Search for dissertations about: "managing people in organisation"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 7 swedish dissertations containing the words managing people in organisation.
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1. Managing the Urban Greens : Maintaining ecological functions in human dominated landscapes
Abstract : At the core of this thesis lie two realisations: First, like other ecosystems, those in urban landscapes provide humans with a number of ecosystem services, some recognized while others are not. Second, in cities just as in other intensively used social-ecological systems, management is of central importance. READ MORE
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2. Managing Variable Patient Flows at Hospitals
Abstract : Healthcare is a large industry faced with major challenges, such as decreasing inpatient bed numbers and increases in the share of elderly people, which require improved efficiency and effectiveness. The organisation of hospitals normally comprises highly specialised clinical departments, through which patient flows are managed. READ MORE
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3. Managing malaria in under-fives : prompt access, adherence to treatment and referral in rural Tanzania
Abstract : Background: Nearly a million people die of malaria each year, the majority are children in rural African settings. These deaths could be reduced if children had prompt access to artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACTs), demonstrated adherence to treatment and to referral advice for severe malaria. READ MORE
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4. Using Technologies with Care : Notes on Technology Assimilation Processes in Home Care
Abstract : Elderly care is currently undergoing a phase of development in which new technologies are anticipated to increase efficiency, secure quality of services and give care assistants more time with the elderly people. This thesis reports on a study of how people involve technologies in everyday home care work. READ MORE
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5. In search of information systems value : a case study of the EHR benefits realisation efforts of three Swedish hospitals
Abstract : The Swedish public health care organisation could very well be undergoing its most significant change since its specialisation during the late 19th and early 20th century. At the heart of this change is a move from using manual patient journals to electronic health records (EHR). READ MORE