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- Medical English LInking keywords finder for the PubMed Zipped Archive (ELIZA) -

return kwic search for potential out of >500 occurrences
545945 occurrences (No.21 in the rank) during 5 years in the PubMed. [no cache] 500 found
74) It must also only be undertaken with the appropriate participant consent, otherwise this has the potential to cause patients harm.
--- ABSTRACT ---
PMID:24176299 DOI:10.1071/PY13087
2015 Australian journal of primary health
* Barriers and enablers to good communication and information-sharing practices in care planning for chronic condition management.
- Our aim was to document current communication and information-sharing practices and to identify the barriers and enablers to good practices within the context of care planning for chronic condition management. Further aims were to make recommendations about how changes to policy and practice can improve communication and information sharing in primary health care. A mixed-method approach was applied to seek the perspectives of patients and primary health-care workers across Australia. Data was collected via interviews, focus groups, non-participant observations and a national survey. Data analysis was performed using a mix of thematic, discourse and statistical approaches. Central barriers to effective communication and information sharing included fragmented communication, uncertainty around client and interagency consent, and the unacknowledged existence of overlapping care plans. To be most effective, communication and information sharing should be open, two-way and inclusive of all members of health-care teams. It must also only be undertaken with the appropriate participant consent, otherwise this has the potential to cause patients harm. Improvements in care planning as a communication and information-sharing tool may be achieved through practice initiatives that reflect the rhetoric of collaborative person-centred care, which is already supported through existing policy in Australia. General practitioners and other primary care providers should operationalise care planning, and the expectation of collaborative and effective communication of care that underpins it, within their practice with patients and all members of the care team. To assist in meeting these aims, we make several recommendations.
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(1)67 of (15)4 effects (29)2 by (43)2 mediator
(2)39 to (16)4 guardian (30)2 clinical (44)2 new
(3)35 for (17)4 mechanism (31)2 confounders (45)2 pathways
(4)14 *null* (18)4 mechanisms (32)2 confounders, (46)2 perils
(5)13 in (19)3 adverse (33)2 directions (47)2 preventive
(6)10 as (20)3 applications (34)2 drug (48)2 risks
(7)10 risk (21)3 association (35)2 factors (49)2 than
(8)8 role (22)3 cytotoxicity (36)2 future (50)2 therapy
(9)8 use (23)3 genotoxic (37)2 harm (51)2 toxicity
(10)7 and (24)3 influence (38)2 hazards (52)2 vaccine
(11)7 therapeutic (25)3 pitfalls (39)2 impact (53)2 was
(12)6 benefits (26)3 utility (40)2 is
(13)5 health (27)3 value (41)2 issues
(14)5 predictors (28)2 biomarker (42)2 maximum

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--- WordNet output for potential --- =>可能性のある, 可能な, 潜在力のある, 位置の, 電位の, 潜在的な, ポテンシャル, 可能性, 電位 Overview of noun potential The noun potential has 2 senses (first 1 from tagged texts) 1. (10) potential, potentiality, potency -- (the inherent capacity for coming into being) 2. electric potential, potential, potential difference, potential drop, voltage -- (the difference in electrical charge between two points in a circuit expressed in volts) Overview of adj potential The adj potential has 2 senses (first 2 from tagged texts) 1. (7) potential, possible -- (existing in possibility; "a potential problem"; "possible uses of nuclear power") 2. (6) likely, potential -- (expected to become or be; in prospect; "potential clients") --- WordNet end ---