Publications by authors named "P Lechene de la Porte"

Objective: To assess the various factors that influence environmentally sustainable behaviour in gynaecological surgery and examine the differences between gynaecologists and residents.

Design: An interview study.

Setting: Academic and non-academic hospitals in the Netherlands.

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An effective way to quantify metacognitive performance is to ask participants to estimate their confidence in the accuracy of their response during a cognitive task. A recent meta-analysis raised the issue that most assessments of metacognitive performance in schizophrenia spectrum disorders may be confounded with cognitive deficits, which are known to be present in this population. Therefore, it remains unclear whether the reported metacognitive deficits are metacognitive in nature or rather inherited from cognitive deficits.

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Article Synopsis
  • The review aims to identify current methods for measuring costs in value-based healthcare (VBHC) and how these methods support value-based decision-making in care provision.
  • The literature search yielded 1930 studies, with 215 focusing on costs in a VBHC context; many relied on hospital costs and employed sophisticated costing methods for better managerial insights.
  • Key practices for successful cost measurement include process mapping, expert input, and observations, with time-driven activity-based costing (TDABC) highlighted as a highly useful method when implemented effectively.
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To decrease infusion pump administration errors, time-consuming training is often initiated. The aims of this study were twofold: to develop minimum competency requirements for programming and operation of infusion pumps and to develop and validate a test for nurses based on those requirements. The test was completed by 226 nurses between May and December 2017.

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Objectives: Despite widespread use of medical devices and their increasing complexity, their contribution to unintended injury caused by healthcare (adverse events, AEs) remains relatively understudied. The aim of this study was to gain insight in the incidence and types of AEs involving medical devices (AMDEs).

Methods: Data from two patient record studies for the identification of AEs were used.

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