ELIZA cgi-bash version rev. 1.90
- Medical English LInking keywords finder for the PubMed Zipped Archive (ELIZA) -

return kwic search for who out of >500 occurrences
271863 occurrences (No.95 in the rank) during 5 years in the PubMed. [cache]
332) To examine these questions, the study used relevance mapping, an empirical methodology that compares youths in a given clinical population with participants in published randomized trials to determine who may be "coverable" by EBTs and which treatments may collectively be most applicable.
--- ABSTRACT ---
PMID:23984676 DOI:10.1080/15374416.2013.828296
2015 Journal of clinical child and adolescent psychology : the official journal for the Society of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, American Psychological Association, Division 53
* Fit of evidence-based treatment components to youths served by wraparound process: a relevance mapping analysis.
- This study investigated whether and which evidence-based treatment (EBT) components might generalize to youths served by the wraparound process. To examine these questions, the study used relevance mapping, an empirical methodology that compares youths in a given clinical population with participants in published randomized trials to determine who may be "coverable" by EBTs and which treatments may collectively be most applicable. In a large diverse clinical sample, youths receiving wraparound services (n = 828) were compared with youths receiving other services (n = 3,104) regarding (a) demographic and clinical profiles, (b) "coverability" by any EBTs, and (c) specific practices from those EBTs that most efficiently applied to each group. Participants in studies of EBTs matched the demographic and clinical characteristics of nearly as many youths receiving wraparound (58-59%) as those receiving non-wraparound services (61-64%). Moreover, the best-fitting solutions of relevant sets of practices were highly similar across groups. These results provide the first large-scale empirical characterization of fit between EBTs and youths receiving wraparound and suggest that these youths are well suited to benefit from clinical strategies commonly used in EBTs.
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[frequency of next (right) word to who]
(1)62 were (15)5 participated (29)2 Basic (43)2 read
(2)53 had (16)5 sexually (30)2 believed (44)2 require
(3)25 are (17)4 do (31)2 can (45)2 required
(4)25 have (18)4 is (32)2 commuted (46)2 scored
(5)25 underwent (19)4 responded (33)2 consumed (47)2 showed
(6)21 received (20)4 sought (34)2 deal (48)2 smoked
(7)14 presented (21)3 attended (35)2 died (49)2 struggle
(8)13 developed (22)3 has (36)2 experience (50)2 suffered
(9)11 reported (23)3 in (37)2 had, (51)2 sustained
(10)11 was (24)3 lived (38)2 live (52)2 took
(11)10 completed (25)3 may (39)2 lives (53)2 use
(12)10 experienced (26)3 met (40)2 measured (54)2 wanted
(13)8 did (27)3 work (41)2 participate
(14)5 inject (28)3 would (42)2 present

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--- WordNet output for who --- =>だれ, だれが, だれを, する(人), そしてその人は, 世界保健機構 Overview of noun who The noun who has 1 sense (no senses from tagged texts) 1. World Health Organization, WHO -- (a United Nations agency to coordinate international health activities and to help governments improve health services) --- WordNet end ---