Systematic bias in traumatic brain injury outcome studies because of loss to follow-up.
about
Neuroimaging of structural pathology and connectomics in traumatic brain injury: Toward personalized outcome prediction.Population health and clinical data linkage: the importance of a population registry.Predicting complete loss to follow-up after a health-education program: number of absences and face-to-face contact with a researcher.Neuroinformatics challenges to the structural, connectomic, functional and electrophysiological multimodal imaging of human traumatic brain injury.Mental illness, traumatic brain injury, and medicaid expendituresPersistence of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder into adulthood: what have we learned from the prospective follow-up studies?Factors influencing attrition in a multisite, randomized, clinical trial following traumatic brain injury in adolescence.Neurologic Functional and Quality of Life Outcomes after TBI: Clinic Attendees versus Non-AttendeesMedical care costs associated with traumatic brain injury over the full spectrum of disease: a controlled population-based study.Representativeness of the Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems National Database.Disability in young people and adults after head injury: 5-7 year follow up of a prospective cohort study.Predictors for Return to Work in Subjects with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury.Impact of age on long-term recovery from traumatic brain injuryThe impact of mild traumatic brain injury on cognitive functioning following co-occurring spinal cord injuryA longitudinal, multicentre, cohort study of community rehabilitation service delivery in long-term neurological conditions.The spectrum captured: a methodological approach to studying incidence and outcomes of traumatic brain injury on a population level.Impact of participant attrition on child injury outcome estimates: a longitudinal birth cohort study in Australia.Caregiver burden in Danish family members of patients with severe brain injury: The chronic phase.Relatives of patients with severe brain injury: Growth curve analysis of anxiety and depression the first year after injury.Incidence and risk factors of posttraumatic seizures following traumatic brain injury: A Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems Study.Bidirectional Changes in Anisotropy Are Associated with Outcomes in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury.Community integration outcomes after traumatic brain injury due to physical assault.Modeling the prospective relationships of impairment, injury severity, and participation to quality of life following traumatic brain injury.Issues of loss to follow-up in a population study of traumatic brain injury (TBI) followed to 3 years post-trauma.Mobile Monitoring of Traumatic Brain Injury in Older Adults: Challenges and Opportunities.Return to work after traumatic brain injury: cohort comparison and economic evaluation.The epidemiology of a specialist neurorehabilitation clinic: implications for clinical practice and regional service development.Acceptance rates in state-federal vocational rehabilitation of clients with brain injury: Is racial disparity an issue?Factors associated with non-participation in one or two follow-up phases in a cohort study of injured adults.Survival and mortality following TBI.Optimizing Outcome Assessment in Multicenter TBI Trials: Perspectives From TRACK-TBI and the TBI Endpoints Development Initiative.Family needs in the chronic phase after severe brain injury in Denmark.Impairment at rehabilitation admission and 1 year after moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury: a prospective multi-centre analysis.Changes in coping strategies, social support, optimism and health-related quality of life following traumatic brain injury: a longitudinal study.Outpatient follow-up after mild traumatic brain injury: Results of the UPFRONT-study.Children and young adults in a prolonged unconscious state after severe brain injury: long-term functional outcome as measured by the DRS and the GOSE after early intensive neurorehabilitation.Multidisciplinary outpatient treatment in patients with mild traumatic brain injury: A randomised controlled intervention study.Relationship between competency in activities, injury severity, and post-concussion symptoms after traumatic brain injury.Predictive utility of weekly post-traumatic amnesia assessments after brain injury: A multicentre analysis.Validity and screening properties of three depression rating scales in a prospective sample of patients with severe traumatic brain injury.
P2860
Q30687519-B553CDA3-F169-48E8-A5E8-C80943D6CDFEQ31132866-11FC48FA-E850-459D-A978-4B608BBA1EDFQ34060042-8330456A-E240-478F-92C4-C2E22BCF1BB2Q35117024-3779282F-EF70-414A-9DCA-784D9E136696Q35651915-D1767AAE-0C4A-4AA4-A508-D05D17322FA6Q35690035-9BB41D05-6A49-48A7-890A-93B671564985Q35734490-808960B3-C9C1-475B-BCF4-2D382F7D39F5Q35821797-5CC731AC-A521-4C88-A540-3B5B5EAD7A4FQ36127356-30635C69-E5D5-44CB-A71D-881F0B56B6A9Q36133740-17827878-55BC-498F-87BA-68740C5C142CQ36226335-C33E2E2C-44BD-4D31-BC4B-B8DFC2640D1EQ36626239-26801AAE-47EA-43BD-B1BA-A0CA14DEE898Q37009638-C8BBF88F-9725-43E2-9D8F-48998CFF9A79Q37494400-CC1B76E8-E5B9-4722-974B-E2FCED97F387Q37612157-99BBEB25-556D-4D52-9230-F4FE7323EDB2Q37969614-3FD38517-CCEE-4F8D-82C6-AFC3F4CF41F5Q38699267-F73DED02-D4DE-407E-87EE-4669751229B4Q38913915-1FFE5467-BB41-431D-AF2A-AF3AB31BD5FCQ39008482-52905A7A-8070-4734-AE03-7FBE60FA95E3Q40542471-149505D9-B8AD-479A-9148-DCFBB5D3FC4DQ40709333-E7A923A0-2B14-4995-88C8-102E2226A70CQ43439083-0E616D2A-7250-4D33-B673-87DC144EB038Q43461259-E82E9207-BFDE-4ECA-A4A7-C5366F5BB280Q43489189-A51B4FC9-B901-44CF-8B82-F5819D9905DAQ43827563-72B86BF0-E658-4B32-88B4-A68183F3A59FQ43868678-62EBA819-CFCD-40E3-85E5-FD2AB6930576Q44386792-F8EC3B67-F0BB-4FAB-8EA7-48F3F630F75DQ44413519-1BEA3527-ECF7-4C5B-A6D9-668F83E42F71Q44853112-3FAFC13F-BA70-4F76-8023-B9D3D54893F8Q47376134-B912EE73-1E57-4F7A-BEB1-B1F20548E64AQ47829472-2877E14D-BC21-45EE-B85E-AF2DE55B3EAAQ48074438-28844F04-144A-4A41-A72A-A3E6DFD54807Q48095205-DB5C71F4-9478-401D-98B2-F7D5289776C8Q48157508-827B4BC9-E64A-4D33-B0EA-84D7D44448EAQ48177145-CEF091E1-54B5-457E-91EC-994750125F53Q48239290-962F2A06-E97C-4745-BD2B-50736DDD0042Q48262338-D6C5A8CB-4C5C-45E3-A374-66A52418F1F7Q48266871-2254A383-1CF8-46AD-8BB9-20F6C0663613Q48293659-491FDE0C-334D-429B-935B-4E6119844D8AQ48305587-9E5E204B-FC14-4569-8DDB-28D20D9AE196
P2860
Systematic bias in traumatic brain injury outcome studies because of loss to follow-up.
description
2003 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2003年の論文
@ja
2003年学术文章
@wuu
2003年学术文章
@zh
2003年学术文章
@zh-cn
2003年学术文章
@zh-hans
2003年学术文章
@zh-my
2003年学术文章
@zh-sg
2003年學術文章
@yue
2003年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Systematic bias in traumatic brain injury outcome studies because of loss to follow-up.
@en
Systematic bias in traumatic brain injury outcome studies because of loss to follow-up.
@nl
type
label
Systematic bias in traumatic brain injury outcome studies because of loss to follow-up.
@en
Systematic bias in traumatic brain injury outcome studies because of loss to follow-up.
@nl
prefLabel
Systematic bias in traumatic brain injury outcome studies because of loss to follow-up.
@en
Systematic bias in traumatic brain injury outcome studies because of loss to follow-up.
@nl
P2093
P356
P1476
Systematic bias in traumatic brain injury outcome studies because of loss to follow-up
@en
P2093
Cynthia Harrison-Felix
Gale Whiteneck
Jennifer Bogner
John D Corrigan
Melissa Sendroy Terrill
P304
P356
10.1053/APMR.2003.50093
P577
2003-02-01T00:00:00Z