10,432 research outputs found
Evidence-Based Health Care for Children: What Are We Missing?
Proposes a new framework for evaluating evidence in health care that takes into account interventions in child health promotion, which aim to change children's physical, social, or emotional environment and may take longer for the effects to show
Optimizing quality of care and patient safety in Malaysia: the current global initiatives, gaps and suggested solutions
BACKGROUND & OBJECTIVE: Demand for health care service has significantly increased, while the quality of healthcare and patient safety has become national and international priorities. This paper aims to identify the gaps and the current initiatives for optimizing the quality of care and patient safety in Malaysia.
DESIGN: Review of the current literature. Highly cited articles were used as the basis to retrieve and review the current initiatives for optimizing the quality of care and patient safety. The country health plan of Ministry of Health (MOH) Malaysia and the MOH Malaysia Annual Reports were reviewed.
RESULTS: The MOH has set four strategies for optimizing quality and sustaining quality of life. The 10th Malaysia Health Plan promotes the theme ā1 Care for 1 Malaysiaā in order to sustain the quality of care. Despite of these efforts, the total number of complaints received by the medico-legal section of the MOH Malaysia is increasing. The current global initiatives indicted that quality performance generally belong to three main categories: patient; staffing; and working environment related factors.
CONCLUSIONS: There is no single intervention for optimizing quality of care to maintain patient safety. Multidimensional efforts and interventions are recommended in order to optimize the quality of care and patient safety in Malaysia
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Service research priorities in a rapidly changing context
The context in which service is delivered and experienced has, in many respects, fundamentally changed. For instance, advances in technology, especially information technology, are leading to a proliferation of revolutionary services and changing how customers serve themselves before, during, and after purchase. To understand this changing landscape, the authors engaged in an international and interdisciplinary research effort to identify research priorities that have the potential to advance the service field and benefit customers, organizations, and society. The priority-setting process was informed by roundtable discussions with researchers affiliated with service research centers and networks located around the world and resulted in the following 12 service research priorities:
ā¢ stimulating service innovation,
ā¢ facilitating servitization, service infusion, and solutions,
ā¢ understanding organization and employee issues relevant to successful service,
ā¢ developing service networks and systems,
ā¢ leveraging service design,
ā¢ using big data to advance service,
ā¢ understanding value creation,
ā¢ enhancing the service experience,
ā¢ improving well-being through transformative service,
ā¢ measuring and optimizing service performance and impact,
ā¢ understanding service in a global context, and
ā¢ leveraging technology to advance service.
For each priority, the authors identified important specific service topics and related research questions. Then, through an online survey, service researchers assessed the subtopicsā perceived importance and the service fieldās extant knowledge about them. Although all the priorities and related topics were deemed important, the results show that topics related to transformative service and measuring and optimizing service performance are particularly important for advancing the service field along with big data, which had the largest gap between importance and current knowledge of the field. The authors present key challenges that should be addressed to move the field forward and conclude with a discussion of the need for additional interdisciplinary research
Progress in Material Handling Research: 2010
Table of Content
Human Factors: Spanning the Gap between OM & HRM
Purpose: This paper examines the claim that the application of human factors (HF) knowledge can improve both human well-being and operations system performance.
Methodology: A systematic review was conducted using a general and two specialist databases to identify empirical studies addressing both human effects and operations system effects in examining manufacturing operations system design aspects.
Findings: We found 45 empirical studies addressing both the human effects and system effects of operations system (re)design. Of those studies providing clear directional effects, 95% showed a convergence between human effects and system effects (+,+ or -,-), 5% showed a divergence of human and system effects (+,- or -,+). System effects included quality, productivity, implementation performance of new technologies, and also more āintangibleā effects in terms of improved communication and co-operation. Human effects included employee health, attitudes, physical workload, and āquality of working lifeā.
Research limitations/im
Maximizing construction of timber kit homes using telescopic crane to improve efficiency and safety: a case study
The challenges of improving efficiency and safety is a daunting task as workers are squeezed with an ever-dwindling resource pool and yet expected to deliver construction projects at optimum capacity. Improving efficiency and safety using telescopic cranes for the construction of Off-Site Manufacturing (OSM) timber kit homes is a viable option for the speedy delivery of new homes. An action research evaluated the maximization of the build and process efficiency and safety using a crane to erect wall panels, floors, and roofs. Data collection through direct observation assessed the labor uptime and downtime, including crane usage. A balanced score card was used by management for strategic organizational decision-making regarding the crane erection. The use of the crane reduced workplace manual handling of OSM panels, minimized the exposure of operatives to work at height risks, and eliminated alterations to scaffolds. However, the manual loading of thermal-insulated plasterboards to floor decks impacted the process efficiency and speed of installing the fixtures and increased the risk of musculoskeletal disorders. High labor downtimes were associated with the adverse weather conditions, which slowed the efficiency of the workforce during construction. The management’s inability to adequately plan the work program further hindered aspects of lifting operations and the speed and number of houses built
From the digital data revolution to digital health and digital economy toward a digital society: Pervasiveness of Artificial Intelligence
Technological progress has led to powerful computers and communication
technologies that penetrate nowadays all areas of science, industry and our
private lives. As a consequence, all these areas are generating digital traces
of data amounting to big data resources. This opens unprecedented opportunities
but also challenges toward the analysis, management, interpretation and
utilization of these data. Fortunately, recent breakthroughs in deep learning
algorithms complement now machine learning and statistics methods for an
efficient analysis of such data. Furthermore, advances in text mining and
natural language processing, e.g., word-embedding methods, enable also the
processing of large amounts of text data from diverse sources as governmental
reports, blog entries in social media or clinical health records of patients.
In this paper, we present a perspective on the role of artificial intelligence
in these developments and discuss also potential problems we are facing in a
digital society
Ready or Not? Protecting the Public's Health From Diseases, Disasters, and Bioterrorism, 2011
Highlights examples of preparedness programs and capacities at risk of federal budget cuts or elimination, examines state and local public health budget cuts, reviews ten years of progress and shortfalls, and outlines policy issues and recommendations
Aeronautical Engineering: A continuing bibliography, supplement 120
This bibliography contains abstracts for 297 reports, articles, and other documents introduced into the NASA scientific and technical information system in February 1980
Aeronautical engineering: A special bibliography with indexes, supplement 82, April 1977
This bibliography lists 311 reports, articles, and other documents introduced into the NASA scientific and technical information system in March 1977
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