14 research outputs found
Isolated patellofemoral osteoarthritis: A systematic review of treatment options using the GRADE approach
Background and purpose The optimal treatment for isolated patellofemoral osteoarthritis is unclear at present. We systematically reviewed the highest level of available evidence on the nonoperative and operative treatment of isolated patellofemoral osteoarthritis to develop an evidenced-based discussion of treatment options
Managerialism, organizational commitment and quality of job performances among European university employees
To achieve efficient and effective quality improvement, European universities
have gradually adopted organizational strategies, structures, technologies, management
instruments, and values that are commonly found in the private business sector. Whereas
some studies have shown that such managerialism is beneficial to the quality of job
performances of university employees, others have argued that managerialism is largely
counterproductive and that it results in lower performances. The latter situation is called a
‘managerialism contradiction’. This paper tests two lines of reasoning underlying a
potential contradiction governing the relationship between managerialism and job performances,
while using university employee survey data from six European countries
(Belgium, Finland, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden, UK). The results tend to support the
assumption that managerialism, in these six countries at least, has a positive effect, albeit a
modest one, on the quality of performances. The most important conclusion is therefore
that there is no managerialism contradiction at work in European universities.