9 results match your criteria: "National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE)[Affiliation]"

The current system of biomedical innovation is unable to keep pace with scientific advancements. We propose to address this gap by reengineering innovation processes to accelerate reliable delivery of products that address unmet medical needs. Adaptive biomedical innovation (ABI) provides an integrative, strategic approach for process innovation.

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Health care decisions are complex and involve confronting trade-offs between multiple, often conflicting, objectives. Using structured, explicit approaches to decisions involving multiple criteria can improve the quality of decision making and a set of techniques, known under the collective heading multiple criteria decision analysis (MCDA), are useful for this purpose. MCDA methods are widely used in other sectors, and recently there has been an increase in health care applications.

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Background: Minocycline is an oral antibiotic used for acne vulgaris. Its use has lessened due to safety concerns (including potentially irreversible pigmentation), a relatively high cost, and no evidence of any greater benefit than other acne treatments. A modified-release version of minocycline is being promoted as having fewer side-effects.

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Background: Keeping clinical practice recommendations up-to-date with a continually evolving evidence base presents challenges. Resources required to update recommendations compete with those needed to evaluate newer treatments.

Methods: We describe an approach developed by the UK National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) for updating clinical practice recommendations for new interventional procedures and we evaluate relevant initial experience of using this system.

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Article Synopsis
  • Self-management education can enhance the quality of life and health outcomes for children and young people with chronic illnesses, including epilepsy.
  • A systematic review of research literature was conducted, focusing on randomized trials of self-management education programs for epilepsy patients.
  • The findings suggest that while only one trial showed some positive effects, including reduced seizure frequency and improved knowledge and behavior concerning epilepsy, the overall evidence for self-management education's effectiveness is limited due to the low quality of the study identified.
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Background: Self-management education has been shown to improve the quality of life of people with chronic illnesses. It has been suggested that self-management education may improve seizure control and other outcomes in people with epilepsy.

Objectives: To review systematically the research literature on the effectiveness of self-management education in improving health outcomes for adults with epilepsy.

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Visual examination, without instruments, of the eye allows inspection of the iris, sclera, cornea and, through the iris, some abnormalities of the lens and retina. Several hereditary disorders can easily be recognised by characteristic iris changes. This review discusses changes in the iris, visible lens anomalies, and changes in the cornea surrounding the iris.

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Conventional cost-effectiveness decision rules rely on the assumptions that all health care programmes are divisible and exhibit constant returns to scale for a homogeneous population; hence, the path between adjacent programmes on a cost-effectiveness frontier must be linear. In this paper we build a framework to analyse non-linear 'expansion' paths. We model the impact of two key sources of non-linearity: economies of scale or scope in the production of health care; and prioritisation of patients who are most likely to benefit from more expensive and more effective treatments.

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Public health guidance and the role of new NICE.

Public Health

November 2005

The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE), Mid City Place, 71, High Holborn, London, WC1V 6NA, UK.

This paper describes the operating and methods for the newly established centre for Public Health Excellence in the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). The origins of the establishment of this organisation are described and the types of public health guidance which will be produced are outlined. The Advisory Committee Structure for the new organisation is also presented.

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