Consenting non-technical skills in chronic care healthcare professionals: applying health consensus in collective self-assessment

Carregant...
Miniatura
El pots comprar en digital a:
El pots comprar en paper a:

Projectes de recerca

Unitats organitzatives

Número de la revista

Títol de la revista

ISSN de la revista

Títol del volum

Cita com:

Col·laborador

Editor

Tribunal avaluador

Realitzat a/amb

Tipus de document

Comunicació de congrés

Data publicació

Editor

Condicions d'accés

Accés obert

Llicència

Creative Commons
Aquesta obra està protegida pels drets de propietat intel·lectual i industrial corresponents. Llevat que s'hi indiqui el contrari, els seus continguts estan subjectes a la llicència de Creative Commons: Reconeixement-NoComercial-SenseObraDerivada 3.0 Espanya

Assignatures relacionades

Assignatures relacionades

Publicacions relacionades

Datasets relacionats

Datasets relacionats

Projecte CCD

Abstract

Our ageing populations have changed the epidemiology our health care services currently face. Chronic care, complex and frail patients require a different care approach based on preventive activities and care follow-up by multidisciplinary teams. Healthcare has been traditionally based in face-to-face encounters between the patient and the healthcare provider. Collaboration of healthcare professionals remained for those activities such as emergencies and surgical procedures. This is probably the reason why the first taxonomies of non-technical skills came out from the specialties of anesthetics and surgery (Fletcher et al 2003; Flin and Maran 2004; Yule et al 2008). Non-technical skills are the set of interpersonal and cognitive skills complementary to clinical technical skills. It encompasses competences such as communication, teamwork, leadership, decision- making or situational awareness. A first approach to non-technical skills for healthcare professionals responsible of delivering care services and health maintenance was developed recently in Spain in the context of home care for chronic patients (Escarrabill et al 2014)

Descripció

Persones/entitats

Document relacionat

Versió de

Citació

Martí, T., Monguet, J.M., Trejo, A., Ecarrabill, J. Consenting non-technical skills in chronic care healthcare professionals: applying health consensus in collective self-assessment. A: Collective Intelligence Conference. "Collective Intelligence 2015: Santa Clara, California: May 31 – June 2, 2015: proceedings book". Santa Clara, California: 2015, p. 1-4.

Ajut

Forma part

DOI

Dipòsit legal

ISBN

ISSN

Versió de l'editor

Altres identificadors

Referències