Results 131 to 140 of about 59,653 (312)
Why HR Has Failed to Address Healthcare's Workforce Crisis: The Need for a Systems Partner Role
ABSTRACT Attempts to remedy sustained workforce challenges facing healthcare organizations globally have been largely ineffective, despite increased political attention. In this paper we draw on contextually based human resource theory to explain why these challenges remain intractable.
Aoife M. McDermott +2 more
wiley +1 more source
The Meaning of Work in the Digital Era: A Systematic Review and Research Agenda
ABSTRACT As digital technologies continue to reshape the nature of work, their impact on workers' experience of the meaning of work has attracted growing scholarly interest. However, the existing body of findings remains largely fragmented and conceptually inconsistent.
Yukun Liu +4 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Problematic substance use (PSU) is a significant, inadequately managed people management challenge. Drawing on the conflicting outcomes and mutual losses perspectives on HRM and employee wellbeing, and using Job Demands‐Resources theory to explain underlying strain‐driven loss cycles, we examine factors shaping PSU and help‐seeking among 575 ...
Karen Maher +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Australian Royal Commissions Into Child Welfare, Abuse and Protection
ABSTRACT Both nationally and internationally, the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (RCIRCSA) is widely viewed as a remarkably successful public inquiry. Unlike many other commissions, it was stable, attracted little controversy, was highly regarded, and led to extensive legal, regulatory and policy reform ...
Shurlee Swain, Katie Wright
wiley +1 more source
Are physicians' microlinguistic strategies for orchestrating alignment in the clinic linked to the reproduction of patterns of social control and institutional expression? Through empirical analysis of videotaped physician-patient interviews, the present
Robins, Lynne Stephanie
core
ABSTRACT The creation of critical research spaces, such as ethnography labs, studios, and other collaborative research environments, requires attention and attunement in anthropology to focus on the kinds of imaginative and generative spaces where creative ethnographic research can unfold as scholarship.
Fiona P. McDonald
wiley +1 more source
SIEDY Diagnostic Accuracy in Assessing Erectile Dysfunction in Young Men Living With HIV
ABSTRACT Background Erectile dysfunction (ED) is a multidimensional condition commonly affecting men living with HIV. The structured interview of erectile dysfunction (SIEDY) is the only validated tool assessing organic, relational, and psychological factors contributing to ED, while dynamic penile color Doppler ultrasound (dPCDU) is a reliable method ...
Giorgio Tiecco +10 more
wiley +1 more source
Dhwani Krishnan,1 Anna Dermenchyan,2 Wendy Simon,2 Caitlin Chen,1 Sitaram Vangala,3 Erin P Dowling2 1The Healthcare Improvement & Innovation in Quality (THINQ) Collaborative, Department of Medicine, UCLA Health, University of California, Los Angeles,
Krishnan D +5 more
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[Physician-patient relations in rheumatology].
In a further attempt to tackle the question of the doctor-patient relationship in rheumatology, this time more comprehensively and from a different angle, the mistakes a doctor may make in daily practice are indicated.
M. D'Amore +2 more
core
Abstract Introduction Erectile dysfunction (ED) significantly impacts quality of life. For patients unresponsive to conservative treatments, penile prosthesis implantation represents an effective solution with high satisfaction rates. However, the complexity and sensitive nature of the procedure often generate multiple patient concerns.
Gabriele Tulone +7 more
wiley +1 more source

