Displaying 131 - 140 of 829 results for "translate english to serbian"
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Participate in DEWS
We invite aged residential care facilities to register their interest to implement the Deterioration Early Warning System (DEWS).
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Resilient health care
Resilient health care is defined as the capacity to adapt to challenges and changes at different system levels, to maintain high-quality care.
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Pre-hospital community sepsis pathways
These tools are designed to support health professionals working in community and pre-hospital settings to recognise sepsis early and initiate timely management
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Diabetes
This diabetes domain investigates the quality of care given to people with diabetes. The data is not intended to form a basis for judgement or definitive statements of quality, rather to raise questions about potential areas for quality improvement.
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Deterioration Early Warning System (DEWS)
The Deterioration Early Warning System (DEWS) supports aged residential care facilities to identify and respond to acute deterioration in people living in aged care.
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Hand Hygiene New Zealand communication toolkit
The hand hygiene communication toolkit provides district health board staff with a range of ideas and guidance to promote hand hygiene and to engage health care workers to improve their practice.
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Leadership and capability
Our quality improvement science education and training courses provide skills to address local improvement challenges, and build our ability to draw on what is available nationally.
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Healing, learning and improving from harm
To improve consumer and health care worker safety by supporting health and disability service providers to report, heal, learn and improve after the harm has occurred.
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Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease in people aged 45 and over
The goal of this Atlas domain is to highlight variation in the prevalence, admissions, and medicine use of people estimated to have Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD).
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National review of avoidable deaths
Our role is to reduce avoidable deaths in New Zealand. We examine what contributes to a person’s death, and work with families and whānau, communities, clinicians, health services and other parts of government to prevent avoidable deaths.