G
Gunilla Nilsson
Researcher at Linnaeus University
Publications - 35
Citations - 1519
Gunilla Nilsson is an academic researcher from Linnaeus University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health informatics & Health care. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 35 publications receiving 1427 citations. Previous affiliations of Gunilla Nilsson include Lund University & Linköping University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Evaluation of quality of life after laparoscopic surgery: evidence-based guidelines of the European Association for Endoscopic Surgery.
D. Korolija,Stefan Sauerland,S. Wood-Dauphinee,C. C. Abbou,Ernst Eypasch,M. Garcia Caballero,Mary Ann Lumsden,B. Millat,John R. T. Monson,Gunilla Nilsson,R. Pointner,Wolfgang Schwenk,A. Shamiyeh,Amir Szold,Eduardo M. Targarona,B. Ure,Edmund Neugebauer +16 more
TL;DR: Laparoscopic surgery provides better postoperative QoL in many clinical situations and can be recommended for benign esophageal and gallbladder disease and for hysterectomy, the SF-36 together with an evaluation of urinary and sexual function.
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The Use of the Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) Among Personnel and Students in Health Care : a Review.
TL;DR: The PDA seems to be a valuable tool for personnel and students in health care, but there is a need for further intervention studies, randomized controlled trials, action research, and studies with various health care groups in order to identify its appropriate functions and software applications.
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Randomized clinical trial of laparoscopic versus open fundoplication: blind evaluation of recovery and discharge period.
TL;DR: There is a widespread belief that introduction of the laparoscopic technique in antireflux surgery has led to easier postoperative recovery, and a prospective randomized clinical trial with blind evaluation was conducted to test this hypothesis.
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Health care consumers' experiences of information communication technology--a summary of literature.
TL;DR: ICT can improve the nurse-patient relationship and augment well-being for consumers and more research is needed to measure consumers' experiences and factors that influence it.
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Nurses’ experience of using electronic patient records in everyday practice in acute/inpatient ward settings: A literature review
TL;DR: There is an urgent need for nurses to be directly involved in software design to ensure that the essence and complexity of nursing is not lost in the system.