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Tayana Soukup

Researcher at King's College London

Publications -  47
Citations -  774

Tayana Soukup is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Multidisciplinary approach. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 33 publications receiving 453 citations. Previous affiliations of Tayana Soukup include London South Bank University & Imperial College London.

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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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Aviation and healthcare: a comparative review with implications for patient safety

TL;DR: It is recommended that healthcare should emulate aviation in its resourcing of staff who specialise in human factors and related psychological aspects of patient safety and staff wellbeing.
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The anatomy of clinical decision-making in multidisciplinary cancer meetings: A cross-sectional observational study of teams in a natural context.

TL;DR: The decision-making process in cancer meetings is driven by 4 underlying factors representing the complete patient profile and contributions to case review by all core disciplines, which relates to team ability to reach a decision.
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Development of a theoretical framework of factors affecting patient safety incident reporting: a theoretical review of the literature.

TL;DR: A theoretical framework, encompassing factors that act as barriers and enablers of incident reporting, was developed and found a wide range of factors contributing to engagement in incident reporting exist.
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Predictors of Treatment Decisions in Multidisciplinary Oncology Meetings: A Quantitative Observational Study

TL;DR: Multidisciplinary inputs into case reviews and patient psychosocial information stimulate decision making, thereby reinforcing the role of MTBs in cancer care in processing such information.