Results 181 to 190 of about 209,474 (310)
SOME FEATURES OF MANIFESTATIONS OF EPIDEMIC PROCESS DURING ACUTE INTESTINAL INFECTIONS IN MOSCOW
Filatov Nn +2 more
openalex +1 more source
On the basis of RT‐qPCR results, 549 oropharyngeal swabs were classified into four groups: MP‐positive (n = 109), MP‐negative (n = 160), RSV‐positive (n = 122), and RSV‐negative (n = 158). Using these as the reference standard, we evaluated a molecular point‐of‐care testing (mPOCT) system (EasyNAT) for simultaneous MP and RSV detection.
Yang Su +13 more
wiley +1 more source
This study found that parent internalising symptoms predicted internalising symptoms in younger children, with no evidence of child‐driven effects. Among adolescents, mental health symptoms showed bidirectional associations with parent internalising symptoms, particularly for externalising symptoms.
Martha Oakes +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Based on data collected monthly from April to July 2020, we found that time spent playing outside and with other children were associated with lower internalising problems across time in preschool‐aged children, whereas more time spent playing alone was associated with more severe internalising problems.
Helen F. Dodd +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Background Routine in‐hospital screening of social risk factors linked with poor health outcomes is not done in Singapore, where an aging population pays for 25% healthcare costs out‐of‐pocket despite universal coverage. Objective We developed and implemented a social risk screening tool for hospitalised patients and reported the association ...
Orlanda Q. M. Goh +10 more
wiley +1 more source
[Functional outline of the epidemic process].
The present study has shown that on the level of the parasitic system the epidemic process is a biological system, wherein the host population serves as the internal regulator, the mechanism of transmission serves as the external regulator and the parasite population, as the regulated object. The biological regulating mechanisms of the epidemic process
openaire +1 more source
Reframing healthcare violence as systemic failure
Abstract Healthcare workers face escalating violence despite significant security investments, suggesting current approaches miss fundamental causes. We argue that most healthcare violence stems not from individual pathology but from systemic failures—financial barriers, insurance denials, access delays, and administrative complexity—that create ...
Minal R. Patel +2 more
wiley +1 more source

