapists.
26 f individual HT (iHT) performed by qualified therapists.
27 f 18 home visits from the study occupational therapists.
28 randomized to treatment delivered by trained therapists.
29 tal health workers or CBT from psychological therapists.
30  0.40 mm probe were observed for patients of therapist 1, and for the quartile of all 60 patients tha
31 I], 0.61-0.90), experience of peer violence (therapist, -10.4%; control, +4.7%; RR, 0.70; 95% CI, 0.5
32 n [SD] age, 36.2 [12.1] years) treated by 20 therapists (19 women and 1 man; mean [SD] age, 40.0 [14.
33                                          For therapist 2 and 3 groups, no differences were found.
34 ercise program at home managed by a physical therapist 2 months after the stroke (home-exercise progr
35 % CI, 0.52-0.95), and violence consequences (therapist, -30.4%; control, -13.0%; RR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.
36 reported reductions in alcohol consequences (therapist, -32.2%; control, -17.7%; odds ratio, 0.56; 95
37 ctions in the occurrence of peer aggression (therapist, -34.3%; control, -16.4%; relative risk [RR],
38 mple included 19 agencies with 23 sites, 130 therapists, 36 supervisors, and 22 executive administrat
39                   A visual screen by hygiene-therapists acted as the index test, and the general dent
40                        Eighty percent of the therapists' administration experiences were positive.
41 rall effect size of the relationship between therapist affect focus and outcome, statistical signific
42 dministrative experience were collected from therapists after each administration.
43 sician, critical care nurse, and respiratory therapist along with the supplies and equipment to opera
44 tion and swallowing by a speech and language therapist), an off-hours pattern (door-to-needle time fo
45 received 8 weekly individual sessions with a therapist and 2 booster sessions.
46 linical evaluation by a trained occupational therapist and an on-road driving evaluation by a masked
47               Combined physician-respiratory therapist and nurse acceptance scores of the study weani
48 chair, climbing a step) taught by a physical therapist and performed independently by the participant
49 at hospital discharge by a licensed physical therapist and rated based on qualitative categories adap
50 s is difficult because of limited numbers of therapists and because of the disabling effects of OCD s
51 -quality qualitative articles indicated that therapists and clients considered art therapy to be a be
52 me to achieve fidelity to treatment than PST therapists and had one-third of the PST therapists' skil
53                                        Older therapists and therapists with more open attitudes were
54 onphysician mental health professionals (eg, therapists), and (4) mental health facility or office-ba
55 , 25% see an orthopedist, 11% see a physical therapist, and 6% see a rheumatologist.
56 ending physician, ICU nurse, ICU respiratory therapist, and nursing supervisor.
57 862 physicians, 941 nurses, 968 occupational therapists, and 879 respiratory therapists (n=3,650).
58                                    Subjects, therapists, and assessors were blind to the treatment co
59 alth professionals, social workers, physical therapists, and dieticians), providing their patients (C
60 s, gastroenterologists, nurses, occupational therapists, and dieticians, can make a major contributio
61  care unit nurses, 24 (44%) were respiratory therapists, and four did not indicate their profession.
62  pulmonary and sleep physicians, respiratory therapists, and methodologists using the Evidence-to-Dec
63 of all Texas physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, and occupational therapists with active lice
64 actors, acupuncturists, naturopaths, massage therapists, and other CAM practitioners.
65  nurses, nonphysician providers, respiratory therapists, and others to provide clinical services.
66 , including physicians, nurses, pharmacists, therapists, and others.
67  of relevance to researchers, physicians and therapists, and patients.
68 espiratory therapists, occupational/physical therapists, and physicians.
69 titioners, physician assistants, respiratory therapists, and registered nurses who elect to receive e
70 t of family-based interventions, training of therapists, and research.
71 n groups (intensive care physicians, nurses, therapists, and respiratory therapists).
72 linical representativeness of their samples, therapists, and settings, suggesting a need for increase
73                                  Respiratory therapists answered a brief online satisfaction survey.
74 States, the evidence clearly suggests dental therapists are clinically competent to safely perform th
75               The experience and training of therapists are crucial.
76  muscle strength obtained independently from therapists are highly related (r = -0.77), but estimates
77                                       Dental therapists are members of the dental team in many countr
78 atment expectancy, and low perception of the therapist as accepting.
79    The type of PT identified by the physical therapists as having the most positive impact also signi
80  rheumatologists, orthopedists, and physical therapists as OA specialists.
81 dental injections, lack of access to trained therapists, as well as dentists' lack of training and ti
82 treatment, the therapist-led (51.7%) and the therapist-assisted (33.3%) conditions had higher binge e
83  waiting list (81.2%) conditions than in the therapist-assisted (68.3%) and self-help (59.7%) conditi
84 roup treatment compared to therapist-led and therapist-assisted group cognitive-behavioral therapy.
85 , controlled proof-of-concept trial of a new therapist-assisted, Internet-based, self-management cogn
86 domly assigned to 20 weeks of therapist-led, therapist-assisted, or self-help group treatment or a wa
87 ian or fellow and an experienced respiratory therapist attempted to obtain both static pressure-volum
88 ation sessions involving equivalent time and therapist attention.
89             We aimed to describe UK physical therapists' attitudes and beliefs regarding exercise and
90 zational factors are important in explaining therapist behavior and use of evidence-based practices,
91 cal therapy is appropriate, because physical therapists can assess mobility limitations and devise cu
92 removal, delirium, and nurse and respiratory therapist clinical workload (on a 10-point visual analog
93 the value of adding LV rehabilitation with a therapist compared with LV services without intervention
94 the value of adding LV rehabilitation with a therapist compared with LV services without intervention
95 response to the suicide, severely distressed therapists, compared to others, reported a significantly
96                        Overall, 482 physical therapists completed their survey.
97 , skills training, telephone coaching, and a therapist consultation team, and little is known about w
98                                   The median therapist contact time was 4 visits of 58 minutes over 8
99 CBT that provided over 8 additional hours of therapist contact.
100 CW job roles, with providers and respiratory therapists contacting themselves significantly more time
101                    Across variables, patient-therapist correlations (0.40-0.66) and overall correct c
102             The results suggest that hygiene-therapists could be used to screen for dental caries and
103 y experienced by ICU survivors, occupational therapists could play an important role in their recover
104 atic review aimed to determine dentists' and therapists' current lesion threshold for carrying our re
105                    Problem-solving treatment therapists delivered 6 sessions during 8 weeks in subjec
106 BS were randomly allocated to receive either therapist-delivered telephone CBT (telephone-CBT group),
107 r generated and unmasked to participants and therapists delivering treatment after randomisation.
108        Although these findings indicate that therapist delivery of group treatment is associated with
109                                       Expert therapists developed prototypes of the ideal regimens of
110 ingle sessions, high session frequency, more therapist direction, flexible use of musical activities,
111  relative experience levels of the cognitive therapists each appear to have contributed to this inter
112 also work in conjunction with rehabilitation therapists, educators, nurses, social care providers, an
113 sponse Questionnaire to identify patterns of therapists' emotional response, and the Shedler-Westen A
114 tudy was to examine the relationship between therapists' emotional responses and patients' personalit
115                                       Twenty therapists employed at a community mental health center
116  effectiveness may depend on a high level of therapist experience or expertise.
117           Health anxiety has been treated by therapists expert in cognitive behaviour therapy with so
118       These cases illuminate common problems therapists face in working with suicidal patients and hi
119                     These data indicate that therapist facilitation of patient affective experience/e
120 atistically significant relationship between therapist facilitation of patient emotional experience/e
121 ematically examined the relationship between therapist facilitation of patient emotional experience/e
122 ient who then died, a treatment decision the therapist felt contributed to the suicide, negative reac
123                                              Therapists' fidelity to the manuals was measured.
124 lus exercise or exercise alone by a physical therapist for 4 weeks.
125 ss of CBT delivered online in real time by a therapist for patients with depression in primary care.
126 ween psychiatrists and cognitive behavioural therapists for 12 months, followed by graduated transfer
127                                              Therapists for 34 patients who died by suicide completed
128                                              Therapists for 36 patients who died by suicide while in
129 erning staffing and availability of physical therapists for ICU patients, and the utilization of PT f
130  after suitable training, are very effective therapists for patients with health anxiety in medical c
131          Surveys were mailed to 984 physical therapists from across the United States.
132             Physiotherapists or occupational therapists gave the treatments.
133 1 patients undergoing ICBT for insomnia with therapist guidance.
134                  The CBT consisted of weekly therapist-guided sessions, with a maximum duration of 24
135                              One respiratory therapist had been reported for tampering with fentanyl;
136                         Second-cohort schema therapists had better results than first-cohort therapis
137  therapy under the supervision of a physical therapist has been shown to improve posture, fitness, mo
138                                 Occupational therapists have an integral role in the multidisciplinar
139   Various interventions provided by physical therapists have been shown to decrease dizziness and imp
140                                 Occupational therapists have specialized expertise to enable people t
141 rder (FND) are commonly seen by occupational therapists; however, there are limited descriptions in t
142  CD (CD group) or iHT performed by qualified therapists (iHT group).
143                  Rounds included respiratory therapists in 26 of 43 (60.5%) and pharmacists in 23 of
144 e of interventions delivered by occupational therapists in adult ICU patients.
145                     The role of occupational therapists in ICU rehabilitation is not currently well e
146 me among physicians, nurses, and respiratory therapists in intensive care units.
147 with a CD is noninferior to iHT performed by therapists in pediatric IBS or FAP(S).
148 ical care nurse, nursing assistant, physical therapist) initiated the protocol within 48 hrs of mecha
149 ment for chronic fatigue syndrome, but it is therapist intensive and availability is limited.
150  Compared with controls, participants in the therapist intervention showed self-reported reductions i
151             At 6 months, participants in the therapist intervention showed self-reported reductions i
152 ing exercise program delivered by a physical therapist (intervention group; n = 173) or usual care, c
153  identified: poor communication with another therapist involved in the case, permitting patients or r
154  technology staff, and physical/occupational therapists) involved in the implementation and use of th
155 ve-behaviour therapy (CBT) from a specialist therapist is current "best practice." However, access is
156  home exercises are prescribed, and when the therapist is well trained and experienced.
157                     At end of treatment, the therapist-led (51.7%) and the therapist-assisted (33.3%)
158 g period completion rates were higher in the therapist-led (88.3%) and waiting list (81.2%) condition
159 acy of self-help group treatment compared to therapist-led and therapist-assisted group cognitive-beh
160      All patients were on a waiting list for therapist-led CBT (treatment as usual).
161 ignificant benefits but may reduce uptake of therapist-led CBT.
162                                          The therapist-led condition also showed more reductions in b
163                                              Therapist-led group cognitive-behavioral treatment for b
164 oup treatment may be a viable alternative to therapist-led interventions.
165 sorder were randomly assigned to 20 weeks of therapist-led, therapist-assisted, or self-help group tr
166                                              Therapists may focus on increasing meaningful social int
167 though the attitudes and beliefs of physical therapists may help to explain differences between curre
168 re to: (1) describe treatments that physical therapists may use to supplement exercise programs to en
169 nnaire previously validated against physical therapists' measurement-based clinical criteria, we assi
170  delivered by either a computer (n = 237) or therapist (n = 254) in the ED, with follow-up assessment
171 5%), physicians (n = 212, 2.9%), respiratory therapists (n = 31, 0.4%), and pharmacists (n = 30, 0.4%
172 = 218), physicians (n = 73), and respiratory therapists (n = 77).
173 occupational therapists, and 879 respiratory therapists (n=3,650).
174  After removal of the implicated respiratory therapist, no further cases occurred.
175  anxiety or standard care delivered by naive therapists (not randomised) who were trained in advance
176             Better values of the respiratory therapists', nurses', and physicians' scores were associ
177 urses, patient care technicians, respiratory therapists, occupational/physical therapists, and physic
178 tion was highest among occupational/physical therapists (odds ratio [OR], 6.96; 95% confidence interv
179 anxiety in medical clinics and should be the therapists of choice for patients in these settings.
180 -affiliated clinic and community settings by therapists or case managers.
181 ple did not include individuals from private therapists or pain clinics.
182 y (CBT-HA group) delivered by hospital-based therapists or to standard care in the clinics.
183 nce interval [CI], 3.51, 13.79), respiratory therapists (OR, 5.34; 95% CI, 3.04, 9.39), and when any
184 ask participants, general practitioners, CBT therapists, or researchers to the treatment allocation.
185 RP; trial 2) to compare four sessions with a therapist over 3 months with standard care and lifestyle
186  with separation anxiety by using the dyadic therapist-patient relationship to recapture and better u
187 ent required, on average, 14 more minutes of therapist-patient time per remaining week.
188 ve care unit, an increase in the respiratory therapist:patient ratio, and the addition of a clinical
189 hese reports, all but 2 conclude that dental therapists perform at an acceptable level.
190 d of experienced ICU staff and a respiratory therapist performed the evaluation, treatment, and triag
191         We would like to suggest that dental therapists periodically evaluate this part of their skil
192 rounds as rounds that included a respiratory therapist, pharmacist, physician and nurse; and protocol
193 s, dentists, dental hygienists, occupational therapists, physical therapists, speech and language pat
194 me measures were obtained by unblinded study therapists, possibly leading to reporting bias and the o
195 teams comprising athletic trainers, physical therapists, primary care sports medicine physicians, and
196 namic therapy techniques, as measured by the Therapist Procedures Checklist-Family Revised.
197                                     Physical therapists provide a variety of interventions, such as m
198 patient safety, proponents argue that dental therapists provide treatment that is as technically comp
199                                   We defined therapist-provided mobility as the proportion of patient
200  therapy or LV devices with a rehabilitation therapist providing instruction and homework on the use
201 rmacists, case workers, dietitians, physical therapists, psychologists, and information systems speci
202 ysician assistants, physical or occupational therapists, psychologists, social workers, and others.
203 w a physician, chiropractor, and/or physical therapist (PT) in the past 12 months.
204                                     Physical therapists (PT) and clinicians must be skilled in identi
205 inally tested Fit and Strong! using physical therapists (PTs) as instructors but have transitioned to
206                                  Respiratory therapists recorded demographic information, blood gases
207 chotherapy, focuses on exploring the patient-therapist relationship, with the idea that this may lead
208 th new opportunities to quantify how patient-therapist relationships relate to treatment outcomes.
209                                              Therapists reported barrier identification as easy, whil
210                                  Respiratory therapists require unique physical assessment skills and
211                                     "Engage" therapists required an average of 30% less training time
212 clinical psychologists (N=203) completed the Therapist Response Questionnaire to identify patterns of
213 atively associated with special/overinvolved therapist responses.
214 parental/protective and special/overinvolved therapist responses.
215 re several significant relationships between therapists' responses and patients' personality patholog
216                                  In general, therapists' responses were characterized by stronger neg
217                Ten physical and occupational therapists reviewed the initial version of the tool and
218 ctive or coercive actions resulting from the therapist's anxieties about a patient's potential suicid
219 would seem to be an important component of a therapist's clinical skills.
220  to the suicide, negative reactions from the therapist's institution, and fear of a lawsuit by the pa
221 gh one emotion was sometimes dominant in the therapist's response to the suicide, severely distressed
222 rtant, it was seen as the patient's, not the therapist's, responsibility.
223         A significant proportion of dentists/therapists said they would intervene invasively (restora
224 sphagia assessments by a speech and language therapist (SALT) were associated with patients' risk of
225      The association between the respiratory therapists' scores and lower mortality rate (p =.025) al
226 consist of direct 'reward exposure', but the therapists search for barriers in three behavioral domai
227 selected live music (LM) preoperatively with therapist-selected recorded music intraoperatively (n=69
228 cted recorded music (RM) preoperatively with therapist-selected recorded music intraoperatively (n=70
229                                              Therapist self-reported use of cognitive-behavioral, fam
230                                  Respiratory therapists serve as essential team members in the creati
231                      Factors contributing to therapists' severe distress after the suicide of a patie
232 aximize internal validity by controlling for therapist sex, availability, expertise, allegiance, trai
233 icians, social workers, and respiratory care therapists showing increases in significance.
234  to the model used and to the development of therapist skill.
235  PST therapists and had one-third of the PST therapists' skill drift.
236 surveys sent to UK-based Speech and Language Therapists (SLTs).
237  of their presumed persecutor, voiced by the therapist so that the avatar responds by becoming less h
238 le interventions, co-designed with community therapists so that they can be delivered in community se
239                     PICU nurses, respiratory therapists, social workers, and child life specialists j
240 lving physiatrists and physical/occupational therapists specializing in cancer.
241 ns, including physician assistants, physical therapists, speech and language pathologists, and occupa
242 ygienists, occupational therapists, physical therapists, speech and language pathologists, and others
243                                Consequently, therapists spent substantial time performing exercises t
244 nvolvement, 12% (95% CI, 6%-22%) of dentists/therapists stated they would intervene, increasing to 74
245 phone-CBT group), web-based CBT with minimal therapist support (web-CBT group), or treatment as usual
246 should focus on dissemination and optimizing therapist support methods to maximize the public health
247 (written or web-based materials with limited therapist support) can be provided remotely, which has t
248                        iCBT, with or without therapist support, has clinically significant, salutary
249 e behavioral therapy (iCBT), with or without therapist support, on the perceived impact of hot flushe
250 s evaluated the efficacy and durability of a therapist-supported method for computer-assisted cogniti
251  mailed to 2,000 UK-based chartered physical therapists that included 23 attitude statements derived
252                                          The therapists then administered the WES-RC to 20 patients.
253                                The amount of therapist time in CCBT was planned to be about one-third
254 d with PTM which are often difficult for the therapist to detect.
255 hat would prove of interest to biologist and therapist to get real time informatics needed to evaluat
256 3%, P = .10), and high ratios of respiratory therapists to beds (39.7% vs 21.1%, P < .001).
257 as used as an exemplary case, as it requires therapists to control the non-trivial locomotor dynamics
258 e could be an opportunities for occupational therapists to expand their role and spearhead original r
259  opt-out protocol for nurses and respiratory therapists to perform paired daily SATs and SBTs.
260  these more sophisticated studies will allow therapists to tailor treatments to individuals to maximi
261 macists, and providing dedicated respiratory therapists to the ICU team.
262          A variety of DBT interventions with therapists trained in the DBT suicide risk assessment an
263 ts, dieticians, and physical or occupational therapists; trainee samples were excluded.
264 tant sources of how patients relate to their therapists (transference).
265 e as follows: (1) repetitive training with a therapist twice weekly during a 6-week period, (2) simpl
266 n the UK, differences exist between physical therapists' use of exercise for patients with knee osteo
267 ion was evaluated by a licensed occupational therapist using the Active Movement Scale preoperatively
268        Music (recordings selected by a music therapist via ambient speakers) vs standard care.
269 y room visits, chiropractic visits, physical therapist visits, and nights in hospital), and self-effi
270 ficantly higher among nurses and respiratory therapists vs. physicians.
271  received 2 to 3 home visits from a physical therapist weekly for 16 weeks; nutritional counseling; a
272                     Outcome assessors and PR therapists were blinded to group allocation.
273 ity of hospitals (89%) at which the physical therapists were employed require a physician consultatio
274 ts, researchers involved in recruitment, and therapists were masked in advance to allocation.
275                           Thirteen of the 34 therapists were severely distressed.
276 2016, 5 physicians, 5 nurses, and 4 physical therapists were shadowed for 1 hour 30 minutes to 3 hour
277                                      Massage therapists were unblinded.
278               Assessors, but not families or therapists, were masked to group assignment.
279 pare the diagnostic test accuracy of hygiene-therapists when screening for dental caries and periodon
280 ith preferred selections tailored by a music therapist whenever desired while receiving ventilatory s
281 ons of the study include the use of only two therapists where one treated 69% of patients, possible a
282 inated, "Engage" will increase the number of therapists who can reliably treat late-life depression a
283                            Over one-third of therapists who experienced a patient's suicide were foun
284  while credit is due to the nurses and music therapists who pioneered the idea in nursing care, consi
285                                              Therapists who undertook patient assessments were blinde
286                      The speech and language therapists who were doing the outcome assessments were d
287 nary meetings of specialized consultants and therapists will improve communication and maximize outco
288 ed for fidelity) delivered by master's-level therapists with a follow-up telephone booster.
289 es, respiratory therapists, and occupational therapists with active licenses in 2003.
290 ge 1: an invitation was sent to occupational therapists with expertise in FND in different countries
291                                              Therapists with more divergent attitudes and less knowle
292                         Older therapists and therapists with more open attitudes were more likely to
293 dy that directly compared the work of dental therapists with that of dentists found that they perform
294 tive when delivered online in real time by a therapist, with benefits maintained over 8 months.
295     There were two cohorts of schema therapy therapists, with the first trained primarily with lectur
296                    Physical and occupational therapists work at the Combat Support Hospitals to provi
297                        The observed physical therapists worked in one geographic location, spent exte
298                 Regardless of whether dental therapists would be the most effective intervention for
299 nfidence interval [CI], 15%-28%) of dentists/therapists would intervene invasively.
300  junction, 48% (95% CI, 40%-56%) of dentists/therapists would intervene restoratively.

 
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