Understand the process of adult learning and how it should impact medical education. High-Impact, Evidence-Based Education for Health Care Professionals.
Suchergebnisse
Suchergebnisse:
NICE is the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, an organisation that provides guidance and advice to improve health and social care in the UK. Learn how to get involved, access the latest news and guidance, and find out more about NICE's work and transformation plan.
- Conditions and Diseases
Browse guidance by topic. NICE Guidance; Browse guidance by...
- What We Do
Role and responsibilities of the National Institute of...
- NICE Guidance
Learn more about the guidance we produce. From technology...
- Lifestyle and Wellbeing
NICE Guidance; Browse guidance by topic. Lifestyle and...
- Meetings in Public
The indicator advisory committee develops indicators that...
- Who We Are
We are the experts in evidence-based best practice and value...
- Register as a Stakeholder
Guidelines, quality standards and indicators. Our guidelines...
- Conditions and Diseases
It was set up as the National Institute for Clinical Excellence in 1999, and on 1 April 2005 joined with the Health Development Agency to become the new National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (still abbreviated as NICE).
Es wurde zunächst im Jahr 1999 als das National Institute for Clinical Excellence gegründet und am 1. April 2005 mit der Health Development Agency zusammengelegt, zunächst als National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). [2] [3] 2013 wurde das NICE – entsprechend seiner neuen Verantwortung für soziale Betreuung ...
NICE is an independent organisation that helps practitioners and commissioners get the best care to patients, fast, while ensuring value for the taxpayer. It produces guidance, assesses evidence, develops recommendations and supports uptake of best practice for health, public health and social care.
NICE is a public body that provides guidance and advice to improve health and social care in the UK. It covers topics such as NHS planning, digital mental health, social care quality standards, and annual reports.
Launched as The National Institute for Clinical Excellence in April 1999 by the then health secretary Frank Dobson, NICE got off to a rapid and controversial start. Sir Michael Rawlins was appointed NICE's first chairman and Sir Andrew Dillon as the Institute's first chief executive.