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1 ith one's liberal values can help, if one is willing.
2 , choosing appropriate problems, identifying willing and able collaborators, and publishing the resul
3  care service has coordinated care for every willing and able fragility fracture patient with positiv
4                  In the absence of a hegemon willing and able to coerce other states into avoiding a
5 e expected to tolerate study procedures, and willing and able to comply with study requirements.
6  medical management of miscarriage, and were willing and able to give informed consent.
7 e cognitive processing, some individuals are willing and able to go about the costly process of quest
8 articipants in multicenter cancer trials are willing and able to report their own symptomatic AEs at
9              To examine whether patients are willing and able to report their symptomatic AEs in mult
10 ols (58.3%, 95% CI, 49.9%-66.7%) and faculty willing and able to teach LGBT-related curricular conten
11  transplantation in the majority of patients willing and able to undergo this procedure and subsequen
12 previously found that citizen scientists are willing and capable of performing named entity recogniti
13 AT surprisingly partitions between endocytic-willing and endocytic-resistant populations.
14 ould be initiated in all individuals who are willing and ready to start treatment.
15 ess between cohorts of transplant recipients willing and unwilling to receive HCV-viremic hearts.
16 ts for end-stage renal disease patients with willing but incompatible living donors.
17 lecommunicator is provided just in time to a willing caller, transforming the caller into a lay rescu
18 capes provided favorable growth habitats and willing dispersal partners in the wake of ecological uph
19                                          His willing donor (female, aged 53 y) with a Living Kidney D
20 l cosmetic advantage and convenience for the willing donor.
21 nt matching program using a national pool of willing donors.
22  affordable, and selective DNA biosensors is willing, due to the important role of DNA detection in t
23                       The majority (67%) was willing for their child to be involved in the trial with
24 e for a driving force, and the perception of willing is not fully processed until after the movement.
25 -making for pediatric patients with healthy, willing living donors should consider these findings in
26 conclude that T62D-hDAT represents an efflux-willing, Na(+)-primed orientation-possibly representing
27 his may be helpful for those who are neither willing nor able to schedule time for PA almost every da
28 icipants were cigarette smokers who were not willing or able to quit smoking within the next month bu
29                  Among cigarette smokers not willing or able to quit within the next month but willin
30 imited by a reliance on what individuals are willing or able to report explicitly.
31 hat people living in rural areas may be less willing or able to undergo elective surgical procedures.
32  clinical and data coordinating centers, and willing participants who devoted their time to make the
33 s greater than 1000 copies per mL and with a willing partner, were randomly assigned (1:1), via compu
34 e regimen with HIV RNA >1000 copies/mL and a willing partner.
35  would imply that alkali metal alkoxides are willing partners in these electron transfer reactions, b
36  include hospital review, attempts to find a willing provider at another institution, and opportunity
37 essive expansion of qualified hospitals, and willing providers and early imaging strategies to match
38 he highest income bracket (>$90,000) is more willing than all others (P = 0.0001), that men are more
39 cts that longer-lived species should be less willing than shorter-lived species to return to care for
40 n all others (P = 0.0001), that men are more willing than women (P = 0.0011), and that the proportion
41 P = 0.0002), that older populations are more willing than younger (P<0.0001), that the highest income
42          This perception includes a sense of willing the movement and self-agency that they are respo
43                 Kidney transplant candidates willing to accept a HCV-seropositive kidney increased fr
44 oration of VA, patients with nAMD seem to be willing to accept a high treatment burden with regular i
45 sk was only 0.1%; 19.5% of all patients were willing to accept a risk of at least 10%.
46 vers, 82% of their recipients were listed as willing to accept a segmental liver, and only 3% were li
47 ening VA, patients in our study stated to be willing to accept a very long time needed per physician
48 -adjusted life-years, QALYs) between cohorts willing to accept any heart and those willing to accept
49              The patients indicated they are willing to accept elevated SAE risks in exchange for cli
50 have high weight loss expectations and to be willing to accept high risk.
51 ces, despite evidence that some patients are willing to accept increased side-effect risk in exchange
52 uating usual medical practices, but they are willing to accept less elaborate approaches than written
53 ohorts willing to accept any heart and those willing to accept only HCV-negative hearts.
54           People value such contacts and are willing to accept some disease risk to gain contact-rela
55 nd parents of children with IBD appear to be willing to accept the known risks associated with IBD th
56 t almost all relevant households (>98%) were willing to accept this commitment.
57 eferences among treatment attributes and are willing to accept tradeoffs among attributes.
58          Healthcare personnel (HCP) are less willing to accept treatment than other populations.
59 minimum thresholds of coverage they would be willing to accept when managing these patients.
60 of treatment, how much risk IBD patients are willing to accept, and to introduce ideas to facilitate
61   What types of asylum seekers are Europeans willing to accept?
62 t climate change and global warming and less willing to act against it than liberals.
63 at conservationists and resource managers be willing to act despite the uncertainties.
64                                 While we are willing to act for one victim, we often become numb as t
65 less customers have such information and are willing to act on it.
66  more likely to rate pain higher and be more willing to administer opioid analgesics than were physic
67 iencing greater pain intensity and were more willing to administer opioid analgesics to them than to
68                  Similarly, nurses were more willing to administer opioids make treatment decisions t
69 a friend, family member, or community member willing to advocate for the candidate) for this advocacy
70            Neonatal intensive care units are willing to apply environmental enrichment via music for
71 ection of force for which the brain was less willing to assign effort to an arm was generally the dir
72    In Parkinson's disease, patients are less willing to assign force to their affected arm.
73  with directions for which the brain is less willing to assign force.
74            Only half of the respondents were willing to attend a hands-on course on CBCT interpretati
75                        As clinicians, are we willing to base therapy decisions on risk models that la
76  practices from Belgium and Canada that were willing to be assigned to either of the study groups, pa
77 ted drug injection in the past 30 days, were willing to be interviewed for about 1 hour and tested fo
78 ility outcome was the percentage of families willing to be randomized.
79 ry health care facility for patients who are willing to be treated.
80 sing the intention-to-behavior gap for those willing to be vaccinated rather than focusing on those h
81 endered depending on the risk the patient is willing to bear.
82 ties associated with identifying individuals willing to become suicide terrorists, understanding the
83                                If owners are willing to bring dogs to central point campaigns at doub
84 tarian regulations for AVs and would be less willing to buy such an AV.
85                               The service is willing to collect it, analyse its meaning and redesign
86 icted the duration of time that viewers were willing to commit to narrative videos.
87 d to the burden of health care costs and are willing to consider alternative options based on a patie
88                     Nearly all patients were willing to consider ART, and 40% of the sample went on A
89 of the participants were definitely/probably willing to consider knee replacement, with no difference
90                       Most participants were willing to consider taking PrEP (39.2% "yes, definitely"
91 erall, members of potential user groups were willing to consider taking PrEP (61% reported that they
92 2 patients dropped out because they were not willing to continue therapy and follow-up.
93 ough this measure may be welcome in patients willing to contribute to their disease management, limit
94 storical evidence shows that people are more willing to cooperate with others and punish defectors wh
95                             A "good" male is willing to court for longer than a "bad" male; in this w
96        However, we also show that groups are willing to curtail their ability of self-reliance.
97                One-third of women (32%) were willing to decrease mammogram frequency (as consistent w
98 , p = 0.001) were associated with being less willing to decrease screening frequency.
99 upport of this view, we show that adults are willing to destroy others' resources to avoid inequality
100 select chemical fragments that they would be willing to develop into a lead compound from a set of ~4
101 or rated their care as "excellent" were more willing to discuss HRQOL problems (P < .05).
102                                Men were more willing to discuss sexual problems than women (P < .001)
103 s reporting poorer physical health were less willing to discuss their daily functioning problems (P <
104 scuss ADs with their oncologist but would be willing to discuss them with an admitting physician.
105  The degree to which the US voting public is willing to donate a kidney and the perceptions of curren
106 ggesting that one-third of patients might be willing to donate at imminent death, we estimate that be
107                       Participants were most willing to donate DNA or health information for research
108 of Wisconsin would be medically eligible and willing to donate each year at the time of imminent deat
109 5925 and 31 097 people might be eligible and willing to donate each year.
110                            The proportion of willing to donate eyes was 37.6% [95% CI: 34.3%-41.3%].
111 aving lives, resulting in fewer participants willing to donate organs or support measures that facili
112                                   67.3% were willing to donate their corneas after death.
113 ntion to whether people around the world are willing to donate their data that are then subsequently
114                     82% of the subjects were willing to donate their eyes and this was unaffected by
115            The proportion of people who were willing to donate their organs did not differ between op
116  participants (66.04%) stated that they were willing to donate their organs for transplant purposes.
117 gislation, the proportion of people who were willing to donate their organs was greater in opt-out (8
118  was specified as a medical doctor and least willing to donate when the recipient was a for-profit re
119 users asking for data were more likely to be willing to donate.
120                      Pregnant women might be willing to eat more fish if this were advised by their o
121 S Food and Drug Administration approval, are willing to employ gene transfer therapies in their patie
122  commons dilemmas have found that people are willing to engage in costly punishment, frequently gener
123  effect sets in whereby individuals are less willing to engage in safe behavior over time.
124  uninjured animals, but disbudded calves are willing to engage in this cost.
125            However, intoxicated bees were as willing to engage in trophallaxis as the sucrose-fed bee
126          Among the 299 (51%) of 590 patients willing to estimate their LE, those who recalled prognos
127 s, despite the fact that children are rarely willing to execute costly punishment.
128 nt of both types of effort participants were willing to exert for rewards.
129 and fishers with lower catch value were more willing to exit.
130 o reduce their own carbon footprint and were willing to explore alternatives to the traditional confe
131 s down because members of a group are rarely willing to follow another.
132 ir roles differently, with nurses being more willing to follow protocols.
133     In addition, 66% indicated they would be willing to forgo a portion of their income to provide ca
134                       Even patients who were willing to forgo cancer treatment (n = 38; 13%) preferre
135 ether, and under what conditions, people are willing to forgo monetary reward for the sake of influen
136                   Moreover, individuals were willing to forgo money to disclose about the self.
137 y to participate in decision-making, and (6) willing to fulfill several supportive roles including pa
138 rkforce, validated genetic tests, and payers willing to fund pretreatment testing.
139  across different samples, people are indeed willing to gamble, subjecting themselves to electric sho
140 nterfere with the progestogen-only pill, and willing to give contact details for follow-up were invit
141 pondents (57-71% depending on scenario) were willing to give leeway to future surrogate decision-make
142 and increases the proportion of participants willing to give up half of their allotted money.
143 device for another), or (c) if they would be willing to go to the clinic for the given increase in SN
144                      The majority (83%) were willing to grant advance consent to a blood draw study,
145                             Most people were willing to grant leeway to their surrogates, and this wi
146  for research decision making, and most were willing to grant their proxy leeway over their advance c
147                    Although humans are often willing to help others in need, at times (e.g., during i
148 iety of Critical Care Medicine membership is willing to help support them and work to further shape t
149                              Most (96%) were willing to identify a proxy for research decision making
150 he American Psychiatric Association was less willing to implement a dimensional approach to the diagn
151 lemented by fair-minded individuals, who are willing to impose the cooperation norm at a personal cos
152 platform in their own lab but also for those willing to incorporate FPOP as an additional tool in add
153 ess for mussels with evidences of OA and are willing to increase the price they pay to avoid negative
154 onstrate experimentally that chimpanzees are willing to incur a material cost to deliver rewards to a
155                                   Humans are willing to incur personal costs to punish others who vio
156                                   63.9% were willing to indicate their donor statuses on drivers' lic
157          Many long-term smokers with PAD are willing to initiate a serious quit attempt and to engage
158 tal cost reflects the time that patients are willing to invest to attend the high-risk clinic.
159 rofessionals of outstanding promise who were willing to join me in "betting the house" that, working
160 rt, motivated students and postdocs who were willing to join my search for molecular understanding of
161  show that the brain controls how much it is willing to learn from the current error through a princi
162 domised trial, undertaken in the UK, smokers willing to make a quit attempt were randomly allocated,
163  frequencies of "oversocialized" individuals willing to make extreme sacrifices for their groups no m
164                         Some people are more willing to make immediate, risky, or costly reward-focus
165 timators have been used when researchers are willing to make parametric assumptions.
166 d to provide care to the underserved and are willing to make personal sacrifices to meet that need.
167                                  Smokers are willing to make repeated pharmacotherapy-assisted quit a
168 h on the effort contributions volunteers are willing to make to crowd science projects is lacking.
169                                 By not being willing to mate immediately the female achieves a degree
170  assay, we demonstrate that females are less willing to mate with siblings than nonsiblings.
171  trained surgeons, with most of them (81.8%) willing to mentor even for free.
172 s critically on highly connected individuals willing to mobilize people in distant locations, overcom
173 ly 14% to 53% of participating surgeons were willing to offer exploration following neoadjuvant thera
174 dictive value for pathCR at which one may be willing to omit surgery, there was no clear incremental
175                       Influential physicians willing to overcome resistance to advances were able to
176      (5) Both donors and recipients are more willing to participate if their intended recipient or do
177 gh risk for acquiring an infection, and were willing to participate in a behavioral intervention and
178 on-weighted respondents stated they would be willing to participate in a biobank; willingness and att
179 ligible patients were at least 18 years old, willing to participate in a weekly group, and able to pr
180 e patients (80.0%) stated that they would be willing to participate in clinical trials.
181 ne transfer scenario) to 92% (drug RCT) were willing to participate in future dementia research.
182 36 of 38 (92%) reported they would have been willing to participate in KPD.
183 r 90% of directed donors and recipients were willing to participate in KPD.
184 ponders to prior antiviral therapy but still willing to participate in long-term pegylated interferon
185 erience in assessing psychopathology, and is willing to participate in ongoing care.
186 cietal authority and justice, and to be more willing to participate in political, social, and familia
187 nceived naturally within 1 year and remained willing to participate in the trial were randomly assign
188                       Most patients would be willing to participate in trials after learning conflict
189                                        Those willing to participate were asked to return the postal q
190   Underserved African American families were willing to participate.
191 eted the randomised controlled MGTX and were willing to participate.
192 ducation and research, or a program director willing to participate.
193                               If society was willing to pay $100,000 per quality-adjusted life year,
194                            If hospitals were willing to pay $100,000 per survival-to-discharge, any i
195 ld be cost effective if decision makers were willing to pay $4550 for an additional diagnosis.
196 ed over alternative strategies if society is willing to pay $50,000/QALY and statins cost $1.54 to $2
197 primary care was 90% if decision makers were willing to pay 1,900 pounds for improvements in function
198       If the UK National Health Service were willing to pay 10,000 pound per additional QALY, there i
199                 On average, respondents were willing to pay 11 birr ($0.65 USD) per injection.
200                 When should an individual be willing to pay a cost in order to help or harm another i
201                       If decision makers are willing to pay a maximum of $50,000/QALY, the probabilit
202                             Respondents were willing to pay an average of $1445 to avoid taking a pil
203 ased the opportunity cost most subjects were willing to pay for a reward of a given intensity.
204  the cost of statins and how much society is willing to pay for better health outcomes.
205 tion also elevated the effort cost rats were willing to pay for cocaine and made associated cues beco
206 urce value - meaning the amount a partner is willing to pay for it - by mediating where and when it i
207 We examine how much more society ought to be willing to pay for TAF over TDF, in exchange for its imp
208  example, studies have shown that people are willing to pay more for a small set of high-quality good
209 l cookstove technology and are therefore not willing to pay much for a new nontraditional cookstove.
210                                Consumers are willing to pay on average 52% less for mussels with evid
211 Patients reported high satisfaction and were willing to pay out of pocket for access to such services
212  (48%) or physician's office (39%); 77% were willing to pay out-of-pocket for FMT.
213  a maximum probability of 0.61 if society is willing to pay pound 1,800 per minute less sedentary tim
214 ared with the comparison group if society is willing to pay pound 1.50 per extra step/day, a maximum
215 time/day, and 0.13 probability if society is willing to pay pound 30,000 per quality-adjusted life-ye
216 -money auction), although a modest share was willing to pay the actual or expected retail price for l
217 e atheists and agnostics are "prayer averse"-willing to pay to avoid receiving prayers.
218 ete latrine SanPlats, 60% of households were willing to pay US$0.48 and 10% of households were willin
219 ng to pay US$0.48 and 10% of households were willing to pay US$4.05, yet the average cost of supplyin
220  using them were asked whether they would be willing to pay, and if so, how much.
221 KR by surgeons who were either expert in and willing to perform both surgeries or by a surgeon with p
222                      Physicians were half as willing to prescribe drugs studied in industry-funded tr
223 I], 0.46 to 0.89; P=0.008) and would be more willing to prescribe drugs tested in high-rigor trials t
224  Physicians reported that they would be less willing to prescribe drugs tested in low-rigor trials th
225 ts rated pain intensity higher and were more willing to prescribe opioids to female, African-American
226  effort in return for a reward but were less willing to produce effort to avoid punishment.
227 ased the amount of effort that patients were willing to produce for a given reward and (2) slowed dow
228 acted authors to determine whether they were willing to produce new predictions for standardised scen
229 festyle of the nurse or that nurses are more willing to promote the health of their patients by offer
230 articipants were asked whether they would be willing to provide additional data by means of surveys a
231 nfidence of paternity, the more he should be willing to provide care.
232 ca, age 18-25 years, in good general health, willing to provide informed consent, and were not pregna
233 how that the hosting population is typically willing to provide water and sanitation services to disp
234 a, aged at least 18 years, and were able and willing to provide written consent to participate in the
235 bsence of such institutions, individuals are willing to punish defectors, even at a cost to themselve
236 at similarity-focused participants were more willing to punish others' uncooperative behavior.
237 n in the central amygdala makes a mother rat willing to put her life in danger in order to protect he
238 older with genotype 1 HCV infection who were willing to receive HCV therapy on site in the OAT progra
239 ive at that visit or within a month and were willing to receive PrEP counselling were interviewed to
240  example, when her owner was in the room and willing to reciprocate communication, the parrot was mor
241 ng or able to quit within the next month but willing to reduce cigarette consumption and make a quit
242  not be ready to quit immediately but may be willing to reduce cigarette consumption with the goal of
243 le to quit smoking within the next month but willing to reduce smoking and make a quit attempt within
244         A higher proportion of patients were willing to repeat split-dose vs day-before cleansing (OR
245 f black women and 59% of Hispanic women were willing to return for a second noninvasive procedure des
246 tility was 0.991 (0.989-0.993), with 62% not willing to risk any chance of death.
247                   Notably, participants were willing to sacrifice a more tangible reward, money, in o
248 vior is instead hyperaltruistic: We are more willing to sacrifice gains to spare others from harm tha
249                                What makes us willing to sacrifice our own self-interest for another p
250                              Individuals are willing to sacrifice their own resources to promote equa
251  despite antihypertensive treatment and were willing to self-manage their hypertension.
252 e often open about the code they produce and willing to share it, but there is little appreciation am
253         Recognising that most scientists are willing to share this material on a collaborative basis,
254  teams in any setting is when each member is willing to speak up to share thoughts and ideas to impro
255 asting in both conditions, participants were willing to spend more money on food items only after sle
256 who smoked tobacco on a daily basis and were willing to stop smoking.
257 treatment for cancer, and even those who are willing to stop treatment, express a clear preference fo
258 rcentage of HHCs of MDR-TB/RR-TB index cases willing to take hypothetical MDR TPT provides important
259 ife expectancy of at least 10 years, and are willing to take low-dose aspirin daily for at least 10 y
260 ife expectancy of at least 10 years, and are willing to take low-dose aspirin daily for at least 10 y
261 ife expectancy of at least 10 years, and are willing to take low-dose aspirin daily for at least 10 y
262                             Around half were willing to take part in a PrEP study (n = 695; 49.9%) or
263 ultiple challenges, MSM in Thailand would be willing to take PrEP, even if they had to experience inc
264      Whereas over half of MSM said they were willing to take PrEP, only about 4% reported using PrEP.
265  and Hispanic women (65%) were slightly less willing to take this risk than were white women (75%) (P
266         Specifically, participants were more willing to take time penalties to receive feedback on tr
267   Patients and health care professionals are willing to tolerate high rates of false-positive diagnos
268 ardiovascular disease participants were only willing to trade 3.1(2.1 to 4.7), 1.7(1.1 to 2.5), and 1
269 .988-0.992), including approximately 70% not willing to trade any amount of time to avoid taking a pr
270                   Among AMB + AMD, 80 % were willing to trade lifetime in exchange for cure.
271 curred in 98 of 145 (68%) patients initially willing to trade survival time, and was more common with
272                        Among BAMD, 75 % were willing to trade, utility was 0.917.
273                  Clinicians are increasingly willing to treat prostate cancer within the primary site
274      94% of all patients of either group are willing to under go a repeat liver biopsy (NS).
275 -65 years) were previously untreated or were willing to undergo a 1-week medication washout before th
276 of dying to undergo WLS, but only 57.5% were willing to undergo a hypothetical treatment that produce
277  fair and just compensation to those persons willing to undergo donor nephrectomy.
278 t in the household the night before and were willing to undergo home-based HIV testing, answer demogr
279 cipants in 2009 to ask whether they would be willing to undergo MRI.
280 median, 5; IQR, 3-7; P = 0.03) and were more willing to undergo PET/CT colonography again (36/43 [84%
281 t high risk for splenectomy and in those not willing to undergo surgery.
282 ed, it is important to know whether they are willing to use immersive virtual reality.
283 overall change of at least 30% in proportion willing to vaccinate as risk of infection increases.
284  women (P = 0.0011), and that the proportion willing to vaccinate is related to both ideology and the
285 isk of mortality invokes a larger proportion willing to vaccinate than mere morbidity (P = 0.0002), t
286 dering morbidity information, the proportion willing to vaccinate went from 0.476 (0.449-0.503) at 0
287 nd with different proportions of populations willing to vaccinate.
288                                If society is willing to value a QALY at pound30,000 there is a 62.7%
289            On average, respondents were more willing to volunteer themselves for research than to enr
290 ater cost, as evidenced by how long they are willing to wait for a rewarding outcome.
291 e confidence by the amount of time they were willing to wait for reward.
292                     Instead, rats were often willing to wait for surprisingly long periods, and conse
293 money in the study (d = -0.47) and were less willing to wait in a persistence task (d = -0.39).
294  when it comes to money, but chimpanzees are willing to wait longer than humans for food, suggesting
295                                    They were willing to wait longer to see trained practitioners.
296               We measured how long they were willing to wait to obtain the better odds and how much t
297                      We found that rats were willing to work for cues that evoked either outcome-spec
298 ommunities resulted in greater odds of being willing to work in a rural area.
299                         For student midwives willing to work in rural areas the top reasons cited inc
300 individual will both be more likely, or more willing, to form a new, or strengthen an existing, conne

 
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