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1  Funding Source: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
2 ancisco, and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
3 y of Copenhagen, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
4 undation and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
5 h and Quality; and US Department of Veterans Affairs.
6 role in the natural environment and in human affairs.
7 itutes of Health, and Department of Veterans Affairs.
8                       Department of Veterans Affairs.
9 ouncil, Glaxo Wellcome International Medical Affairs.
10 s of Health, and U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
11 ed the specialty and its influence on public affairs.
12 ducted using national Department of Veterans Affairs administrative data of patients hospitalized at
13                                 For Veterans Affairs admissions, we used clinical data to calculate V
14                       Department of Veterans Affairs and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
15 ment, Academy of Finland, Ministry of Social Affairs and Employment (Netherlands), Economic and Socia
16 ment, Academy of Finland, Ministry of Social Affairs and Employment (Netherlands), US National Instit
17  Funding Source: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and Institute for Clinical and Economic Review.
18  case-control study using linked US Veterans Affairs and Medicare data.
19                In a study of the US Veterans Affairs and Medicare databases, lower endoscopy in the p
20 rescription-fill data were linked to Veteran Affairs and Medicare encounter files, each person-day of
21 ory failure and/or shock from three Veterans Affairs and one civilian hospital.
22 ide a concise review of the current state of affairs and potential future developments in the diagnos
23                       Department of Veterans Affairs and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
24 using a data set created by linking Veterans Affairs and US Renal Data System information, including
25 on was determined using bedsection (Veterans Affairs) and revenue center codes (Medicare).
26  Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, and donors.
27 Institutes of Health, Department of Veterans Affairs, and UPMC Rehabilitation Institute.
28 ow is Vice President for Global Microbiology Affairs at bioMerieux, Durham, NC, wrote the initial cou
29 on; 72% and 78%, respectively, were Veterans Affairs based.
30 rom 2011 to 2013 was performed at a Veterans Affairs-based urology clinic in Brooklyn, New York, amon
31 143 patients) undergoing PCI in the Veterans Affairs between 2007 and 2010 were examined.
32 ssential for conservation and sociopolitical affairs but notoriously difficult.
33           We combined data from the Veterans Affairs Cancer Registry with the Surgical Quality Improv
34         Data were collected from 42 Veterans Affairs cardiac surgery centers.
35  Michigan Foundation, Department of Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research, Univers
36                                     Veterans Affairs Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion.
37 ited from primary care clinics at a Veterans Affairs center.
38 lsification cataract surgeries at 5 veterans affairs centers in the United States.
39                       Department of Veterans Affairs, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
40 n 2008 were ascertained through the Veterans Affairs Central Cancer Registry and sent questionnaires
41                                This state of affairs changed in 2012, when the most influential profe
42 2, were examined using the national veterans affairs Clinical Assessment Reporting and Tracking (CART
43        The study used data from the Veterans Affairs Clinical Assessment, Reporting, and Tracking (VA
44                      Using national Veterans Affairs Clinical Assessment, Reporting, and Tracking Pro
45 -to-treat cohort analysis using the Veterans Affairs Clinical Case Registry to identify HIV/HCV GT1-c
46               Based on data from the Veteran Affairs Clinical Case Registry, statin use among patient
47 med a retrospective cohort using the Veteran Affairs Clinical Case Registry, which contains nationwid
48 eterization, including 12232 in the Veterans Affairs cohort between October 1, 2007, and September 30
49 ectious Diseases Society of America Clinical Affairs Committee has long endeavored to quantify the va
50                                   A Clinical Affairs Committee-sponsored study of ID physicians' posi
51 ween July 2002 and June 2011 at the Veterans Affairs Connecticut Healthcare System were included in t
52 ement (ADAM) study conducted by the Veterans Affairs Cooperative Studies Program from 1992 to 2000.
53 tments such as the US Department of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Studies Program have also enhanced t
54 revention Study (SPS; Department of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Studies Program Number 403), SPS par
55 ey receipt as part of Department of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Study 579, HealthVIEWS.
56                                This state of affairs could exacerbate a dearth of innovations and lea
57                   In Phase 1 of the Veterans Affairs CSP 468 study, 255 PD patients were randomised t
58 e database analysis of the national Veterans Affairs database for patients with a admission diagnosis
59 ection Agency and the Department of Veterans Affairs databases to build an observational cohort of 2,
60 ort of 760 men in the Department of Veterans Affairs Dental Longitudinal Study and Normative Aging St
61 d 29 to 64 years at entry) from the Veterans Affairs Dental Longitudinal Study from whom DNA and dent
62 ociation, as well as those from the Veterans Affairs/Department of Defense and the Joint British Soci
63 ce and its affiliated Department of Veterans Affairs dermatology service.
64                                 The Veterans Affairs Diabetes Trial previously showed that intensive
65 eceived care from the Department of Veterans Affairs during 2007-2012.
66  HIV care from the US Department of Veterans Affairs during 2009-2013 were evaluated to determine tre
67                       Data from the Veterans Affairs electronic database included demographics, diagn
68 istry of Health; Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs; EMERGENCY's private donations; and Royal Engine
69 atomy were recruited from the Miami Veterans Affairs Eye Clinic (N = 248).
70     Male patients seen in the Miami Veterans Affairs eye clinic aged 50 years or older were recruited
71 etrospective cohort study involving Veterans Affairs facilities from January 1, 2000, to December 31,
72   Our hospital was one of the first Veterans Affairs facilities to launch a transcatheter aortic valv
73  safely and with good outcomes at a Veterans Affairs facility with a committed multidisciplinary team
74 in an EHR data warehouse at a large Veterans Affairs facility, and manual record reviews were used to
75 everse sequence algorithm (RSA) in a Veteran Affairs facility, finding 5.5% reactive Treponema pallid
76 ents who received warfarin from the Veterans Affairs from 2007 to 2008, International Classification
77                                This state of affairs has led to the development of positive allosteri
78                                     Veterans Affairs has made substantial progress in reducing the fr
79                We used the National Veterans Affairs HCV Clinical Case Registry to identify patients
80                We used the National Veterans Affairs HCV Clinical Case Registry to identify patients
81                       Department of Veterans Affairs health care facilities.
82  were enrolled in the Department of Veterans Affairs health care system between October 7, 2001, and
83  84 years with ASCVD treated in the Veterans Affairs health care system from April 1, 2013, to April
84 ct-acting antiviral regimens in the Veterans Affairs health care system nationally.
85 , 2014 through June 20, 2015 in the Veterans Affairs health care system.
86 ober 2007 and September 2012 in the Veterans Affairs health care system.
87  intensity of statin therapy in the Veterans Affairs health care system.
88                  U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Health Services Research & Development Service.
89                       Department of Veterans Affairs, Health Services Research and Development Servic
90  catheterization (2007-2012) in the Veterans Affairs healthcare system (n=21,727; 908-day median foll
91 d) who underwent colonoscopy in the Veterans Affairs healthcare system in fiscal year 2008.
92 s exist among women veterans in the veterans affairs healthcare system is unknown.
93  We used the national Department of Veterans Affairs Hepatitis C Virus Clinical Case Registry to iden
94 V-infected veterans followed in the Veterans Affairs HIV Clinical Case Registry from 1996 to 2011.
95 l training program with significant Veterans Affairs hospital experience between 2004 and 2012.
96 -sectional study conducted at Miami Veterans Affairs Hospital included 118 individuals with a wide va
97 rt study at a university-affiliated Veterans Affairs hospital of all noncardiac surgical patients wit
98 ted to 15 intensive care units in a Veterans Affairs hospital setting (the Veterans Integrated Servic
99 , 2015, among patients at the Miami Veterans Affairs Hospital with a wide variety of dry eye symptoms
100 , 2015, among patients at the Miami Veterans Affairs Hospital with a wide variety of dry eye symptoms
101  in Georgia surrounding the Atlanta Veterans Affairs hospital.
102  surgeon-patient consultations) from Veteran Affairs hospitals and a randomized controlled laboratory
103 VG-PCI between 2008 and 2011 at all Veterans Affairs hospitals and compared clinical outcomes of betw
104 gery and were discharged alive from Veterans Affairs hospitals for orthopedic, general, and vascular
105 y included all patients admitted to Veterans Affairs hospitals from 2003 to 2010 who had positive blo
106 y included patients admitted to 119 Veterans Affairs hospitals from 2003 to 2010.
107 urgical procedures performed at 117 Veterans Affairs hospitals from 2007 to 2014 were identified, and
108 nts who received PCI at any 1 of 62 Veterans Affairs hospitals from 2008 to 2011.
109 s of patients undergoing surgery in Veterans Affairs hospitals from October 1, 2008, through Septembe
110                       Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals in 21 geographic regions.
111 ized clinical trial conducted at 18 Veterans Affairs hospitals using the Randomized On/Off Bypass (RO
112 ardiography registries from 2 major Veterans Affairs hospitals were accessed to identify patients wit
113 tive cohort study in patients at US Veterans Affairs hospitals who had a coronary stent placed betwee
114 to internal medicine services in 10 Veterans Affairs hospitals, end-of-rotation transition in care wa
115  institutions, private offices, and Veterans Affairs hospitals.
116 rtery bypass grafting procedures in Veterans Affairs hospitals.
117 it times for surgical procedures in Veterans Affairs hospitals.
118  who were ineligible for treatment (Veterans Affairs HR=2.35, CI 1.18-4.69, mean follow-up 10 years,
119  performed a retrospective study of Veterans Affairs Human Immunodeficiency Virus Clinical Case Regis
120 screen as used by the Department of Veterans Affairs in all of its primary care clinics.
121 e field while concurrently updating state of affairs in cutting edge research.
122                         The current state of affairs in the drug discovery and development process is
123 urrent delay and wait times prevent Veterans Affairs institutions from fully meeting the needs of cur
124 d clinical outcomes in the national Veterans Affairs integrated healthcare system.
125 erformed secondary data analyses of Veterans Affairs intensive care unit (ICU) episodes across 5 year
126 cident AMI (Medicaid, Medicare, and Veterans Affairs International Classification of Diseases-9 codes
127                        This overall state of affairs is likely to be exacerbated by anthropogenic cli
128 ver whether or not one and the same state of affairs is negative or positive.
129                       However, this state of affairs is somewhat counterintuitive because GO sheets b
130                                 The Veterans Affairs Keratinocyte Carcinoma Chemoprevention (VAKCC) t
131                                 The Veterans Affairs Keratinocyte Carcinoma Chemoprevention Trial was
132 , OH, USA) and the US Department of Veterans Affairs, Louis Stokes Cleveland Veterans Affairs Medical
133 ty) estimated from responses to the Veterans Affairs Low Vision Visual Functioning Questionnaire (hig
134 ty) estimated from responses to the Veterans Affairs Low Vision Visual Functioning Questionnaire (hig
135 gton and University of Maryland and Veterans Affairs Maryland Healthcare systems.
136 ans Affairs, Louis Stokes Cleveland Veterans Affairs Medical Center (Cleveland, OH, USA).
137                   This study at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center (Indianapolis, Indiana) included
138  and December 31, 2012, at a single Veterans Affairs medical center among a consecutive cohort of 166
139 ronic medical records of a regional Veterans Affairs Medical Center and a pathologically confirmed Ba
140 endent cohorts from a United States Veterans Affairs Medical Center and a University Teaching Hospita
141 e disorder from the Ralph H Johnson Veterans Affairs Medical Center and four associated community out
142 ents who underwent primary TKA at a Veterans Affairs Medical Center before (March 3, 2013-March 2, 20
143 went cardiac surgery at Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Medical Center between 1993 and 2010.
144 n segments total) at the West Haven Veterans Affairs Medical Center from January 2014 to February 201
145 bmitted to the IRB at a large urban Veterans Affairs medical center from June 1, 2009, through May 31
146  5 primary care clinics in a single Veterans Affairs medical center from June 2010 through May 2012,
147 h PTSD recruited at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Medical Center from March 2012 to December 2013.
148 munity-based clinics of the Atlanta Veterans Affairs Medical Center from October 1, 2008, through Mar
149       3 primary care clinics at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Durham and Raleigh, North Caro
150                             DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Houston, Texas, was analyzed f
151  for the treatment of VRE-BSI among Veterans Affairs Medical Center patients admitted during 2004-201
152 onal Review Board and the Iowa City Veterans Affairs Medical Center Research and Development Committe
153 n January and September 2012 at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center Tennessee Valley Healthcare Syste
154            Patients from the Dallas Veterans Affairs Medical Center who had reflux esophagitis succes
155 d all 9153 patients from a level 1b Veterans Affairs medical center who presented for major, elective
156 ermatology clinics of the affiliated Veteran Affairs medical center with biopsy-confirmed DN with pos
157 l Cancer Institute cancer center, a Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and community outreach clinics w
158                           Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Indianapolis, Indiana, revealed
159 d and followed up at the Sacramento Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Mather, California, from March 5
160 nical Center (GRECC), Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Tennessee Valley Healthcare Syst
161 r osteoarthritis in a Department of Veterans Affairs medical center, this study found no statisticall
162 study at an academically affiliated Veterans Affairs medical center.
163 The study was conducted in a single Veterans Affairs medical center.
164 0-6 February 2014) at the San Diego Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
165 San Francisco and the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
166 mber 16, 2011, at the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
167  Iowa Heath Care System, a Level 1b Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
168                             DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
169                       Department of Veterans Affairs medical center.
170 scal years (FYs) at a tertiary care Veterans Affairs medical center.
171 ral Hospital and the San Francisco Veteran's Affairs Medical Center.
172 t 2 academic sites and an affiliated Veteran Affairs medical center.
173 uence MRSA nosocomial infections in Veterans Affairs Medical Centers (VAMCs).
174 ing) from 24 nationally distributed Veterans Affairs Medical Centers (VAMCs).
175  resting conditions at academic and Veterans Affairs medical centers among 56 individuals in the foll
176 rtion skills checklist, we compared Veterans Affairs Medical Centers attending physicians' simulated
177 tients receiving coronary stents at Veterans Affairs medical centers between 2000 and 2010 was used t
178 s of pneumonia at 128 Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers from 2006 through 2010, we measu
179 ncluded dyslipidaemic veterans from Veterans Affairs Medical Centers in Palo Alto, CA, and Washington
180 e subjects (58.3+/-11 years) at the Veterans Affairs Medical Centers in Washington, DC, and Palo Alto
181 m managers from 51 US Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers to collect data on skin-related
182                     Outcomes from 5 Veterans Affairs medical centers were analyzed, including use of
183                Outpatients from two Veterans Affairs Medical Centers were enrolled from 2008 to 2010.
184 ixty-seven patients hospitalized at Veterans Affairs medical centers were randomized to the surveilla
185 %) representing 12 specialties at 3 Veterans Affairs medical centers.
186 imary prevention ICDs at 2 tertiary Veterans Affairs Medical Centers.
187 d concluded in September 2012 at 14 Veterans Affairs medical centers.
188 ams and preventive approaches in US Veterans Affairs medical centers.
189 h maintenance organizations, and 15 Veterans Affairs Medical Centers.
190  15, 2002, to April 15, 2008, at 42 Veterans Affairs medical centers.
191 nth Revision diagnosis codes in the Veterans Affairs Medical SAS data sets.
192  was estimated statistically by the Veterans Affairs mortality risk estimate and subjectively by card
193               We used Department of Veterans Affairs national databases to build a primary cohort of
194 -4 (ranging from 75% to 93%) in the Veterans Affairs national health care system achieved SVR12, appr
195      All patients identified in the Veterans Affairs National Surgical Quality Improvement Program da
196                    US Department of Veterans Affairs, National Institutes of Health.
197  July 2011 to September 2015 at the Veterans Affairs Nebraska-Western Iowa Heath Care System, a Level
198  included 370 participants from the Veterans Affairs Normative Aging Study with up to 2 visits betwee
199 al data from 718 elderly men in the Veterans Affairs Normative Aging Study, 1999-2010.
200  blood pressure in elderly men: the Veterans Affairs Normative Aging Study.
201 luded 839 participants from the VA (Veterans Affairs) Normative Aging Study whose lung function [forc
202     UK Government, Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation, T
203 itable Foundation and Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Policy and Planning.
204  with and without glaucoma from the Veterans Affairs Ophthalmic Surgical Outcomes Data Project were c
205 ical quality improvement databases (Veterans Affairs or American College of Surgeons National Surgica
206 cising more vigorously, seeking extramarital affairs, or choosing to end their lives).
207 terventional study performed at the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, patients 35 years
208 pective cohort study using national Veterans Affairs patient-level data on adherence to the original
209 ective cohort study of hospitalized Veterans Affairs patients treated with standard-dose (6 mg/kg tot
210  pregnancy and patient safety and regulatory affairs personnel to meet serious adverse event reportin
211 ed a retrospective case series in a Veterans Affairs population from 1991 to 2013 to characterize blu
212 h moderate-to-severe knee OA from 3 Veterans Affairs primary care clinics were enrolled in a randomiz
213 010 to June 2011 for 964 818 active Veterans Affairs primary care patients >/=18 years of age with di
214                       Department of Veterans Affairs Quality Enhancement Research Initiative.
215         We assessed mortality from Veteran's Affairs' records on Dec 31, 2011.
216                     This study used Veterans Affairs registry data to evaluate the associations betwe
217 s base in southern California or at Veterans Affairs San Diego Medical Center.
218 R01HL108441-01A1) and Department of Veterans Affairs Sierra Pacific Mental Illness Research, Educatio
219 esearch (AACR) Science Policy and Government Affairs (SPGA) Committee and American Society of Clinica
220 Study, but similar to the Northwest Veterans Affairs Study.
221 e patients, we linked 2785 to local Veterans Affairs Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement P
222                            National Veterans Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement data on inpatient g
223 tudy of 266,101 patients within the Veterans Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program (2000-2014)
224                                 The Veterans Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program and Central
225                                 The Veterans Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program assessments
226  retrospective observational study, Veterans Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program data for su
227                            National Veterans Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program data on inp
228                                 The Veterans Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program data were u
229 m September 2014 to April 2015, the Veterans Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program database an
230 rospective cohort study of national Veterans Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program preoperativ
231 plication currently assessed by the Veterans Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program.
232 the relative use of OFF CABG in the Veterans Affairs system since 2003.
233                          Within the Veterans Affairs, the use of r-PCI increased over time.
234 rontieres; the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs through the Research Council of Norway; and the
235 ns Frontieres, Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (through the Research Council of Norway's GLOBVA
236  prior reviews have attributed this state of affairs to diagnostic heterogeneity, symptom comorbidity
237 y care clinics in the Department of Veterans Affairs to indicate a positive screen, the 4-item PC-PTS
238 ection Agency and the Department of Veterans Affairs, to build a cohort of US veterans, and used surv
239 on comprising 1,131 veterans in the Veterans Affairs Topical Tretinoin Chemoprevention (VATTC) Trial.
240 , and from the Government of Canada, Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada.
241 nt Research Centre and Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development).
242 t Research Centre, and Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development.
243                Government of Canada, Foreign Affairs, Trade, and Development; US Fund for UNICEF; and
244 re study sites, fewer university or Veterans Affairs treatment settings, and a lower percentage of pa
245 tients who had been included in the Veterans Affairs trial of on-pump versus off-pump CABG.
246 a's Ministry for Health, Welfare, and Family Affairs, UK Wellcome Trust, Wolfson Foundation, UK Strok
247 ied Research Program, and Ann Arbor Veterans Affairs/University of Michigan Patient Safety Enhancemen
248 ve cohort study using data from the Veterans Affairs VA hepatitis C virus (HCV) Clinical Case Registr
249 out comparative performance between Veterans Affairs (VA) and non-VA hospitals, particularly related
250 s in kidney transplantation (KT) in Veterans Affairs (VA) and non-VA transplant centers.
251 e perspectives of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and society.
252  April 2017, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) ap
253                       Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) approv
254 ted healthcare systems, such as the Veterans Affairs (VA) are unknown.
255  who underwent bariatric surgery in Veterans Affairs (VA) bariatric centers from 2000-2011 and matche
256 ements incurred $1.4 million in non-Veterans Affairs (VA) care costs with an average length of stay o
257 by using the national Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Central Cancer Registry (2004-2007) and lin
258        Using national data from the Veterans Affairs (VA) Clinical Assessment Reporting and Tracking
259 S AND Using a multicenter, national Veterans Affairs (VA) cohort, all patients who underwent cardiac,
260 ere recruited from 11 Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) community-based outpatient clinics serving
261   Using data from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Corporate Warehouse Data from 2015, we eval
262 uded the 1,152 dentate males in the Veterans Affairs (VA) Dental Longitudinal Study who presented for
263 and better coordinate care with non-Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities.
264                                 The Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system has used this strategy,
265 d with HIV who received care in the Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system nationally between 1996
266 use of left ventriculography in the Veterans Affairs (VA) Health Care System.
267 and use of eye care services in the Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system.
268  coronary intervention (PCI) in the Veterans Affairs (VA) health system are not known.
269                      The nationwide Veterans Affairs (VA) health system seeks to provide equal access
270 ) study from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) healthcare system, we identified patients w
271 ber 28,2012 in any Department of US Veterans Affairs (VA) hospital, we identified 5,968 with availabl
272 ures performed at 112 Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals found an overall complication rat
273          Surgical patients from 129 Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals were included.
274 nance dialysis in the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) in fiscal years 2000-2009 (n=1691) to chara
275 oom area poses unique challenges in Veterans Affairs (VA) institutions.
276                       Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is the nation's largest care provider for h
277 cohort study in a tertiary referral Veterans Affairs (VA) medical center within an 8-state designated
278 e data from 1 year (2012-2013) at 4 Veterans Affairs (VA) medical centers.
279 e 1990s after implementation of the Veterans Affairs (VA) National Surgical Quality Improvement Progr
280 xaminations of 428 older men in the Veterans Affairs (VA) Normative Aging Study.
281 BE patients identified from national Veteran Affairs (VA) outpatient files, diagnosed with BE from 20
282  a national retrospective cohort of Veterans Affairs (VA) patients with the diagnosis of cirrhosis (n
283 ve study of a US national cohort of Veterans Affairs (VA) patients.
284  participating in the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) PE Training Program.
285 Defense (DoD) and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provide comprehensive HIV treatment and car
286 m the patients at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) sites and some non-VA sites in the United S
287 ls more efficient, 10 Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) sites were selected.
288 spective review of records from the Veterans Affairs (VA) Surgical Quality Improvement Program (VASQI
289 derwent coronary angiography in the Veterans Affairs (VA) system between 2005 and 2011.
290  all patients undergoing PCI in the Veterans Affairs (VA) system from 2007 to 2010.
291 e Part D and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) use different approaches to manage prescrip
292 ejection fraction receiving care at Veterans Affairs (VA) versus non-VA hospitals have not been previ
293 providers outside the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
294 providers outside the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
295 ohort study at the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
296 uidelines and 2014 US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)/US Department of Defense (DoD) joint clinic
297 rticipating in the US Department of Veterans Affairs Veterans Aging Cohort Study from April 1, 2003,
298 imary Funding Source: Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Office of Resea
299 VA Healthcare System, Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Office of Resea
300                       Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Office of Resea

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