Publications by authors named "C D Foley"

Background: In Ireland, maternity care is provided through a mixture of public and private services, with type of maternity care offered varying according to availability, clinical need and geographic location.

Aim: To explore women's perceived involvement in decisions about care depending on the maternity care pathway received.

Methods: Mixed-methods secondary analysis of data from the Irish National Maternity Experience Survey 2020.

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Many scholars argue that there is a deepening crisis of trust in healthcare systems. What is not contested is the centrality of public trust in building reputational value in healthcare organisations. However, there is a dearth of research focused on better understanding how trust in healthcare institutions, and the healthcare workforce, can be sustainably cultivated.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to compare long-term decision regret in younger patients (30 years or younger) versus older patients (31-49 years) who underwent laparoscopic hysterectomy for benign conditions.
  • Researchers conducted a matched retrospective cohort study from 2009 to 2016, gathering survey responses focused on surgical decision regret and loss-of-fertility regret from 287 participants, with 241 completing the survey.
  • Results showed that younger participants experienced significantly higher rates of regret regarding both surgical decisions and loss of fertility compared to older participants, indicating that age influences feelings of regret post-surgery.
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Background: Advances in technology have increased the ease of reporting hospital incidents, resulting in large amounts of qualitative descriptive data. Health services have little experience analysing these data at scale to incorporate into routine reporting.

Objective: We aimed to explore the feasibility of applying a semi-automated content analysis (SACA) tool (Leximancerâ„¢) to qualitative descriptions of system-wide hospital incidents to provide insights into safety issues at all health service levels.

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Background: Freshwater fish are important food sources that also pose risks to human and wildlife health because of the bioaccumulation of environmental chemicals in their tissues. Although most studies, fish consumption advisories, and regulations focus on individual contaminants, fish consumers are exposed to mixtures of chemicals, including legacy contaminants and contaminants of emerging concern, that can have combined effects. Chemicals of emerging concern represent one source of hazard, but legacy contaminants can still pose threats to fish consumers due to their persistence in the environment.

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