Showing 781 - 800 results of 12,193 for search '(( 50 ((we decrease) OR (mean decrease)) ) OR ( 5 ((fold decrease) OR (nn decrease)) ))', query time: 0.56s Refine Results
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    Opioid consumption data. by Wali U. Pirzada (22278071)

    Published 2025
    “…Orthopaedic Surgery patients saw a mean 45% reduction in prescription size from 462 MMEs (range: 50–7200 MMEs) to 197 MMEs (range: 25–2400 MMEs) (p < .001), while General Surgery patients experienced a mean 38% reduction from 100 MMEs (range: 25–150 MMEs) to 60 MMEs (range: 25–150 MMEs) (p < .001). …”
  11. 791

    Prescription data. by Wali U. Pirzada (22278071)

    Published 2025
    “…Orthopaedic Surgery patients saw a mean 45% reduction in prescription size from 462 MMEs (range: 50–7200 MMEs) to 197 MMEs (range: 25–2400 MMEs) (p < .001), while General Surgery patients experienced a mean 38% reduction from 100 MMEs (range: 25–150 MMEs) to 60 MMEs (range: 25–150 MMEs) (p < .001). …”
  12. 792

    Refill rate by surgical specialty. by Wali U. Pirzada (22278071)

    Published 2025
    “…Orthopaedic Surgery patients saw a mean 45% reduction in prescription size from 462 MMEs (range: 50–7200 MMEs) to 197 MMEs (range: 25–2400 MMEs) (p < .001), while General Surgery patients experienced a mean 38% reduction from 100 MMEs (range: 25–150 MMEs) to 60 MMEs (range: 25–150 MMEs) (p < .001). …”
  13. 793

    Noncontinuous data on opioid use. by Wali U. Pirzada (22278071)

    Published 2025
    “…Orthopaedic Surgery patients saw a mean 45% reduction in prescription size from 462 MMEs (range: 50–7200 MMEs) to 197 MMEs (range: 25–2400 MMEs) (p < .001), while General Surgery patients experienced a mean 38% reduction from 100 MMEs (range: 25–150 MMEs) to 60 MMEs (range: 25–150 MMEs) (p < .001). …”
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    The most stressor items in ENSS. by Phu Dinh Vu (19429477)

    Published 2024
    “…Nurses’ occupational stress in emergency and intensive care units (50.0%) was substantially higher than that in the other departments (11.7%). …”
  20. 800

    S1 Data - by Phu Dinh Vu (19429477)

    Published 2024
    “…Nurses’ occupational stress in emergency and intensive care units (50.0%) was substantially higher than that in the other departments (11.7%). …”