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Daniel S. Tawfik

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  40
Citations -  1231

Daniel S. Tawfik is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Burnout & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 32 publications receiving 644 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel S. Tawfik include University of Iowa & Lucile Packard Children's Hospital.

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Physician Burnout, Well-being, and Work Unit Safety Grades in Relationship to Reported Medical Errors

TL;DR: In this large national study, physician burnout, fatigue, and work unit safety grades were independently associated with major medical errors and interventions to reduce rates of medical errors must address both physician well‐being and workunit safety.
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Evidence Relating Health Care Provider Burnout and Quality of Care: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

TL;DR: A systematic literature review and meta-analysis was conducted to provide summary estimations of the relation between provider burnout and quality of care, estimate study heterogeneity, and explore the potential of reporting bias in the field.
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Factors Associated With Provider Burnout in the NICU.

TL;DR: Burnout is most prevalent in NICUs with high patient volume and electronic health records and may affect nurses disproportionately, and interventions to reduce burnout prevalence may be of greater importance in NICs with ≥10 weekly admissions.
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Burnout in the neonatal intensive care unit and its relation to healthcare-associated infections

TL;DR: Burnout is most prevalent among non-physicians, daytime workers and experienced workers, and perceptions of working too hard associate with increased HAIs in this cohort of VLBW infants, but overall burnout prevalence is not predictive.
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Association of Blood Pressure Measurements With Peripheral Artery Disease Events.

TL;DR: In this reanalysis of data from ALLHAT, a higher rate of lower extremity PAD events is found with higher and lower SBP and pulse pressure and with lower DBP, which indicates further refinement of optimal blood pressure targets specific to PAD is needed.