Little is known about the long-term outcome of mobile-bearing total ankle replacement (TAR) in the treatment of end-stage arthritis of the ankle, and in particular for patients with inflammatory joint disease. The aim of this study was to assess the minimum ten-year outcome of TAR in this group of patients. We prospectively followed 76 patients (93 TARs) who underwent surgery between 1988 and 1999.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: The main objective of this study is to describe the methods and design of the survey of living conditions in the Arctic (SLiCA), relevant participation rates and the distribution of participants, as applicable to the survey data in Alaska, Greenland and Norway. This article briefly addresses possible selection bias in the data and also the ways to tackle it in future studies.
Study Design: Population-based cross-sectional survey.
Int J Circumpolar Health
March 2005
Objectives: Smoking and drinking habits among young people are of great concern in Greenland. The Home Rule government has through the Department of Prevention (PAARISA) carried out several campaigns to highlight the risks of smoking and drinking alcohol. To monitor the changes in these habits Greenland has participated in the European Survey Project on Alcohol and Drugs (ESPAD) in 1999 and 2003.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTime has proven that expert valuation of dental practices combines both art and science. The valuation results will vary according to the methods used, and, frequently, the most difficult task is to reconcile the various values derived through different acceptable valuation techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA growing demand for integrating stand-alone information systems with an HIS can be observed. Different forms of integration can be distinguished: technical integration, user interface integration, and integration of the information service. The integration of the information service appears to be especially difficult.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper presents an overview of the data from 15 cases collected with the CAPACITY software for cost analysis of PACS. The data suggest that both hospital wide and partial PACS implementations do not pay back yet. Only Nuclear Medicine PACS systems may be introduced cost-neutral in the near future.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWithin the scope of the Dutch PACS project, the costs of a hospital wide PACS in the Utrecht University Hospital were estimated, with the help of the software package CAPACITY. The cost analysis was based on the most recent specifications of the costs of the equipment, on extrapolations, and on the experience acquired with a PACS prototype in the Utrecht University Hospital. Savings due to a possible reduction in the length of stay, or due to logistic improvements were not taken into account.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe hospital-wide use of picture archiving and communication systems (PACS) promises a number of advantages in the future. These benefits will only be obtained at considerable costs, however. In view of the rapidly developing technology the costs of hardware can be expected to decrease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNowadays a growing number of experts in the PACS field agree on the necessity of having an integrated HIS-PACS combination available in modern hospitals in order to manage the enormous amounts of patient data, both textual, numerical and image information, in an effective way. Since 1986 BAZIS (the Development and Support Group of the Hospital Information System), Philips Medical Systems and the University Hospital of Utrecht (AZU) are partners in the so-called Dutch PACS Project in the development and evaluation of a fully integrated image information system. The first phase of the coupling (sub)project consists of establishing a communication link between the BAZIS/ZIS and the Philips/MARCOM system with the following restrictions: the only data sent concerns the inpatients of one ward; data will only flow one way, from BAZIS/ZIS to Philips/MARCOM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Inform (Lond)
June 1989
In The Netherlands a national PACS development programme has been started, supported by the Dutch Society of Radiology and funded by the Dutch Department of Health because of the national character of the project. Three main partners are cooperating in this development: the Utrecht University Hospital (AZU), BAZIS and Philips International (Product Division Medical Systems), with the Delft University of Technology as the main BAZIS subcontractor. The non-profit foundation BAZIS, developing and supporting the ZIS Hospital Information System (in use in some 30 Dutch hospitals, over 15,000 acute beds), initiated its current IMAGe Information System (IMAGIS) projects in 1984.
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