4 results on '"Bart Jansen"'
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2. Assessment of formats and completeness of paper-based referral letters among urban hospitals in Rwanda: a retrospective baseline study
- Author
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Zamzam Kalume, Bart Jansen, Marc Nyssen, Jan Cornelis, Frank Verbeke, Jean Paul Niyoyita, Electronics and Informatics, Faculty of Engineering, Vriendenkring VUB, Biostatistics and medical informatics, Audio Visual Signal Processing, Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, and Public Health Sciences
- Subjects
Hospitals, Urban ,Referral completeness ,Pregnancy ,Health Policy ,Infant, Newborn ,Rwanda ,Humans ,Female ,Patient referral ,Referral letters ,Referral and Consultation ,Retrospective Studies ,Hospitals, Private - Abstract
Background Patient referral is a process in which a healthcare provider decides to seek assistance due to the limitations of available skills, resources and services offered locally. Paper-based referrals predominantly used in low-income countries hardly follow any procedure. This causes a major gap in communication, coordination, and continuity of care between primary and specialized levels, leading to poor access, delay, duplication and unnecessary costs. The goal of this study is to assess the formats and completeness of existing paper-based referral letters in order to improve health information exchange, coordination, and continuity of care. Methods A retrospective exploratory research was conducted in eight public and three private healthcare facilities in the city of Kigali from May to October 2021. A purposive sampling method was used to select hospitals and referral letters from patients’ files. A data capture sheet was designed according to the contents of the referral letters and the resulting responses were analyzed descriptively. Results In public hospitals, five types of updated referral letters were available, in total agreement with World Health Organization (WHO) standards of which two (neonatal transfer form and patient monitoring transfer form) were not used. There was also one old format that was used by most hospitals and another format designed and used by a district hospital (DH) separately. Three formats were designed and used by private hospitals (PH) individually. A total of 2,304 referral letters were perused and the results show that “external transfer” forms were completed at 58.8%; “antenatal, delivery, and postnatal external transfer” forms at 47.5%; “internal transfer” forms at 46.6%; “Referral/counter referral” forms at 46.0%; district hospital referrals (DH2) at 73.4%. Referrals by private hospitals (PH1, PH2 and PH3) were completed at 97.7%, 70.7%, and 0.0% respectively. The major completeness deficit was observed in counter referral information for all hospitals. Conclusion We observed inconsistencies in the format of the available referral letters used by public hospitals, moreover some of them were incompatible with WHO standards. Additionally, there were deficits in the completeness of all types of paper-based referral letters in use. There is a need for standardization and to disseminate the national patient referral guideline in public hospitals with emphasis on referral feedback, referral registry, triage, archiving and a need for regular training in all organizations.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Dispute Resolution as an Ethical Phantasm
- Author
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Bart Jansen
- Subjects
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Lifeworld ,Strategy and Management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Context (language use) ,06 humanities and the arts ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,Alternative dispute resolution ,Dispute resolution ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Casuistry ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Political science ,0502 economics and business ,060301 applied ethics ,Justice (ethics) ,Business and International Management ,Business ethics ,050203 business & management ,Autonomy ,Law and economics ,media_common - Abstract
Alternative dispute resolution (ADR) is a collective noun for all kinds of alternative methods to formal dispute resolution. Business ethics attempts to theorize the different forms of normative coordination of corporate acts that remain within the lifeworld and outside the formal sphere of the legal system. In this context, business ethics could offer a positive approach to ADR, as ADR would be an effective, practical form of casuistry ethics. In this manner, concrete conflicts of interest and disagreements between economic actors could be resolved based on moral intentions and moral validity claims. This approach of ADR through business ethics is confirmed by many articles in business ethical journals. In two important aspects, namely justice and autonomy, law is contrary to ethics. ADR lacks exactly these ethical characteristics; thus the idea that ADR belongs to the discourse of business ethics is misleading. This article will argue that ADR is not in the realm of the ethical, but in the realm of the legal. This critical analysis of ADR will show a deeper dimension in the relationship between business ethics and law, namely the systematic colonization of ethical methods by law.
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- 2021
- Full Text
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4. Hilbert sEMG data scanning for hand gesture recognition based on deep learning
- Author
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Bart Jansen, Athanassios N. Skodras, Bruno Cornelis, Jan Cornelis, Panagiotis Tsinganos, Electronics and Informatics, Faculty of Engineering, Vriendenkring VUB, Translational Imaging Research Alliance, and Audio Visual Signal Processing
- Subjects
Contextual image classification ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Deep learning ,0206 medical engineering ,Pattern recognition ,Image processing ,Hilbert curve ,02 engineering and technology ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Convolutional neural network ,Field (computer science) ,Artificial Intelligence ,Gesture recognition ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Software - Abstract
Deep learning has transformed the field of data analysis by dramatically improving the state of the art in various classification and prediction tasks, especially in the area of computer vision. In biomedical engineering, a lot of new work is directed toward surface electromyography (sEMG)-based gesture recognition, often addressed as an image classification problem using convolutional neural networks (CNNs). In this paper, we utilize the Hilbert space-filling curve for the generation of image representations of sEMG signals, which allows the application of typical image processing pipelines such as CNNs on sequence data. The proposed method is evaluated on different state-of-the-art network architectures and yields a significant classification improvement over the approach without the Hilbert curve. Additionally, we develop a new network architecture (MSHilbNet) that takes advantage of multiple scales of an initial Hilbert curve representation and achieves equal performance with fewer convolutional layers.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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