- UHRA Home
- Browsing by Author
Browsing by Author "Adeyemi, Shola"
Now showing items 1-10 of 10
-
The Analyses of Individual Patient Pathways : Investigating Regional Variation in COPD readmissions
Adeyemi, Shola; Demir, Eren; Chaussalet, Thierry J (Vilnius Gediminas Technical University Publishing House “Technika”, 2009-07-13)Regional variation for those treated for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has been studied amongst many public health issues. However, for those experiencing frequent readmissions were not considered. The ... -
Analysis of Variability in Neonatal Care Units : A Retrospective Analysis
Adeyemi, Shola; Demir, Eren; Chahed, Salma; Chaussalet, Thierry J (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2010)The number of babies needing neonatal care is increasing due mainly to technological and therapeutic advances. These advances have implied a decreasing neonatal mortality rate for low birth weight infants and also a falling ... -
A cautionary note on the association between meteorological parameters and COVID-19 pandemic
Adeyemi, Shola; Yakutcan, Usame; Adeoti, Adekunle O.; Demir, Eren (2020-08-11)Will the increasing temperature and humidity stop the spread of coronavirus, like seasonal patterns seen in viruses like influenza? In the authors’ opinion, weather has little or no part to play in bringing an end to the ... -
HIV-MSS: A user-friendly management support system for better planning of HIV care services
Demir, Eren; Adeyemi, Shola; Pascal Kengne, Andre; Kayode, Gbenga A.; Adeoti, Adekunle (2021-06-28)The advent of antiretroviral therapy (ART) has transformed HIV infection from a deadly disease to a manageable chronic condition. The life expectancy of people living with HIV has been prolonged dramatically. Therefore, ... -
Modelling length of stay and patient flows : Methodological case studies from the UK neonatal care services
Demir, Eren; Lebcir, Mohamed; Adeyemi, Shola (University of Hertfordshire, 2013-03-07)The number of babies needing neonatal care is increasing due mainly to technological and therapeutic advances. These advances have implied a decreasing neonatal mortality rate for low birth weight infants and also a falling ... -
Modelling length of stay and patient flows : methodological case studies from the UK neonatal care services
Demir, Eren; Lebcir, Mohamed; Adeyemi, Shola (2014-04-01)The number of babies needing neonatal care is increasing due mainly to technological and therapeutic advances. These advances have implied a decreasing neonatal mortality rate for low birth weight infants and also a falling ... -
Modelling the neonatal system: A joint analysis of length of stay and patient pathways
Adeyemi, Shola; Demir, Eren (2019-11-27)In the United Kingdom, one in seven babies require specialist neonatal care after birth, with a noticeable increase in demand. Coupled with budgeting constraints and lack of investment means that neonatal units are struggling. ... -
Profiling hospitals based on emergency readmission: A multilevel transition modelling approach
Demir, Eren; Chaussalet, Thierry; Adeyemi, Shola; Toffa, Sam (2012-11)Emergency readmission is seen as an important part of the United Kingdom government policy to improve the quality of care that patients receive. In this context, patients and the public have the right to know how well ... -
SmartHIV Manager: a web-based computer simulation system for better management of HIV services
Adeyemi, Shola; Demir, Eren; Yakutcan, Usame; Adeoti, Adekunle; Pascal Kengne, Andre; Gbenga Kayode, Ayodele; Aliyu, Ahmad; Idika, Nneoma; Isichei, Christian (2021-06-25)Background: Life-changing developments enabled people living with HIV/AIDS (human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) to live a relatively normal life like the general population. However, there is ... -
A statistical assessment of association between meteorological parameters and COVID-19 pandemic in 10 countries
Adeyemi, Shola; Yakutcan, Usame; Demir, Eren (2020-07-22)Background Eleven out of 13 published articles reported temperature and humidity as factors that could reduce the daily confirmed COVID-19 cases among many other findings. However, there are significant caveats, related ...