3,206 results match your criteria: "Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management ESHPM[Affiliation]"

Background: Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) provide invaluable information on patients' health outcomes and can be used to improve patient-related outcomes at the individual, organizational and policy levels. This systematic review aimed to a) identify contemporary applications and synthesize all evidence on the use of PROMs in these contexts and b) to determine characteristics of interventions associated with increased effectiveness.

Methods: Five databases were searched for studies providing quantitative evidence of the impact of PROM interventions.

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Background: Healthcare use by High-Need High-Cost (HNHC) patients is believed to be modifiable through better coordination of care. To identify patients for care management, a hybrid approach is recommended that combines clinical assessment of need with model-based prediction of cost. Models that predict high healthcare costs persisting over time are relevant but scarce.

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Background/objectives: The nursing work environment is a critical element in healthcare delivery and a strong predictor of both patient and nurse outcomes. Understanding the complexity and multifaceted nature of this environment is essential for improving nursing practices and optimizing healthcare systems. This study aimed to gain insights into the perceived characteristics of the nursing work environment, considering it as a complex and multifaceted system.

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Article Synopsis
  • Real-time access to test results can be both beneficial and stressful for patients, as it requires them to decide whether to view results before consulting a doctor.
  • Through discourse analysis of interviews with 28 patients, three main perspectives on this access were identified: it can cause stress, reduce anxiety, and enhance self-management.
  • The findings highlight the varied opinions on real-time access, suggesting the need for tailored strategies to assist patients in effectively using this feature.
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Evaluating the Health and Economic Impacts of Return-to-Work Interventions: A Modeling Study.

Value Health

November 2024

Department of Health Management and Health Economics, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway; Center for Health Decision Science, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA. Electronic address:

Objectives: The rate of sickness absence in Norway is at its highest point since 2009, and policymakers need tools to make informed decisions on high-value interventions to address sick leave. Using trial-linked registry data, multi-state modeling, and decision-analytic modeling, we assessed the cost-effectiveness of 2 return-to-work (RTW) interventions for individuals with musculoskeletal and psychological disorders in Norway.

Methods: Using data from 166 individuals in a randomized trial, we developed a decision-analytic model to compare 2 multidomain RTW interventions: outpatient acceptance and commitment therapy (O-ACT) and inpatient multimodal occupational rehabilitation (I-MORE).

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The growing burden of cancer, with its costly and difficult to endure therapies, underscores the urgent need for individualized care that enhances patients' quality of life. Effective individualized treatment planning requires collaboration between healthcare professionals and patients (and their relatives), focusing on patients' personal values and preferences through shared decision-making. In practice, oncology care predominantly follows clinical guidelines, which, while reducing practice variation, may not account for individual patient differences in health status and preferences.

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Background: Comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) can identify targets beyond standard of care, potentially revolutionizing personalized cancer management. However, conducting well designed studies in this rapidly evolving field is complex and demands time and investments. Consequently, the total added value of CGP remains uncertain.

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The implementation of design methodologies for supporting shared decision making in healthcare services: A systematic review.

Patient Educ Couns

February 2025

Aragon Institute for Engineering Research (i3a), Department of Engineering Design and Manufacturing, University of Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain; Water and Environmental Health-IUCA Research Group, University of Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain. Electronic address:

Objectives: This systematic review examines how design methodologies support Shared Decision Making (SDM), identifies the most suitable for future use, explores types of methodologies used, challenges faced, and the impact on patients, clinicians, and care pathways.

Methods: Studies were searched on Medline, Web of Science, Scopus and grey literature (Google Scholar, CORDIS) up to July 2024, following PRISMA guidelines.

Results: were analysed to identify patient involvement, design strategies, SDM solutions, and their impact on care paths, professionals, and patients.

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In Indonesia, primary health centres (PHCs) are mandated to provide essential medicines to ensure equal access to medication for all Indonesians, as stated in the national medicine policy. However, limited information is available regarding the actual practices of health workers within the context of decentralised governance. This paper investigates the discrepancies between national policies and local practices in two Indonesian districts, shedding light on coping mechanisms employed in each phase of medicine management within PHCs.

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Article Synopsis
  • Decentralized clinical trials (DCTs) are designed to improve trial participation by moving activities closer to participants, but understanding what motivates people to join these trials, especially those with type 2 diabetes, is still unclear.
  • Focus groups in the Netherlands, Germany, and Austria with participants aged around 66 identified seven key themes about trial participation, including location, time, interaction with healthcare professionals, and technology use, revealing a total of 20 different motivating factors.
  • The most significant motivators for DCT participation were flexibility in location and time; however, factors like digital infrastructure and personal interaction were seen as both helpful and challenging, suggesting future DCT designs could benefit from addressing these barriers directly.
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Background: Despite HPV vaccines' availability for over a decade, coverage across the US varies. While some states have tried to increase HPV vaccination coverage, most model-based analyses focus on national impacts. We evaluated hypothetical changes in HPV vaccination coverage at the national and state levels for California, New York, and Texas using a mathematical model.

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Feasibility of implementing immersive and non-interactive virtual reality interventions in elderly populations: A scoping review.

Geriatr Nurs

November 2024

Applied Professorship Elderly Care HZ University of Applied Sciences, Vlissingen, The Netherlands; Academic Workplace for Elderly Care Zeeland, Zeeland, The Netherlands; Department of Science, University College Roosevelt, Utrecht University, Middelburg, The Netherlands. Electronic address:

Introduction: The rapid growth of the elderly population underscores the need for affordable and easy-to-implement elderly care interventions. While virtual reality (VR) interventions show promising results, the feasibility of implementing non-interactive VR in elderly populations is under-researched.

Objectives: This scoping review investigates preconceptions, practical and economic barriers, and health and safety risks associated with implementing non-interactive VR interventions in elderly populations.

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Background: Collaborative care relationships form a key component of recovery-oriented mental healthcare, but can be disrupted if service users feel judged by professionals. Professionals can express stigmatizing attitudes through microaggressions, i.e.

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The maldistribution of physicians, especially in rural areas, remains a global public health challenge. The internship programme for medical doctors is one of the efforts undertaken to address this issue. However, evidence aiming to disentangle this persistent challenge in the Indonesian context has been scant.

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Article Synopsis
  • * A significant majority of participants disposed of medications by throwing them in household garbage or dumping them, highlighting a lack of proper disposal methods.
  • * Despite some knowledge gaps and challenges, participants showed a positive willingness to engage in a household medicines take-back system, indicating potential for improved disposal practices.
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Beyond the Queue: Exploring Waiting Practices in the Stories of Patients With Breast Cancer.

Health Expect

December 2024

Department of Health Care Governance, Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

Background: Waiting is an important topic in healthcare debates, mostly discussed in the form of waiting lists and waiting times. In this discourse, the experiential element of waiting stays hidden. Understanding the waiting experiences of patients can help to better understand healthcare waiting practices, which have a large impact on patients.

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Unlabelled: Alcohol-related emergency department attendance in adolescents should be considered as a valuable opportunity to address and mitigate future alcohol consumption. Therefore, a paediatric department of a major district hospital in the Netherlands developed an outpatient preventive program targeting adolescents admitted for acute alcohol intoxication. The primary aim of this study is to evaluate how adolescent drinking patterns participating in the preventive program developed over time.

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Purpose: Skin cancer, a significant global health problem, imposes financial and workload burdens on the Dutch healthcare system. Artificial intelligence (AI) for diagnostic augmentation has gained momentum in dermatology, but despite significant research on adoption, acceptance, and implementation, we lack a holistic understanding of why technologies (do not) become embedded in the healthcare system. This study utilizes the concept of legitimacy, omnipresent but underexplored in health technology studies, to examine assumptions guiding the integration of an AI mHealth app for skin lesion cancer risk assessment in the Dutch healthcare system.

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Background: Identification of groups at a high risk of gastric cancer could facilitate targeted screening in countries with a low gastric cancer incidence. Our aim was to identify such high-risk groups based on individual-level population data on migration history and socioeconomic status (SES) in the Netherlands.

Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, patient data from the Netherlands Cancer Registry were linked to demographic data of Statistics Netherlands in the period 2010 to 2022.

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Background: Given their often-vulnerable circumstances, young fathers' childcare involvement is precarious. Despite the potential benefits of receiving professional support, young fathers experience exclusion or suboptimal support in maternity care. Insights into maternity care providers' attitudes toward young fathers and their perspectives on the support they provide to this group are, however, lacking.

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Background: The prognostic role of the fibrosis-4 (FIB-4) index relative to intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) after hepatectomy remains unclear. This study sought to characterize the impact of the FIB-4 index and tumor burden score (TBS) on recurrence and overall survival (OS).

Methods: ICC patients undergoing hepatectomy (2000-2020) were identified using a multi-institutional database.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Healthcare decision-making often relies on uncertain assessments of clinical and economic value due to incomplete or absent evidence, especially in areas like advanced therapies and rare diagnoses.
  • - Structured expert elicitation (SEE) helps gather and quantify expert knowledge about uncertain factors, utilizing various protocols to ensure more transparent and reliable assessments.
  • - The report introduces five SEE protocols, highlights their implementation differences, discusses their strengths and weaknesses, and suggests areas for further research without making specific practice recommendations.
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Background: Clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) are designed to assist health care professionals in medical decision-making, but they often lack effective integration of shared decision-making (SDM) principles to reflect patient values and preferences, particularly in the context of preference-sensitive CPG recommendations. To address this shortcoming and foster SDM through CPGs, the integration of patient decision aids (PDAs) into CPGs has been proposed as an important strategy. However, methods for systematically identifying and prioritizing CPG recommendations relevant to SDM and related decision support tools are currently lacking.

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