Imperial College London

ProfessorNickSevdalis

Faculty of MedicineDepartment of Surgery & Cancer

Visiting Professor
 
 
 
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Contact

 

+44 (0)20 7594 3431n.sevdalis Website

 
 
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Location

 

507, Wright Fleming BNorfolk PlaceSt Mary's Campus

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Summary

 

Publications

Publication Type
Year
to

266 results found

Davis R, Sevdalis N, Vincent C, 2008, The role of the HBM and the TPB in predicting patient involvement in safety, PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH, Vol: 23, Pages: 99-99, ISSN: 0887-0446

Journal article

Arora S, Sevdalis N, 2008, HOSPEX and concepts of simulation., J R Army Med Corps, Vol: 154, Pages: 202-205, ISSN: 0035-8665

A conceptual three-level framework is presented for understanding the aims, scope and potential outcomes of simulation in healthcare contexts. At the first level, micro-simulation aims at honing basic technical skills of individual clinicians. At the second level, meso-simulation aims to train clinicians to work more effectively and efficiently as part of a clinical team. At the third level, macro-simulation aims toassess organisational fitness fo r purpose at large scale. We discuss HOSPEX as an exemplar macro-simulation and argue for needs- and evidence-based implementation of simulation-based training at micro, meso and macro levels.

Journal article

Smith A, Sevdalis N, Koutantji M, Vincent Cet al., 2008, A systematic review of patient satisfaction with care in gastrointestinal cancer patients, PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH, Vol: 23, Pages: 239-239, ISSN: 0887-0446

Journal article

Sevdalis N, Forrest D, Undre S, Darzi A, Vincent Cet al., 2008, Annoyances, disruptions, and interruptions in surgery: The Disruptions in Surgery Index (DiSI), WORLD JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Vol: 32, Pages: 1643-1650, ISSN: 0364-2313

Journal article

Sevdalis N, Davis R, Koutantji M, Undre S, Darzi A, Vincent CAet al., 2008, Reliability of a revised NOTECHS scale for use in surgical teams, AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Vol: 196, Pages: 184-190, ISSN: 0002-9610

Journal article

Jacklin R, Sevdalis N, Darzi A, Vincent Cet al., 2008, Mapping surgical practice decision making: an interview study to evaluate decisions in surgical care, AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Vol: 195, Pages: 689-696, ISSN: 0002-9610

Journal article

Sevdalis N, Jacklin R, 2008, Interaction effects and subgroup analyses in clinical trials: More than meets the eye?, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, Vol: in press

Journal article

Sevdalis N, Jacklin R, 2008, Opening the "Black box" of surgeons' risk estimation: From intuition to quantitative modeling, WORLD JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Vol: 32, Pages: 324-325, ISSN: 0364-2313

Journal article

Jacklin R, Sevdalis N, Harries C, Darzi A, Vincent Cet al., 2008, Judgment analysis: a method for quantitative evaluation of trainee surgeons' judgments of surgical risk, AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Vol: 195, Pages: 183-188, ISSN: 0002-9610

Journal article

Arora S, Sevdalis N, Nestel D, Woloshynowych M, Tierney T, Kneebone Ret al., 2008, Managing Intra-operative stress: What do surgeons want from a crisis training programme?, American Journal Surgery (in press)

Journal article

Davis RE, Jacklin R, Sevdalis N, Vincent CAet al., 2007, Patient involvement in patient safety: what factors influence patient participation and engagement?, Health Expect, Vol: 10, Pages: 259-267, ISSN: 1369-6513

BACKGROUND: Patients can play an important role in improving patient safety by becoming actively involved in their health care. However, there is a paucity of empirical data on the extent to which patients take on such a role. In order to encourage patient participation in patient safety we first need to assess the full range of factors that may be implicated in such involvement. OBJECTIVE: To delineate factors that could affect the participation of the patient in quality and safety issues in their health care. METHOD: Literature review of patient involvement in health care, drawing from direct evidence (specifically from the safety context) and indirect evidence (extrapolated from treatment decision-making research and the wider patient involvement in health care literature); synthesis and conceptual framework developed, illustrating the known and putative factors that could affect the participation of the patient in safety issues in their health care. MAIN RESULTS: Five categories of factors emerged that could affect patient involvement in safety: patient-related (e.g. patients' demographic characteristics), illness-related (e.g. illness severity), health-care professional-related (e.g. health care professionals' knowledge and beliefs), health care setting-related (e.g. primary or secondary care), and task-related (e.g. whether the required patient safety behaviour challenges clinicians' clinical abilities). CONCLUSION: The potential for engaging patients in patient safety is considerable but further research is needed to examine the influences on patient involvement, the limits and the possible dangers. Patients can act as 'safety buffers' during their care but the responsibility for their safety must remain with the health care professionals.

Journal article

Undre S, Koutantji M, Sevdalis N, Gautama S, Selvapatt N, Williams S, Sains P, McCulloch P, Darzi A, Vincent Cet al., 2007, Multidisciplinary crisis simulations: The way forward for training surgical teams, WORLD JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Vol: 31, Pages: 1843-1853, ISSN: 0364-2313

Journal article

Undre S, Sevdalis N, Healey AN, Darzi SA, Vincent CAet al., 2007, Observational teamwork assessment for surgery (OTAS): Refinement and application in urological surgery, WORLD JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Vol: 31, Pages: 1373-1381, ISSN: 0364-2313

Journal article

Sevdalis N, Healey AN, Vincent CA, 2007, Distracting communications in the operating theatre, JOURNAL OF EVALUATION IN CLINICAL PRACTICE, Vol: 13, Pages: 390-394, ISSN: 1356-1294

Journal article

Sevdalis N, Petrides KV, Harvey N, 2007, Trait emotional intelligence and decision-related emotions, PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, Vol: 42, Pages: 1347-1358, ISSN: 0191-8869

Journal article

Healey AN, Sevdalis N, Vincent CA, 2007, Measuring intra-operative interference from distraction and interruption observed in the operating theatre, ERGONOMICS, Vol: 49, Pages: 589-604, ISSN: 0014-0139

Journal article

Undre S, Sevdalis N, 2007, Teamworking in the operating theatre, Publisher: NHS Evidence

Working paper

Nick Sevdalis, Nigel Harvey, 2007, Biased forecasting of post-decisional affect, Psychological Science, Vol: in press

Journal article

Sevdalis N, Harvey N, Yip M, 2006, Regret triggers inaction inertia - but which regret and how?, BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, Vol: 45, Pages: 839-853, ISSN: 0144-6665

Journal article

Healey AN, Undre S, Sevdalis N, Koutantji M, Vincent CAet al., 2006, The complexity of measuring interprofessional teamwork in the operating theatre., J Interprof Care, Vol: 20, Pages: 485-495, ISSN: 1356-1820

Surgery depends on interprofessional teamwork, which is becoming increasingly specialized. If surgery is to become a highly reliable system, it must adapt and professionals must learn from, and share, tested models of interprofessional teamwork. Trainers also need valid measures of teamwork to assess individual and team performance. However, measurement and assessment of interprofessional teamwork is lacking and interprofessional team training is scarce in the surgical domain. This paper addresses the complexity of measuring interprofessional teamwork in the operating theatre. It focuses mainly on the design and properties of observational assessment tools. The report and analysis serves to inform the researcher or clinician of the issues to consider when designing or choosing from alternative measures of team performance for training or assessment.

Journal article

Sevdalis N, Harvey N, 2006, Predicting preferences: a neglected aspect of shared decision-making, HEALTH EXPECTATIONS, Vol: 9, Pages: 245-251, ISSN: 1369-6513

Journal article

Sevdalis N, Harvey N, 2006, Determinants of willingness to pay in separate and joint evaluations of options: Context matters, JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC PSYCHOLOGY, Vol: 27, Pages: 377-385, ISSN: 0167-4870

Journal article

Sevdalis N, Kokkinaki F, 2006, The differential effect of realistic and unrealistic counterfactual thinking on regret, ACTA PSYCHOLOGICA, Vol: 122, Pages: 111-128, ISSN: 0001-6918

Journal article

Sevdalis N, 2006, Evaluating research methods in psychology: A case study approach, BRITISH JOURNAL OF MATHEMATICAL & STATISTICAL PSYCHOLOGY, Vol: 59, Pages: 215-216, ISSN: 0007-1102

Journal article

Undre S, Sevdalis N, Healey AN, Darzi SA, Vincent CAet al., 2006, Teamwork in the operating theatre: cohesion or confusion?, JOURNAL OF EVALUATION IN CLINICAL PRACTICE, Vol: 12, Pages: 182-189, ISSN: 1356-1294

Journal article

Sevdalis N, McCulloch P, 2006, Teaching evidence-based decision-making, SURGICAL CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, Vol: 86, Pages: 59-+, ISSN: 0039-6109

Journal article

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