scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | Corita R Grudzen | Q38327857 |
P2093 | author name string | Roy Lee | |
Ka Ming Ngai | |||
Lynne D Richardson | |||
Alicia Fernandez | |||
Vicky Y Tong | |||
P2860 | cites work | Validating Health Information Exchange (HIE) Data For Quality Measurement Across Four Hospitals | Q28648044 |
Do professional interpreters improve clinical care for patients with limited English proficiency? A systematic review of the literature | Q30479972 | ||
Interventions to improve patient comprehension in informed consent for medical and surgical procedures: a systematic review | Q30847882 | ||
Frequent users of emergency departments: the myths, the data, and the policy implications | Q33546782 | ||
Updating and validating the Charlson comorbidity index and score for risk adjustment in hospital discharge abstracts using data from 6 countries | Q33823425 | ||
Effect of language barriers on follow-up appointments after an emergency department visit | Q33888772 | ||
Language barriers, physician-patient language concordance, and glycemic control among insured Latinos with diabetes: the Diabetes Study of Northern California (DISTANCE) | Q34482575 | ||
Impact of interpreter services on delivery of health care to limited-English-proficient patients | Q34744019 | ||
Does a video-interpreting network improve delivery of care in the emergency department? | Q36085486 | ||
The impact of medical interpreter services on the quality of health care: a systematic review | Q36128031 | ||
Providing high-quality care for limited English proficient patients: the importance of language concordance and interpreter use. | Q36145406 | ||
Patient satisfaction with different interpreting methods: a randomized controlled trial | Q36145478 | ||
The legal framework for language access in healthcare settings: Title VI and beyond | Q36293456 | ||
Language barriers among patients in Boston emergency departments: use of medical interpreters after passage of interpreter legislation | Q36311853 | ||
Use of hospital-based acute care among patients recently discharged from the hospital | Q36687729 | ||
Getting by: underuse of interpreters by resident physicians | Q37067766 | ||
Medicaid patients at high risk for frequent hospital admission: real-time identification and remediable risks | Q37111777 | ||
Language interpreter utilization in the emergency department setting: a clinical review | Q37158965 | ||
"Bounces": an analysis of short-term return visits to a public hospital emergency department | Q38125205 | ||
An analysis of unscheduled return visits to an urban emergency department. | Q38512246 | ||
Impact of language barriers on patient satisfaction in an emergency department | Q39488176 | ||
Frequent users of emergency departments: developing standard definitions and defining prominent risk factors | Q39656618 | ||
Characteristics of occasional and frequent emergency department users: do insurance coverage and access to care matter? | Q39674216 | ||
Coded Chief Complaints--automated analysis of free-text complaints. | Q40478291 | ||
Errors of medical interpretation and their potential clinical consequences: a comparison of professional versus ad hoc versus no interpreters | Q41976749 | ||
The association between language proficiency and outcomes of elderly patients with asthma | Q44615481 | ||
Are diagnostic testing and admission rates higher in non-English-speaking versus English-speaking patients in the emergency department? | Q45101262 | ||
Characteristics of frequent users of emergency departments. | Q48932044 | ||
Criterion for the simultaneous selection of a working correlation structure and either generalized estimating equations or the quadratic inference function approach. | Q51123065 | ||
Akaike's information criterion in generalized estimating equations. | Q52066951 | ||
Analysis of patient revisits to the emergency department. | Q52418238 | ||
Pay Now Or Pay Later: Providing Interpreter Services In Health Care | Q56688985 | ||
Professional Interpreters and Bilingual Physicians in a Pediatric Emergency Department | Q56688986 | ||
Improving the Quality of Informed Consent: It Is Not All About the Risks | Q56779017 | ||
Defining Frequent Use: The Numbers No Longer Count | Q57750079 | ||
English proficiency and language preference: testing the equivalence of two measures | Q60784878 | ||
Trained medical interpreters in the emergency department: effects on services, subsequent charges, and follow-up | Q61463336 | ||
Return visits to the emergency department | Q69425605 | ||
Emergency department revisits | Q69690150 | ||
Use and effectiveness of interpreters in an emergency department | Q70994402 | ||
Does a physician-patient language difference increase the probability of hospital admission? | Q74096856 | ||
Language barriers and resource utilization in a pediatric emergency department | Q77828500 | ||
The effect of limited English proficiency on admission rates from a pediatric ED: stratification by triage acuity | Q81309200 | ||
Unscheduled return visits to the emergency department: the impact of language | Q86629138 | ||
P433 | issue | 2 | |
P407 | language of work or name | English | Q1860 |
P304 | page(s) | 213-221 | |
P577 | publication date | 2016-03-29 | |
P1433 | published in | Annals of Emergency Medicine | Q4767847 |
P1476 | title | The Association Between Limited English Proficiency and Unplanned Emergency Department Revisit Within 72 Hours | |
P478 | volume | 68 |
Q64107003 | A Reversed Trend: Care for Limited English Proficiency Patients in the Pediatric Emergency Department |
Q61445284 | Language assistance for limited English proficiency patients in a public ED: determining the unmet need |
Q91623764 | Large observational study on risks predicting emergency department return visits and associated disposition deviations |
Q58781909 | Seventy-two-hour emergency department revisits among adults with chronic diseases: a Saudi Arabian study |
Q39176866 | Shared Decision Making With Vulnerable Populations in the Emergency Department |
Q33666851 | Short Term Unscheduled Revisits to Paediatric Emergency Department - A Six Year Data |
Q93157607 | Socio-demographic and disease related characteristics associated with unplanned emergency department visits by cancer patients: a retrospective cohort study |
Search more.