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Clinical improvement is defined as: improved function of at least two organ systems (i.e. circulatory, pulmonary, or renal) or improvement of two out of three parameters of infection (i.e. C-reactive protein, leucocytes, or temperature).
Translated to SCR designs, the baseline phase becomes the control condition, the intervention phase becomes the treatment condition, and improvement is defined as non-overlapping data between phases.
A quantitative estimate for the visibility improvement is defined as a logarithmic function of the backscatter component.
In many studies, a clinically relevant improvement is defined as ten letters at one year.
Improvement is defined as a change to a better renal function group as shown in Table 1 compared to the renal function group at discharge.
In the results below, improvement is defined as the inference accuracy percentage of the method using the simulated functional association prior minus the inference accuracy percentage of the method using the naïve prior.
Similar(54)
A secondary outcome, significant improvement, was defined as much better or very much better.
%DLCO was rated similarly, except that "improvement" was defined as improved by >5%.
In accordance with our protocol, "improvement" was defined as scoring less than four on the fatigue scale or improving by 50% or more or scoring 75% or more on the SF-36 physical functioning scale.
With respect to the global improvement scale, "improvement" was defined as the point at which the patient first answered "Yes, definite improvement".
Improvement was defined as a change of more than twice the coefficient of variation of repeated measurements of tidal volume and flows from baseline.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com