About this item
- Title
- The (non) use of prioritisation protocols by surgeons
- Content partner
- FigShare
- Collection
- FigShare
- Description
Priority setting and rationing is a dominant feature of contemporary health policy. In New Zealand, clinical priority assessment criteria (CPAC) tools have been developed to make access to elective surgery more equitable and efficient. Research was undertaken to identify how surgeons used these tools in the consultation. Forty-seven consultations with 15 different surgeons have to date been video- and audio-recorded. There were no instances where CPAC tools were explicitly used in the consult...
- Format
- Other
- Date created
- 23 Jul, 2020
- Creator
- Kevin Dew / M Stubbe / L Macdonald / A Dowell / E Plumridge
- URL
- https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/The_non_use_of_prioritisation_protocols_by_sur...
- Related subjects
- elective surgery / prioritisation tools / doctor-patient interaction / Health services & systems / Generic Health Relevance / Decision Support Techniques / Elective Surgical Procedures / Humans / New Zealand / Patient Care Management / Physician-Patient Relations / Referral and Consultation / Videotape Recording / Surgical Procedures, Elective / Science & Technology / Social Sciences / Life Sciences & Biomedicine / Public, Environmental & Occupational Health / Social Sciences, Biomedical / Sociology / Biomedical Social Sciences / CONSULTATIONS / Public Health / Policy and Administration / Public Health and Health Services / History and Philosophy of Specific Fields
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Report this itemDigitalNZ brings together more than 30 million items from institutions so that they are easy to find and use. This information is the best information we could find on this item. This item was added on 24 July 2020, and updated 01 March 2023.
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