Impact of COVID-19 on Health Emergency and Disaster Risk Management System: A Scoping Review of Healthcare Workforce Management in COVID-19
暂无分享,去创建一个
Odgerel Chimed-Ochir | N. Ghotbi | T. Kubo | V. Murray | Y. Yumiya | F. van Trimpont | Ryoma Kayano | Jargalmaa Amarsanaa | Yui Yumiya
[1] J. Myong,et al. The COVID-19 Pandemic Response and Its Impact on Post-Corona Health Emergency and Disaster Risk Management in Republic of Korea , 2023, Sustainability.
[2] Edbert B. Hsu,et al. The COVID-19 Pandemic Response and Its Impact on Post-Pandemic Health Emergency and Disaster Risk Management in the United States , 2022, Sustainability.
[3] S. Tateishi,et al. The Impact of COVID-19 Outbreak on Health Emergency and Disaster in Japan , 2022, Sustainability.
[4] N. Ghotbi. The COVID-19 Pandemic Response and Its Impact on Post-Corona Health Emergency and Disaster Risk Management in Iran , 2022, Sustainability.
[5] L. Ragazzoni,et al. The COVID-19 pandemic response and its impact on post-corona health emergency and disaster risk management in Italy , 2022, Frontiers in Public Health.
[6] M. Dimian,et al. Global Challenges to Public Health Care Systems during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Review of Pandemic Measures and Problems , 2022, Journal of personalized medicine.
[7] S. Peckham,et al. Health system resilience and health workforce capacities: Comparing health system responses during the COVID‐19 pandemic in six European countries , 2022, The International journal of health planning and management.
[8] C. Vindrola‐Padros,et al. Training and redeployment of healthcare workers to intensive care units (ICUs) during the COVID-19 pandemic: a systematic review , 2022, BMJ Open.
[9] M. Karanikolos,et al. Lessons learned from the Baltic countries’ response to the first wave of COVID-19 , 2021, Health Policy.
[10] B. Dahn,et al. Liberia’s First Health Workforce Program Strategy: Reflections and Lessons Learned , 2021, Annals of global health.
[11] Gemma A. Williams,et al. COVID-19 pandemic health system responses in the Mediterranean countries: a tale of successes and challenges , 2021, Health Policy.
[12] T. Eckmanns,et al. The Containment Scouts: First Insights into an Initiative to Increase the Public Health Workforce for Contact Tracing during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Germany , 2021, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.
[13] C. A. Satterfield,et al. Rapid Development, Training, and Implementation of a Remote Health Profession’s Student Volunteer Corps During the COVID-19 Pandemic , 2021, Public health reports.
[14] S. Islam,et al. Challenges Faced by Healthcare Professionals During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Inquiry From Bangladesh , 2021, Frontiers in Public Health.
[15] Gemma A. Williams,et al. European countries' responses in ensuring sufficient physical infrastructure and workforce capacity during the first COVID-19 wave , 2021, Health Policy.
[16] M. Westwood,et al. Lessons in cognitive unloading, skills mixing, flattened hierarchy and organisational agility from the Nightingale Hospital London during the first wave of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic , 2021, BMJ open quality.
[17] A. Baumann,et al. Diversifying the health workforce: a mixed methods analysis of an employment integration strategy , 2021, Human Resources for Health.
[18] M. Šantrić Milićević,et al. Health workforce management in the context of the COVID‐19 pandemic: A survey of physicians in Serbia , 2021, The International journal of health planning and management.
[19] C. Maier,et al. Health workforce response to Covid‐19: What pandemic preparedness planning and action at the federal and state levels in Germany? , 2021, The International journal of health planning and management.
[20] G. Molina,et al. Redeployment of Health Care Workers in the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study of Health System Leaders’ Strategies , 2021, Journal of patient safety.
[21] Wenke Hong,et al. Psychological and occupational impact on healthcare workers and its associated factors during the COVID-19 outbreak in China , 2021, International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health.
[22] Richelle L. Witherspoon,et al. Health workforce surge capacity during the COVID‐19 pandemic and other global respiratory disease outbreaks: A systematic review of health system requirements and responses , 2021, The International Journal of Health Planning and Management.
[23] J. Denis,et al. Global health and innovation: A panoramic view on health human resources in the COVID‐19 pandemic context , 2021, The International journal of health planning and management.
[24] G. Rees,et al. The implications of COVID‐19 for health workforce planning and policy: the case of Peru , 2021, The International journal of health planning and management.
[25] Yin Cheng Lim,et al. Workforce Mobilization From the National Institutes of Health for the Ministry of Health Malaysia: A COVID-19 Pandemic Response , 2021, Frontiers in Public Health.
[26] R. Kohli-Seth,et al. Tiered Model of Nurse Staffing for Critical Care and Emergency Departments in the Wake of a Pandemic. , 2021, The Journal of nursing administration.
[27] E. Conway,et al. “We All Really Need to just Take a Breath”: Composite Narratives of Hospital Doctors’ Well-Being during the COVID-19 Pandemic , 2021, International journal of environmental research and public health.
[28] C. Namwat,et al. Public health policies and health-care workers’ response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Thailand , 2021, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.
[29] D. Muller,et al. The COVID-19 Student WorkForce at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai: A Model for Rapid Response in Emergency Preparedness , 2020, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.
[30] J. Doyle,et al. Mobilising a workforce to combat COVID-19: An account, reflections, and lessons learned , 2020, Journal of the Intensive Care Society.
[31] A. Mackenzie,et al. The COVID-19 pandemic presents an opportunity to develop more sustainable health workforces , 2020, Human Resources for Health.
[32] A. Marshall,et al. A critical care pandemic staffing framework in Australia , 2020, Australian Critical Care.
[33] L. Glynn,et al. The COVID-19 pandemic in Ireland: An overview of the health service and economic policy response , 2020, Health Policy and Technology.
[34] R. Buckland. Medical student volunteering during COVID-19: lessons for future interprofessional practice , 2020, Journal of interprofessional care.
[35] Matthew D. McHugh,et al. Chronic hospital nurse understaffing meets COVID-19: an observational study , 2020, BMJ Quality & Safety.
[36] E. Ridley,et al. Surge capacity for critical care specialised allied health professionals in Australia during COVID-19 , 2020, Australian Critical Care.
[37] S. Zhang,et al. Rapidly organize redeployed medical staff in coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic: what we should do , 2020, Chinese medical journal.
[38] A. Advincula,et al. Intradepartmental redeployment of faculty and staff , 2020, Seminars in Perinatology.
[39] C. Westhoff,et al. Mobilization of health professions students during the COVID-19 pandemic☆ , 2020, Seminars in Perinatology.
[40] E. Eber,et al. European and United Kingdom COVID-19 pandemic experience: The same but different , 2020, Paediatric Respiratory Reviews.
[41] A. Harvey,et al. Covid-19: the medical students responding to the pandemic , 2020, BMJ.
[42] H. Reyes-Morales,et al. Socioeconomic factors and inequality in the distribution of physicians and nurses in Mexico , 2020, Revista de saude publica.
[43] R. Bal,et al. Practicing Corona – Towards a research agenda of health policies , 2020, Health Policy.
[44] B. Satiani,et al. COVID-19 financial resources for physicians , 2020, Journal of Vascular Surgery.
[45] D. Pilcher,et al. Surge capacity of intensive care units in case of acute increase in demand caused by COVID‐19 in Australia , 2020, The Medical journal of Australia.
[46] P. Brennan,et al. Operating during the COVID-19 pandemic: How to reduce medical error , 2020, British Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery.
[47] H. Bauchner,et al. A Bold Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Medical Students, National Service, and Public Health. , 2020, JAMA.
[48] S. Gong,et al. Covid-19 in China: ten critical issues for intensive care medicine , 2020, Critical Care.
[49] D. Auerbach,et al. Older Clinicians and the Surge in Novel Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). , 2020, JAMA.
[50] Kai Zhao,et al. A pneumonia outbreak associated with a new coronavirus of probable bat origin , 2020, Nature.
[51] D. Chamberlain,et al. ACCCN Workforce Standards for Intensive Care Nursing: Systematic and evidence review, development, and appraisal. , 2017, Australian critical care : official journal of the Confederation of Australian Critical Care Nurses.
[52] A. Páez,et al. Grey literature: An important resource in systematic reviews. , 2017, Journal of evidence-based medicine.
[53] Jean Adams,et al. Searching and synthesising ‘grey literature’ and ‘grey information’ in public health: critical reflections on three case studies , 2016, Systematic Reviews.
[54] R. Scheffler,et al. Global Health Workforce Labor Market Projections for 2030 , 2016, Human Resources for Health.
[55] Patricia McInerney,et al. An Evidence-Based Approach to Scoping Reviews. , 2016, Worldviews on evidence-based nursing.
[56] D. Moher,et al. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses: The PRISMA Statement , 2009, BMJ : British Medical Journal.
[57] Cara J Person,et al. State of the Public Health Workforce: Trends and Challenges Leading Up to the COVID-19 Pandemic. , 2021, Journal of public health management and practice : JPHMP.