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Examples
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"There's more and more interest in how to better motivate and engage patients beyond just simply reminding them or reducing financial barriers or simplifying therapy," says Dr. Shrank.
How Can You Help the Medicine Go Down? Katherine Hobson 2011
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Shrank quite a bit, but that happens with porcelain.
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Another review of efforts to improve adherence—sponsored by CVS Caremark Corp. and carried out by Dr. Shrank and other researchers from Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard University and CVS—found that nurses talking with patients as they were discharged from the hospital were right behind pharmacists in terms of how often they successfully encouraged patients to take their medications as directed.
How Can You Help the Medicine Go Down? Katherine Hobson 2011
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Get Pharmacists Involved "Retail pharmacists appear to be able to play a really substantial role in encouraging patients to use their medications better," says William Shrank , an assistant professor of medicine in the division of pharmacoepidemiology at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.
How Can You Help the Medicine Go Down? Katherine Hobson 2011
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Shrank quite a bit, but that happens with porcelain.
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Multifaceted programs that entail various combinations of those elements and education delivered by health-care professionals have shown promise in studies, but "we don't have a good sense of what precisely is the right mix," Dr. Shrank says.
How Can You Help the Medicine Go Down? Katherine Hobson 2011
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More: Holiday Prices Lift Inflation in Germany Spain's Economy Likely Shrank Less lending to the private sector underlines fears of a credit crunch in the euro zone, as banks grow increasingly cautious.
Lending to Euro-Zone Private Sector Slows William Launder 2011
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“He Who Shrank” is a much better example of shrinking people than “A Matter of Size,” and here Henry Hasse also takes on the (now mostly defunct) universe-inside-an-atom story that had its origins in “The Girl in the Golden Atom” (Ray Cummings, 1923).
Archive 2010-06-01 Karen Burnham 2010
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“He Who Shrank” is a much better example of shrinking people than “A Matter of Size,” and here Henry Hasse also takes on the (now mostly defunct) universe-inside-an-atom story that had its origins in “The Girl in the Golden Atom” (Ray Cummings, 1923).
Golden Age Adventures Karen Burnham 2010
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This is the fourth installment of "He Who Shrank" by Henry Hasse, a science fiction story from the Gernsback Era that first appeared in the August 1936 issue of Amazing Stories magazine.
"He Who Shrank" by Henry Hasse, part 4 Johnny Pez 2010
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