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Teaching hospital medical staff to handwash

Medical Journal of Australia, 1996
To increase the frequency of handwashing by medical staff.a prospective study of handwashing before and after patient contact.A paediatric intensive care unit in a tertiary hospital.61 intensive care unit medical staff and visiting medical staff.A five-phase behaviour modification program:(i) unobtrusive observation for four weeks to obtain a baseline ...
Michael Whitby, Dolly O Olesen
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Noise in hospitals as a strain for the medical staff

Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics, 2013
Noise research in hospitals focuses mainly on the harmful effects on patients. But at least in intensive care units and operation theaters, also the staff is exposed to high levels of noise during considerable portions of working time. Evidence from literature is summarized here.
Gert Notbohm, Silvester Siegmann
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Medical Staff Characteristics and Hospital Costs

The Journal of Human Resources, 1978
In order to test the hypothesis that medical staff physicians affect hospital behavior, this paper relates cost data for a sample of non-major-teaching, short-term hospitals to information on the characteristics of the medical staff which treats patients in those hospitals.
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The Medical Staff in the Modern Hospital.

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1968
Doctor C. Wesley Eisele has edited this remarkable new volume which is the first work in its field. Fifty-five contributors graphically describe their roles as staff members in hospitals of various sizes. This unique volume is aimed at improving the quality of patient care through the development of a better understanding of all aspects of staff work ...
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RELATION OF HOSPITAL ADMINISTRATORS, NURSING STAFF, AND MEDICAL STAFF

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1952
In 1947 the President of the American Medical Association, Dr. Edward L. Bortz, on the recommendation of the House of Delegates, appointed a committee to study the nursing problem in the United States, with particular reference to the shortage of nurses. The members of the original Committee on Nursing Problems were Drs.
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Hospital Power and Medical Responsibility: Medical-Staff Bylaws

New England Journal of Medicine, 1977
The internal organization of most American hospitals is an uneasy union of medical-care delivery by physicians and the administration of a medical-care facility by the hospital's governing board.
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