Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 2. 10. 3| between points of care (hospitals, laboratories and homes)
2 I, 2. 10. 3| namely health cards, virtual hospitals and provision of health-related
3 I, 2. 10. 4| systems and processes in hospitals are unable to efficiently
4 I, 2. 10. 4| all stock-on-hand in most hospitals is waste of working capital,
5 I, 2. 10. 4| identification systems in hospitals today is very low: it is
6 I, 2. 10. 4| estimated that less than 10% of hospitals currently use bar-codes
7 I, 2. 10. 4| much larger extent than hospitals and use it at the point
8 I, 2. 10. 4| at the point of sale.~ ~Hospitals have delayed investment
9 II, 5. 3. 2| several sources (e.g. district hospitals, cancer centres, hospices,
10 II, 5. 3. 2| centres, hospices, private hospitals, screening registries, other
11 II, 5. 4. 2| highly heterogeneous across hospitals and territories. An admission
12 II, 5. 4. 2| are frequently recorded in hospitals.~A particular case of outcome
13 II, 5. 4. 2| information obtained through hospitals and health insurances only
14 II, 5. 5.Int| inpatient beds in general hospitals for short term treatment.
15 II, 5. 5. 3| discharge rates from psychiatric hospitals between Finland and Norway.
16 II, 5. 5. 3| admission to psychiatric hospitals. Therefore, there is an
17 II, 5. 5. 3| psychiatric beds in general hospitals (10%) than the world average (
18 II, 5. 5. 3| to rely on large mental hospitals to provide care for people
19 II, 5. 5. 3| at the interface between hospitals and community care;~· to
20 II, 6. 3. 2| in healthcare settings. Hospitals, especially intensive care
21 II, 6. 3. 2| differentiate antibiotic usage in hospitals and outpatient settings.
22 II, 6. 3. 2| surveillance network of hospitals, whereby individual rates
23 II, 6. 3. 2| those of other participating hospitals and services as a measure
24 II, 6. 3. 6| places, such as schools, hospitals and cruise ships are on
25 II, 6. 4. 3| systems being stretched, hospitals saturated, transport and
26 II, 7. 2. 6| from selected Member State hospitals. This data is aggregated
27 II, 7. 3. 1| injuries treated outside of hospitals (“All medically treated
28 II, 7. 3. 1| injuries are treated in hospitals, making them an important
29 II, 9. 1. 1| in nine European referral hospitals: descriptive study. Eur
30 II, 9. 1. 2| some countries, private hospitals do not make their data available,
31 II, 9. 1. 2| their data available, or hospitals do not use a standard coding
32 II, 9. 2. 5| initiatives for Baby Friendly Hospitals (UNICEF, 1991), and for
33 II, 9. 2. 5| children to appropriate hospitals in Europe (EACH, 1988).
34 II, 9. 2. 6| statistical reporting systems in hospitals and primary care to seek
35 II, 9. 3. 1| inpatient beds in general hospitals for short term treatment.
36 II, 9. 3. 2| in nine European referral hospitals: descriptive study. Eur
37 II, 9. 4. 3| older patients in thirteen hospitals in ten European countries
38 II, 9. 4. 5| patients attending general hospitals as medical emergencies is
39 III, 10. 2. 1| countries still allow smoking in hospitals and schools;~· Only 5% of
40 III, 10. 3. 3| places, such as schools, hospitals and cruise ships are on
41 III, 10. 3. 4| response and recovery periods . Hospitals, ambulances, retirement
42 IV, 11. 1. 5| managed by teams in university hospitals. Despite being voluntary,
43 IV, 11. 1. 5| economic use of medicines in hospitals in accordance with government
44 IV, 11. 1. 5| information services based in hospitals have been developed to facilitate
45 IV, 11. 1. 5| collection efforts on German hospitals to monitor performance on
46 IV, 11. 1. 5| and, consequently, have hospitals stays 8 to 12 days longer
47 IV, 11. 1. 5| professionals and individual hospitals, as well as the physical
48 IV, 11. 1. 6| and case-based payment for hospitals).~ ~Fee-for-service is an
49 IV, 11. 1. 6| while England includes all hospitals to determine average costs (
50 IV, 11. 1. 6| determine average costs (300 hospitals), the Netherlands chooses
51 IV, 11. 1. 6| the Netherlands chooses hospitals that are representative
52 IV, 11. 1. 6| including 23 or 22% of all hospitals using DRGs), Italy, Germany
53 IV, 11. 1. 6| and Spain include those hospitals with predefined cost accounting
54 IV, 11. 1. 6| 1%), 214 (12%), and 18 hospitals respectively). There is
55 IV, 11. 1. 6| representative of the country’s hospitals (Schreyogg et al, 2006).
56 IV, 11. 1. 6| differing degrees. In Austria, hospitals became more cost conscious,
57 IV, 11. 2. 1| transfer care outside of hospitals because of the perceived
58 IV, 11. 2. 1| the declining number of hospitals and hospital beds in many
59 IV, 11. 2. 1| see below). Care outside hospitals is organized in different
60 IV, 11. 2. 1| 1990-2005~ ~The number of hospitals has seen a decreasing trend
61 IV, 11. 2. 1| whole EU, the number of hospitals declined from 3.82 per 100,
62 IV, 11. 2. 1| thus, a reduction of 0.72 hospitals), compared to a reduction
63 IV, 11. 2. 1| compared to a reduction in 0.89 hospitals in the EU15 and an increase
64 IV, 11. 2. 1| and an increase of 0.8. hospitals in the new Member States (
65 IV, 11. 2. 1| average length of stay in hospitals has also decreased substantially
66 IV, 11. 3 | physical resources e.g. hospitals and hospital beds, have
67 IV, 11. 5. 1| process is carried out by hospitals or professionals falling
68 IV, 11. 6. 4| Furthermore, to compare hospitals or populations, it is necessary
69 IV, 11. 6. 4| benchmark (i.e. the pool of hospitals or reference populations
70 IV, 11. 6. 5| McKee M, Healy J (2002): Hospitals in a changing Europe. Oxford,
71 IV, 12. 2 | countries still allow smoking in hospitals and schools;~Only 5% of
72 IV, 12. 5 | on health care supply in hospitals and medical practice)~-
73 IV, 12. 10 | German network for smoke-free Hospitals (member of European network
74 IV, 12. 10 | European network for smoke-free hospitals)~www – German non-smokers
75 IV, 12. 10 | are on waiting lists at hospitals beyond a specific length
76 IV, 12. 10 | Cancer Control~· Acute Hospitals~· Disability and Mental
77 IV, 12. 10 | appropriate activity from hospitals to community-based settings. ~ ~
78 IV, 12. 10 | technology assessment. ~ ~Acute Hospitals~The Government is committed
79 IV, 12. 10 | the development of acute hospitals include:~· Hospital networks
80 IV, 12. 10 | private patients to public hospitals.~· Reduction in inappropriate
81 IV, 12. 10 | Super Markets, Hotels, Hospitals, etc. A dynamic advertising
82 IV, 12. 10 | with the above Decision, hospitals have to be obtained with
83 IV, 12. 10 | hazardous medical waste. Also, hospitals are obliged to use different
84 IV, 12. 10 | low income in the public hospitals and other health institutions
85 IV, 12. 10 | concerning work-related issues in hospitals in 1998 was founded the
86 IV, 12. 10 | Network of Health Promoting Hospitals (HNHPH-www.neahygeia.gr/
87 IV, 12. 10 | European Network of Smoke Free Hospitals. It aims to:~- Health promotion
88 IV, 12. 10 | Health promotion and education of hospitals employees~- Improvement
89 IV, 12. 10 | specialized medical care (hospitals other than those at health
90 IV, 13. 6. 2| 13.6.2.1 Hospitals~ ~Children do not occupy
91 Key, Ap5. 0. 0| hospitalization~hospitalizations~hospitals~household~households~housewives~