310 results
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2. Osler Centenary Papers: Osler: the towering genius who disdained a beaten path.
- Author
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Cheung BMY
- Subjects
- History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, North America, United Kingdom, Clinical Medicine history, Education, Medical history, Famous Persons
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The white papers, quality indicators and clinical responsibility.
- Author
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Spencer, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
EVALUATION of medical care , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *HOSPITALS , *CLINICAL medicine , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DATABASE management , *DEATH rate , *KEY performance indicators (Management) - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Impact Assessment of Sports Medicine Studies on Knowledge Production and Development.
- Author
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ZARE, Fatemeh, MAKKIZADEH, Fatemeh, and HAZERI, Afsaneh
- Subjects
SPORTS medicine ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,SCIENCE databases ,WEB databases ,ATHLETIC fields ,CLINICAL medicine - Abstract
In order to justify the investments made in research in the field of sports medicine, the outcomes and impacts of these investments should be assessed. The purpose of this study was to investigate the status and impact of sports medicine studies on the production and development of knowledge. In this descriptive study bibliometric and scientometric methods were used on 1145 scientific productions of sports medicine indexed in the Web of Science database. Data were analyzed through Excel Software, and cooperation maps were drawn using VOSviewer Software. According to the findings, the ratio of citations to the articles on the scientific productions of sports medicine was 23.17, which is higher than the clinical medicine area (6.8). The ratio of citations to the authors was 5.46% and 52 articles (4.54%) of the articles appeared without citations. The average impact factor of journals publishing papers was 3.9. Most of the articles were published with the collaboration of five authors. The results of the present study, based on a selected model and a combination of indicators of the UK's and Canadian Capital Return frameworks (from the production and development dimension), generally highlighted the validity and effectiveness of all indicators, including activity, quality, and development. The results revealed the most significant impact of the number and quality of each of the indicators in sports medicine in this area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. PAPER-FREE POINT OF CARE: The challenges and rewards of digitisation.
- Author
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Dean, Erin
- Subjects
CLINICAL medicine ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMATION technology ,TELEMEDICINE ,ACCESS to information - Abstract
The article looks at the challenges and rewards of digitization of health records in Great Britain. A particular focus is given to a digital system called eHospital used by Cambridge University Hospitals National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust. It is noted that electronic records provide nurses and other clinicians faster access to more comprehensive patient information. The advantage of electronic health records to the management of teams is also discussed.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Patient and public involvement prior to trial initiation: lessons learnt for rapid partnership in the COVID-19 era.
- Author
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Jamal, Zahra, Perkins, Alexander, Allen, Christopher, Evans, Richard, Sturgess, Joanna, Snowdon, Claire, Clayton, Tim, and Elbourne, Diana
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,TROPICAL medicine ,PSYCHOLOGICAL feedback ,CLINICAL medicine ,CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Plain English summary: Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) describes the active involvement of patients and the public in the research process. Through PPI, patients and members of the public are increasingly involved in the design and conduct of clinical trials. PPI has been shown to improve the quality and relevance of research. During the COVID-19 pandemic, clinical trials have been playing a vital role in helping us find ways to prevent and treat the infection and improve our understanding of the virus. It is important that patients and the public are actively involved in deciding how COVID-19 research is carried out. Unfortunately, Research Ethics Committees in the UK have seen far less PPI for COVID-19 research studies compared with research before the pandemic. A key reason for this is that research is being designed much faster than normal and researchers may feel they do not have time to properly involve patients and the public. In this paper, we share our experiences of PPI for a COVID-19 clinical trial. We show that it is possible to rapidly involve patients and the public in COVID-19 clinical trials. We also explain how the design of the clinical trial was changed in response to feedback from public contributors. Lastly, we discuss the wider learning from this process which might be useful for researchers planning PPI activities for COVID-19 clinical trials in the future. Background: Clinical trials are playing a critical role in the global public health response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite the increasing recognition of the value of PPI in clinical trials, just 22% of the COVID-19 research proposals reviewed by Research Ethics Committees in the UK at the start of the pandemic reported PPI. There is a perception that PPI might result in delays in delivering research and therefore delays in obtaining important results. In this paper, we report our experience of rapid PPI for a COVID-19 clinical trial. Methods: RAPID-19 is a COVID-19 clinical trial which was planned to be submitted for fast-track ethics review in the United Kingdom. During the development of the trial protocol, the PPI Panel at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Clinical Trials Unit was involved in the design of the study. The meeting with the PPI Panel lasted just over 1 h and was conducted by teleconference. Results: Although we only had a short period of time to explore the study with the PPI Panel, we were able to gain valuable insight into how the trial would be perceived by potential trial participants. Substantive changes were made to the trial to improve the acceptability of the research without compromising the study timelines. Having access to public contributors with relevant lived experience is an important resource for a Clinical Trials Unit and is critical for rapid PPI. The move to remote working due to lockdown required virtual discussions which helped to overcome some of the barriers to organising face-to-face meetings at short notice. Conclusions: PPI for clinical trials can be conducted in a time-efficient manner within the pressured environment of a pandemic. Involving PPI contributors at an early stage in protocol development maximised the opportunity to shape and influence the trial as well as limited potential delays which could occur if changes to the protocol had to be made at a later stage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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7. Positioning, power and agency in postgraduate primary care supervision: a study of trainee narratives.
- Author
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Jackson, Dawn, Brady, Josephine, and Dawkins, Donna
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PRIMARY care ,ELECTRONIC books ,RELATIONSHIP quality ,SUPERVISION ,CLINICAL medicine - Abstract
Background: Postgraduate supervision takes place within complex training environments, where experiences are shaped by the socio-cultural context and wider profession, and where tensions permeate. Bordin's working alliance-based model of supervision suggests that quality relationships encompass agreement on the goals and tasks of supervision, in the context of an emotional bond. However, as trainees and their supervisors navigate the demands of providing safe clinical care, alongside educational support, disagreement on expectations for supervision may emerge. By applying a critical lens, this research draws on positioning theory to explore General Practice trainees' experiences of supervision. Methods: In 2017–2019 a series of narrative interviews were undertaken with 13 General Practice trainees in the United Kingdom (UK). Participants were purposively sampled based on end-of-year performance, gender, training location and training status. Interviews were analysed using Brown and Gilligan's Listening Guide, which was adapted to incorporate an exploration of positioning, power and agency. Results: Trainees appeared to hold variable positions, such as 'insiders', 'outsiders', 'peers' and 'problem trainees'. Supervisors, through talk and the degree of access afforded, contributed to this positioning. Some trainees viewed their supervisors as brokers and guides as they navigated their training, whilst others were suspicious of the supervisor role. For trainees who raised concerns about their supervisor through formal channels, results were not often satisfactory. Others chose to navigate difficulty in supervision through informal means. This typically involved mastery of artefacts of training, such as the electronic appointment book or training portfolio. Conclusions: This paper builds on Bordin's model of supervision to encourage greater clarity in supervisory discussions, exploring assumptions, and recognising the influences of environment, power, positioning, and agency. We have developed a Model of the Supervisory Alliance in Postgraduate GP Training (MSA-GP) to serve as a springboard for discussion for trainees and their supervisors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Updating evidence-based clinical guidelines.
- Author
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Eccles, Martin, Rousseau, Nikki, and Freemantle, Nick
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GUIDELINES ,CLINICAL medicine ,MEDICAL research ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Objectives: To report on the updating of two evidence-based guidelines. Methods: Development of multi-disciplinary evidence-based guidelines within the North of England Evidence Based Guideline Development Programme. Results: The guideline updating groups were multi-disciplinary although the balance of disciplines was different from the original development groups; the convening of the updating groups allowed refinement of both the skills within the groups and the overall size of the groups. As both groups were starting with a previous version of the guideline, defining the scope of the guideline was more straightforward and faster than when developing the guideline de novo. The process of evidence identification for both guidelines was again by systematic review. Updating the guidelines influenced recommendations in two ways: new evidence required new recommendations; and supplementary evidence in an existing area allowed refinement of recommendations. Overall savings within the guideline updating process (compared with initial development) were modest. The major costs of both the initial guideline development and the updating process were staff costs, which were identical for the two processes. Conclusions: There is little other experience to set alongside this paper. There is a need for further sharing of experiences and the development of explicit methods for informing decisions on when and how to update evidence-based guidelines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Integration of social determinants of health information within the primary care electronic health record: a systematic review of patient perspectives and experiences.
- Author
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Caicedo, Nicolle Marianne Arroyave, Parry, Emma, Arslan, Nazan, and Park, Sophie
- Subjects
CLINICAL medicine ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SELF-evaluation ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,HUMAN services programs ,FAMILY medicine ,RESEARCH funding ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,HEALTH ,PRIMARY health care ,CINAHL database ,INFORMATION resources ,EXPERIENCE ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,THEMATIC analysis ,MEDLINE ,ELECTRONIC health records ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,MEDICAL records ,ACQUISITION of data ,MEDICAL databases ,LITERATURE reviews ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,RESOURCE-limited settings ,MEDICAL screening ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Background: Social determinants of health (SDOH) are the non-medical factors that impact health. Although geographical measures of deprivation are used, individual measures of social risk could identify those most at risk and generate more personalised care and targeted referrals to community resources. We know SDOH are important to health care, but it is not yet known whether their collection via the electronic health record (EHR) is acceptable and useful from the patient perspective. Aim: To synthesise relevant literature to explore patient perspectives on integrating information about SDOH into primary care EHRs, and the opportunities and challenges of its implementation in a general practice setting. Design & setting: Systematic review of primary care-based qualitative and mixed-method studies using thematic framework analysis. Method: Key databases were searched for articles reporting patient perspectives of SDOH collection within the primary care EHR. Qualitative and mixed-methods studies written in English were included. A framework analysis was conducted to identify themes. Results: From 14 included studies, the following five main themes were identified: rationale for SDOH screening and the anticipated outcomes; impact of the provider-patient relationship on patient perceptions; data, which included privacy concerns; screening process and referral; and recommendations for future research. Conclusion: Integration of information on SDOH into the EHR appears acceptable to patients. This review has added to the discussion of whether and how to implement SDOH screening and referral programmes into UK primary care systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Implementing electronic patient handover in a district general hospital.
- Author
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Brebner, Judith, Sandhu, Kanwaljit, Addison, Clara, and Kapadia, Suneil
- Subjects
AUDITING ,CLINICAL medicine ,DECISION making ,HEALTH facility administration ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MANAGEMENT ,PERSONNEL management ,INTRANETS (Computer networks) - Abstract
This paper discusses how we have improved patient handover by implementing an electronic system for weekend handover. We discuss the process of changing handover methods and the results of an audit comparing our old paper based book versus our new 'e-handover' system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Getting to Grips with Evidence-Based Practice: the Ten Commandments.
- Author
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Bannigan, Katrina and Birleson, Angela
- Subjects
PHYSICIAN practice patterns ,MEDICAL personnel ,OCCUPATIONAL therapist & patient ,MEDICAL practice ,MEDICAL care ,GENERAL practitioners ,CLINICAL medicine ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
There is an expectation that all occupational therapists will be evidence-based practitioners. This paper reports on an education intervention that has helped therapists working in clinical practice to respond to the challenges posed by evidence-based practice. The intervention was developed for a group of clinicians who had already undertaken an evidence-based practice course. The aim was to enable them to apply evidence-based practice skills to their practice settings. The intervention, which used the problem of evidence-tinged practice as a focus, is described and the ten commandments generated by the clinicians involved are presented for others as a potentially useful tool. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Micro-costing and a cost-consequence analysis of the ‘Girls Active’ programme: A cluster randomised controlled trial.
- Author
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Charles, Joanna M., Harrington, Deirdre M., Davies, Melanie J., Edwardson, Charlotte L., Gorely, Trish, Bodicoat, Danielle H., Khunti, Kamlesh, Sherar, Lauren B., Yates, Thomas, and Edwards, Rhiannon Tudor
- Subjects
PHYSICAL activity ,QUALITY of life ,SEDENTARY behavior ,SCHOOL nursing ,GENERAL practitioners ,EARLY death - Abstract
Physical inactivity has been identified as a leading risk factor for premature mortality globally, and adolescents, in particular, have low physical activity levels. Schools have been identified as a setting to tackle physical inactivity. Economic evidence of school-based physical activity programmes is limited, and the costs of these programmes are not always collected in full. This paper describes a micro-costing and cost-consequence analysis of the ‘Girls Active’ secondary school-based programme as part of a cluster randomised controlled trial (RCT). Micro-costing and cost-consequence analyses were conducted using bespoke cost diaries and questionnaires to collect programme delivery information. Outcomes for the cost-consequence analysis included health-related quality of life measured by the Child Health Utility-9D (CHU-9D), primary care General Practitioner (GP) and school-based (school nurse and school counsellor) service use as part of a cluster RCT of the ‘Girls Active’ programme. Overall, 1,752 secondary pupils were recruited and a complete case sample of 997 participants (Intervention n = 570, Control n = 427) was used for the cost-consequence analysis. The micro-costing analysis demonstrated that, depending upon how the programme was delivered, ‘Girls Active’ costs ranged from £1,054 (£2 per pupil, per school year) to £3,489 (£7 per pupil, per school year). The least costly option was to absorb ‘Girls Active’ strictly within curriculum hours. The analysis demonstrated no effect for the programme for the three main outcomes of interest (health-related quality of life, physical activity and service use).Micro-costing analyses demonstrated the costs of delivering the ‘Girls Active’ programme, addressing a gap in the United Kingdom (UK) literature regarding economic evidence from school-based physical activity programmes. This paper provides recommendations for those gathering cost and service use data in school settings to supplement validated and objective measures, furthering economic research in this field. Trial registration: -ISRCTN, . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The rhetoric of caring and the recruitment of overseas nurses: the social production of a care gap.
- Author
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Allan H
- Subjects
NURSE supply & demand ,EMPLOYMENT of nurses ,EMPLOYMENT discrimination ,LABOR supply ,NURSING ,SICK people ,MEDICAL care ,CLINICAL medicine - Abstract
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: I will argue that overseas nurse recruitment is the consequence of a care gap, which arose from several policy shifts in the 1990s and in part from the rhetoric of a normative moral discourse in the UK which claims that caring is the moral essence of nursing. I will suggest that this discourse has masked the uncoupling of caring from nursing practice and that this uncoupling places the overseas nurses in a contradictory position. BACKGROUND: In an increasingly competitive global labour market, the UK is faced with a nursing shortage and has been recruiting trained nurses from abroad (NMC 1993-2002). DESIGN AND METHODS: This paper is based on two related, qualitative studies using semi-structured focus groups and individual interviews. The first explored the experiences of overseas nurses in the UK and the second investigated the equal opportunities and career progression of overseas nurses in the UK. RESULTS: The data from these studies challenge the normative UK value that caring is at the heart of nursing. These data are the lens through which we see this contradiction explicitly played out. Overseas nurses observe that caring (as undertaken by health care assistants in care homes) is not nursing yet caring is being passed down the line as a process that marginalizes the overseas nurses and at the same time devalues their skills. I do not argue that overseas nurses care at a higher standard (although this may be the case) just that they care differently, that they expected UK nurses to deliver basic care and, instead, experience UK nursing practice as less autonomous and of a lower standard than they expected. CONCLUSIONS: I argue that the overseas nurses' views help us understand the processes by which the uncoupling of caring from nursing has come about. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: This paper discusses a workforce issue which is directly relevant to clinical practice because it focuses on the meaning of care; what is caring, what are caring activities and how are these represented in the discourse on caring in the literature? This paper also reveals significant worries among nursing managers about how to staff the nursing workforce and what nurses should be doing in the clinical areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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- View/download PDF
14. Human disease/clinical medical sciences in dentistry: Current state and future development of undergraduate assessments in the UK and Ireland.
- Author
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Atkin PA, Willis A, Doncahie C, Elledge ROC, Thomas SJ, Ni Riordain R, Galvin S, Marney C, Setterfield JF, Smith PM, and Hammond D
- Subjects
- Curriculum, Dentistry, Education, Dental, Humans, Ireland, Surveys and Questionnaires, United Kingdom, Clinical Medicine, Education, Medical, Undergraduate
- Abstract
Introduction: The United Kingdom and Ireland teachers of Human Disease/Clinical Medical Science for Dentistry (HD/CMSD) group continue to work together and most recently collaborated to review current and future assessments., Materials and Methods: The first part of the review of assessments in HD/CMSD took place at a face-to-face meeting with presentations from delegates on assessments in their home institutions. The second and larger part comprised an online survey where all eighteen schools in the UK and Ireland participated., Results: All schools had some element of formative assessment, and the majority had a stand-alone summative assessment at the end of the HD/CMSD teaching block. Most schools had a written paper and practical elements to their assessments, most commonly a combination of a multiple-choice type question combined with an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE). There was a trend towards the use of single best answer (SBA) questions and a willingness amongst participants to share a question bank. All schools incorporated elements of HD/CMSD in their final examinations., Discussion and Conclusion: This collaboration promoted the sharing of developments in assessment for HD/CMSD and demonstrated a willingness to cooperate between institutions. Assessment in HD/CMSD in the UK and Ireland continues to be refined by those responsible for its content and delivery, and assessment methods are progressing following evidence-based best practice., (© 2020 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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15. An action framework for compliance and governance.
- Author
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O'Neill, Allen
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RIGHT of privacy ,MEDICAL ethics laws ,RISK management in business ,MEDICAL ethics ,PRIVACY ,ABILITY ,CLINICAL medicine ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,HEALTH services administration ,INFORMATION resources management ,EVALUATION of medical care ,QUALITY assurance ,TRAINING ,FIDUCIARY responsibility ,REGULATORY approval ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,DATA security ,CONCEPT mapping ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance - Abstract
Purpose -- The purpose of this paper is to propose a framework for clinical governance, in particular, the compliance of data privacy in a healthcare organisation. Design/methodology/approach -- The approach of the research was to highlight problem areas in compliance and governance risk management (governance, risk and compliance (GRC)) in general, and then identify knowledge in other domains that could be combined and applied to improve GRC management, and ultimately improve governance outcomes. Findings -- There is a gap in the literature is respect of systems and frameworks to assist organisations in managing the complex minutiae associated with compliance. This paper addresses this gap by proposing a "compliance action framework" which builds on work existing in other domains in relation to education, process control and governance. Research limitations/implications -- The present research provides a starting point for an implementation of the framework within a number of organisations, and opens questions for further research in the field. Originality/value -- The GRC framework proposed in this paper contributes to the state of the art, by proposing processes for improving the governance capability and compliance outcomes within an organisation for governance of data privacy risk and data protection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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16. Communities of practice, a phenomenon to explain student development in community nursing.
- Author
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Sayer, Lynn
- Subjects
CLINICAL medicine ,COMMUNITY health nursing ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,GROUNDED theory ,INTERNSHIP programs ,INTERVIEWING ,NURSING school faculty ,NURSING students ,PROBLEM solving ,SCHOOL environment ,QUALITATIVE research ,LABELING theory - Abstract
AimTo explore practice teachers understanding of the process of professional education experienced by community nursing students.BackgroundThis paper analyses the concepts of situated learning and communities of practice as an underpinning theoretical framework to understand the professional education of community nurses in practice settings. The paper also highlights the strengths and limitations of the community of practice theory as applied to professional education.MethodsA qualitative grounded theory study was undertaken involving interviews with 30 community nurse practice teachers.FindingsEmerging from the data were the central components of Lave and Wenger's theory of communities of practice. The practice teachers appeared to use these components including legitimate peripheral participation, sponsorship and journeying to good effect in facilitating the development of community nurse students. The paper extends Lave and Wenger's community of practice phenomenon and identifies how communities are (re)produced over time. The development of professional practitioners over a lengthy period of time within supportive communities of practice where one person with expertise in professional education sponsors the student and takes responsibility for their journey was perceived by practice teachers to be an important and appropriate approach. An approach that was found by practice teachers to transform the student's professional identity, enabling them to undertake a complex multifaceted role using a holistic, problem solving and participative style with clients and communities. It is also an approach that was hypothesised to allow the profession itself to (re)produce in a way that supports continuity but also promotes changes in practice. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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17. An inspector calls.
- Author
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Harrop, Nick and Gillies, Alan
- Subjects
AUDITING laws ,NATIONAL health services ,ADVERSE health care events ,AUDITING ,CLINICAL medicine ,CONCEPTS ,HEALTH facilities ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,PROBLEM solving ,PUBLIC relations ,QUALITY assurance ,RESPONSIBILITY ,GOVERNMENT aid ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance ,STANDARDS ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to summarise key concepts within clinical governance by reference to literature, and to present the topic of statutory clinical governance inspections of hospitals. Design/methodology/approach – Conceptual paper in form of extended editorial; rapid, non-systematic review of basic clinical governance literature from UK, Republic of Ireland and Australia. Findings – The Mid-Staffordshire Hospitals report (Francis, 2013) is evidence that, more than 15 years after its inception, clinical governance in the UK has not yet fulfilled its mission. This report has stimulated the subjection of all NHS provider institutions to a statutory inspection regime. Two different yet complementary, authoritative perspectives on clinical governance are identified and discussed. Whilst the inspection regimes methodology is under review, the object of inspection is not. The object of inspection could usefully be broadened to bring the arms length planning and funding bodies associated with provision under closer scrutiny for their obligation to engage constructively and collaboratively with providers in difficulty. Research limitations/implications – A more extensive, systematic study of international literature will provide a foundation for international comparison studies which will enable participants in clinical governance to learn from each other. Practical implications – The information contained in this brief review will assist practices of governance inspection and local self-governance. Originality/value – Other studies (e.g. Brennan and Flynn 2013) have garnered definitions of clinical governance from other health systems, which tend to emphasise accountability as the key concept. Inspired by Halligan (2006), the present contribution stresses leadership and empowerment alongside accountability (in the sense of enabling “every clinical team to put quality at the heart of their moment-to moment care of patients”. It implies that accountability to “create an environment in which excellence in clinical care will flourish” should lie not only with individual clinical departments and healthcare provider institutions but also with funding and planning bodies such as the Clinical Commissioning Groups, recently introduced in the UK. The latter are not subject to the same inspection regime as providers but could usefully be made more accountable to engage constructively and collaboratively with providers in difficulty (Colin-Thomé, 2013). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Kinderheilkunde and Continental Connections in Child Health: The “Glasgow School Revisited”—Again.
- Author
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Weaver, Lawrence T.
- Subjects
CHILDREN'S health ,CHILD nutrition ,CLINICAL medicine ,PHYSICIANS ,PEDIATRICS ,MEDICINE ,HISTORY - Abstract
The last two hundred years or so have seen the transformation of medical practice from a clinical art to the application of science to the diagnosis and treatment of disease. There has been a historical debate about how the use of technology and discoveries of the laboratory have become integrated within medical practice. In trying to understand the evolution of “scientific medicine,” this has generally focused on the tensions between the differing cultures, persons, and professions of the “laboratory” and “clinic” and sought to explain how they were resolved within specific institutions. This paper looks again at the “Glasgow School” (the subject of a number of seminal papers on this subject) and the forces that shaped it, by exploring the career of Leonard Findlay, whose training in Glasgow, and in Berlin (where he worked in a department in which science and medicine were integrated), defined a style of clinical medicine that formed the model for a new sort of university department of medicine in which clinicians and scientists worked side by side, albeit under the leadership of the former. As a clinician exposed in Berlin to the emerging new sciences of nutrition, microbiology, and immunology, which were particularly relevant to the care of sick children, Findlay created in Glasgow a department of medical pediatrics, which owed less to local factors, figures, and forces and more to his experience in Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. CGIJ review.
- Author
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Phipps, Fiona Mac Vane
- Subjects
CLINICAL medicine ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance ,DEVELOPING countries ,QUALITY assurance ,SERIAL publications - Abstract
Purpose -- The purpose of this review is to enable busy health professionals to gain a rapid overview of the content contained in the current issue of CGIJ. Design/methodology/approach -- The design is a review, providing a brief summary of each of the major papers contained in the current issue of CGIJ. Findings -- Clinical governance continues to be an important facet of healthcare in the UK and around the world. In some developing countries however, implementation of clinical governance continues to be a work in progress with some senior managers expressing concerns that it is merely a "paper exercise" in their areas. Areas where components of the clinical governance agenda have been used to improve services in the UK include an acute gynaecology dashboard developed for an EPAU in London, prevention of sudden death in epilepsy (SUDEP) and evaluation of an out-of-hours GP service where some GP consultations are now done by ANPs and pharmacists. Finally, adopting a clinical governance approach to accountancy auditing has led to improvements in the island nation, Solomon Islands where geographic spread and low per capita income add challenges to national healthcare management. Originality/value -- The value of this review is that it enables readers to quickly identify articles of interest to them which they can then be read in their entirety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Introducing an acute gynaecology dashboard as a new clinical governance tool.
- Author
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Guha, S., Hoo, W. P., and Bottomley, C.
- Subjects
CLINICAL medicine ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,GYNECOLOGY ,LABOR supply ,OBSTETRICS ,PATIENTS ,PRENATAL care ,RISK management in business - Abstract
Purpose -- Risk management is an essential cornerstone of any effective unit. The maternity dashboard has been found to be an efficient governance tool, but there is no such scorecard in gynaecology. The paper aims to conceptualise and implement an acute gynaecology dashboard in a teaching hospital over a period of two years and review the changes brought in practice as a result of the dashboard. Design/methodology/approach -- This acute gynaecology dashboard was designed in line with the existing maternity dashboard. Goals and benchmarks were determined on the basis of available national guidelines, expert opinions and local policies. The dashboard was prospectively implemented, updated monthly and presented in the relevant forums. A retrospective overview of the changes brought in the practice is presented in this paper. Findings -- Through the use of the dashboard significant problems related to workforce, training and clinical activity were identified. A number of changes were subsequently executed to improve patient management, service provision and training. This paper provides empirical insights about how positive changes in clinical practice could be brought in by the implementation of the acute gynaecology dashboard. The acute gynaecology dashboard was found to be a valuable governance tool to monitor performance and improve training and patient care. Practical implications -- The acute gynaecology dashboard can be used as an effective clinical governance tool to monitor performance and leads to improvement in clinical practice in other acute gynaecology units. Originality/value -- Though the maternity dashboard is widely in use, there has been no previous description of an acute gynaecology dashboard and this is the first paper in this area. With the increasing demand of acute gynaecology services, the dashboard becomes an essential tool for clinical governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Development opportunities in the "new" NHS for personal, population and system careThe coming of age for clinical governance?
- Author
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Colin-Thomé, David
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL governance ,AUDITING ,CLINICAL medicine ,HEALTH care rationing ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,LEADERSHIP ,LOCAL government ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDICAL quality control ,MEDICAL protocols ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness ,EVALUATION of organizational effectiveness ,PATIENT satisfaction ,POLICY sciences ,PRIMARY health care ,RESPONSIBILITY ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,HISTORY - Abstract
Purpose – The aim of this paper is to set out the role of clinical governance within the new commissioning framework. It starts by considering the historical development of clinical governance and lays out ideas for the new arrangements around the concept of the primary care home and concludes with challenging questions for the future. Design/methodology/approach – The paper draws on the author's role and experience as a senior policy maker in the UK Department of Health. Findings – If we are to fulfil the defined attributes of clinical governance the NHS needs to adopt a more reflective self-auditing leadership culture. Whether that supposition is accepted or not, a set of questions arises. Why, given for instance the gross failures of care for the frail elderly, have the principles of clinical governance not been systematically embedded? Why, given the NHS can no longer be described as poorly resourced, are clinical outcomes for many conditions lagging behind equivalent international healthcare systems? Why have the improved access and clinical outcomes of recent years been dependent on political rather than NHS leadership? And why in our publicly funded NHS is there frequently a culture of regarding patients as grateful supplicants rather than true partners to whom we should account? Clinical governance for personal, population and system care. Does this represent a coming of age? Originality/value – This article provides a contribution to the emerging policy debate around clinical governance in the new commissioned NHS, rooted in experience from both the clinical front line and the heart of national health policy making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The role of Government policy in supporting nurse-led care in general practice in the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia: an adapted realist review.
- Author
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Hoare, Karen J., Mills, Jane, and Francis, Karen
- Subjects
CINAHL database ,CLINICAL medicine ,DATABASES ,FAMILY medicine ,FAMILY nursing ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH care teams ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,HEALTH policy ,NATIONAL health services ,MEDLINE ,NURSE practitioners ,NURSES ,NURSING practice ,PRIMARY health care ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,QUALITY assurance ,WAGES ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance - Abstract
hoare k.j., mills j. & francis k. (2011) The role of government policy in supporting nurse-led care in general practice in the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia: an adapted realist review. Journal of Advanced Nursing 68(5), 963-980. Abstract Aim. This article is a report on a review that examined the role of Government policy in primary care and its association with nurse-led care in the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia between 1998 and 2009. Background. The United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia share a similar model of first point access to the healthcare system via general practitioners. General practice is synonymous with the term primary care. Data sources. Medline, CINAHL, EMBASE, Scopus, PsychInfo, Google, Department of Health, England (United Kingdom), Ministry of Health, New Zealand, Department of Health and Ageing, Australia. Searches of electronic databases from 1998 to December 2009 and hand searches of identified leads and key journals. Historical papers accessed to describe the genesis of practice nursing and historical Government policy documents prior to 1998, were examined. Review methods. A modified realist review was used to synthesize research and policy documents relating to government policies pertaining to nurse-led care. In addition, a systematic review was used to identify literature that described practice nurse-led care. Results. Nurse-led primary care services are well described in the United Kingdom with a total of 45 studies meeting the inclusion criteria for the second review. There are no published studies from New Zealand, and only two from Australia describing nurse-led primary care. Conclusion. New Zealand and Australia lag behind the United Kingdom in practice nurse development. Implementation of clinical governance was fundamental to the development of nurse-led care in the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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23. Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care: lessons from the theory of communities of practice.
- Author
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Kislov, Roman, Harvey, Gill, and Walshe, Kieran
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,CLINICAL medicine ,CLINICAL pharmacology ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: The paper combines the analytical and instrumental perspectives on communities of practice (CoPs) to reflect on potential challenges that may arise in the process of interprofessional and inter-organisational joint working within the Collaborations for Leaderships in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRCs)-partnerships between the universities and National Health Service (NHS) Trusts aimed at conducting applied health research and translating its findings into day-to-day clinical practice. Discussion: The paper discusses seminal theoretical literature on CoPs as well as previous empirical research on the role of these communities in healthcare collaboration, which is organised around the following three themes: knowledge sharing within and across CoPs, CoP formation and manageability, and identity building in CoPs. It argues that the multiprofessional and multi-agency nature of the CLAHRCs operating in the traditionally demarcated organisational landscape of the NHS may present formidable obstacles to knowledge sharing between various professional groupings, formation of a shared 'collaborative' identity, and the development of new communities within the CLAHRCs. To cross multiple boundaries between various professional and organisational communities and hence enable the flow of knowledge, the CLAHRCs will have to create an effective system of 'bridges' involving knowledge brokers, boundary objects, and cross-disciplinary interactions as well as address a number of issues related to professional and organisational identification. Summary: The CoP approach can complement traditional 'stage-of-change' theories used in the field of implementation research and provide a basis for designing theory-informed interventions and evaluations. It can help to illuminate multiple boundaries that exist between professional and organisational groups within the CLAHRCs and suggest ways of crossing those boundaries to enable knowledge transfer and organisational learning. Achieving the aims of the CLAHRCs and producing a sustainable change in the ways applied health research is conducted and implemented may be influenced by how effectively these organisations can navigate through the multiple CoPs involved and promote the development of new multiprofessional and multi-organisational communities united by shared practice and a shared sense of belonging-an assumption that needs to be explored by further empirical research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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24. The strategic leadership of complex practice: opportunities and challenges.
- Author
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Morrison, Tony
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL learning ,RISK management in business ,CHILD protection services ,LEADERSHIP ,CHANGE agents ,CHILD abuse ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,CHILD welfare ,CLINICAL medicine ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,LEARNING ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,SOCIAL services ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance - Abstract
This paper addresses the issue of how strategic-level partnerships, such as Local Safeguarding Children Boards, know about and learn from practice. The death of Baby Peter in Haringey exposed the dangers of reliance on numerical performance data alone to inform leaders about the true state of practice. The drivers for, and impact of, regulatory, media and political pressures on front-line practice and partnership behaviour are discussed with reference to the rise of organisational risk management and 'rule-based' responses (Munro,
2009 ). These are exacerbated by an overload of negative data about child protection systems which results in contagious 'attention cascades' which lead to over-simplification of complex issues and the rush to quick-fix solutions. This results in compliance-based responses designed to avoid 'blame', based on individualistic analyses of complex situations. Under these conditions, 'learning', such as from serious case reviews, can become regressive (how to avoid future culpability) rather than progressive (how to improve knowledge skills and practice). It is argued that understanding and improving practice require strategic partnerships to have engaged with front-line staff in order to access practice narratives as well as performance numbers, and to achieve an accurate and systemic analysis of the state of practice and how it can be improved. This calls for collective forms of knowing and reflecting and the paper concludes by describing examples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
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25. Institutionalized disadvantage: older Ghanaian nurses’ and midwives’ reflections on career progression and stagnation in the NHS.
- Author
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Henry, Leroi
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT discrimination ,EQUALITY in the workplace ,MIDWIVES ,EMPLOYMENT of nurses ,CLINICAL medicine ,LABOR supply ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Aims and objectives. This paper explores the perceptions of career progression in the NHS of a group of midwives and nurses trained in Ghana and working in the UK. It draws on semi-structured interviews with nurses, midwives and managers which were conducted as part of the Researching Equal Opportunities for Overseas trained Health Professionals project (REOH). Background. Research into overseas nurses in the UK has tended to focus on their experiences of discrimination in relationships with colleagues, managers and patients. There is limited statistical evidence indicating that migrant nurses experience slower career progression than their UK-trained counterparts. However, there is little analysis of their experiences and perceptions of the process of career progression or their understandings of the factors that could account for their limited entry into higher grades. Conclusions. This paper argues that many Ghanaian nurses and midwives can experience difficulty in progressing into senior positions because of cultural differences and gaps in knowledge. However, this paper indicates that these problems can become institutionalized and entrenched by practices on the ward, particularly support from managers being dispensed as patronage that is not given equally to all. This creates an informal system of promotion to management which is not transparent, is based on subjective and culturally specific criteria and can undermine egalitarian formal procedures and create spaces where discriminatory practices can operate. Relevance to clinical practice. These processes can lead to sectors of the workforce becoming demoralized, to the wastage of skills and other resources and problems in staff retention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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- View/download PDF
26. Product-based planning: the importance of project and project management deliverables in the management of clinical trials.
- Author
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Bryde, David James and Joby, Roger
- Subjects
CLINICAL medicine ,CLINICAL trials ,PHARMACEUTICAL industry ,DRUG development ,INVESTORS ,MEDICAL experimentation on humans ,MEDICAL research ,PROJECT management - Abstract
As the cost of clinical trials continues to rise organisations are looking at ways of managing this part of the drug development process as effectively and efficiently as possible. As a tactical response, many pharmaceutical companies outsource the management of clinical trials to clinical research organisations on a fixed-price contract basis. This paper presents an alternative approach based on the concept of Product-Based Planning. Key elements of the approach are the creation of a deliverables budget and the establishment of project management-related deliverables. The conceptual developments described in the paper are supported by a telephone survey of 10 UK practitioners. The survey confirms the prevalence and limitations of fixed-price contracts while highlighting a willingness to try a deliverable-based approach – initially through small pilot studies. The key barrier to implementing a new approach is resistance from key stakeholders, such as finance departments, which can be addressed through selling of the business case. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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- View/download PDF
27. Where do UK clinicians find information at the point of care? A pragmatic, exploratory study.
- Author
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McCartney, Margaret, Connolly, Kate, Sullivan, Frank, Heneghan, Carl, Heng Ho, Elijah Yu, Hendry, Brid, Salisbury, Charlotte, Offer, Sam, and Nunan, David
- Subjects
CLINICAL medicine ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,WORLD Wide Web ,RESEARCH funding ,FAMILY medicine ,QUALITATIVE research ,PRIMARY health care ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,STATISTICAL sampling ,INFORMATION resources ,INFORMATION technology ,QUANTITATIVE research ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,GOVERNMENT aid ,CONFLICT of interests ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology - Abstract
Aim: To describe where clinical information is contemporarily and commonly found in UK primary care, what is favoured by clinicians, and whether this is (1) publicly funded (2) has commercial potential conflicts of interest. Design and setting: A mixed methods study, consisting of (1) site visits to general practices in Scotland, (2) online questionnaire, focused on UK general practice (3) analysis of materials cited by professionals. Methods: Data about sources of clinical information used was obtained verbally, visually and via search histories on computers from visits. This was used to inform a questionnaire in which primary care clinicians in the four nations of the UK were invited to participate. This obtained data about the information sources used and preferred by clinicians. This information was searched for data about funding and conflicts of interest. Results: Over 2022, four practices were visited. 337 clinicians, 280 of whom were general practitioners completed an online questionnaire. 136 different resources were identified. These were mainly websites but sources of information included colleagues, either in practice or through online networks, apps, local guidelines, health charities, and learning resources aimed at GPs. Of these, 70 were not publicly funded, and were a mixture of membership organisations, charities, or sponsored venues. Conclusions: Primary care clinicians obtain information for themselves and patients from a wide variety of sources. Funding is from a variety of sources and some contain advertising and/or sponsorship, risking commercial bias. Protocol: Pre-published at https://osf.io/wrzqk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Evaluating the use of key performance indicators to evidence the patient experience.
- Author
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McCance, Tanya, Hastings, Jack, and Dowler, Hilda
- Subjects
PATIENT satisfaction ,MEDICAL personnel ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CLINICAL medicine ,INTERVIEWING ,MEDICAL quality control ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL records ,NURSE-patient relationships ,NURSING practice ,QUALITY assurance ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,MIDWIFERY ,EVALUATION research ,KEY performance indicators (Management) ,PATIENT-centered care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Aims and objectives To test eight person-centred key performance indicators and the feasibility of an appropriate measurement framework as an approach to evidencing the patient experience. Background The value of measuring the quality of patient care is undisputed in the international literature, however, the type of measures that can be used to generate data that is meaningful for practice continues to be debated. This paper offers a different perspective to the 'measurement' of the nursing and midwifery contribution to the patient experience. Design Fourth generation evaluation was the methodological approach used to evaluate the implementation of the key performance indicators and measurement framework across three participating organisations involving nine practice settings. Methods Data were collected by repeated use of claims, concerns and issues with staff working across nine participating sites ( n = 18) and the senior executives from the three partner organisations ( n = 12). Data were collected during the facilitated sessions with stakeholders and analysed in conjunction with the data generated from the measurement framework. Results The data reveal the inherent value placed on the evidence generated from the implementation of the key performance indicators as reflected in the following themes: measuring what matters; evidencing the patient experience; engaging staff; a focus for improving practice; and articulating and demonstrating the positive contribution of nursing and midwifery. Conclusions The implementation of the key performance indicators and the measurement framework has been effective in generating evidence that demonstrates the patient experience. The nature of the data generated not only privileges the patient voice but also offers feedback to nurses and midwives that can inform the development of person-centred cultures. Relevance to clinical practice The use of these indicators will produce evidence of patient experience that can be used by nurse and midwives to celebrate and further inform person-centred practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
29. Student nurses on placement – collaborators or challengers.
- Author
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Clarke, Pat
- Subjects
NURSING education ,INTERNSHIP programs ,CLINICAL medicine ,FOCUS groups ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,NURSING care facilities ,NURSING students ,SCHOOL environment ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
Purpose – All nursing students have the opportunity to gain experience in the Independent Sector. The Health and Social Care Act (2012) in the UK has led to more health services being provided by the Independent Sector. The purpose of this paper is to explore the perceptions of first year student nurses of their learning experience in nursing homes placements within the Independent Sector. Design/methodology/approach – Two focus groups were undertaken with first year student nurses, one with six students and the other with seven students. All students had completed four week clinical placements in nursing homes. The focus groups were semi structured. Thematic analysis was undertaken on the data. Findings – Important themes that emerged from the data included: leadership issues, poor practice relating to infection control and manual handling, team dynamics, commitment to addressing issues when raised and challenges to raising issues within the placement area. The findings provided an insight into some of the barriers for student nurses when raising issues. The decision to raise concerns was multifactorial and complex. Attention was also focused on the relationship between the mentor and the student and the impact that can have on the learning environment. Research limitations/implications – The limitations for this study included: this was a small scale study, the findings were from a small number of placement areas within a small geographical area of the UK. Some students may have felt reluctant to share their views in a focus group. The findings reflect the views of first year student nurses only. However, first year students can provide an alternative view of a placement area. Their lack of experience can be an opportunity to question accepted norms with the mentor, acting as a resource of new ideas. Originality/value – This paper identified opportunities and challenges for student nurses and education providers alike. For the student it was the complexities of raising issues and for the education provider it was equipping students with the knowledge and skills to raise such issues not only as a student but also upon qualification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Improving compliance with central venous catheter care bundles using electronic records.
- Author
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Hermon, Andrew, Pain, Terina, Beckett, Penelope, Jerrett, Heather, Llewellyn, Nicola, Lawrence, Paul, and Szakmany, Tamas
- Subjects
PREVENTION of bloodborne infections ,ANALYSIS of variance ,BLOODBORNE infections ,CLINICAL medicine ,LEGAL compliance ,DOCUMENTATION ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,INTENSIVE care nursing ,INTENSIVE care units ,RESEARCH methodology ,PATIENTS ,PROFESSIONS ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,PUBLIC hospitals ,QUALITY assurance ,REGRESSION analysis ,DISEASE incidence ,CENTRAL venous catheters ,DATA analysis software ,ELECTRONIC health records ,VASCULAR catheters ,SAFETY ,CATHETER-related infections ,INFECTION prevention - Abstract
ABSTRACT Background Health care associated infections are a major contributor to avoidable harm experienced by patients in modern health care settings. Recent reports suggest that electronic checklists for the documentation of a central line bundle may significantly enhance documented process compliance and help to reduce catheter-related bloodstream infection rates. Aims This paper describes the use of our electronic tool to monitor and feedback process compliance in conjunction of introducing bespoke central line insertion packs to tackle catheter-related bloodstream infections in our intensive care unit in a medium-sized district general hospital. Design and methods Continuous quality improvement programme with 'Plan-Do-Study-Act' cycles was implemented. The central venous catheter insertion and maintenance bundle was rolled out in 2007. To monitor compliance with the bundle elements, an electronic tool was designed as part of our bedside Clinical Information System. From 2009, regular quarterly feedback was provided on the number of central venous catheter lines inserted, compliance with the insertion and maintenance bundle and catheter-related bloodstream infection rate using the data collected through the Clinical Information System. We have also introduced dedicated line insertion trolleys and factory-prepared insertion packs. We used segmented regression analysis to assess the changes in the catheter-related bloodstream infection rate before and after implementation of the central venous catheter bundle. Results Bundle compliance increased during the implementation period and reached over 95% within 6 months. We observed a significant reduction in the catheter-related bloodstream infection rate from 15·6/1000 days to 0·4/1000 days. Regression analysis showed that only the compliance had significant effect on the number and prevalence of catheter-related bloodstream infections. Conclusion/Implications Implementation of evidence-based care bundles reinforced by real-time feedback on the performance of caregivers can significantly reduce the rate of catheter-related bloodstream infection in the intensive care unit. Ensuring that change processes are seamlessly integrated in the workflow with minimal administrative burden is crucial to the quality improvement process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. "Safe handover saves lives": results from clinical audit.
- Author
-
Advani, Rajeev, Stobbs, Nicola Marie, Killick, Neil, and Kumar, B. Nirmal
- Subjects
AUDITING ,CLINICAL medicine ,CONTINUUM of care ,DATA transmission systems ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL quality control ,PATIENT safety ,QUALITY assurance ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SURGEONS ,OPERATIVE surgery ,HUMAN services programs ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose - The implementation of the European Working Time Directive and its subsequent impact on the hours worked by doctors in training has resulted in shift-working rotas being the norm and greater cross-cover between specialties. As such, the need for continuity of information and comprehensiveness of handover between shifts has become more important than ever. The purpose of this paper is to show how handover can be improved by the implementation of an electronic handover system and subsequent Quality Improvement Rapid Cycle Change Model of clinical audit. Design/methodology/approach - Initial data were collected using a standardised questionnaire collected prospectively from all junior doctors within the surgical division. Following the first audit cycle, changes were implemented in a Quality Improvement Rapid Cycle Change Model of clinical audit and a Surgical Division Electronic Handover Shared Drive was developed. Three further prospective cycles of clinical audit were carried out over a period of 12 months. Findings - The results show a more effective handover system to be in place. Effects of change measured as an 80 per cent standard was achieved in all categories and maintained throughout all cycles of re-audit. Practical implications - A surgical division shared electronic handover drive was developed and subsequent audits have shown improved handover practice in a foundation trust. This has positive benefits on patient safety and quality of care. Originality/value - This work is of interest to those looking to set up an electronic handover system and additionally to all those working in specialities where cross-cover is required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Learning from people with long-term conditions: new insights for governance in primary healthcare.
- Author
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Ross, Fiona, Smith, Pam, Byng, Richard, Christian, Sara, Allan, Helen, Price, Linnie, and Brearley, Sally
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHRONIC diseases ,CLINICAL medicine ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,INTERVIEWING ,CASE studies ,MEDICAL personnel ,PRIMARY health care ,EMPLOYEES' workload ,QUALITATIVE research ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance - Abstract
The introduction of top-down centrally driven solutions to governance of healthcare, at the same time as increasing policy emphasis on greater 'bottom up' patient and public involvement in all aspects of healthcare, has set up complex tensions for policy implementation and healthcare practice. This paper explores the interplay of these agendas in the context of changes in primary healthcare services provided by the National Health Service in England. Specifically, it looks at service user involvement in a qualitative study of the professional response to changes in the governance and incentives in the care of people with long-term conditions. Service users influenced and guided the study at local and national levels. Vignettes of patient stories developed by service users informed in-depth interviews with 56 health and social care professionals engaged in the development of local policies and services for people with complex long-term illness, and themes generated by cross case analysis were validated through service users. The findings presented here focus on four themes about risk and comparison of professionals' and service users' perspectives of the issues: managing risks/consistent support, the risks of letting go/feeling in control, professional identity/helping people to help themselves, and managing expectations/professionals losing out. In this study, service user involvement added value by validating understandings of governance, framing debates to focus on what matters at the point of care and enabling perspective sharing and interaction. We suggest that more collaborative forms of governance in healthcare that take account of service user perspectives and enable interaction with professional groups could help validate processes of quality assurance and provide motivation for continuous quality improvement. We offer a model for 'opening up' collaborative projects to evaluation and critical reflection of the interrelationships between the context, methods and outcomes of service user involvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Reflections on the implementation of governance structures for early-stage clinical innovation.
- Author
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Cowie, Luke, Sandall, Jane, and Ehrich, Kathryn
- Subjects
MEDICAL technology laws ,ADVERSE health care events ,CLINICAL medicine ,COMMITTEES ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,NATIONAL health services ,RESEARCH funding ,PROFESSIONAL standards ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,HUMAN services programs ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance ,DATA analysis software ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Objectives This paper seeks to further explore the question of how best to monitor and govern innovative clinical procedures in their earliest phase of development. We examine the potential value of proposed governance frameworks, such as the IDEAL model, and examine the functioning of a novel procedures review committee. Methods The paper draws upon 20 qualitative, semi-structured interviews. Nine interviews were conducted with members of a committee that was established as a means of governing innovative procedures within a large National Health Service Foundation Trust hospital in the UK. Eleven interviews were conducted with health providers involved with the development of a variety of novel clinical procedures. Results Prominent themes from the data include the potential willingness of clinicians to engage with regulatory frameworks for innovative procedures, existing ways in which clinicians and others attempt to ensure patient's safety and manage uncertainty in the context of novel procedures, views on the potential benefits and drawbacks of engaging with a review committee for novel procedures, and the pragmatic considerations and potential unintended consequences that are entailed in the implementation of regulatory requirements for the monitoring of innovative procedures. Conclusions The views of committee members and clinical innovators help us to understand the practical issues of implementing governance structures for novel clinical procedures. The data illustrate those factors that must be taken into account if governance is to support innovation rather than act as an inhibiting factor in the development of new clinical procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Clinical leadership training: an evaluation of the Welsh Fellowship programme.
- Author
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Phillips, Suzanne and Bullock, Alison
- Subjects
CLINICAL medicine ,INTERNSHIP programs ,LEADERSHIP ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL education ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,NATIONAL health services ,SCHOLARSHIPS ,QUALITATIVE research ,KEY performance indicators (Management) ,HUMAN services programs ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes - Abstract
Purpose UK fellowship schemes have been set up to address low-level engagement of doctors with leadership roles. Established in 2013, the Welsh Clinical Leadership Fellowship (WCLF) programme aims to recruit aspiring future clinical leaders and equip them with knowledge and skills to lead improvements in healthcare delivery. This paper aims to evaluate the 12-month WCLF programme in its first two years of operation.Design/methodology/approach Focused on the participants (n = 8), the authors explored expectations of the programme, reactions to academic components (provided by Academi Wales) and learning from workplace projects and other opportunities. The authors adopted a qualitative approach, collecting data from four focus groups, 20 individual face-to-face or telephone interviews with fellows and project supervisors and observation of Academi Wales training days.Findings Although from diverse specialties and stages in training, all participants reported that the Fellowship met expectations. Fellows learned leadership theory, developing understanding of leadership and teamwork in complex organisations. Through workplace projects, they applied their knowledge, learning from both success and failure. The quality of communication with fellows distinguished the better supervisors and impacted on project success.Research limitations/implications Small participant numbers limit generalisability. The authors did not evaluate longer-term impact.Practical implications Doctors are required to be both clinically proficient and influence service delivery and improve patient care. The WCLF programme addresses both the need for leadership theory (through the Academi Wales training) and the application of learning through the performance of leadership roles in the projects.Originality/value This work represents an evaluation of the only leadership programme in Wales, and outcomes have led to improvements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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35. Estimating and comparing the reliability of a suite of workplace-based assessments: An obstetrics and gynaecology setting.
- Author
-
Homer, Matt, Setna, Zeryab, Jha, Vikram, Higham, Jenny, Roberts, Trudie, and Boursicot, Katherine
- Subjects
CLINICAL medicine ,STATISTICAL correlation ,GYNECOLOGY ,STUDY & teaching of medicine ,OBSTETRICS ,INDUSTRIAL research ,SCHOOL environment ,RATING of students ,QUANTITATIVE research ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,EVALUATION - Abstract
This paper reports on a study that compares estimates of the reliability of a suite of workplace based assessment forms as employed to formatively assess the progress of trainee obstetricians and gynaecologists. The use of such forms of assessment is growing nationally and internationally in many specialties, but there is little research evidence on comparisons by procedure/competency and form-type across an entire specialty. Generalisability theory combined with a multilevel modelling approach is used to estimate variance components, G-coefficients and standard errors of measurement across 13 procedures and three form-types (mini-CEX, OSATS and CbD). The main finding is that there are wide variations in the estimates of reliability across the forms, and that therefore the guidance on assessment within the specialty does not always allow for enough forms per trainee to ensure that the levels of reliability of the process is adequate. There is, however, little evidence that reliability varies systematically by form-type. Methodologically, the problems of accurately estimating reliability in these contexts through the calculation of variance components and, crucially, their associated standard errors are considered. The importance of the use of appropriate methods in such calculations is emphasised, and the unavoidable limitations of research in naturalistic settings are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Conducting retrospective impact analysis to inform a medical research charity's funding strategies: the case of Asthma UK.
- Author
-
Hanney, Stephen R., Watt, Amanda, Jones, Teresa H., and Metcalf, Leanne
- Subjects
ASTHMA ,MEDICAL research ,BIOTECHNOLOGY ,MEDICINE ,THERAPEUTICS ,CLINICAL medicine ,FINANCE - Abstract
Background: Debate is intensifying about how to assess the full range of impacts from medical research. Complexity increases when assessing the diverse funding streams of funders such as Asthma UK, a charitable patient organisation supporting medical research to benefit people with asthma. This paper aims to describe the various impacts identified from a range of Asthma UK research, and explore how Asthma UK utilised the characteristics of successful funding approaches to inform future research strategies. Methods: We adapted the Payback Framework, using it both in a survey and to help structure interviews, documentary analysis, and case studies. We sent surveys to 153 lead researchers of projects, plus 10 past research fellows, and also conducted 14 detailed case studies. These covered nine projects and two fellowships, in addition to the innovative case studies on the professorial chairs (funded since 1988) and the MRC-Asthma UK Centre in Allergic Mechanisms of Asthma (the 'Centre') which together facilitated a comprehensive analysis of the whole funding portfolio. We organised each case study to capture whatever academic and wider societal impacts (or payback) might have arisen given the diverse timescales, size of funding involved, and extent to which Asthma UK funding contributed to the impacts. Results: Projects recorded an average of four peer-reviewed journal articles. Together the chairs reported over 500 papers. All streams of funding attracted follow-on funding. Each of the various categories of societal impacts arose from only a minority of individual projects and fellowships. Some of the research portfolio is influencing asthmarelated clinical guidelines, and some contributing to product development. The latter includes potentially major breakthroughs in asthma therapies (in immunotherapy, and new inhaled drugs) trialled by university spin-out companies. Such research-informed guidelines and medicines can, in turn, contribute to health improvements. The role of the chairs and the pioneering collaborative Centre is shown as being particularly important. Conclusions: We systematically demonstrate that all types of Asthma UK's research funding assessed are making impacts at different levels, but the main societal impacts from projects and fellowships come from a minority of those funded. Asthma UK used the study's findings, especially in relation to the Centre, to inform research funding strategies to promote the achievement of impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Use of randomisation in clinical trials: a survey of UK practice.
- Author
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McPherson, Gladys C., Campbell, Marion K., and Elbourne, Diana R.
- Subjects
CLINICAL trials ,HEALTH surveys ,MEDICAL research ,CLINICAL medicine - Abstract
Background: In healthcare research the randomised controlled trial is seen as the gold standard because it ensures selection bias is minimised. However, there is uncertainty as to which is the most preferred method of randomisation in any given setting and to what extent more complex methods are actually being implemented in the field. Methods: In this paper we describe the results of a survey of UK academics and publicly funded researchers to examine the extent of the use of various methods of randomisation in clinical trials. Results: Trialists reported using simple randomisation, permuted blocks and stratification more often than more complex methods such as minimisation. Most trialists believed that simple randomisation is suitable for larger trials but there is a high probability of possible imbalance between treatment groups in small trials. It was thought that groups should be balanced at baseline to avoid imbalance and help face-validity. However, very few respondents considered that more complex methods offer any advantages. Conclusions: This paper demonstrates that for most UK trialists the preferred method of randomisation is using permuted blocks of varying random length within strata. This method eliminates the problem of predictability while maintaining balance across combinations of factors. If the number of prognostic factors is large, then minimisation can be used to provide treatment balance as well as balance over these factors. However, only those factors known to affect outcome should be considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The CLCF: developing leadership capacity and capability in the clinical professions.
- Author
-
Long, Paul William, Lobley, Kate, Spurgeon, Peter C., Clark, John C., Balderson, Sue, and Lonetto, Tracy Marie
- Subjects
MEDICAL schools ,ALLIED health personnel ,CLINICAL medicine ,CURRICULUM planning ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,LEADERSHIP ,MEDICAL education ,MEDICAL personnel ,HEALTH policy ,STUDY & teaching of medicine ,NURSES ,NURSING education ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,PROFESSIONAL standards ,JOB performance ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance - Abstract
This paper reports on the findings of work to develop a Clinical Leadership Competency Framework (CLCF) that will be used by all the regulated clinical professions across the UK. The CLCF was created, with the agreement of the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement and the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, from the Medical Leadership Competency Framework (MLCF), which was created and developed and is owned jointly by the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement and the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges. Although the context and scenarios described in the MLCF are particular to doctors, the generic leadership competences were considered potentially applicable to all clinicians in their practitioner roles. The aim of this project was to work with the clinical professions to build leadership awareness and capability across the health service, by assessing the readiness of the clinical professions to embed leadership competences in undergraduate education, postgraduate training and continuing professional development. The work that has been undertaken to date shows that there is widespread recognition that leadership is important, and that the development of clinical leadership is viewed as absolutely critical. It represents a fundamental change in the way we train and educate clinicians. The next step for the CLCF project team is to work with professional bodies, regulators and education establishments to help them to embed the CLCF effectively, and this work is already under way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
39. PROFESSIONAL. Practice improvement, breastfeeding duration and health visitors.
- Author
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Spencer, Rachael L., Greatrex-White, Sheila, and Fraser, Diane M.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of mothers ,BREASTFEEDING ,CLINICAL medicine ,COMMUNITY health nursing ,HEALTH attitudes ,NURSES ,NURSING ,SOCIAL role ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The primary purpose of practice improvement is to improve clinical practice through changing the behaviour of healthcare professionals. Breastfeeding is a key public health issue, conferring benefits associated with both infant and maternal health, yet breastfeeding rates in the UK and Ireland are among the lowest in Western Europe. In this paper, the ways in which practice improvement can be utilised to enhance both efficiency and effectiveness are described, using a case study of the potential contribution of health visitors to increasing breastfeeding duration in primary care in order to illustrate this in clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
40. Care pathways: an ethnographic description of the field.
- Author
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Allen, Davina
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,PUBLIC health ,CLINICAL medicine ,COMMUNITY health services ,SOCIAL services ,ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
This paper describes an ethnographic study of the care pathway community. Qualitative data generated through attendance at the annual care pathways conference and a regional group network are assembled in order to present an interpretation of the spread of pathways across the health-care field and identify the stakeholders involved, as well as their interests, aspirations and alignments. The growing popularity of care pathway methodology can be explained by its effectiveness in reconciling clinical and management interests in offering a single solution to shared health service problems. However, this breadth of appeal disguises tensions between clinical and management agenda which creates challenges in inscribing this multiplicity of interests into the pathway design. This helps to explain the challenges of pathway development and the range of interventions to which the term 'pathway' is applied. In a second, companion paper, I consider how the community has responded to these concerns and draw on social sciences concepts to offer an alternative approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Leadership for learning: a literature study of leadership for learning in clinical practice.
- Author
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Allan HT, Smith PA, and Lorentzon M
- Subjects
NURSING students ,LEADERSHIP ,CLINICAL medicine ,LEARNING - Abstract
Aim To report a literature study of leadership for learning in clinical practice in the United Kingdom. Background Previous research in the United Kingdom showed that the ward sister was central to creating a positive learning environment for student nurses. Since the 1990s, the ward mentor has emerged as the key to student nurses' learning in the United Kingdom. Methods A literature study of new leadership roles and their influence on student nurse learning (restricted to the United Kingdom) which includes an analysis of ten qualitative interviews with stakeholders in higher education in the United Kingdom undertaken as part of the literature study. Results Learning in clinical placements is led by practice teaching roles such as mentors, clinical practice facilitators and practice educators rather than new leadership roles. However, workforce changes in clinical placements has restricted the opportunities for trained nurses to role model caring activities for student nurses and university based lecturers are increasingly distant from clinical practice. Conclusions and implications for practice Leadership for learning in clinical practice poses three unresolved questions for nurse managers, practitioners and educators - what is nursing, what should student nurses learn and from whom? Implications for nursing management Leadership for student nurse learning has passed to new learning and teaching roles with Trusts and away from nursing managers. This has implications for workforce planning and role modelling within the profession. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Teamwork, Clinical Research, and the Development of Scientific Medicines in Interwar Britain: The "Glasgow School" Revisited.
- Author
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Hull, Andrew J.
- Subjects
MEDICAL historians ,MEDICINE ,CLINICAL medicine ,HEALTH care teams - Abstract
This article argues that historians of medicine have, until very recently, misinterpreted the relationship of "science" and "the clinic" in the early twentieth century. It follows recent historiographic developments in focusing on the relationship in practice as exemplified by the development of a specific variety of collaborative clinical research using laboratory methods, ca. 1919-37, in a major British medical school. It suggests that it is such working hybrids that should be studied in order to understand fully the development of scientific medicines in the United Kingdom in this period. In Glasgow, it was the local medical culture's characteristic local subservience to clinical priorities that facilitated, in a particular kind of academic unit, a certain type of hierarchical teamwork between clinicians and laboratory workers; the paper reveals how and why this teamwork became, over time, more of an equal partnership. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Education for new prescribers: a summary of the proceedings of a symposium held at The British Pharmacological Society, December 2005.
- Author
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Leathard, Helen L., Abbott, Margaret, Brownsell, Mike, Lennard, Martin, and Maxwell, Simon
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,PHARMACOLOGY ,CLINICAL medicine ,DRUGS -- Congresses ,MEDICAL societies - Abstract
Information about several papers discussed at a symposium which was held at the British Pharmacological Society in Great Britain in December 2005 is presented. The topics of the studies concentrated on the electronic-learning program, and on accounts of related issues and resources from a medical perspective. Furthermore, the second part of the conference tackled the different ways in which pharmacology education can be delivered effectively.
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- 2007
- Full Text
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44. Primary care computing in England and Scotland: a comparison with Denmark.
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Protti, Denis, Wright, Graham, Treweek, Shaun, and Johansen, Ib
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PRIMARY care ,MEDICAL care ,CLINICAL medicine - Abstract
This paper compares the status of primary care computing in England and Scotland with that of Denmark. The rate of utilisation by Danish GPs is among the highest in the world and the MedCom national health network handles over 90% of the country's primary sector clinical communications. A high proportion of English and Scottish GPs also use computers in their clinical practices, and like their Danish colleagues, they benefit from more accurate and streamlined medications management, particularly in terms of repeat prescriptions. The historical forces and factors which influenced the development of primary care computing are identified and discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
45. Research ethics and evidence based medicine.
- Author
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Lie, R. K.
- Subjects
CLINICAL trials ,RESEARCH ethics ,PROFESSIONAL ethics ,CLINICAL medicine ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
In this paper, the author argues that the requirement to conduct randomised clinical trials to inform policy in cases where one wants to identify a cheaper alternative to known effective but expensive interventions raises an important ethical issue. This situation will eventually arise whenever there are resource constraints, and a policy decision has been made not to fund an intervention on cost effectiveness grounds. It has been thought that this is an issue only in extremely resource poor settings. This paper gives an example from the United Kingdom illustrating that this is also a problem faced by richer countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Clinical governance and governmentality.
- Author
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Flynn, Rob
- Subjects
MEDICAL personnel ,PUBLIC health ,CLINICAL medicine ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
The introduction of Clinical Governance into the National Health Service in England represents a fundamental shift in the regulatory relationship between the state and medical professionals. This paper critically examines the underlying assumptions of Clinical Governance, and discusses them in relation to Foucauldian concepts of 'governmentality'. First, official definitions of Clinical Governance are reviewed in the context of other policies to apply increased control and surveillance to medical professionals and linkages between this and wider tends in public sector managerialism and governance. The paper then briefly considers these developments in relation to theoretical accounts of bureaucracy, professionalism, risk and trust. It is argued that at the organisational level, Clinical Governance can be usefully analysed as involving a move towards 'encoded knowledge' through the use of 'soft bureaucracy'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Networked information and clinical decision making: the experience of Birmingham Heartlands and Solihull National Health Service Trust (Teaching).
- Author
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Nankivell, Clare, Wallis, Peter, and Mynott, Glen
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC journals ,CLINICAL medicine - Abstract
Objectives The paper presents the findings of the evaluation of a pilot project to introduce networked information resources into clinical settings in a large NHS Trust and describes the subsequent developments of networked information within the Trust. Design The main purpose of the evaluation was to ascertain whether access to electronic journals and other resources via a networked system offered real benefits to clinical effectiveness. Setting Birmingham Heartlands and Solihull NHS Trust (Teaching). Subjects Medical and administrative staff at Birmingham and Solihull NHS Trust. Results The main conclusions of the evaluation were that: (1) appropriate location of terminals close to clinical areas is vital to ensure that best use is made of networked information resources; (2) rapid access to networked information services saves staff time and allows educational opportunities to be realized; (3) networked information resources enhance rather than replace existing information sources; (4) training and support are essential to maximizing the benefits of networked information services, and (5) such a network can support clinical decision making. Conclusions With the development of clinical governance, the clinical network has assumed even greater importance within the Trust. Timely and easy access to clinical and educational information is crucial to the practice of evidence-based medicine which underpins high quality clinical care. The evaluation led to a number of recommendations which have since been used to develop the clinical network at Birmingham Heartlands and Solihull NHS Trust. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. eHealth and the use of individually tailored information: A systematic review.
- Author
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Conway, Nicholas, Webster, Clare, Smith, Blair, and Wake, Deborah
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BEHAVIOR modification ,CHRONIC diseases ,CLINICAL medicine ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDICAL protocols ,MEDLINE ,TELEMEDICINE ,SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Tailored messages are those that specifically target individuals following an assessment of their unique characteristics. This systematic review assesses the evidence regarding the effectiveness of tailoring within eHealth interventions aimed at chronic disease management. OVID Medline/Embase databases were searched for randomised control trials, controlled clinical, trials, before -after studies, and time series analyses from inception - May 2014. Objectively measured clinical processes/outcomes were considered. Twenty-two papers were eligible for inclusion: 6/22 used fully tailored messaging and 16/22 used partially tailored messages. Two studies isolated tailoring as the active component. The remainder compared intervention with standard care. In all, 12/16 studies measuring clinical processes and 2/6 studies reporting clinical outcomes showed improvements, regardless of target group. Study quality was low and design did not allow for identification of interventions’ active component. Heterogeneity precluded meta-analysis. This review has demonstrated that there is a lack of evidence to suggest that tailoring within an eHealth context confers benefit over non-tailored eHealth interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Metric-based vs peer-reviewed evaluation of a research output: Lesson learnt from UK’s national research assessment exercise.
- Author
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Koya, Kushwanth and Chowdhury, Gobinda
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,INSTITUTIONAL repositories ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,MEDICAL sciences ,CLINICAL medicine - Abstract
Purpose: There is a general inquisition regarding the monetary value of a research output, as a substantial amount of funding in modern academia is essentially awarded to good research presented in the form of journal articles, conferences papers, performances, compositions, exhibitions, books and book chapters etc., which, eventually leads to another question if the value varies across different disciplines. Answers to these questions will not only assist academics and researchers, but will also help higher education institutions (HEIs) make informed decisions in their administrative and research policies. Design and methodology: To examine both the questions, we applied the United Kingdom’s recently concluded national research assessment exercise known as the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2014 as a case study. All the data for this study is sourced from the openly available publications which arose from the digital repositories of REF’s results and HEFCE’s funding allocations. Findings: A world leading output earns between £7504 and £14,639 per year within the REF cycle, whereas an internationally excellent output earns between £1876 and £3659, varying according to their area of research. Secondly, an investigation into the impact rating of 25315 journal articles submitted in five areas of research by UK HEIs and their awarded funding revealed a linear relationship between the percentage of quartile-one journal publications and percentage of 4* outputs in Clinical Medicine, Physics and Psychology/Psychiatry/Neuroscience UoAs, and no relationship was found in the Classics and Anthropology/Development Studies UoAs, due to the fact that most publications in the latter two disciplines are not journal articles. Practical implications: The findings provide an indication of the monetary value of a research output, from the perspectives of government funding for research, and also what makes a good output, i.e. whether a relationship exists between good quality output and the source of its publication. The findings may also influence future REF submission strategies in HEIs and ascertain that the impact rating of the journals is not necessarily a reflection of the quality of research in every discipline, and this may have a significant influence on the future of scholarly communications in general. Originality: According to the author’s knowledge, this is the first time an investigation has estimated the monetary value of a good research output. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Analysis of Resin-Based Dental Materials' Composition Depending on Their Clinical Applications.
- Author
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Dantagnan, Claire-Adeline, Babajko, Sylvie, Nassif, Ali, Houari, Sophia, Jedeon, Katia, François, Philippe, Dursun, Elisabeth, Attal, Jean-Pierre, and Bosco, Julia
- Subjects
DENTAL materials ,CLINICAL medicine ,PRECAUTIONARY principle ,DENTAL care ,DATABASE searching ,MONOMERS - Abstract
The objective of this study was to detail the monomer composition of resin-based dental materials sold in the market in 2023 and to evaluate the proportion of bisphenol A (BPA)-derivatives in relation to their applications. A search on manufacturers' websites was performed to reference resin-based dental materials currently on the European market (including the European Union (EU) and United Kingdom (UK). Their monomer composition was determined using material-safety data sheets and was completed by a search on the PubMed database. Among the 543 material compositions exploitable, 382 (70.3%) contained BPA derivatives. Among them, 56.2% contained BisGMA and 28% BisEMA, the most frequently reported. A total of 59 monomers, of which six were BPA derivatives, were found. In total, 309 materials (56.9%) contained UDMA and 292 (53.8%) TEGDMA. Less than one third of materials identified contained no BPA derivatives. These proportions vary a lot depending on their applications, with materials dedicated to the dental care of young populations containing the highest proportions of BPA-derivative monomers. The long-term effects on human health of the different monomers identified including BPA-derivative monomers is a source of concern. For children and pregnant or lactating women arises the question of whether to take a precautionary principle and avoid the use of resin-based dental materials likely to release BPA by opting for alternative materials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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