Vai al contenuto principale della pagina

Clinical Medicine for Healthcare and Sustainability



(Visualizza in formato marc)    (Visualizza in BIBFRAME)

Autore: Meen Teen-­Hang Visualizza persona
Titolo: Clinical Medicine for Healthcare and Sustainability Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Basel, Switzerland, : MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2020
Descrizione fisica: 1 electronic resource (434 p.)
Soggetto topico: Medicine
Soggetto non controllato: sarcopenia
bioimpedance analysis
computed tomography
discordance
effect
protection
catheter
hemodialysis
meta-analysis
trial sequential analysis
Long-term oxygen therapy
home mechanical ventilation
patient-reported experience measures
quality of care
healthcare
sustainability
hepatocellular carcinoma
health-related quality of life
minimal clinically important difference
survival
serum urate
menopause
hypertension
xanthine dehydrogenase
cross-sectional cohort study
diabetic foot ulcer
peripheral arterial disease
incidence
prevalence
cost
National Health Insurance Service data
erythrodermic psoriasis
secukinumab
addiction
smoking
alcohol
cannabis
virtual reality
musculoskeletal disorders
randomized controlled tria
ceftaroline
ceftriaxone
community-acquired pneumonia
safety
eravacycline
complicated intra-abdominal infection
efficacy
mortality
laparoscopic
open surgery
non-metastatic colorectal cancer
surgical complication
oncologic outcome
single surgeon experience
doripenem
acute bacterial infection
pneumonia
intra-abdominal infection
complicated urinary tract infection
ultrasound-guided injection
laser assisted
long-axis injection
chronic disease
multimorbidity
suicidal thoughts
suicidal plans
stroke
post-acute care
medical referral system
propensity score matching
resistance training
arterial pressure
disease prevention
caffeine
older adults
frailty
medication
primary care
white matter hyperintensity
MRI
healthcare quotient
chronic
older adults living in super-aging society
mild cognitive impairment
walking speed
depression
urinary tract infection
rapid culture
antibiotic susceptibility testing (AST), evidence-based prescription
antibiotics
antimicrobial resistance (AMR), rapid diagnostics
prediction
deep learning
conventional neural network
bariatric surgery
hospital emergency department
queuing theory
decision support
cost optimization
health behavior
socioeconomic status
Korea
cardiovascular disease
postprandial
hypotension
blood pressure
elderly
lung cancer
physical activity
season
preoperative
wearable
macrosomia
large for gestational age
machine learning
ensemble methods
sensitivity
specificity
clinical deterioration
early medical intervention
electronic health records
hospital rapid response team
intensive care units
medical records system
computerized
osteoporosis screening
artificial intelligence
convolutional neural networks
dental panoramic radiographs
palliative care
nursing homes
symptom assessment
drug therapy
therapeutics
longitudinal studies
occupational medicine
forensic medicine
insurance medicine
psychoactive substances
clinical
forensic
law
ethics
uric acid
risk factor
epidemiology
cardiometabolic diseases
healthcare and sustainability
therapy of internal medicine diseases
Persona (resp. second.): MatsumotoYusuke
LeeKuan-Han
MeenTeen-­Hang
Sommario/riassunto: When the domestic government, the private sector, and people in various professional fields talk about long-term care issues, they all focus on creating a warm and home-like care institution. However, we actively emphasize the importance of community-based long-term care. For “aging in place”, the development of domestic non-institutional care is still in its infancy, and some long-term care needs must still be met through institutional care, and the facilitation of the extension or outreach of community-based care and respite service platforms for the development of community-based long-term care still rely on institutional care. The history of the development of long-term care in Taiwan is much shorter than that of Japan, Europe, the United States, and Canada. Despite years of hard work and rapid development, the long-term care resources needed to establish a complete system in terms of universalization, fairness, accessibility, and selectivity are not available. In the future, based on the soundness of institutional care, it hoped that outreach will move toward the goals of community care and aging in place. We hope the studies in this Special Issue will help further develop clinical medicine for healthcare and stainability.
Titolo autorizzato: Clinical Medicine for Healthcare and Sustainability  Visualizza cluster
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910557572503321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui