Results 271 to 280 of about 2,148,940 (313)
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Quality of Care

JAMA, 1991
Many physicians think about quality of care the way Justice Stewart characterized his ability to recognize pornography: I shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced within that shorthand description [hardcore pornography]; and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligibly doing so.
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Quality of Care

2021
The WHO defines quality of care as “the extent to which health care services provided to individuals and patient populations improve desired health outcomes.”
Henk ten Have   +1 more
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Quality of Care, Including Survivorship Care Plans

2015
With the expectation of prolonged survival in the vast majority of women diagnosed with breast cancer, making initial treatment decisions that minimize or prevent late complications, and maximize the quality as well as quantity of life, is absolutely critical. Unfortunately, such care is not uniformly delivered.
Dawn L, Hershman, Patricia A, Ganz
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Linking quality assurance and quality of care

The Journal of Mental Health Administration, 1990
Since the introduction of the problem-oriented record into hospital work nearly 30 years ago, psychiatry has struggled to adapt it to the complex bio-psycho-social determinants of illness and therapeutics. This struggle has been especially difficult with the seriously and persistently ill patient who requires more than a minimal hospital stay ...
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"Caring" as Part of Health Care Quality

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1975
The subjective aspects of "caring" are an important part of health care quality and should be understood in the context of the illness-recovery process and the physician-patient relationship. "Caring" requires sensitivity on the part of the physician to the role of illness in our society and to the emotional component of illness in every patient.
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Health Care Technology and Quality of Care

Quality Assurance and Utilization Review, 1987
The increasing costs and complexity of technologic advances in diagnosis and treatment have been ac companied by other important issues. They are often moral or ethical in nature; they include the public's desire and determination to have access to these "high-tech" advances; and the quality and equity with which those advances are apportioned and ...
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Quality of Care

2013
Pressure ulcer prevention and care is an indicator of quality care across all healthcare settings. Evaluating pressure ulcer quality of care is complicated by multiple quality indicators developed by multiple organizations which are applied in different care settings. Regulations related to pressure ulcer care in different care settings creates further
Barbara M. Bates-Jensen, Janet Cheng
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Quality of Care

Archives of Neurology, 1996
OF THE MANY elemental management objectives of American health system reform, 3 have always stood out: control of cost, promotion of quality, and access for all to basic medical care. Many of us hoped to achieve all 3 of these major objectives in a comprehensive, organized, and timely way while preserving necessary patient and physician autonomy ...
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Quality of Care

2001
Abstract Those who are knowledgeable, expert, and solicitous about the animals for which they are responsible may be expected to provide a high standard of care on their own initiative. Unfortunately, many who have charge of animals do not demonstrate these characteristics and, increasingly, legislation is being used to impose standards ...
Mike Radford, Donald M Broom
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Can Quality of Care Indicators Measure Quality of Care?

Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 2012
Dale C, Strasser   +2 more
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