Kaiser Permanente National Total Joint Replacement Registry: aligning operations with information technology. (1/8)

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Which radiographic parameters are linked to failure of a dynamic spinal implant? (2/8)

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The role of human factors in the design and development of an insulin pump. (3/8)

This article discusses human factors (HF) processes and how they are applied during the development of a medical device to minimize the risk that the user interface design could lead to patient errors, adverse events, and product recalls. This process is best defined as "prevention through design." The HF design process is exemplified by three distinct phases: (1) preliminary analysis, (2) formative design evaluation and modification, and (3) design validation. Additional benefits of employing HF principles during medical device development are briefly reviewed, including reduced patient risk by eliminating design flaws, increased patient adherence through the reduction in the complexity of therapeutic regimes, and reduced likelihood for product recalls.  (+info)

Fluoroscopic screening of asymptomatic patients implanted with the recalled Riata lead family. (4/8)

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Diagnostic and therapeutic direct peroral cholangioscopy using an intraductal anchoring balloon. (5/8)

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How does medical device regulation perform in the United States and the European union? A systematic review. (6/8)

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The withdrawn ASR THA and hip resurfacing systems: how have our patients fared over 1 to 6 years? (7/8)

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Increasing lead burden correlates with externalized cables during systematic fluoroscopic screening of Riata leads. (8/8)

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