LIVIVO - Das Suchportal für Lebenswissenschaften

switch to English language
Erweiterte Suche

Ihre letzten Suchen

  1. AU="Singh Dubb, Sukhpreet"
  2. AU="Jo, Y"
  3. AU="Rietveld, Cornelius A"
  4. AU="Kwanin, Charles"
  5. AU="Thachillath Pramathan"
  6. AU="Robert D Arbeit"
  7. AU="Baize, Nathalie"
  8. AU="Tovar, M"
  9. AU="Zhou, Cailong"
  10. AU="Hollemans, Eva"
  11. AU=Celik Hulya Gamze
  12. AU="Si-Yu Sun"
  13. AU=Kraemer Moritz U G
  14. AU="Valenzuela Gamarra, Luis"
  15. AU="Balgobin, Kristian"
  16. AU="Dayez, J"
  17. AU="Thet, Suwannee"
  18. AU="Ganesan, Subramanian"
  19. AU="Azarkamand, Sahar"
  20. AU="Murata, Chiori"
  21. AU="Lin, Chao-Hsu"
  22. AU="Hachach-Haram, Nadine"
  23. AU="Hayashi, Marito"
  24. AU="Long, Wanjun"
  25. AU="Tan, Yu-Qing"
  26. AU="Bellonzi, A."
  27. AU="Mesina, Anna"
  28. AU="Barrios, Joshua"
  29. AU="Mackridge, Adam J"
  30. AU="Shin, Da Wi"
  31. AU="Musmarra, Isidoro"
  32. AU="Mendenhall, Emily"
  33. AU="Hesselmann, Felicitas"

Suchergebnis

Treffer 1 - 3 von insgesamt 3

Suchoptionen

  1. Artikel ; Online: Nurturing the forest of oral and maxillofacial surgery training.

    Singh Dubb, Sukhpreet

    The British journal of oral & maxillofacial surgery

    2020  Band 58, Heft 5, Seite(n) 614–615

    Mesh-Begriff(e) Forests ; Internship and Residency ; Surgery, Oral ; United Kingdom
    Schlagwörter covid19
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2020-04-18
    Erscheinungsland Scotland
    Dokumenttyp Letter ; Comment
    ZDB-ID 605685-4
    ISSN 1532-1940 ; 0266-4356
    ISSN (online) 1532-1940
    ISSN 0266-4356
    DOI 10.1016/j.bjoms.2020.04.019
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

    Zusatzmaterialien

    Kategorien

  2. Artikel ; Online: "Shh-don't say the Q-word" or do you?

    Singh Dubb, Sukhpreet / Ferro, A / Fowell, C

    The British journal of oral & maxillofacial surgery

    2020  Band 59, Heft 1, Seite(n) e13–e16

    Abstract: We aimed to assess the superstitious belief that saying the word 'quiet' during an on-call period in oral and maxillofacial surgery (OMFS) causes a disproportionate increase in workload. A two-armed, single-centre, randomised trial was performed in a ... ...

    Abstract We aimed to assess the superstitious belief that saying the word 'quiet' during an on-call period in oral and maxillofacial surgery (OMFS) causes a disproportionate increase in workload. A two-armed, single-centre, randomised trial was performed in a single-blinded fashion within the OMFS department at Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge. Duty on-call OMFS SHOs were assigned to a 'quiet group' or 'non-quiet group'. The former group was actively told that the on-call period would be 'quiet' whilst in all contexts in the latter this word was not used. Data were collected from 8am to 7pm from a period that spanned a total of 40 week-day on calls. The total number of bleeps was 491, the mean (SD) bleep count/day irrespective of treatment was 12.3 (4.6). The mean (SD) bleep count was 11.45 (4.15) for the control group and 13.1 (4.9) for the quiet (treatment) group. Welch's independent-sample t test identified no significant difference in the mean number of bleeps encountered between groups. Moreover, ANOVA identified no significant difference in the mean number of bleeps between days (F(4,35)=0.086, p=0.986). Statistical analysis was performed using R package version 3.6.2 (The R Foundation). Our study refutes the central dogma of all of medicine, which suggests that saying the word 'quiet' increases the clinician's workload during the working day. We identified no significant difference in the number of bleeps between different days of the week. OMFS sees a large breadth of presentations within the head and neck that requires a diverse set of skills to manage the varying presentations when on call.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Dental Care ; Hospitals ; Humans ; Workload
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2020-08-20
    Erscheinungsland Scotland
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article ; Randomized Controlled Trial
    ZDB-ID 605685-4
    ISSN 1532-1940 ; 0266-4356
    ISSN (online) 1532-1940
    ISSN 0266-4356
    DOI 10.1016/j.bjoms.2020.08.044
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

    Zusatzmaterialien

    Kategorien

Zum Seitenanfang