S
Signe Flottorp
Researcher at Norwegian Institute of Public Health
Publications - 152
Citations - 24433
Signe Flottorp is an academic researcher from Norwegian Institute of Public Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 139 publications receiving 20282 citations. Previous affiliations of Signe Flottorp include University of Oslo & Norwegian Directorate for Health and Social Affairs.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Identifying determinants of care for tailoring implementation in chronic diseases: an evaluation of different methods
Jane Krause,Jan van Lieshout,Rien Klomp,Elke Huntink,Eivind Aakhus,Signe Flottorp,Cornelia Jaeger,Jost Steinhaeuser,Maciek Godycki-Cwirko,Anna Kowalczyk,Shona Agarwal,Michel Wensing,Richard Baker +12 more
TL;DR: Systematic methods can lead to the identification of large numbers of determinants, and brainstorming is a simple, low cost method that could be relevant to many tailored implementation projects.
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GRADE Guidelines: 19. Assessing the certainty of evidence in the importance of outcomes or values and preferences—Risk of bias and indirectness
Yuan Zhang,Pablo Alonso-Coello,Pablo Alonso-Coello,Gordon H. Guyatt,Juan José Yepes-Nuñez,Elie A. Akl,Glen Hazlewood,Hector Pardo-Hernandez,Itziar Etxeandia-Ikobaltzeta,Amir Qaseem,John W Williams,Peter Tugwell,Signe Flottorp,Yaping Chang,Yuqing Zhang,Reem A. Mustafa,María Ximena Rojas,Holger J. Schünemann +17 more
TL;DR: This article provides guidance and examples for rating the risk of bias and indirectness for a body of evidence summarizing the importance of outcomes.
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The OFF theory of research utilization
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A systematic review of trials evaluating success factors of interventions with computerised clinical decision support
Stijn Van de Velde,Annemie Heselmans,Nicolas Delvaux,Linn Brandt,Linn Brandt,Luis Marco-Ruiz,David Spitaels,Hanne Cloetens,Tiina Kortteisto,Pavel S Roshanov,Ilkka Kunnamo,Bert Aertgeerts,Per Olav Vandvik,Per Olav Vandvik,Signe Flottorp,Signe Flottorp +15 more
TL;DR: Which factors make CDS strategies more effective on a number of outcomes, including adherence to recommended practice, patient outcome measures, economic measures, provider or patient satisfaction, and medical decision quality are examined.
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Process evaluation of a cluster randomized trial of tailored interventions to implement guidelines in primary care—why is it so hard to change practice?
TL;DR: Evaluating how the interventions were received and why practices did or did not change found inadequate time, resources and support were the most salient factors that might explain a lack of change.