https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sotrastaurin-aeb071.html Comparing pre-scribe versus with-scribe periods, documentation time per patient decreased by 3-minutes 28-seconds per patient (pre-scribe IQR 6, with-scribe IQR 3, P=.028); note timeliness decreased from 0.96 days to 0.26 days (pre-scribe IQR 0.22, with-scribe IQR 0.11, P=.028); and clinicians' estimates of time spent in the EHR decreased by 1.2 hours per clinic session (pre-scribe IQR 0.5, with-scribe IQR 0.5, P=.031). Medical scribes in an outpatient pediatric setting result in 1) decreased time spent charting, 2) reduced time to final sign clinic notes, and 3) decrease in clinician's perceived time spent documenting. Medical scribes in an outpatient pediatric setting result in 1) decreased time spent charting, 2) reduced time to final sign clinic notes, and 3) decrease in clinician's perceived time spent documenting. To examine associations between adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and teen behavior outcomes and whether the presence of disability moderates this relationship. We conducted a secondary analysis of population-based data from the Fragile Families & Child Wellbeing Study urban birth cohort. Disability status included physical/developmental/behavioral conditions (ages 1-5) using mother-reported child health conditions and cognitive disability (age 9), measured by the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT), an assessment of receptive vocabulary. We investigated whether either disability type moderates the relationship between ACEs occurring between ages 5 to 9 and behavior outcomes at age 15, specifically, standardized scales of caregiver-reported externalizing and youth-reported internalizing and delinquent behaviors. Associations were examined using multivariate linear regression models, including interaction effects of ACEs with low PPVT score and disability conditions to assess for potential moderaquent behaviors, indicating these children may be particularly vulnerable to the effects o