PubMed COVID-19 Clinical Care
34711 - 34720 of 44782 results found
Comparison of attitudes toward routine maternal vaccines and COVID-19 vaccines among pregnant patients in an urban safety-net setting
Description
CONCLUSIONS: Most participants supported routine prenatal vaccinations, including COVID vaccines. Clinicians are trusted information sources and can help reinforce positive attitudes and social norms of receiving vaccinations in pregnancy while
A scoping literature review of pharmacy-based opioid misuse screening and brief interventions
Description
CONCLUSIONS: Overall, the review suggested a strong lack of a patient-centered and implementation science-focused approach to designing pharmacy-based opioid misuse SBI. Findings suggest that a patient-centered, implementation focused approach is
Peripartum mental health and the role of the pharmacist: A scoping review
Description
CONCLUSIONS: This review highlights the limited evidence available on the explicit role of pharmacists in supporting women with peripartum mental illness, including those with comorbidity. More research, including pharmacists as study participants
Effects of an online training program on cardiovascular health behavior modification on nursing students' health education competency
Description
CONCLUSION: The study found that online courses based on the CDIO model are compelling. The study concluded that online classes are needed during the pandemic as it does not limit time and space. Nursing students can take their internship from
Tanzania's COVID-19 vaccination strategy: lessons, learning, and execution
Description
No abstract
Vaccine hesitancy promotes emergence of new SARS-CoV-2 variants
Description
The successive emergence of SARS-CoV-2 mutations has led to an unprecedented increase in COVID-19 incidence worldwide. Currently, vaccination is considered to be the best available solution to control the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. However, public
Canine Olfactory Detection of SARS-CoV-2-Infected Humans - a Systematic Review
Description
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) developed into a pandemic within months. SARS-CoV-2 testing measures and vaccines became quickly accessible. However, due to pre- or asymptomatic transmission, effective disease control remains challenging. To
Association between Covid-19 vaccination and incidence of Type 1 diabetes in China: evidence from 14.14 million registered residents between 2007 and 2021
Description
CONCLUSIONS: The findings suggest that COVID-19 vaccination did not increase the onset of T1D or have a significant impact on T1D pathogenesis, at least not on a large scale.