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Evidence-based management in health care

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The article was published on 2005-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 25 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Health care & Unlicensed assistive personnel.

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Is there Such a thing as “Evidence-Based Management”?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the promise organization research offers for improved management practice and how, at present, it falls short using evidence-based medicine as an exemplar, identify ways of closing the prevailing "research-practice gap" and close with guidance for researchers, educators, and managers for translating the principles governing human behavior and organizational processes into more effective management practice.
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Evidence-based management: Concept clean-up time?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify and clarify a number of common misconceptions about evidence-based management (EBMgt) and present a systematic review that summarizes in an explicit way what is known and not known about a specific practice-related question.
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Educating Managers From an Evidence-Based Perspective

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the core features of educational processes promoting evidence-based management (EBM) and identify key factors in organizational research, education, and management practice that inhibit EBM's use and ways these can be overcome.
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Toy Recalls and China: Emotion vs. Evidence

TL;DR: This paper found that the vast majority of recalls were due to flaws in product designs, conducted in the corporate headquarters of toy companies, rather than to poor manufacturing by factories in Asian countries.
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The Association between Hospital Ownership and Technical Efficiency in a Managed Care Environment

TL;DR: It was determined that non-profits were more efficient than for-profit hospitals for all 4 years examined in this study, and teaching hospitals were more efficiency than non-teaching hospitals in 2001–2003, but not in 2004.