Browsing by Author "Randjelovic, Simona (57218484223)"
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Publication Electronic Health Record Acceptance by Physicians: A Single Hospital Experience in Daily Practice(2021) ;Pavlovic, Andrija (57221760227) ;Rajovic, Nina (57218484684) ;Pavlovic Stojanovic, Jasmina (58683715700) ;Akinyombo, Debora (58682091400) ;Ugljesic, Milica (58683715800) ;Pavlica, Marina (56878778200) ;Pavlovic, Vedrana (57202093978) ;Randjelovic, Simona (57218484223) ;Spaic, Dragan (57428341100) ;Masic, Srdjan (57190441485) ;Stanisavljevic, Dejana (23566969700)Milic, Natasa (7003460927)Introduction: Potential benefits of implementing an electronic health record (EHR) to increase the efficiency of health services and improve the quality of health care are often obstructed by the unwillingness of the users themselves to accept and use the available systems. Aim: The aim of this study was to identify factors that influence the acceptance of the use of an EHR by physicians in the daily practice of hospital health care. Material and Methods: The cross-sectional study was conducted among physicians in the General Hospital Pancevo, Serbia. An anonymous questionnaire, developed according to the technology acceptance model (TAM), was used for the assessment of EHR acceptance. The response rate was 91%. Internal consistency was assessed by Cronbach’s alpha coefficient. A logistic regression analysis was used to identify the factors influencing the acceptance of the use of EHR. Results: The study population included 156 physicians. The mean age was 46.4 ± 10.4 years, 58.8% participants were female. Half of the respondents (50.1%) supported the use of EHR in comparison to paper patient records. In multivariate logistic regression modeling of social and technical factors, ease of use, usefulness, and attitudes towards use of EHR as determinants of the EHR acceptance, the following predictors were identified: use of a computer outside of the office for reading daily newspapers (p = 0.005), EHR providing a greater amount of valuable information (p = 0.007), improvement in the productivity by EHR use (p < 0.001), and a statement that using EHR is a good idea (p = 0.014). Overall the percentage of correct classifications in the model was 83.9%. Conclusion: In this research, determinants of the EHR acceptance were assessed in accordance with the TAM, providing an overall good model fit. Future research should attempt to add other constructs to the TAM in order to fully identify all determinants of physician acceptance of EHR in the complex environment of different health systems. © 2021 by the authors. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Electronic Health Record Acceptance by Physicians: A Single Hospital Experience in Daily Practice(2021) ;Pavlovic, Andrija (57221760227) ;Rajovic, Nina (57218484684) ;Pavlovic Stojanovic, Jasmina (58683715700) ;Akinyombo, Debora (58682091400) ;Ugljesic, Milica (58683715800) ;Pavlica, Marina (56878778200) ;Pavlovic, Vedrana (57202093978) ;Randjelovic, Simona (57218484223) ;Spaic, Dragan (57428341100) ;Masic, Srdjan (57190441485) ;Stanisavljevic, Dejana (23566969700)Milic, Natasa (7003460927)Introduction: Potential benefits of implementing an electronic health record (EHR) to increase the efficiency of health services and improve the quality of health care are often obstructed by the unwillingness of the users themselves to accept and use the available systems. Aim: The aim of this study was to identify factors that influence the acceptance of the use of an EHR by physicians in the daily practice of hospital health care. Material and Methods: The cross-sectional study was conducted among physicians in the General Hospital Pancevo, Serbia. An anonymous questionnaire, developed according to the technology acceptance model (TAM), was used for the assessment of EHR acceptance. The response rate was 91%. Internal consistency was assessed by Cronbach’s alpha coefficient. A logistic regression analysis was used to identify the factors influencing the acceptance of the use of EHR. Results: The study population included 156 physicians. The mean age was 46.4 ± 10.4 years, 58.8% participants were female. Half of the respondents (50.1%) supported the use of EHR in comparison to paper patient records. In multivariate logistic regression modeling of social and technical factors, ease of use, usefulness, and attitudes towards use of EHR as determinants of the EHR acceptance, the following predictors were identified: use of a computer outside of the office for reading daily newspapers (p = 0.005), EHR providing a greater amount of valuable information (p = 0.007), improvement in the productivity by EHR use (p < 0.001), and a statement that using EHR is a good idea (p = 0.014). Overall the percentage of correct classifications in the model was 83.9%. Conclusion: In this research, determinants of the EHR acceptance were assessed in accordance with the TAM, providing an overall good model fit. Future research should attempt to add other constructs to the TAM in order to fully identify all determinants of physician acceptance of EHR in the complex environment of different health systems. © 2021 by the authors. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication How accurate are citations of frequently cited papers in biomedical literature?(2021) ;Pavlovic, Vedrana (57202093978) ;Weissgerber, Tracey (6506688349) ;Stanisavljevic, Dejana (23566969700) ;Pekmezovic, Tatjana (7003989932) ;Milicevic, Ognjen (57211159715) ;Lazovic, Jelena Milin (57023980700) ;Cirkovic, Andja (56120460600) ;Savic, Marko (57225215986) ;Rajovic, Nina (57218484684) ;Piperac, Pavle (57188729382) ;Djuric, Nemanja (57221762932) ;Madzarevic, Petar (57220067073) ;Dimitrijevic, Ana (57221766955) ;Randjelovic, Simona (57218484223) ;Nestorovic, Emilija (56090978800) ;Akinyombo, Remi (57221763608) ;Pavlovic, Andrija (57221760227) ;Ghamrawi, Ranine (57217382626) ;Garovic, Vesna (6603419874)Milic, Natasa (7003460927)Citations are an important, but often overlooked, part of every scientific paper. They allow the reader to trace the flow of evidence, serving as a gateway to relevant literature. Most scientists are aware of citations' errors, but few appreciate the prevalence of these problems. The purpose of the present study was to examine how often frequently cited papers in biomedical scientific literature are cited inaccurately. The study included an active participation of the first authors of included papers; to first-hand verify the citations accuracy. Findings from feasibility study, where we reviewed 1540 articles containing 2526 citations of 14 most cited articles in which the authors were affiliated with the Faculty of Medicine University of Belgrade, were further evaluated for external confirmation in an independent verification set of articles. Verification set included 4912 citations identified in 2995 articles that cited 13 most cited articles published by authors affiliated with the Mayo Clinic Division of Nephrology and Hypertension. A citation was defined as being accurate if the cited article supported or was in accordance with the statement by citing authors. At least one inaccurate citation was found in 11 and 15% of articles in the feasibility study and verification set, respectively, suggesting that inaccurate citations are common in biomedical literature. The most common problem was the citation of nonexistent findings (38.4%), followed by an incorrect interpretation of findings (15.4%). One-fifth of inaccurate citations were due to chains of inaccurate citations. Based on these findings, several actions to reduce citation inaccuracies have been proposed. © 2021 The Author(s). - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The burnout syndrome in medical academia: Psychometric properties of the Serbian version of the maslach burnout inventory—educators survey(2020) ;Vukmirovic, Marijana (57218484875) ;Rajovic, Nina (57218484684) ;Pavlovic, Vedrana (57202093978) ;Masic, Srdjan (57190441485) ;Mirkovic, Momcilo (37048783100) ;Tasic, Radica (57216548156) ;Randjelovic, Simona (57218484223) ;Mostic, Danka (57218484915) ;Velickovic, Igor (57218482857) ;Nestorovic, Emilija (56090978800) ;Milcanovic, Petar (57218483550) ;Stanisavljevic, Dejana (23566969700)Milic, Natasa (7003460927)The aim of this study was to assess the psychometric properties of the Maslach Burnout Inventory—Educators Survey (MBI-ES). The presence of burnout syndrome, its relationship with personality traits, intention to change career and work abroad were assessed in a cross-sectional multi-center trial conducted among educators at three medical faculties in the Western Balkans during 2019. Translation and cultural adaptation were made based on internationally accepted principles. Personality traits were assessed by the Big Five Plus Two questionnaire. In total, 246 medical faculty members, predominantly females (61%), were enrolled. The three-factor structure of the MBI-ES questionnaire (exhaustion, cynicism, and professional efficacy) was validated. Analysis of internal consistency yielded a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.785, indicating scale reliability. The majority of respondents (85.6%) reported moderate level of burnout. Aggressiveness, neuroticism, and negative valence were associated with emotional exhaustion and depersonalization, while extraversion, conscientiousness, openness, and positive valence correlated with personal accomplishment. Emotional exhaustion and depersonalization in a multivariate regression model were significantly associated with intentions to change career and work abroad (p < 0.05). The present study provided evidence for the appropriate metric properties of the Serbian version of MBI-ES. Presence of burnout syndrome, which was identified as a common problem in medical academia, and directly linked to personality traits, affected intention to career change and work abroad. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication The burnout syndrome in medical academia: Psychometric properties of the Serbian version of the maslach burnout inventory—educators survey(2020) ;Vukmirovic, Marijana (57218484875) ;Rajovic, Nina (57218484684) ;Pavlovic, Vedrana (57202093978) ;Masic, Srdjan (57190441485) ;Mirkovic, Momcilo (37048783100) ;Tasic, Radica (57216548156) ;Randjelovic, Simona (57218484223) ;Mostic, Danka (57218484915) ;Velickovic, Igor (57218482857) ;Nestorovic, Emilija (56090978800) ;Milcanovic, Petar (57218483550) ;Stanisavljevic, Dejana (23566969700)Milic, Natasa (7003460927)The aim of this study was to assess the psychometric properties of the Maslach Burnout Inventory—Educators Survey (MBI-ES). The presence of burnout syndrome, its relationship with personality traits, intention to change career and work abroad were assessed in a cross-sectional multi-center trial conducted among educators at three medical faculties in the Western Balkans during 2019. Translation and cultural adaptation were made based on internationally accepted principles. Personality traits were assessed by the Big Five Plus Two questionnaire. In total, 246 medical faculty members, predominantly females (61%), were enrolled. The three-factor structure of the MBI-ES questionnaire (exhaustion, cynicism, and professional efficacy) was validated. Analysis of internal consistency yielded a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.785, indicating scale reliability. The majority of respondents (85.6%) reported moderate level of burnout. Aggressiveness, neuroticism, and negative valence were associated with emotional exhaustion and depersonalization, while extraversion, conscientiousness, openness, and positive valence correlated with personal accomplishment. Emotional exhaustion and depersonalization in a multivariate regression model were significantly associated with intentions to change career and work abroad (p < 0.05). The present study provided evidence for the appropriate metric properties of the Serbian version of MBI-ES. Presence of burnout syndrome, which was identified as a common problem in medical academia, and directly linked to personality traits, affected intention to career change and work abroad. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
