Healthcare systems : (Record no. 88641)

000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 15203nam a22004217a 4500
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
control field 20240917090932.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
fixed length control field 240917b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 9781786307996
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 9781119902614
Qualifying information (electronic bk. : oBook)
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 1119902614
Qualifying information (electronic bk. : oBook)
024 7# - OTHER STANDARD IDENTIFIER
Standard number or code 10.1002/9781119902614
Source of number or code doi
035 ## - SYSTEM CONTROL NUMBER
System control number (OCoLC)1305502755
041 ## - LANGUAGE CODE
Language code of text/sound track or separate title eng
050 #4 - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CALL NUMBER
Classification number RA971
082 04 - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 362.1068
Edition number 23
245 00 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Healthcare systems :
Remainder of title challenges and opportunities /
Statement of responsibility, etc edited by Sondes Chaabane, Etienne Cousein, Philippe Wieser.
264 #1 - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication, distribution, etc London, UK :
Name of publisher, distributor, etc ISTE, Ltd. ;
Place of publication, distribution, etc Hoboken, NJ :
Name of publisher, distributor, etc Wiley,
Date of publication, distribution, etc 2022.
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent 1 online resource.
336 ## - CONTENT TYPE
Content type term text
Content type code txt
Source rdacontent.
337 ## - MEDIA TYPE
Media type term computer
Media type code c
Source rdamedia.
338 ## - CARRIER TYPE
Carrier type term online resource
Carrier type code cr
Source rdacarrier.
340 ## - PHYSICAL MEDIUM
Source rdacc
Authority record control number or standard number http://rdaregistry.info/termList/RDAColourContent/1003.
490 1# - SERIES STATEMENT
Series statement Health engineering and society series.
504 ## - BIBLIOGRAPHY, ETC. NOTE
Bibliography, etc Includes bibliographical references and index.
505 0# - CONTENTS
Formatted contents note Table of Contents<br/><br/>Foreword xiii<br/>Alain GUINET<br/><br/>Preface xvii<br/>Sondès CHAABANE<br/><br/>Part 1. Optimization and Simulation of Healthcare Systems 1<br/><br/>Summary of Contributions – Part 1 3<br/><br/>Chapter 1. Towards a Prototype for the Strategic Recomputing of Schedules in Home Care Services 7<br/>Cléa MARTINEZ, Maria DI MASCOLO, Marie-Laure ESPINOUSE and Jérôme RADUREAU<br/><br/>1.1. Introduction 7<br/><br/>1.2. Literature review 8<br/><br/>1.3. Description of the problem 11<br/><br/>1.3.1. Constraints 11<br/><br/>1.3.2. Objective function 13<br/><br/>1.4. Resolution method 13<br/><br/>1.4.1. Route generation 13<br/><br/>1.4.2. Route selection 14<br/><br/>1.5. Presentation of the prototype 14<br/><br/>1.6. Tests and results 15<br/><br/>1.7. Conclusion and perspectives 17<br/><br/>1.8. References 17<br/><br/>Chapter 2. Home Healthcare Scheduling Activities 21<br/>Rym BEN BACHOUCH JACQUIN and Jihene TOUNSI<br/><br/>2.1. Introduction 21<br/><br/>2.2. State of the art 21<br/><br/>2.3. Description of the proposed approach 24<br/><br/>2.3.1. Home healthcare planning “offline phase” 24<br/><br/>2.3.2. Rescheduling in online mode 27<br/><br/>2.4. Experiments and results 28<br/><br/>2.5. Conclusions and perspectives 30<br/><br/>2.6. References 30<br/><br/>Chapter 3. Optimal Sizing of an Automated Dispensing Cabinet Under Adjacency Constraints 35<br/>Khalid HACHEMI, Didier GOURC and François MARMIER<br/><br/>3.1. Introduction 35<br/><br/>3.2. Problem statement 37<br/><br/>3.2.1. Description of the assignment problem 38<br/><br/>3.2.2. Notations and definitions 38<br/><br/>3.3. Mathematical formulation 40<br/><br/>3.3.1. Determination of boundary conditions 40<br/><br/>3.3.2. Problem solving approach 42<br/><br/>3.4. Application example 45<br/><br/>3.5. Conclusion 47<br/><br/>3.6. References 47<br/><br/>Chapter 4. Validation of an Automated and Targeted Pharmaceutical Analysis Tool at the CHU de Liège 49<br/>Sophie STREEL, Nathalie MAES, Véronique GONCETTE, Laurence SEIDEL, Denis MENAGER, Adelin ALBERT, Philippe KOLH and Didier MAESEN<br/><br/>4.1. Introduction 49<br/><br/>4.2. Methods 51<br/><br/>4.3. Results 53<br/><br/>4.3.1. Creation of algorithms 53<br/><br/>4.3.2. IT tool development 53<br/><br/>4.3.3. Tool validation 56<br/><br/>4.4. Discussion and conclusion 57<br/><br/>4.5. References 59<br/><br/>Chapter 5. Simulation of Countermeasures in the Face of Covid-19 Using a Linear Compartmental Model 61<br/>Alain GUINET<br/><br/>5.1. Introduction 61<br/><br/>5.2. The compartmental model 62<br/><br/>5.2.1. Model assumptions 62<br/><br/>5.2.2. Model parameters 63<br/><br/>5.3. A linear SIR model 64<br/><br/>5.3.1. Data 64<br/><br/>5.3.2. Variables 65<br/><br/>5.3.3. Objective function 65<br/><br/>5.3.4. Constraints 66<br/><br/>5.4. Results 68<br/><br/>5.5. Conclusion 69<br/><br/>5.6. References 70<br/><br/>Part 2. Digital and New Technologies for Health Services 73<br/><br/>Summary of Contributions – Part 2 75<br/><br/>Chapter 6. Towards a New Classification of Medical Procedures in Belgium 79<br/>Pol LECLERCQ, Sarah BARDIAUX, Djohra AZZI, Julie VAN DEN BULCKE and Magali PIRSON<br/><br/>6.1. Introduction 79<br/><br/>6.1.1. An essential but obsolete medical healthcare nomenclature 79<br/><br/>6.1.2. Decision to initiate a structural reform of the Belgian healthcare nomenclature 80<br/><br/>6.1.3. The NPS V0 nomenclature in a few figures 81<br/><br/>6.1.4. Purpose of the presentation 81<br/><br/>6.2. Methodology 82<br/><br/>6.2.1. Term analysis and standardization (NPS ATMC V1-1) 84<br/><br/>6.2.2. Medical pre-validation (NPS ATMC V1-2) 84<br/><br/>6.2.3. Matching the WHO International Classification of Health Interventions (NPS ATMC V1-3) 86<br/><br/>6.2.4. Provisional classification of new terms (NPS ATMC V1-3') 89<br/><br/>6.2.5. INAMI administrative work 91<br/><br/>6.2.6. Validation of proposals by expert groups (NPS ATMC V1-4) 91<br/><br/>6.3. Results 93<br/><br/>6.3.1. Planning 93<br/><br/>6.3.2. A summary of the modifications between NPS V0 and NSS V1-3 93<br/><br/>6.3.3. Validation of proposals by experts (NPS ATMC V1-5) 96<br/><br/>6.4. Discussion 96<br/><br/>6.4.1. From the standardization of medical procedures to a common descriptive classification 97<br/><br/>6.4.2. Evaluate the quality for the standardization of medical procedures 99<br/><br/>6.4.3. An estimate of the resources mobilized to arrive at a common descriptive classification 100<br/><br/>6.4.4. Participation of medical experts 100<br/><br/>6.4.5. The implementation of common descriptive classification (CC ATMC V1) 101<br/><br/>6.5. Conclusion 103<br/><br/>6.6. References 103<br/><br/>Chapter 7. Digital Toolkit for the Ergonomic Evaluation of Workstations 105<br/>Valentin ROCHAT and Antoine HAYEK<br/><br/>7.1. Introduction 105<br/><br/>7.2. ProcSim and ergonomics 106<br/><br/>7.2.1. Origin 106<br/><br/>7.2.2. Our product 106<br/><br/>7.2.3. Examples of applications in different sectors 107<br/><br/>7.2.4. Benefits and value addition 108<br/><br/>7.3. Ergonomic assessment process 108<br/><br/>7.3.1. Data collection 108<br/><br/>7.3.2. Data analysis 109<br/><br/>7.3.3. Workstation modeling 111<br/><br/>7.3.4. Virtual reality testing of possible activities 111<br/><br/>7.3.5. Improvement proposals and recommendations 111<br/><br/>7.4. Conclusion 112<br/><br/>7.5. References 113<br/><br/>Chapter 8. Simulation on an RFID Interactive Tabletop with Tangible Objects of Future Working Conditions: Prospects for Implementation in the Hospital Sector 115<br/>Yoann LEBRUN, Nicolas VISPI, Sophie LEPREUX, Sondès CHAABANE and Christophe KOLSKI<br/><br/>8.1. Introduction 115<br/><br/>8.2. State-of-the-art on the simulation of future working conditions 116<br/><br/>8.3. Proposal for a simulator on an interactive tabletop 117<br/><br/>8.4. Development of a first version of a simulator on an interactive tabletop 119<br/><br/>8.5. Application opportunities in the healthcare industry 123<br/><br/>8.6. Conclusion and perspectives in the healthcare industry 124<br/><br/>8.7. Acknowledgments 125<br/><br/>8.8. References 125<br/><br/>Chapter 9. Robotic Geriatric Assistant: A Pilot Assessment in a Real-world Hospital 129<br/>Dimitri VOILMY, Karine LAN HING TING, Ana IGLESIAS, Rebeca MARFIL, Juan Pedro BANDERA, Fernando FERNANDEZ and Quitterie DE ROLL<br/><br/>9.1. Introduction 129<br/><br/>9.2. Geriatric assessment: from needs to the proposed solution 130<br/><br/>9.2.1. Data management and the proposed robotic solution 131<br/><br/>9.2.2. The Clara robotic geriatric assistant – research 132<br/><br/>9.2.3. Hypotheses and research objectives 134<br/><br/>9.3. Methodological approach: living lab approach 134<br/><br/>9.3.1. Empowerment in and through interaction 135<br/><br/>9.3.2. Contribution: new analytical framework 136<br/><br/>9.3.3. Mixed methodological approach 136<br/><br/>9.4. Pilot assessment 137<br/><br/>9.4.1. Procedure and test protocol 137<br/><br/>9.4.2. Results 138<br/><br/>9.5. Conclusion 140<br/><br/>9.6. Acknowledgments 141<br/><br/>9.7. References 141<br/><br/>Chapter 10. Perspectives on the Patient Experience (PX) of People with Disabilities in the Digital Age: From UX to PX 145<br/>Djilali IDOUGHI, Karim TOULOUM, Yohan GUERRIER and Christophe KOLSKI<br/><br/>10.1. Introduction 145<br/><br/>10.2. State-of-the-art on Patient eXperience (PX) 146<br/><br/>10.3. Research methodology and proposal 149<br/><br/>10.4. Illustrations relating to the “user research” phase of the methodological framework 151<br/><br/>10.5. Case study: digital care journey of a patient with a disability 153<br/><br/>10.6. Conclusion 155<br/><br/>10.7. References 155<br/><br/>Part 3. Change Management and Organizational Innovations 159<br/><br/>Summary of Contributions – Part 3 161<br/><br/>Chapter 11. Jointly Improving the Experience of All Stakeholders in Hospital 4.0: The ICSSURP Initiative 165<br/>Wilson GOUDALO, Christophe KOLSKI and Frédéric VANDERHAEGEN<br/><br/>11.1. Introduction 165<br/><br/>11.2. Digital transformation to Hospital 4.0 166<br/><br/>11.3. Essential qualities of information systems of Hospital 4.0 167<br/><br/>11.3.1. Security in information systems of Hospital 4.0 168<br/><br/>11.3.2. Usability of information systems of Hospital 4.0 169<br/><br/>11.3.3. Resilience of information systems of Hospital 4.0 170<br/><br/>11.3.4. Performance of information systems of Hospital 4.0 171<br/><br/>11.4. Towards a joint security, safety, usability, resilience and performance engineering initiative (ICSSURP) 172<br/><br/>11.4.1. Advanced conceptual model of ICSSURP 172<br/><br/>11.4.2. System of homogeneous metrics 172<br/><br/>11.4.3. Summary of the ICSSURP initiative 174<br/><br/>11.5. Conclusion and perspectives 174<br/><br/>11.6. References 175<br/><br/>Chapter 12. A Tool-based Approach to Analyze Operating Room Schedule Execution: Application to Online Management 179<br/>Leah RIFI, Franck FONTANILI and Michel JEANNEY<br/><br/>12.1. Introduction 179<br/><br/>12.2. Methodology used to generate our approach 181<br/><br/>12.2.1. Preliminary phase: from observation to the approach outline 181<br/><br/>12.2.2. Phase 1: design 181<br/><br/>12.2.3. Phase 2: build 182<br/><br/>12.2.4. Phase 3: test 182<br/><br/>12.3. Current version of the proposed tool-based approach 183<br/><br/>12.3.1. Presentation of the first tool: the dashboard conceptual model 183<br/><br/>12.3.2. Presentation of the second tool: the Logbook 185<br/><br/>12.3.3. Description of the current version of the approach 185<br/><br/>12.4. Applied example of our tool-based approach at the Centre Hospitalier de Narbonne 189<br/><br/>12.4.1. Step 1 – collect and process the data 189<br/><br/>12.4.2. Step 2 – evaluate the feasibility and optimality of the initial schedule 190<br/><br/>12.4.3. Steps 3 and 4 – study the indicators and their deviations for the operating suite and the operating rooms 190<br/><br/>12.4.4. Step 5 – study the indicators and their deviations at the level of the interventions 191<br/><br/>12.4.5. Step 6 – determine root causes, impact on the performed schedule and responsibility for deviations 191<br/><br/>12.4.6. Step 7 – evaluate the quality of the actions implemented 192<br/><br/>12.4.7. Summation 192<br/><br/>12.5. Conclusion and perspectives 192<br/><br/>12.6. References 193<br/><br/>Chapter 13. Planning Patient Journeys in Outpatient Hospitals to Support the Ambulatory Shift 195<br/>Virginie FORTINEAU and Lucie ROUSSEL<br/><br/>13.1. Introduction 195<br/><br/>13.2. Background and state-of-the-art methods 196<br/><br/>13.2.1. Planning patient journeys at the hospital 196<br/><br/>13.2.2. 4.0 transforming the operational management of hospital flows 197<br/><br/>13.2.3. Research problem 198<br/><br/>13.3. State-of-the-art and field of application 198<br/><br/>13.3.1. Field of application: patient flows in outpatient hospitals 198<br/><br/>13.3.2. Little tactical planning for the state of the art 199<br/><br/>13.3.3. Choosing a planning and workflow management method 201<br/><br/>13.4. Contribution 202<br/><br/>13.4.1. Macro-planning for groups of pathways: an S&Op for ambulatory medicine 202<br/><br/>13.4.2. Feedback 204<br/><br/>13.5. Discussion and perspectives 205<br/><br/>13.5.1. Repeatability and accessibility of the macro-planning approach 205<br/><br/>13.5.2. Beyond the macro-planning for groups of pathways: towards integrated planning 205<br/><br/>13.6. Conclusion 206<br/><br/>13.7. References 206<br/><br/>Chapter 14. Treatment Protocols Generated by Machine Learning: Putting a Case Study of Hospitalization at Home into Perspective 209<br/>Alice MARTIN, Jean-Baptiste GUILLAUME, Alain GUINET and Julien FONDREVELLE<br/><br/>14.1. Introduction 209<br/><br/>14.2. Context and perspective 210<br/><br/>14.2.1. France’s healthcare restructuring and the impact for HaH 210<br/><br/>14.2.2. Hospitalization at home and target patients 210<br/><br/>14.2.3. The positioning of hospitalization at home versus traditional medicine 212<br/><br/>14.2.4. The problems facing hospitalization at home 213<br/><br/>14.3. The contribution of protocolization 214<br/><br/>14.3.1. A quality tool for the patient and the healthcare provider 214<br/><br/>14.3.2. The interface protocol between healthcare facilities 215<br/><br/>14.3.3. Protocol facing its limitations 216<br/><br/>14.4. Study and proposed methodology 216<br/><br/>14.4.1. Case study of the cost drivers of a hospitalization at home 216<br/><br/>14.4.2. Patient trajectory forecasting and protocol generation 219<br/><br/>14.5. Conclusion 221<br/><br/>14.6. References 221<br/><br/>Chapter 15. Resilience of Healthcare Teams: Case Study of Two Cardiology Intensive Care Units 223<br/>Racha LAMARI<br/><br/>15.1. Introduction 223<br/><br/>15.2. Theoretical framework 225<br/><br/>15.2.1. Defining the concept of resilience within the framework of the study 225<br/><br/>15.2.2. Nature of events and situations studied 226<br/><br/>15.2.3. The conceptual framework of the study 226<br/><br/>15.3. Research methodology 227<br/><br/>15.3.1. The narrative of the event 227<br/><br/>15.3.2. The data collection 228<br/><br/>15.4. Research results 229<br/><br/>15.4.1. Identification of stressors 229<br/><br/>15.4.2. The resilience process 231<br/><br/>15.5. Discussion 238<br/><br/>15.6. Conclusion 242<br/><br/>15.7. References 242<br/><br/>Conclusion and Perspectives 249<br/>Sondès CHAABANE<br/><br/>Glossary 253<br/><br/>List of Authors 259<br/><br/>Index 263
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC.
Summary, etc This book is centered around the development of agile, high-performing healthcare institutions that are well integrated into their environment. The aim is to take advantage of artificial intelligence, optimization and simulation methods to provide solutions to prevent, anticipate, monitor and follow public health developments in order to intervene at the right time, using tools and resources that are both appropriate and effective.
545 0# - BIOGRAPHICAL OR HISTORICAL DATA
Biographical or historical note About the Author<br/>Sondes Chaabane is a researcher at the Laboratory of Automation, Mechanics and Industrial and Human Computer Science (LAMIH UMR CNRS 8201) at Université Polytechnique Hauts-de-France and a lecturer at INSA Hauts-de-France. Her research focuses on the control and resilience of complex systems that combine optimization, simulation and artificial intelligence techniques.<br/><br/>Etienne Cousein is Head of the Pharmacy Department at the Valenciennes Hospital Center, France, and Vice President of the Commission Médicale d'Établissement. His main research interests include automated distribution solutions and medicine management within electronic patient records.<br/><br/>Philippe Wieser is Honorary Professor at EPFL, Switzerland, and Professor at the École des Ponts ParisTech, France. His fields of research are predominantly related to project management, industrial supply chain management and hospital logistics.
650 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Health services administration.
Authority record control number http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85059600.
650 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Medical care.
Authority record control number http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85082871.
655 #4 - INDEX TERM--GENRE/FORM
Genre/form data or focus term Electronic books.
700 1# - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Chaabane, Sondes,
Relator term editor.
700 1# - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Cousein, Etienne,
Relator term editor.
700 1# - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Wieser, Philippe,
Relator term editor.
830 #0 - SERIES ADDED ENTRY--UNIFORM TITLE
Uniform title Health engineering and society series.
Authority record control number http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2018009204.
856 40 - ELECTRONIC LOCATION AND ACCESS
Uniform Resource Identifier https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/9781119902614
Link text Full text available at Wiley Online Library Click here to view
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS
Source of classification or shelving scheme
Item type EBOOK
Holdings
Withdrawn status Lost status Source of classification or shelving scheme Damaged status Not for loan Permanent Location Current Location Date acquired Source of acquisition Full call number Date last seen Price effective from Item type
          COLLEGE LIBRARY COLLEGE LIBRARY 2024-09-17 Megatexts Phil. Inc. 362.1068 H3498 2022 2024-09-17 2024-09-17 EBOOK