Results 251 to 260 of about 5,794,747 (285)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Southern Medical Journal, 2015
Our objectives were to assess physician knowledge of costs of products, tests, and services commonly used by obstetrician/gynecologists (OB/GYNs) and identify those items that could be eliminated without decreasing quality of care by performing a prospective observational pilot study.An anonymous electronic survey was distributed to 70 OB/GYN providers
Lauren D, Demosthenes +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Our objectives were to assess physician knowledge of costs of products, tests, and services commonly used by obstetrician/gynecologists (OB/GYNs) and identify those items that could be eliminated without decreasing quality of care by performing a prospective observational pilot study.An anonymous electronic survey was distributed to 70 OB/GYN providers
Lauren D, Demosthenes +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Delivering high-value breast care
Breast Global Journal, 2023Abstract Focusing only on survival and recurrence outcomes can lead to breast cancer overtreatment, high costs, and poor patient experience. Providing care through the lens of the patient improves value in breast cancer treatment.
Jill R Dietz, Sneha Joshi, Ankush Dewle
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High‐value care for senior medical students
The Clinical Teacher, 2020Background Physicians have an opportunity to address rising health care costs by optimising resource use. Recent research suggests that regional spending patterns influence student engagement with high‐ and low‐value behaviours, revealing that these behaviours may be adopted early in ...
Mary Lacy, Leonard Noronha
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Clinic–Community Linkages for High-Value Care
New England Journal of Medicine, 2014A key strategy for improving population health is linking delivery systems, communities, and patients in an integrated effort, in part by reporting and acting on clinical performance measures at the community level, rather than at the level of hospitals or physicians.
Thomas D, Sequist, Elsie M, Taveras
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Observation Care — High-Value Care or a Cost-Shifting Loophole?
New England Journal of Medicine, 2013Protocolized observation care in dedicated hospital units can result in higher-value care for some conditions, but by treating observation billing for inpatient care the same as for observation-unit care, current policy promotes cost shifting without rewarding higher value.
Christopher W, Baugh, Jeremiah D, Schuur
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Fostering High-Value, Cost-Conscious Care
Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012Frank J, Rybicki +3 more
+7 more sources
High value collaborative perioperative care programs
Perioperative Care and Operating Room Management, 2017Abstract There exists significant opportunity to improve surgical care. Protocols and programs have evolved that streamline perioperative care, reducing complications and costs. No single element of such programs has demonstrated singular ability to improve care.
openaire +1 more source

