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Lars Holger Ehlers

Researcher at Aalborg University

Publications -  131
Citations -  2320

Lars Holger Ehlers is an academic researcher from Aalborg University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cost effectiveness & Population. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 128 publications receiving 1757 citations. Previous affiliations of Lars Holger Ehlers include Aarhus University & Aarhus University Hospital.

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The Health-Related Quality of Life for Patients with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis / Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS)

TL;DR: The adjusted analysis confirms that poor HRQoL of ME/CFS is distinctly different from and not a proxy of the other included conditions, and further studies are needed to exclude the possible selection bias of the current study.
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Using preventive home monitoring to reduce hospital admission rates and reduce costs: a case study of telehealth among chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients:

TL;DR: Whether preventive home monitoring of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) could reduce the frequency of hospital admissions and lower the cost of hospitalization is studied and future work requires large-scale studies of prolonged home monitoring with more extended follow-up.
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Doing mini-health technology assessments in hospitals: a new concept of decision support in health care?

TL;DR: Doing mini-HTA in hospitals seems to balance the need for quality and depth with the limited time and resources for assessment, and theoretical and empirical evidence is found that local involvement in the process of making the HTA could be important for the use of the results from the H TA and for theprocess of implementing the new technology.
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Person-centred care for patients with chronic heart failure – a cost–utility analysis

TL;DR: It is argued that positive effects of person-centred care, both cheaper and somewhat better, were obtained only among those receiving the PCC intervention in its intended form, PCC(PP).
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Can quality improvement improve the quality of care? A systematic review of reported effects and methodological rigor in plan-do-study-act projects

TL;DR: The widespread challenges with low adherence to key methodological features in the individual projects pose a challenge for the legitimacy of PDSA-based QI, indicating that there is a continued need for improvement in quality improvement methodology.