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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Evaluation des consommations médicamenteuses associées au décours d'un lymphome : approche pharmacoépidémiologique / Drug utilization in lynphoma patients : a pharmacoepidemiological approach in the French health insurance database

Conte, Cécile 11 June 2018 (has links)
Ces travaux de thèse présentent une approche de pharmaco-épidémiologie explorant l'exposition médicamenteuse chez des patients atteints de lymphome tout au long de leur parcours de soin. L'utilisation des données du Système National d'Information Inter-régimes de l'Assurance Maladie (SNIIRAM) nous a permis de quantifier cette exposition médicamenteuse et de déterminer les facteurs associés dans le contexte de la vie réelle. Les travaux de recherche réalisés au cours de cette thèse répondaient à 3 objectifs. Dans un premier objectif, nous avons souhaité valider l'utilisation du SNIIRAM à des fins de recherche pour améliorer la robustesse des futures études menées sur le lymphome. Après avoir défini plusieurs algorithmes d'identification des cas incidents de lymphome, nous avons testé leur validité par confrontation aux données cliniques exhaustives du Registre des cancers du Tarn. Les paramètres de performance obtenus permettent de considérer les données disponibles dans le SNIIRAM comme un outil puissant pour mener des études pharmaco-épidémiologiques ou médico-économiques sur le Lymphome. Le second objectif était d'explorer l'existence d'une surconsommation de médicaments psychotropes au cours de la phase active de traitement par rapport à une population témoin, sous l'hypothèse d'une initiation accrue de ces médicaments pour pallier les complications psychologiques associées à la prise en charge du Lymphome. Par ailleurs, la chronicisation fréquemment observée de ce type de consommation peut conduire à terme à des complications potentiellement évitables. Pour répondre à cet objectif, nous avons réalisé une étude selon une approche " new-user design ", à partir d'une cohorte de patients incidents de lymphome identifiés dans les données du SNIIRAM à l'échelon régional. Nous avons observé un taux d'initiation supérieur au taux observé en population générale ou chez des patients atteints d'autres pathologies mettant en jeu le pronostic vital (infarctus du myocarde). En fonction de la classe thérapeutique étudiée, 20 à plus de 50% des patients restaient exposés de façon inappropriée (au-delà des recommandations) à ces médicaments. Le troisième objectif a donc été d'explorer les déterminants associés à une utilisation prolongée de médicaments psychotropes dans la phase de l'après-cancer à partir des données de l'Echantillon généraliste des bénéficiaires (EGB). [...] / This thesis presents a pharmacoepidemiology approach to describe drug utilization in lymphomas during their whole care pathway. The use of the French claims database (Système National d'Informations Inter-Régimes de l'Assurance Maladie (SNIIRAM)) allows to exhaustively quantify this drug utilization in real life conditions. This thesis consists of three mains objectives. First, we aimed to develop validated algorithms for the identification of incident cases of lymphoma. For the validation, we used data from a regional Cancer Registry as the gold standard. The purpose of this validation study was to enhance validity of future studies conducted on lymphomas in the SNIIRAM database. The results of this study associated to strengths of this database demonstrate that this approach is of great interest to conduct pharmacoepidemiological or medico-economic studies in lymphomas. Second, we aimed to estimate the incidence of use of psychotropic drugs during the active treatment phase of lymphoma in comparison with control groups. Indeed, the increased probability of developing anxio-depressive disorders after diagnosis could lead to an increased initiation of psychotropic drugs and a potential inappropriate chronic use of these drugs after initiation. Such inappropriate chronic use can unnecessarily expose patients to adverse event. For this aim, we conducted a new-user cohort study using data from the SNIIRAM database. The results of this study revealed that the initiation rate of these drugs is higher than in the general population or for life-threatening diseases such as myocardial infarction. Moreover, we observed an inappropriate prolonged use for a significant fraction of patients (20% to more than 50% according to therapeutic class). On the basis of these findings, the third objective was to identify factors associated with prolonged use of these drugs during survivorship. This study was conducted using data from the General Sample of Beneficiaries (EGB). [...]
32

Predictive Relationships Between Electronic Health Records Attributes and Meaningful Use Objectives

Koppoe, Solomon Nii 01 January 2018 (has links)
The use of electronic health records (EHR) has the potential to improve relationships between physicians and patients and significantly improve care delivery. The purpose of this study was to analyze the relationships between hospital attributes and EHR implementation. The research design for this study was the cross-sectional approach. Secondary data from the Health Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) Analytics Database was utilized (n = 169) in a correlational crosssectional research design. Normalization Process Theory (NPT) and implementation theory were the theoretical underpinnings used in this study. Multiple linear regressions results showed statistically significant relationships between the 4 independent variables (region, ownership status, number of staffed beds [size], and organizational control) and the outcomes for the dependent variables of EHR software application attributes (Clinical Decision Support Systems (CDSS) components), EHR software application attributes (major systems), and successful implementation of Meaningful Use (MU) (p = .001). A statistically significant relationship (p = .001) was also found between the 2 independent variables (EHR software application attributes [CDSS components] and EHR software application attributes [major systems]) and the outcome of successful implementation of MU when combined. This evidence should provide policy makers and health practitioners support for their attempts to implement EHR systems to result in positive Meaningful Use which has been shown to be more cost effective and result in better quality of care for patients.The potential social change is improved medication prescribing and administration for hospitals and, lower cost and better quality of care for patients.
33

What is the effect of information and computing technology on healthcare?

Ludwick, Dave 11 1900 (has links)
Long waitlists and growing numbers of unattached patients are indicative of a Canadian healthcare system which is unable to address the demands of a growing and aging population. Health information technology is one solution offering respite, but brings its own issues. Health information technology includes primary care physician office systems, telehealth and jurisdictional EHRs integrated through interoperability standards to share data across care providers. This dissertation explores effects that health information technology has on primary care. Literature reviews provided context of health information systems adoption. Surveys and semi-structured interviews gathered information from health system actors. Workflow analysis illustrated how technology could change physician office workflow. Exam room observations illustrated how technology affects proxemics and haptics in the patient encounter. This research derived change management models which quantified substantial change management costs related to adoption of physician office systems. We found that physicians have concerns over how health information technology will affect efficiency, financial, quality, liability, safety and other factors. Physicians in smaller suburban physician offices take little time to select a system for their needs. Urban, academic and hospital physicians spend more time networking with colleagues and devote funds to project management and training. Our studies showed that stronger professional networks, more complete training, a managed approach to implementation and in-house technical support are more influential in facilitating adoption than remuneration models. Telemedicine can improve quality of care, the referral process for family physicians and access to services for patients. Teledermatology was shown to make significant improvements in access to services for patients, but referring physicians are concerned about their liability if they follow the recommendations of a dermatologist who has not seen their patient face-to-face. Certification organizations mitigate liability, procurement and financial risk to qualifying family physicians by pre-qualifying vendor solutions, coaching physicians through procurement and reimbursing family physicians for purchasing an approved system. We found that centralization plays a key role in adoption of health information systems at the jurisdictional and primary care level. Online scheduling can reduce human resource requirements used in scheduling, if the system is well implemented, well documented and easy to use. / Engineering Management
34

A Multi-Level Approach to Understanding Pap Smear Compliance Across Community Health Centers in Florida

Cook, Nicole Jill 07 April 2009 (has links)
Community Health Centers (CHCs) are the nation's primary care safety-net for vulnerable populations, including racial/ethnic minorities, migrant workers and the uninsured. Women from these populations contribute disproportionately to cervical cancer morbidity and mortality, largely due to underutilization of Pap smear screening. The purpose of this cross-sectional study was to identify factors that may be related to Pap smear screening compliance among a large cohort of women seen at 10 Community Health Centers in Florida. Building upon an ecologic framework, this research went beyond patient-level risk factors, which are generally well-known, and explored provider and organizational variables that may also be associated with Pap smear screening compliance in this population. Ten CHCs in Florida met study inclusion criteria of having at least four complete years of claims and patient registration data stored in an Electronic Health Record (HER) data system maintained at HCN. EHR data were merged with provider gender obtained from a credentialing database and with data from a short organizational survey administered to the Medical Directors of the CHCs. Descriptive statistics, chi-squared analysis, and multiple logistic regression were used to examine Pap smear screening rates for women (n=71,234) in relation to a variety of patient, provider and organizational variables. Younger, Hispanic and insured women were most likely to have had a screening in the past three years compared to older, white non- Hispanic and uninsured women. Among providers, patients who received care from female providers generally had higher Pap smear compliance rates, but these findings differed by patient insurance and race/ethnicity group. Organizational factors that appeared to be associated with higher Pap compliance rates included diffusion of an EHR system, implementation of "Care Model Principals", and having recently implemented a Pap smear screening process improvement project. Results demonstrated that multi-level factors, operating on the patient, provider and organizational levels, contribute to Pap smear compliance among women seen at CHCs. Results suggested that improving screening compliance within this population of women requires interventions that are ecologic in scope, incorporate targeted education to high-risk women and providers, and include organizational strategies that can optimize care delivery at point-of-care.
35

Information Use with Paper and Electronic Nursing Documentation by Nurses Caring for Pediatric Patients

Kelley, Tiffany Frances January 2012 (has links)
<p>This dissertation aimed to investigate the use of electronic nursing documentation as a strategy to improve the quality of care provided to hospitalized patients. The literature to support the use of electronic nursing documentation on the quality of care delivered to patients is limited to date. Additionally, the literature describing the use of information for the delivery of care on paper-based nursing documentation is limited. This dissertation reviews the current literature, investigated the knowledge needed for nurses to know their patients and established categories of nurses' information needs as preliminary work to be able to descriptively compare the use of paper with electronic nursing documentation on inpatient care units within a hospital setting. The main study conducted for this investigation used a mixed-methods multiple case study design, to describe the processes of information use on two inpatient care units, while first using paper and subsequently electronic nursing documentation. Findings revealed the importance of the categories of nurses' information needs for both cases in addition to the use of verbal, paper-based and electronic information sources for the collection, communication and temporary storage of information needs. Additionally, the conversion to electronic nursing documentation introduced new challenges related to three quality metrics: efficiency, timeliness and safety. Recommendations are provided for further evaluation of electronic health records with additional consideration for appropriate hardware devices in the context of the care environment.</p> / Dissertation
36

Attitudes And Opinions Of People Who Use Medical Services About Privacy And Confidentiality Of Health Information In Electronic Environment

Ozkan, Ozlem 01 February 2011 (has links) (PDF)
In health services, it is a necessity to keep the records of the patients. Although paper-based records are commonly used for this aim, they are not as convenient as computerized records. Therefore, many of the health facilities have recently started keeping patients&rsquo / health records in electronic databases. However, new questions about confidentiality and privacy of these records were raised with this new system.This study aims to investigate the opinions and attitudes of the people who use the health services of Turkey about the privacy and confidentiality of health information in electronic environment. In the survey, there are 596 participants from 64 different cities in six geographical regions of Turkey. The findings show that people feel comfortable about computer usage in health-care but they are concerned about the privacy and confidentiality of their information and also they are not sure if their medical information is safe and secure now. Moreover, they are mostly unaware about current regulations related to information privacy in Turkey. The study also shows that people trust in their doctors, health researchers in universities, pharmacist, nurses and other hospital staff but do not trust in insurance companies, government, private sector health researchers, information technology specialists and government health researchers for the privacy of their medical records.
37

Change is inevitable but compliance is optional : coworker social influence and behavioral work-arounds in the EHR implementation of healthcare organizations

Barrett, Ashley Katherine 03 September 2015 (has links)
The implementation of planned organizational change is ultimately a communication-related phenomenon, and as such, it is imperative that organizational communication scholars examine the interactions surrounding EHR implementation and understand how users (e.g. healthcare practitioners) utilize, evaluate, and deliberate this new technological innovation. Previous research on planned organizational change has called for researchers to adopt a more dynamic perspective that emphasizes the active agency of organizational members throughout implementation processes and focuses on informal implementers and change reinvention (work-arounds) as individuals actively reinterpret and personalize their work roles during implementation socialization. This dissertation seeks to fill this gap in research by demonstrating how communication between doctors, nurses, and other health professionals affects the adoption, maintenance, alternation, modification, or rejection of EHR systems within health care organizations. To delve into these inquiries and examine the intersecting domains of medical informatics and organizational communication research, this dissertation proceeds in the following manner: First, a literature review, capitalizing on Laurie Lewis’s work in planned organizational change and social constructionist views of technology use in organizations, outlines the assumptions that undergird this research. Next, this dissertation builds a model that predicts the communicative and structural antecedents of the study outcome variables, which include 1) organizational resistance to EHR implementation, 2) employees’ perception of EHR implementation success, 3) levels of change reinvention—or work-arounds—due to change initiatives and activities, and 4) employees’ perceptions of the quality of the organizational communication surrounding the change. Hypotheses guiding the model specification are provided and are followed by a description of the empirical methods and procedures that were utilized to explore the variable relationships. Results of the SEM model suggest that work-arounds could play a mediating role governing the relationship between informal social influence and the outcome variables in the study. In addition, one-way ANOVAs and multiple regression analyses reveal that physicians are the most resistant to EHR implementation and perceived change communication quality positively predicts perceived EHR implementation success and perceived relative advantage of EHR and negatively predicts employee resistance. A discussion of the expected and unexpected results is offered in addition to study limitation and future directions. / text
38

What is the effect of information and computing technology on healthcare?

Ludwick, Dave Unknown Date
No description available.
39

Designing for Collaborative Reflection

Marcu, Gabriela 01 September 2014 (has links)
A rise in chronic conditions has put a strain on our healthcare system. Treatment for chronic conditions spans time, agencies, and providers, making coordination a complex problem. Information systems such as electronic health records should be helping with the challenge of coordination, but research shows that often they do not. This thesis aims to alleviate this problem by examining the design of health information technology with an emphasis on social and organizational processes. The focus of this thesis is on the implications of continuous care over time: the shift from a single provider to team-based services, the emergence of patients and families as primary caregivers in the home, and the diffusion of data-driven decision making. I investigated these trends to understand the role of data in coordinating long-term care, and inform the design of information systems. I studied behavioral and mental health services for children, which are coordinated across clinical, home, and special education settings. I found coordination that was unstructured, unpredictable, and adaptive. I developed a conceptual framework, collaborative reflection, to describe my observations and distinguish my findings from the processes of time-critical and protocol-based care. I also found ways in which coordination was not data-driven, due to a lack of support and tools. Collaborative reflection thus illustrates how long-term coordination works when it is data-driven, informing a discussion of what is needed for coordination to be data-driven. Based on the process of collaborative reflection, and using participatory design, I developed Lilypad—a tablet-based information system for data-driven coordination. I conducted a five-month deployment study of Lilypad in the field, to examine its social impact. This study validated designing for collaborative reflection to improve the use of data in coordination. The contributions of this thesis are: a description of unstructured and informal workflow that drives long-term coordination in health services; the theoretical construct of collaborative reflection to inform the design of systems that improve coordination; a field deployment validation, demonstrating how designing for collaborative reflection improves coordination and avoids common unintended consequences of health information technology.
40

Implementation of Electronic Medical Records and Preventive Services: A Mixed Methods Study

Greiver, Michelle 24 August 2011 (has links)
The implementation of Electronic Medical Records (EMRs) may lead to improved quality of primary health care. To investigate this, we conducted a mixed methods study of eighteen Toronto family physicians who implemented EMRs in 2006 and nine comparison family physicians who continued to use paper records. We used a controlled before-after design and two focus groups. We examined five preventive services with Pay for Performance incentives: Pap smears, screening mammograms, fecal occult blood testing, influenza vaccinations and childhood vaccinations. There was no difference between the two groups: after adjustment, combined preventive services for the EMR group increased by 0.7% less than for the non-EMR group (p=0.55, 95% CI -2.8, 3.9). Physicians felt that EMR implementation was challenging.

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