Search alternatives:
significant decrease » significant increase (Expand Search), significantly increased (Expand Search)
significant effects » significant effect (Expand Search), significantly affected (Expand Search)
effects decrease » effects decreased (Expand Search), effects regress (Expand Search)
significant decrease » significant increase (Expand Search), significantly increased (Expand Search)
significant effects » significant effect (Expand Search), significantly affected (Expand Search)
effects decrease » effects decreased (Expand Search), effects regress (Expand Search)
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2861
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2862
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2863
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2864
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2865
Flowchart of analysis.
Published 2025“…Propensity score-matched analysis was conducted to evaluate the effect of migration on postoperative outcomes and financial burden.…”
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2866
Concurrent mixed methods design diagram.
Published 2025“…It is hypothesised that: a) intervention sites will demonstrate more significant decreases in restrictive practice events and duration and physical injuries, compared to within-group baseline and control group, and b) measures of people’s experiences and perceptions and nurses’ outcomes and behaviours will improve, compared to within-group baseline. …”
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2867
The guiding map.
Published 2025“…It is hypothesised that: a) intervention sites will demonstrate more significant decreases in restrictive practice events and duration and physical injuries, compared to within-group baseline and control group, and b) measures of people’s experiences and perceptions and nurses’ outcomes and behaviours will improve, compared to within-group baseline. …”
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2868
Estimated and observed disease prevalence in school-aged children by area, test and sampling year.
Published 2025Subjects: -
2869
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2870
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2871
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2872
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2873
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2874
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2875
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2876
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2877
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2878
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2879
Estimated infection intensity (mean egg count per gram) for infected stools.
Published 2025Subjects: -
2880
The results of threshold effect analysis.
Published 2025“…However, the rate of alert detection by an attending physician had a significant negative association with medical costs, and there was a threshold effect between them. …”