Milisa Manojlovich
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View article: Nurse-Patient Communication During Postpartum Discharge Teaching: Protocol for a Mixed Methods Study
Nurse-Patient Communication During Postpartum Discharge Teaching: Protocol for a Mixed Methods Study Open
Background Communication failures in inpatient maternity care are one of the leading causes of preventable maternal mortality. Most maternal mortality occurs during the postpartum period after hospital discharge. Nurses provide most direct…
View article: Using Video Ethnography and Stimulated Recall Interviews to Describe the Diagnostic Process in the Emergency Department
Using Video Ethnography and Stimulated Recall Interviews to Describe the Diagnostic Process in the Emergency Department Open
Objectives Understanding how physicians make diagnoses is challenging because cognitive processes are unobservable and partly unconscious, making it difficult for physicians to describe how they arrived at a diagnosis. Physicians who work …
View article: Exploring factors affecting the adoption and use of digital health technologies among older adults with cancer: A qualitative study
Exploring factors affecting the adoption and use of digital health technologies among older adults with cancer: A qualitative study Open
Purpose Although digital health technologies (DHTs) are promising to improve health outcomes in older adults with cancer, the low adoption and limited use remain significant gaps in their effective digital health care. Little is known abou…
View article: The Influence of Patient and Physician Race-Related Attitudes and Perceptions on Nonverbal Synchrony in Oncology Treatment Interactions Between Black Patients and Non-Black Physicians
The Influence of Patient and Physician Race-Related Attitudes and Perceptions on Nonverbal Synchrony in Oncology Treatment Interactions Between Black Patients and Non-Black Physicians Open
Introduction Abundant research documents Black-White disparities in the quality of patient-physician clinical communication during oncology interactions. Prior research shows that Black patients’ and non-Black physicians’ race-related atti…
View article: “Everything is electronic health record-driven”: the role of the electronic health record in the emergency department diagnostic process
“Everything is electronic health record-driven”: the role of the electronic health record in the emergency department diagnostic process Open
Objectives There is limited knowledge on how providers and patients in the emergency department (ED) use electronic health records (EHRs) to facilitate the diagnostic process. While EHRs can support diagnostic decision-making, EHR features…
View article: Development, implementation, and evaluation of an intervention to improve multidisciplinary communication about complex patients
Development, implementation, and evaluation of an intervention to improve multidisciplinary communication about complex patients Open
Multidisciplinary team meetings showed promise in enhancing communication, care coordination, and staff satisfaction. Ongoing refinement and assessment are necessary to optimize their feasibility and effectiveness over a longer time period.
View article: Clinician attitudes, opinions and practice patterns regarding inotrope use for cardiac surgery in the USA: a multicentre mixed methods study protocol
Clinician attitudes, opinions and practice patterns regarding inotrope use for cardiac surgery in the USA: a multicentre mixed methods study protocol Open
Introduction Cardiac inotrope medications administered to cardiac surgical patients carry steep risk–benefit trade-offs, yet wide inter-institutional variation exists in inotrope practices. Despite known wide variation in use of any inotro…
View article: Multicenter Analysis of the Relationship Between Operative Team Familiarity and Safety and Efficiency Outcomes in Cardiac Surgery
Multicenter Analysis of the Relationship Between Operative Team Familiarity and Safety and Efficiency Outcomes in Cardiac Surgery Open
BACKGROUND: Safety in cardiac surgical procedures is predicated on effective team dynamics. This study associated operative team familiarity (ie, the extent of clinical collaboration among surgical team members) with procedural efficiency …
View article: Applying ordered network analysis to video-recorded physician–nurse interactions to examine communication patterns associated with shared understanding in inpatient oncology care settings
Applying ordered network analysis to video-recorded physician–nurse interactions to examine communication patterns associated with shared understanding in inpatient oncology care settings Open
Objectives The main aim of this study was to demonstrate how ordered network analysis of video-recorded interactions combined with verbal response mode (VRM) coding (eg, edification, disclosure, reflection and interpretation) can uncover s…
View article: The Acceptance and Use of Digital Technologies for Self-Reporting Medication Safety Events After Care Transitions to Home in Patients With Cancer: Survey Study
The Acceptance and Use of Digital Technologies for Self-Reporting Medication Safety Events After Care Transitions to Home in Patients With Cancer: Survey Study Open
Background Actively engaging patients with cancer and their families in monitoring and reporting medication safety events during care transitions is indispensable for achieving optimal patient safety outcomes. However, existing patient sel…
View article: Patient symptoms, self-management, and unscheduled healthcare use during the first 6 months of targeted oral anticancer agent therapy: protocol for a mixed-methods US study
Patient symptoms, self-management, and unscheduled healthcare use during the first 6 months of targeted oral anticancer agent therapy: protocol for a mixed-methods US study Open
Introduction Targeted oral anticancer agents (OAAs) are increasingly used to treat cancer, including haematological malignancies and ovarian cancer, but they can cause serious symptomatic side effects such as arrhythmias, hypertension, and…
View article: Oncology patients’ willingness to report their medication safety concerns from home: A qualitative study
Oncology patients’ willingness to report their medication safety concerns from home: A qualitative study Open
Purpose: Oncology patients often struggle in managing their oral anticancer agents and related adverse events during transitions of care. They are expected to take an active role in self-monitoring and timely reporting of their medication …
View article: GENDER DIFFERENCE IN USING DIGITAL HEALTH TECHNOLOGIES AMONG OLDER ADULTS WITH CANCER: A PILOT QUALITATIVE STUDY
GENDER DIFFERENCE IN USING DIGITAL HEALTH TECHNOLOGIES AMONG OLDER ADULTS WITH CANCER: A PILOT QUALITATIVE STUDY Open
Digital technologies hold promises to improve health and care delivery for various populations, including older adults with cancer. However, older adults’ adoption of digital health technology is less optimal. While age and gender can inte…
View article: Development and Evaluation of a Data-driven, Interactive Workshop to Facilitate Communication and Teamwork in Ambulatory Medical Oncology Settings
Development and Evaluation of a Data-driven, Interactive Workshop to Facilitate Communication and Teamwork in Ambulatory Medical Oncology Settings Open
Background: While adverse events and toxicities related to cancer drug therapy in the ambulatory oncology setting are common and often rooted in communication challenges, few studies have examined the problems of communication or tested to…
View article: The Acceptance and Use of Digital Technologies for Self-Reporting Medication Safety Events After Care Transitions to Home in Patients With Cancer: Survey Study (Preprint)
The Acceptance and Use of Digital Technologies for Self-Reporting Medication Safety Events After Care Transitions to Home in Patients With Cancer: Survey Study (Preprint) Open
BACKGROUND Actively engaging patients with cancer and their families in monitoring and reporting medication safety events during care transitions is indispensable for achieving optimal patient safety outcomes. However, existing patient se…
View article: Video reflexive ethnography as an intervention to improve oral anti-cancer agent patient education: A pilot study
Video reflexive ethnography as an intervention to improve oral anti-cancer agent patient education: A pilot study Open
The use of video enables participants to scrutinize and reshape their practices, making VRE a powerful innovation and adjunct to quality improvement initiatives.
View article: Clinical nurses' patient safety competency, systems thinking and missed nursing care: A cross‐sectional survey
Clinical nurses' patient safety competency, systems thinking and missed nursing care: A cross‐sectional survey Open
Aim The aim of this study was to examine the relationships among patient safety competency, systems thinking and missed nursing care. Background Patient safety competency and systems thinking are important nurse attributes that promote pat…
View article: Understanding clinician connections to inform efforts to promote high-quality inflammatory bowel disease care
Understanding clinician connections to inform efforts to promote high-quality inflammatory bowel disease care Open
Background Highly connected individuals disseminate information effectively within their social network. To apply this concept to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) care and lay the foundation for network interventions to disseminate high-qu…
View article: Temporally guided articulated hand pose tracking in surgical videos
Temporally guided articulated hand pose tracking in surgical videos Open
Purpose Articulated hand pose tracking is an under-explored problem that carries the potential for use in an extensive number of applications, especially in the medical domain. With a robust and accurate tracking system on surgical videos,…
View article: Interventions for the Prevention of Retained Surgical Items: A Systematic Review
Interventions for the Prevention of Retained Surgical Items: A Systematic Review Open
Background Retained surgical items (RSI) are preventable error events. Interest in reducing RSI is increasing globally because of increasing demand for safe surgery. While research of interventions to prevent RSI have been reported, no rig…
View article: It’s like sending a message in a bottle: A qualitative study of the consequences of one-way communication technologies in hospitals
It’s like sending a message in a bottle: A qualitative study of the consequences of one-way communication technologies in hospitals Open
Objective We examine how physicians and nurses use available communication technologies and identify the implications for communication and patient care based on the theory of workarounds. Materials and Methods We conducted a qualitative s…
View article: Influences of Physical Layout and Space on Patient Safety and Communication in Ambulatory Oncology Practices: A Multisite, Mixed Method Investigation
Influences of Physical Layout and Space on Patient Safety and Communication in Ambulatory Oncology Practices: A Multisite, Mixed Method Investigation Open
Objective: To examine how physical layouts and space in ambulatory oncology practices influence patient safety and clinician communication. Background: Ambulatory oncology practices face unique challenges in delivering safe care. With incr…