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Benjamin W. Lamb

Researcher at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Publications -  101
Citations -  2613

Benjamin W. Lamb is an academic researcher from Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. The author has contributed to research in topics: Multidisciplinary approach & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 91 publications receiving 2059 citations. Previous affiliations of Benjamin W. Lamb include Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre & University of Cambridge.

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Quality of Care Management Decisions by Multidisciplinary Cancer Teams: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: Team/social factors affect management decisions by cancer MDTs, and inclusion of time to prepare for MDTs into team-members’ job plans, making team and leadership skills training available to team- members, and systematic input from nursing personnel would address some of the current shortcomings.
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Information Transfer and Communication in Surgery: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: A systematic review of published literature to gain a better understanding of interprofessional information transfer and communication in hospital setting in the field of surgical and anesthetic care found uses of standardized communication through checklist, proformas, and technology innovations have improved the ITC process with an effect on clinical and patient outcomes.
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Successful strategies in implementing a multidisciplinary team working in the care of patients with cancer: an overview and synthesis of the available literature

TL;DR: The aim of the literature review is to synthesize current scientific and clinical understanding on cancer MDTs and their organization to provide an up-to-date summary of the current knowledge that those planning or leading cancer services can use as a guide for service implementation or improvement.
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Teamwork and team performance in multidisciplinary cancer teams: development and evaluation of an observational assessment tool

TL;DR: Scientific observational metrics can be reliably used by medical and non-medical observers in cancer MDTs and provide part of a toolkit for team evaluation and enhancement.
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Improving decision making in multidisciplinary tumor boards: prospective longitudinal evaluation of a multicomponent intervention for 1,421 patients.

TL;DR: A multicomponent intervention designed to improve the multidisciplinary tumor board-delivered treatment's ability to reach treatment decisions is efficacious and applicable to MTBs and can improve decision making and expedite cancer care.