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The Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE), in partnership with other agencies and divisions of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, coordinates a portfolio of projects that build data capacity for conducting patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR). PCOR focuses on producing scientific evidence on the effectiveness of prevention and treatment options to inform the health care decisions of patients, families, and health care providers, taking into consideration the preferences, values, and questions patients face when making health care choices.ASPE asked the National Academies to appoint a consensus study committee to identify issues critical to the continued development of the data infrastructure for PCOR. Building Data Capacity for Patient-Centered Outcomes Research contains findings and conclusions in the areas that could benefit from being prioritized as part of ASPE's work, and offers input on strengthening the overall framework for building the data infrastructure over the coming years. The committee authoring this report also issued three interim reports, which summarized discussions from three workshops, and are included as appendices in the final report.
Information Technology --- Medical Care --- Computers --- Medical --- Outcome assessment (Medical care) --- Patient-centered health care --- Medical care. --- Research --- Data processing. --- 2000-2099 --- United States.
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"This book investigates how paid care work and employment are being transformed by policies of social care individualisation in the context of new gig economies of care. Drawing on a case study of the creation of a new individualised care market under Australias National Disability Insurance Scheme the book provides important insights into possible futures for social care employment where care is treated as an individual consumer service. Bringing together sociological, political science and socio-legal approaches the book demonstrates how, in individualised care markets and with ineffective labour laws, risks of business and employment are devolved to frontline care workers. The book argues for an urgent re-evaluation of current policy approaches to care and for new regulatory approaches to protect workers in diverse forms of employment. Fiona Macdonald is a senior research fellow at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. Her research has centred on the impacts of changing labour markets and employment arrangements, combining ethnographic studies with regulatory and policy analyses"--
Sociology --- Microeconomics --- Labour economics --- Economics --- Business policy --- sociologie --- economie --- industrie --- arbeid --- Social workers --- Social service --- Allied health personnel --- Patient-centered health care --- #SBIB:316.334.3M52 --- #SBIB:316.334.2A340 --- Medical care --- Allied health professionals --- Auxiliary health personnel --- Health auxiliaries --- Health care auxiliaries --- Health care paraprofessionals --- Health services paraprofessionals --- Paramedical personnel --- Paramedics --- Paraprofessionals in health services --- Medical personnel --- Human services personnel --- Employment --- Workload --- Economic aspects --- Medische sociologie: professionele aspecten van de hulpverlening --- Arbeidssociologie: ongelijkheden op de arbeidsmarkt: algemeen --- Australia --- Social policy.
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