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 : The power of presence: Investing in LVNs for lasting impact
Emma Gitomer, Houston Methodist Hospital, United States
Title : Reaching our residents: An interdisciplinary approach to educating our future providers in the art of telephone triage
Cori Brown, Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, United States
Title : Turn the heat around: Quality improvement in malignant hyperthermia response through in-situ simulation
Ayumi S Fielden, Houston Methodist Hospital, United States
Title : PTSD and tools for nursing resilience
Renee Bauer, Indiana State University, United States
Title : Birth partnerships: Enhancing nursing care with doula support
Vera Kevic, Doulas on Bikes, Canada
Title : Shift strong: A proactive stress-physiology framework for early identification of nurse distress
Laura Hall, Colorado Mesa University, United States