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Management: General Practices

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Total 10323 results found since Jan 2013.

Viewpoint: Domperidone and breastfeeding.
PMID: 28860289 [PubMed - in process]
Source: The British Journal of General Practice - September 1, 2017 Category: Primary Care Authors: Finnikin S, Finnikin L Tags: Br J Gen Pract Source Type: research

Breastfeeding and systemic agents for psoriasis.
PMID: 30923142 [PubMed - in process]
Source: The British Journal of General Practice - March 31, 2019 Category: Primary Care Authors: Little S, Fenner S Tags: Br J Gen Pract Source Type: research

Yonder: Exercise procrastination, Tourette syndrome, breastfeeding, television deaths, and podcast of the month.
PMID: 32732212 [PubMed - in process]
Source: The British Journal of General Practice - July 31, 2020 Category: Primary Care Authors: Rashid A Tags: Br J Gen Pract Source Type: research

Tongue-tie and breastfeeding problems
Br J Gen Pract. 2023 Jun 29;73(732):297-298. doi: 10.3399/bjgp23X733221. Print 2023 Jul.NO ABSTRACTPMID:37385756 | PMC:PMC10325602 | DOI:10.3399/bjgp23X733221
Source: The British Journal of General Practice - June 29, 2023 Category: Primary Care Authors: Laith Evans Heidi Lawson Pippa Oakeshott Felicity Knights Komal Chadha Source Type: research

Developing a computerised search to help UK General Practices identify more patients for palliative care planning: a feasibility study
Conclusions: It is possible to significantly improve the identification of patients for palliative care needs assessment using a computerised search however barriers remain to GPs’ finding it acceptable. Time-efficient systems were important as was a generic tool for anticipatory care planning not linked to ‘palliative’ care.
Source: BMC Family Practice - August 8, 2015 Category: Primary Care Authors: Bruce MasonKirsty BoydScott MurrayJohn SteynPaul CormieMarilyn KendallDan MundayDavid WellerShirley FifePeter MurchieChristine Campbell Source Type: research

Adding statistical regularity results in a global slowdown in visual search.
Abstract Current statistical learning theories predict that embedding implicit regularities within a task should further improve online performance, beyond general practice. We challenged this assumption by contrasting performance in a visual search task containing either a consistent-mapping (regularity) condition, a random-mapping condition, or both conditions, mixed. Surprisingly, performance in a random visual search, without any regularity, was better than performance in a mixed design search that contained a beneficial regularity. This result was replicated using different stimuli and different regularities,...
Source: Cognition - January 31, 2018 Category: Neurology Authors: Vaskevich A, Luria R Tags: Cognition Source Type: research

Tongue-tie and breastfeeding problems
Br J Gen Pract. 2023 Jun 29;73(732):297-298. doi: 10.3399/bjgp23X733221. Print 2023 Jul.NO ABSTRACTPMID:37385756 | DOI:10.3399/bjgp23X733221
Source: The British Journal of General Practice - June 29, 2023 Category: Primary Care Authors: Laith Evans Heidi Lawson Pippa Oakeshott Felicity Knights Komal Chadha Source Type: research

Exploiting the potential of large databases of electronic health records for research using rapid search algorithms and an intuitive query interface.
CONCLUSIONS: Our fast search algorithms and simple query algorithms represent a significant advance for users of clinical research databases. PMID: 24272162 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association - November 22, 2013 Category: Information Technology Authors: Tate AR, Beloff N, Al-Radwan B, Wickson J, Puri S, Williams T, Van Staa T, Bleach A Tags: J Am Med Inform Assoc Source Type: research

Identifying people with a learning disability: an advanced search for general practice.
CONCLUSION: The Read Code search supported practices to populate their registers and was quick to run and review, making it a viable choice to support register revalidation. However, it did not find large numbers of people eligible for the LD register who were previously unidentified by their practice, suggesting that additional complementary methods are required to support practices to validate their registers. PMID: 29061717 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: The British Journal of General Practice - October 23, 2017 Category: Primary Care Authors: Russell AM, Bryant L, House A Tags: Br J Gen Pract Source Type: research