Clinical decision-makers, including patients, their caregivers, clinicians, payers, and policy-makers, are the target audience for comparative clinical effectiveness research (CER), which is research that aims to meet their requirements. CER encourages better, more individualised health care decisions, greater clinical results, and the abolition of unnecessary care and costs by evaluating options for prevention, diagnosis, or treatment. Throughout addition to putting a focus on the potential effects of "treatment heterogeneity," PCORI also stresses the information requirements of patients, doctors, and payers as well as the involvement of all pertinent parties in the whole study process. PCORI supports a variety of study designs, including randomised and observational CER studies. It has contributed to PCORnet, a federal clinical research network created to improve the effectiveness, efficiency, and affordability of CER while also increasing its influence on practise change.
Title : Optimizing telemetry alarm management workflow to reduce alarm fatigue
Ashley Hunsucker, Connexall, United States
Title : Overview of artificial intelligence in healthcare
Adele Webb, Strategic Education, Inc., United States
Title : Will be Updated Soon....
Ismat Mikky, Bloomfield College of Montclair State University, United States
Title : Experiential learning with simulated deposition to improve nursing documentation
Victoria Yu, University of New Mexico, United States
Title : Resiliency for nurse educators: Incorporating resiliency training for nursing faculty
Rachael Holder, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, United States
Title : Timely pain reassessment: A critical step towards effective pain management
Rachel Goldsberry, Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, United States