Search for dissertations about: "e healthcare"
Showing result 21 - 25 of 285 swedish dissertations containing the words e healthcare.
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21. Exploring customer needs from a digital healthcare service
Abstract : Cost-effectively capturing and understanding customer needs allows a firm to stay synchronized with the market, to stay ahead of competitors, and to enable service innovation. Traditional qualitative market research methods, such as interviews and focus groups are well-known methods for identifying and capturing customer needs but can be costly, tedious, time-consuming, and can require intensive collaboration with customers. READ MORE
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22. Enterocutaneous fistula : Patients', families' and healthcare professionals' experiences - epidemiology and outcomes
Abstract : Introduction: Enterocutaneous fistula is a rare and complex condition with high morbidity. The condition causes multiple health problems, and it is both physically and psychologically demanding for the affected person and their families. READ MORE
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23. The role of implementation science in healthcare improvement efforts : investigating three complex interventions
Abstract : For decades, scholars have found significant gaps between the knowledge available and the knowledge applied in healthcare. Many potential benefits of adequate knowledge based interventions are therefore never achieved. A considerable body of knowledge has evolved on how to promote a better uptake of evidence-based knowledge into routine use. READ MORE
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24. Understanding Complex Problems in Healthcare : By Applying a Free-Flowing Design Practice
Abstract : Healthcare in Sweden is in need of a transformation. The increase of chronic conditions poses a great challenge to the organisational structure of healthcare, which still largely remains based on acute, rather than chronic care. READ MORE
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25. Conceptions, conflicts and contradictions in the introduction of a Swedish Health Call Centre
Abstract : Call centres have been called the industrialisation of the service sector, characterised by mon¬o¬¬tonous, highly controlled work and standardised procedures performed in an old-fashion¬ed, Tayloristic spirit. Stress and work intensification are known implications of such work. READ MORE