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Annelies Jacobs

Researcher at Radboud University Nijmegen

Publications -  17
Citations -  957

Annelies Jacobs is an academic researcher from Radboud University Nijmegen. The author has contributed to research in topics: FEV1/FVC ratio & Patient safety. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 17 publications receiving 905 citations. Previous affiliations of Annelies Jacobs include Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre & Maastricht University.

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Which chronic conditions are associated with better or poorer quality of life

TL;DR: Comparing the QL of a wide range of chronic disease patients found that patients who were older, female, had a low level of education, were not living with a partner, and had at least one comorbid condition, in general, reported the poorest level of QL.
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Quality assurance in general practice: the state of the art in Europe.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that most countries are only just beginning the implementation of QA, and policy makers and GPs from different parts of Europe should study examples in their fellow countries to accelerate the speed of adoption.
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Asthma education tailored to individual patient needs can optimise partnerships in asthma self-management

TL;DR: Use of this tailored education program improved the GP-patient interaction within the context of a clinically effective asthma self-management program.
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Validation of Self-Management Screening (SeMaS), a tool to facilitate personalised counselling and support of patients with chronic diseases

TL;DR: SeMaS is a short validated tool that can signal potential barriers for self-management that need to be addressed in the dialogue with the patient and can be used to facilitate personalised counselling and support to enhance self- management in patients with chronic conditions in primary care.
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Monitoring of patients with COPD: a review of current guidelines' recommendations.

TL;DR: Some monitoring routines were recommended frequently, especially follow-up of lung function indices, however, evidence to support the guideline recommendations for the monitoring of patients with COPD is missing.