Autor: |
Sobanko, Joseph F., Harikumar, Vishnu, Kang, Bianca Y., Ibrahim, Sarah A., Worley, Brandon, Cook, Jonathan L., Kantor, Jonathan, Lawrence, Naomi, Miller, Alexander, Albertini, John G., Van Beek, Marta, Lober, Clifford Warren, Bordeaux, Jeremy S., Maher, Ian A., Cartee, Todd V., Kibbi, Nour, Owen, Joshua L., Reynolds, Kelly A., Bolotin, Diana, Waldman, Abigail H. |
Předmět: |
|
Zdroj: |
Archives of Dermatological Research; Apr2022, Vol. 314 Issue 3, p311-316, 6p |
Abstrakt: |
The practice environment, including the scope of practice, site of service, patient population, and even coding and reimbursement, will be consistent for societies in the same specialty. A disease or topic may be broad in nature or impinge on the scope of practice of members of several professional societies active in a given medical specialty or subspecialty. Scope of practice can be a substantive issue that poses a barrier, with members of each specialty seeing themselves as the ones that truly "own" the disease or condition for which guidelines are being developed. Keywords: Multisociety; Multispecialty; Clinical; Practice; Guidelines EN Multisociety Multispecialty Clinical Practice Guidelines 311 316 6 03/15/22 20220401 NES 220401 Introduction Clinical practice guidelines that are developed with the involvement of members of multiple medical specialties can be particularly relevant for diseases and conditions which span organ systems, or for which therapies have similarly wide-ranging effects on patient health. [Extracted from the article] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
Externí odkaz: |
|