Academic literature on the topic 'Reconciliation System'

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Journal articles on the topic "Reconciliation System"

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Jones, Bruce M., Emily Plauche, Susan E. Smith, and Christopher M. Bland. "57. Evaluating the Utility of a Penicillin Allergy Reconciliation Program within an Infectious Diseases Consult Population in a Community Health System." Open Forum Infectious Diseases 7, Supplement_1 (2020): S49—S50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa439.102.

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Abstract Background Penicillin allergy reconciliation is an important aspect of antimicrobial stewardship with ~10% of the population reporting a penicillin allergy. Our facility utilizes a Penicillin Allergy Reconciliation Program (PARP) led by an Infectious Diseases (ID) Pharmacist and pharmacy students to identify patients with penicillin allergies to reconcile and intervene when necessary. Information is collected by interview, electronic medical record (EMR) review, prescription outpatient fill history. This study evaluated reconciliations with and without a PARP in patients in a community health system. Methods This was a retrospective study that compared reconciliations performed on adult patients admitted at least once in 2019 with a self-reported penicillin allergy and ID physician consult at a hospital with a PARP (Institution 1) and one without a formal evaluation and intervention program (Institution 2) within the same community health system with same ID physicians. The primary outcome was documented reconciliation of a patient’s penicillin allergy during an inpatient visit in 2019. Reconciliation was defined as an edit or clarification (updating the severity, reaction, or comments section, as well as deleting) to a patient’s penicillin allergy in the EMR. The secondary outcome evaluated the percentage of total and ID consult patients with a penicillin allergy. Results There were 245 patients who met criteria and were included in the study, 113 from Institution 1 and 132 from Institution 2. For the primary outcome, there were 82 (72.6%) reconciliations at Institution 1 and 15 (11.4%) reconciliations at Institution 2 (p < 0.001). Interventions at Institution 1 and 2 resulted in 74 EMR updates and 8 removals and 14 EMR updates and 1 removal, respectively. Reconciliation was performed on the same visit as the ID consult in 59/82 patients (72%) at Institution 1 and 11/15 patients (73.3%) at Institution 2. All reconciliations at Institution 2 were made by pharmacist (10) or nurses (5). For the secondary outcome, 10.9% of patients with an ID consult and 12.6% of all patients admitted in 2019 had a penicillin allergy (p=0.027). Conclusion A PARP led by an ID pharmacist and students was an effective method to perform penicillin allergy reconciliations, even in the presence of active ID consultation. Disclosures Bruce M. Jones, PharmD, BCPS, ALK-Abello (Research Grant or Support)Allergan/Abbvie (Speaker’s Bureau) Christopher M. Bland, PharMD, FCCP, FIDSA, BCPS, ALK Abello, Inc. (Grant/Research Support)Biomerieux (Consultant)Merck (Consultant, Grant/Research Support, Advisor or Review Panel member, Speaker’s Bureau)Tetraphase (Speaker’s Bureau)
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Stauffer, Rebecca L., and Abigail Yancey. "Impact of a Pharmacy-Driven Transitions of Care Medication Reconciliation Following Hospitalization." Journal of Pharmacy Technology 36, no. 2 (2020): 68–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/8755122519900507.

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Background: Medication changes are common after hospitalizations, and medication reconciliations are one tool to help identify potential medication discrepancies. Objective: To determine the impact of a pharmacy-driven medication reconciliation service on number of medication discrepancies identified. Methods: This was a retrospective cohort, chart-review study conducted at an internal medicine outpatient clinic. Patients at least 18 years of age were eligible for inclusion if they presented for a hospital follow-up appointment within 14 days of discharge between September 1, 2015, and May 31, 2016, from a system hospital. The 2 cohorts were patients with a pharmacist-completed medication reconciliation note written in the electronic health record on the date of their hospital follow-up appointment and those without. The primary outcome was number of medication discrepancies identified during medication reconciliation. Secondary outcomes included types of discrepancies, 30-day hospital readmission, and 30-day emergency department visits. This study was approved by the facility institutional review board. Results: Seventy-nine patients were included, and 38 patients had a pharmacist-completed medication reconciliation (48%). A total of 64 medication discrepancies were identified in 26 patients; of these, 49 discrepancies were resolved during the appointment (77%). There was an average of 2.46 medication discrepancies (±2.34) per patient. The most common discrepancy was missing medications. Thirty-day readmission rate was 5.3% in the intervention group and 19.5% in the control group ( P = .054). Conclusions: A pharmacist-completed medication reconciliation identified many medication discrepancies that were then resolved. From this study, pharmacist-led medication reconciliations following hospital discharge appear valuable.
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Maier, Mark W. "System and software architecture reconciliation." Systems Engineering 9, no. 2 (2006): 146–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/sys.20050.

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Li, Qiong, Dan Le, Haokun Mao, Xiamu Niu, Tian Liu, and Hong Guo. "Study on error reconciliation in quantum key distribution." Quantum Information and Computation 14, no. 13&14 (2014): 1117–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.26421/qic14.13-14-5.

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As one of the most important procedure in quantum key distribution system, the error reconciliation algorithm has drew many attentions. However, studies on the error reconciliation algorithm mainly focuses on the reconciliation efficiency. Since the ultimate goal of study on the error reconciliation is to find the most suitable algorithm for a quantum key distribution system and maximize the throughput rate of the whole system, the indicator of reconciliation efficiency is not full-scale enough to evaluate an error reconciliation algorithm. In this paper we propose a new evaluation scheme, including four direct indicators and one composite indicator to solve the problem. Following the new scheme, seven representative error reconciliation algorithms are simulated and compared thoroughly, i.e. BBBSS, the original Cascade and two improved Cascade algorithms, Winnow, and two LDPC based algorithms. Our works are very beneficial to the evaluation, comparison, selection and optimization of error reconciliation algorithms for a practical quantum key distribution system.
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YIMER, Benyam Lake. "ETHIOPIA: ABEGAR INDIGENOUS CONFLICT RESOLUTION SYSTEM – COMMUNITY BASED RECONCILIATION." Conflict Studies Quarterly 36 (July 5, 2021): 54–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.24193/csq.36.4.

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Reconciliation is inevitable for restoring harmony among a society and making peaceful interaction between those who are at variance. The main objective of this study is to investigate the Abegar indigenous conflict resolution system based on community reconciliation in Haberu Woreda, North Wollo. This study employs a qualitative research design and descriptive nature. The study collected primary data from different informants by employing such qualitative data collection techniques as the interview, focus group discussions and observation. The finding of the study revealed that Abegars indigenous conflict resolution system aims at the restoration of order and harmony of the community. The types of conflicts presented and resolved in the community are inter-personal, homicide, inter-group in nature which stemmed from abduction of girls and women, violation of social values, theft, conflict over claims of a girl, competition over ownership of land, and drunkenness. The findings further show that family reconciliation, blood reconciliation (demmaderk) and compensation performance are the major community reconciliation procedures (methods) of conflict management used by the studied community depending on the nature and types of conflicts. Moreover, the ritual ceremony has symbolic and practical significance to established trust between conflicting parties that their relationship is restored. Keywords: Conflict Resolution, Indigenous, Reconciliation, Community
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Hernandez, Tamara, Daniela Barisano, Chelsea Welsh, Joseph Rosano, and Talia Papiro. "Development of a Discharge Counseling and Medication Reconciliation Process for Pediatric Patients Within a Large, Academic Health System." Journal of Pediatric Pharmacology and Therapeutics 29, no. 1 (2024): 76–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.5863/1551-6776-29.1.76.

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OBJECTIVE This study aims to characterize the impact of a pharmacist-driven discharge medication reconciliation and counseling program targeting high-risk pediatric patients to mitigate barriers in transitions of care. METHODS This was a single-center quality improvement initiative including high-risk pediatric patients within a large academic medical center. Pharmacy, medical, and information technology team members developed a scoring system to identify patients at high risk of hospital readmission that resulted in a trigger tool built within the electronic medical record (EMR). Pharmacy workflow, the EMR documentation, and staff training were implemented. The primary end point was the number of high-risk patients with complete medication reconciliation and/or discharge counseling performed during the first 2 months after implementation. The secondary end points included quantification and qualification of the interventions conducted by a pharmacist. RESULTS Pediatric clinical pharmacists conducted discharge medication reconciliation and/or counseling for 60 patients during the first 2 months after implementation. There were 65 interventions performed, including 60 discharge medication reconciliations and 5 discharge counseling sessions. Of these interventions, 22 were recommendations on appropriate medication dosing and frequency (37%), 12 on duration of therapy (20%), and 8 were medication additions (13%). There were 6 interventions on adherence assistance (10%), 6 involved selection of medication formulation (10%), 3 involved medication discontinuation (5%), 2 involved appropriate therapy selection (3%), and 1 involved medication stability (1%). All interventions were accepted and implemented by the prescribing providers. CONCLUSIONS Pharmacist-driven discharge medication reconciliation and counseling programs targeting pediatric high-risk population might be an effective tool to mitigate gaps in transitions of care.
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Appiah-Anane, Sam. "Medicines reconciliation of biologics on a primary care clinical system." Journal of Prescribing Practice 3, no. 7 (2021): 274–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/jprp.2021.3.7.274.

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With increasing number of biologics gaining approval from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence for a wide variety of both cancer and non-cancer clinical indications in secondary care, the need for accurate medicines reconciliation in primary care also increases. The risk of patient harm from incomplete medicines reconciliation is a consideration, particularly when patient data is transferred from a secondary care setting to a primary care setting. As part of a prescribing quality improvement project, a list of biologics prescribed by secondary care providers were reconciled on to patients' primary care clinical systems (EMIS) by clinical pharmacists and pharmacy technicians at a Clinical Commissioning Groups. Patients were identified by cross-referencing high cost drug reports with clinical diagnostic codes (a mixture of READ codes and SNOMED-CT terms) on primary care clinical systems. In total, 192 medicines were reconciled safely on the relevant patients' notes across 16 different GP practices A further 81 medicines had already been reconciled at the start of the quality improvement project. The purpose of this article is three-fold; to expand the awareness of biologics in the context of medicines optimisation in the primary care arena, to discuss medicines reconciliations of biologics in primary care, including the role(s) of pharmacy professionals, and to discuss the wider implications of prescribing biologics in the light of ethical considerations such as veganism.
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Groeschen, Heather M. "Electronic system improves medication reconciliation rates." American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy 64, no. 18 (2007): 1894. http://dx.doi.org/10.2146/news070083.

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Gorecki, P., and J. Tiuryn. "URec: a system for unrooted reconciliation." Bioinformatics 23, no. 4 (2006): 511–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btl634.

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杨, 薇. "Research on Civil Execution Reconciliation System." Open Journal of Legal Science 11, no. 03 (2023): 1920–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.12677/ojls.2023.113273.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Reconciliation System"

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Galbraith, Lindsay. "Making space for reconciliation in Canada's planning system." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2014. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/246612.

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Early in 2012, the Minister of Natural Resources Joe Oliver released an open letter to Canadians where he identified 'an urgent matter of Canada's national interest': 'radical groups' were 'threaten[ing] to hijack [Canada's] regulatory system' for major projects and argued they should 'be accomplished in a quicker and more streamlined fashion'. This came on the eve of the first day of oral hearings for the public review into the controversial Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline and tanker project that would allow for oil sands from Alberta to access outside markets other than the United States. A few months later, Canada's environmental decision-making process was dramatically reformed, resulting in a significant outcry across the country over the likely effects on environmental oversight and Aboriginal rights. In Haida Gwaii, a series of islands off of the north coast of British Columbia (BC) around which the proposed tanker traffic would navigate, a process of reconciliation is in its early stages. The forestry sector is now subject to a collaborative provincial and Haida (First) Nation planning and decision process and a Haida-owned company is the biggest tenure holder and forestry sector employer. However, the Government of Canada has refused to participate in this reconciliation process in any meaningful way. It has, instead, encountered the Haida Nation through the court-like environmental review process for the proposed Enbridge project, the very same process that has been used to justify the dramatic environmental planning reforms. This research constructs a framework for tracing the spatial and institutional dynamics of the reconciliation process in planning. A significant amount of the Crown's approach to reconciliation relies upon the consultation that takes place within and alongside planning and regulatory decision making for natural resource developments. While the process does not, in itself, lead to any meaningful engagement over reconciliation, a central research question is: What opportunities might exist for reconciliation to take place in planning? And, how do these opportunities change? Contributing to the Indigenous planning literature, this dissertation examines some of the discursive and institutional factors that led to (a) the collaborative planning taking place on Haida Gwaii today and (b) the 2012 federal planning reforms. For each case, the opportunities available in planning for modifying the dominant view of reconciliation are considered. The dissertation begins with an overview of the very initial discussions on reconciliation between the Haida Nation and the Province of BC. It is argued that this move was facilitated by the Haida Nation shifting their concerns to various venues that were more or less receptive to their interests: the courts, a road blockade, collaborative planning, and bargaining. On the other hand, Canada has attempted to regain control by actively modifying the venues available to the Haida Nation in ways that excluded them or moved them to a venue that was less receptive to their concerns. It is reasoned that while planning spaces operate in ways that tend to be colonial, certain conditions and mechanisms are available in these systems that can be used to open up (perceived) opportunities for changing the way reconciliation is implemented across this system. These spaces reveal information about Indigenous-state power relations that are usually not observable until a conflict arises, at which point analysts may observe how actors respond to these perceived opportunities. Evidence is collected from numerous sources. Interviews with key informants, observation, and policy document review composed the bulk of the data collection for both cases. Four days of oral hearings in Haida Gwaii were observed in 2012, offering a window into the encounter between the Haida and Canada just as a streamlined environmental review process was being developed and implemented. In contrasting the two cases, this research finds that planning is used both to control development and as an opportunity to engage with the Crown over the long-standing dispute about overlapping title to and, thus, jurisdiction over Haida Gwaii. The process by which one use prevails over another is the central research problem; indeed, there remains an important disconnect between Indigenous political actors and the Crown (and, in some examples, industry) on how environmental planning institutions ought to be used. This tension is present within a planning venue and across the planning system, opening up potential opportunities, such as those used by the Haida Nation to regain control over Haida Gwaii, or closing down these opportunities. For these reasons, planning is one of the most useful arenas for influencing and for understanding the politics of reconciliation in Canada.
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Godfrey, Mark. "Reconciliation and estimation for a short range quantum cryptography system." Thesis, University of Bristol, 2010. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.654561.

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The University of Bristol has been developing a free-space, low cost, test-bed quantum cryptography system for the past five years, and the work in this thesis is 'concerned with the algorithms and protocols used in this system. The use scenario is that a hand-held, Alice, device can be used in conjunction with a fixed terminal, Bob, to expand an existing store of shared secret key bits between the two parties. This requires that both devices are compact and low-cost, but with the hand-held Alice device being more so, as there will be a high of ratio of these to Bob devices. To both satisfy the cost constraint and allow rapid prototyping, the physical setup uses off-the-shelf optical and electrical components. The first part· of the work in this thesis analyses the security and performance implications of implementation imperfections. In order to produce a secret key string, novel data processing and reconciliation algorithms are described, optimisation for the scenario where the Alice device has less computational power than that of Bob. Specifically, clock-period recovery, elimination of the background noise by temporal gating, and synchronisation, with low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes being used for the error correction ·stage. In light of recent results on the security of quantum cryptography systems, estimates are calculated that show that the hardware needs to be further improved in order to expand the key store in a convenient period of time. Several improved models are simulated that explore the modifications required to bring the key expansion times into an acceptable range.
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Polesnak, Stephanie M. "Budgetary and programmatic fluctuations during the system development and demonstration phase a case study of the Marine Corps H-1 Upgrade Program /." Monterey, Calif. : Naval Postgraduate School, 2007. http://bosun.nps.edu/uhtbin/hyperion-image.exe/07Dec%5FPolesnak%5FMBA.pdf.

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"Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Business Administration from the Naval Postgraduate School, December 2007."<br>Advisor(s): Jones, Lawrence ; Petross, Diana. "December 2007." "MBA professional report"--Cover. Description based on title screen as viewed on January 10, 2008. Includes bibliographical references (p. 61-63). Also available in print.
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Soares, João Paulo da Conceição. "FEW phone file system." Master's thesis, FCT - UNL, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10362/2229.

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Trabalho apresentado no âmbito do Mestrado em Engenharia Informática, como requisito parcial para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia Informática<br>The evolution of mobile phones has made these devices more than just simple mobile communication devices. Current mobile phones include such features as built-in digital cameras, the ability to play and record multimedia contents and also the possibility of playing games. Most of these devices have support for Java developed applications, as well as multiple wireless technologies (e.g. GSM/GPRS, UMTS, Bluetooth, and Wi-Fi). All these features have been made possible due to technological evolution that led to the improvement of computational power, storage capacity, and communication capabilities of these devices. This thesis presents a distributed data management system, based on optimistic replication,named FEW Phone File System. This system takes advantage of the storage capacity and wireless communication capabilities of current mobile phones, by allowing users to carry their personal data “in” their mobile phones, and to access it in any workstation, as if they were files in the local file system. The FEW Phone File System is based on a hybrid architecture that merges the client/server model with peer-to-peer replication, that relies on periodic reconciliation to maintain consistency between replicas. The system’s server side runs on the mobile phone, and the client on a workstation. The communication between the client and the server can be supported by one of multiple network technologies, allowing the FEW Phone File System to dynamically adapt to the available network connectivity. The presented system addresses the mobile phone’s storage and power limitations by allowing multimedia contents to be adapted to the device’s specifications, thus reducing the volume of data transferred to the mobile phone, allowing for more user’s data to be stored. The FEW Phone File System also integrates mechanisms that maintain information about the existence of other copies of the stored files (e.g. WWW), avoiding the transfer of those files from the mobile device whenever accessing those copies is advantageous. Due to the increasing number of on-line storage resources (e.g. CVS/SVN, Picasa), this approach allows for those resources to be used by the FEW Phone File System to obtain the stored copies of the user’s files.
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Li, Si Xu. "Improvement of criminal reconciliation system in China :Reference from the restorative justice practice in Taiwan." Thesis, University of Macau, 2018. http://umaclib3.umac.mo/record=b3953495.

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Burn, Geoffrey Livingston. "Land and reconciliation in Australia : a theological approach." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10036/117230.

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This thesis is a work of Christian theology. Its purpose is twofold: firstly to develop an adequate understanding of reconciliation at the level of peoples and nations; and secondly to make a practical contribution to resolving the problems in Australia for the welfare of all the peoples, and of the land itself. The history of the relationships between the Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples in Australia has left many problems, and no matter what the non-Indigenous people try to do, the Indigenous peoples of Australia continue to experience themselves as being in a state of siege. Trying to understand what is happening, and what can be done to resolve the problems for the peoples of Australia and the land, have been the implicit drivers for the theological development in this thesis. This thesis argues that the present generation in any trans-generational dispute is likely to continue to sin in ways that are shaped by the sins of the past, which explains why Indigenous peoples in Australia find themselves in a stage of siege, even when the non-Indigenous peoples are trying to pursue policies which they believe are for the welfare of all. The only way to resolve this is for the peoples of Australia to seek reconciliation. In particular, the non-Indigenous peoples need to repent, both of their own sins, and the sins of their forebears. Reconciliation processes have become part of the international political landscape. However, there are real concerns about the justice of pursuing reconciliation. An important part of the theological development of this thesis is therefore to show that pursuing reconciliation establishes justice. It is shown that the nature of justice, and of repentance, can only be established by pursuing reconciliation. Reconciliation is possible because God has made it possible, and is working in the world to bring reconciliation. Because land is an essential part of Indigenous identity in Australia, the history of land in court cases and legislation in Australia over the past half century forms an important case study in this work. It is shown that, although there was significant repentance within the non-Indigenous legal system in Australia, the degree of repentance available through that legal system is inherently limited, and so a more radical approach is needed in order to seek reconciliation in Australia. A final chapter considers what the non-Indigenous people of Australia need to do in order to repent.
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Lin, TsungPo. "An adaptive modeling and simulation environment for combined-cycle data reconciliation and degradation estimation." Diss., Atlanta, Ga. : Georgia Institute of Technology, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/24819.

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Thesis (Ph.D.)--Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2008.<br>Committee Chair: Dimitri Mavris; Committee Member: Erwing Calleros; Committee Member: Hongmei Chen; Committee Member: Mark Waters; Committee Member: Vitali Volovoi.
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Almanasreh, Enas. "Standardizing and improving medication reconciliation implementation strategies by enhancing the consistency in the classification of medication discrepancies." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/18736.

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Medication discrepancies frequently occur at transitions of care and can result in adverse drug events (ADEs) that may adversely impact patient safety, quality of care, and resources utilization. Medication reconciliation is an essential component of medication safety. The ultimate goal of medication reconciliation is to prevent ADEs related to medication discrepancies at all transitions of care, for all patients, by ensuring accurate and complete medication information transfer across various care settings. However, this process is hampered by the complexity, heterogeneity, and lack of standardised method for quantifying the outcomes of the medication reconciliation process. The rationale of this thesis includes conceptual and practical frameworks. These are standardisation and consistent measures (the taxonomy), and improvement strategies. Accordingly, we suggest that in order to monitor and measure changes that are associated with the implementation of medication reconciliation strategies, standardisation of medication discrepancy nomenclature will improve optimizing measurements and outcomes of medication reconciliation; and therefore, the overall aim of this thesis was to develop and validate a new taxonomy for medication discrepancies to enhance the consistency in the identification and classification of discrepancies, as a critical step in the medication reconciliation process. Findings from a systematic literature review showed significant inconsistencies in reporting, measuring and classifying medication discrepancies and the lack of a well-designed tool to evaluate medication reconciliation outcomes. Therefore, a new taxonomy of medication discrepancies was developed and tested for its content validity, reliability and usability. Additionally, four operational definitions (medication reconciliation, unintentional medication discrepancy, transition of care, and best possible medication list) and instructions were formulated and tested. The second part of this thesis demonstrated that the overall average content validity index (Ave-CVI) of the entire taxonomy was 0.93 and inter-rater reliability was 0.67 (multirater κfree), indicating substantial agreement. In addition, an excellent internal consistency of the taxonomy was established (Kuder–Richardson Formula 20 (KR-20) =0.92). The medication discrepancy taxonomy (MedTax) consists of 12 main types and 28 sub-types of discrepancies that have been arranged in an open hierarchy structure. The usability and test-retest study indicated that the new taxonomy (MedTax) performs as intended, and it is well utilised by the nurses and pharmacists groups. Overall, the (MedTax) provides a valid and reliable approach for various healthcare professionals to be used in different care settings to classify medication discrepancies and to fill an essential void in global endeavors to reinforce standardisation of medication reconciliation practices and to improve medication safety across transitions of care. Further research should be undertaken to investigate the usability and applicability of the tool in clinical practice.
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Davis, Christine S. "A future with hope the social construction of hope, help, and dialogic reconciliation in a community children's mental health system of care /." [Tampa, Fla.] : University of South Florida, 2005. http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/etd/SFE0001040.

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Wahab, Abdul S. "The Sudanese Indigenous Model for Conflict Resolution: A case study to examine the relevancy and the applicability of the Judiyya model in restoring peace within the ethnic tribal communities of the Sudan." Diss., NSUWorks, 2018. https://nsuworks.nova.edu/shss_dcar_etd/87.

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This qualitative research case study explored the indigenous model of conflict resolution known as the “Judiyya,” in the South Darfur State, Sudan. The purpose of the study has been to understand the principles and practices of the Judiyya in maintaining peace among Darfuri tribal communities. Judiyya is a community-based, human-centered model that employs restorative and transformative principles in conflict resolution. The literature review provided context for a research project that addressed the following questions: What is the role of the Judiyya in the current situation? How does the model work? What are its decision-making processes? How does the Judiyya model relate to the International Human Rights Standards? The primary data sources include face-to-face interviews, researcher observations, and a review of document collections and archival records. Research findings explore five emergent themes: Religion or belief system, Elderly leadership, Trust, Effectiveness, and Legitimacy. These explain the model’s process and practices and offer to policymakers some new ideas and perspectives about how to understand and use the indigenous model, which is evaluated for strengths and challenges. The model remains relevant and continues to thrive around the greater Darfur area, helping tribal communities maintain harmony, coexistence, and peace. This research contributes to the emerging literature about the relevance of endogenous knowledge and indigenous models of conflict resolution, and the ongoing efforts to better understand the cultural context of conflict and its reconciliation process.
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Books on the topic "Reconciliation System"

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Institute for Justice and Reconciliation (South Africa), ed. Reconciliation and transitional justice: The case of Rwanda's gacaca courts. Institute for Justice and Reconciliation, 2011.

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Chung-Chung, Tam, Evans Kenneth F, Currie Donald, Chicago Transit Authority. Finance Dept. Revenue Equipment Technology & Maintenance., and United States. Federal Transit Administration. Office of Technical Assistance and Safety., eds. A complete analysis of the bus revenue collection system reconciliation process. U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Transit Administration, Office of Technical Assistance & Safety, 1994.

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Rwanda. National Unity and Reconciliation Commission., ed. Opinion survey on participation in gacaca and national reconciliation. National Unity and Reconciliation Commission, Republic of Rwanda, 2003.

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Rwanda Country Programme (Penal Reform International) and Switzerland. Direktion für Entwicklungszusammenarbeit und Humanitäre Hilfe., eds. Reseach report on Gacaca courts- -PRI: Gacaca and reconciliation : Kibuye case study. PRI, 2004.

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Services, Oregon Dept of Human. Oregon Department of Human Services: Combined check reconciliation system & accounting interface application controls review. Secretary of State, Audits Division, 2007.

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Rwanda Country Programme (Penal Reform International), ed. Report on monitoring and research on the Gacaca: The righteous, between oblivion and reconciliation? : example of the province of Kibuye. PRI Rwanda, 2004.

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Christiansen, Drew, Gerard F. Powers, and Robert T. Hennemeyer. Peacemaking: Moral and policy challenges for a new world. United States Catholic Conference, 1994.

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Gibbs, Maureen. Medication management and reconciliation. HCPro, 2007.

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Merical, Kelly J. The influence of OBRA on cash and stock bonus plans: How the S&P 500 companies reacted to the $1 million tax deductibility limit in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993. Investor Responsibility Research Center, 1995.

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Merical, Kelly J. The influence of OBRA on cash and stock bonus plans: How the S&P 500 companies reacted to the $1 million tax deductibility limit in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993. Investor Responsibility Research Center, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Reconciliation System"

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AlFaouri, Aya, Mohmmad Alshraideh, Martin Leiner, and Iyad AlDajani. "Syrian Refugees Information Prediction System (RIPS) in Germany: Applied Digital Humanities." In Reconciliation and Refugees. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.13109/9783666568565.283.

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Weingarten, Florian, Georg Neugebauer, Ulrike Meyer, and Susanne Wetzel. "Privacy-Preserving Multi-party Reconciliation Using Fully Homomorphic Encryption." In Network and System Security. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-38631-2_36.

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Alkhaldi, Maher Ali Ahmad. "The Legal System of Reconciliation in Economic Crimes." In Studies in Systems, Decision and Control. Springer Nature Switzerland, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-76011-2_101.

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Drew, Oliver, Qi Shi, and Madjid Merabti. "Policy Translation and Reconciliation Techniques for the System-of-Systems Domain." In Global Security, Safety, and Sustainability. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-04062-7_20.

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Alexiadis, Stergios. "Victim Offender Reconciliation Schemes in the Greek Justice System." In Restorative Justice on Trial. Springer Netherlands, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-8064-9_18.

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Matia, Yariv, Yossi Matias, and Leon Portman. "Synopses Reconciliation Via Calibration in the τ-Synopses System." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11687238_77.

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Tago, Atsushi. "Security: System Stability and Reconciliation/Relationship Repair Between Nations." In Introduction to International Relations. Springer Nature Singapore, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-96-6317-0_11.

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Gong, Chunyan. "Development and Application of Accounting and Accounting Bank Reconciliation System." In Proceedings of the 2022 International Conference on Mathematical Statistics and Economic Analysis (MSEA 2022). Atlantis Press International BV, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/978-94-6463-042-8_120.

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Kovalevsky, Vladislav, Vadim Onufriev, and Anton Dybov. "Hierarchical Multi-agent System for Production Control Using KPI Reconciliation." In Proceedings of International Scientific Conference on Telecommunications, Computing and Control. Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-33-6632-9_20.

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Karim, M. N., and A. Halme. "Reconciliation of Measurement Data in Fermentation Using On-line Expert System." In Computer Applications in Fermentation Technology: Modelling and Control of Biotechnological Processes. Springer Netherlands, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-1141-3_5.

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Conference papers on the topic "Reconciliation System"

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Adeyemo, Samuel, and Debangsu Bhattacharyya. "Development of Mass/Energy Constrained Sparse Bayesian Surrogate Models from Noisy Data." In Foundations of Computer-Aided Process Design. PSE Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.69997/sct.101946.

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This paper presents an algorithm for developing sparse surrogate models that satisfy mass/energy conservation even when the training data are noisy and violate the conservation laws. In the first step, we employ the Bayesian Identification of Dynamic Sparse Algebraic Model (BIDSAM) algorithm proposed in our previous work to obtain a set of hierarchically ranked sparse models which approximate system behaviors with linear combinations of a set of well-defined basis functions. Although the model building algorithm was shown to be robust to noisy data, conservation laws may not be satisfied by the surrogate models. In this work we propose an algorithm that augments a data reconciliation step with the BIDSAM model for satisfaction of conservation laws. This method relies only on known boundary conditions and hence is generic for any chemical system. Two case studies are considered-one focused on mass conservation and another on energy conservation. Results show that models with minimum bias are built by using the developed algorithm while exactly satisfying the conservation laws for all data.
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Origlia, Marco, and Marco Secondini. "Soft Reverse Reconciliation for Discrete Modulations." In 2025 14th International ITG Conference on Systems, Communications and Coding (SCC). IEEE, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1109/ieeeconf62907.2025.10949121.

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Cil, Erdem Eray, and Laurent Schmalen. "Rate-Adaptive Protograph-Based Raptor-Like LDPC Code for Continuous-Variable Quantum Key Distribution." In Bragg Gratings, Photosensitivity, and Poling in Glass Waveguides. Optica Publishing Group, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/bgpp.2024.jtu1a.51.

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We propose a new type-based protograph raptor-like LDPC code for rate-adaptive information reconciliation in CV-QKD systems. It offers robust error-correction performance across a wide range of rates while simplifying the code design process.
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Bhattacharya, Ratnadeep, and Timothy Wood. "Load Balancing and Generalized Split State Reconciliation in Event Driven Systems." In 2024 IEEE International Conference on Autonomic Computing and Self-Organizing Systems (ACSOS). IEEE, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1109/acsos61780.2024.00031.

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Huang, Donghao, Gauri Malwe, Ritik Varshney, Alvin Tse, and Zhaoxia Wang. "Scalable Invoice Reconciliation for SMEs: Edge-Deployed LLMs in Multi-Agent Systems." In 2025 International Conference on Data Science, Agents & Artificial Intelligence (ICDSAAI). IEEE, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1109/icdsaai65575.2025.11011581.

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Ernadote, Dominique. "Ontology reconciliation for system engineering." In 2016 IEEE International Symposium on Systems Engineering (ISSE). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/syseng.2016.7753118.

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Martins, V., R. Akbarinia, E. Pacitti, and P. Valduriez. "Reconciliation in the APPA P2P system." In 12th International Conference on Parallel and Distributed Systems - (ICPADS'06). IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icpads.2006.91.

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Zhang, Qiong. "Discussion on Issues of Criminal Reconciliation System." In 2nd International Conference on Judicial, Administrative and Humanitarian Problems of State Structures and Economic Subjects (JAHP 2017). Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/jahp-17.2017.31.

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Yan, Hao, Tienan Ren, Xiang Peng, et al. "Information Reconciliation Protocol in Quantum Key Distribution System." In 2008 Fourth International Conference on Natural Computation. IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icnc.2008.755.

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Nachouki, Gilles, Mirna Nachouki, and Marie-Pierre Chastang. "Semantic reconciliation in peer multi-data source management system." In the 2009 International Database Engineering & Applications Symposium. ACM Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1620432.1620471.

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Reports on the topic "Reconciliation System"

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Hassan, Ali Adan, Abdikarim Mohamed Hussein, Saara Abukar Osman, Abdiaziz Mohamud Hussein, Abdi Hamud Ahmed, and Abdinur Mohamed Osman. Fiscal Federalism in Somalia. IFF, 2025. https://doi.org/10.51363/unifr.diff.2025.45.

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Following several extensive negotiations and reconciliation efforts, Somalia marked a historic milestone with the formation of its first internationally recognized Transitional National Government in 2000, followed by the Transitional Federal Government in 2004. Somalia made another significant breakthrough in 2012 with the adoption of a provisional constitution, establishing a two-tier system of governance comprising the Federal Government and Federal Member States: Puntland, Jubaland, Southwest, Galmudug, and Hirshabelle. Since then, Somalia has made significant progress in creating federal institutions, particularly in fiscal federalism, through the establishment of intergovernmental platforms that reached important agreements and achieved critical milestones. However, advancing the fiscal federalism agenda remains challenging, with issues such as constitutional ambiguities, unclear functional and revenue-raising responsibilities, ineffective resource-sharing arrangements, and recurring intergovernmental disputes between the Federal Government and Member States.
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van Unen, Izzy. Research Brief: Insider Mediators and Trust Building. Trust After Betrayal, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.59498/52693.

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This research brief examines the crucial role of insider mediators, individuals with authoritative personal connections to violence-affected communities, in conflict resolution. They establish trust through pre-existing relationships and are perceived as impartial and trustworthy by conflicting parties. Insider mediators navigate complex social dynamics, identifying culturally appropriate solutions acceptable to all sides. By promoting communication and dialogue, they create safe spaces for discussions, reduce tensions, and foster understanding between conflicting parties. Their involvement in drafting peace agreements ensures proposals align with ground realities, enhancing their implementability and long-term sustainability. Moreover, insider mediators contribute to their viability by fostering ongoing communication and cooperation, identifying potential conflicts, and acting as early warning systems. Recognising and supporting the role of insider mediators is essential for inclusive and effective conflict resolution, promoting healing and reconciliation within conflict-affected societies.
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Haider, Huma. Education, Conflict, and Stability in South Sudan. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2021.129.

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This Emerging Issues Report explores the relationship between education, conflict, and (in)stability in South Sudan, drawing on a wide range of academic, policy, and programming literature. There is a growing body of research on the ways in which education can both exacerbate conflict and contribute to peace. The 4Rs framework (focusing on aspects of Redistribution, Recognition, Representation, and Reconciliation) provides a holistic way to explore and address the education system’s relationship to economic, social, cultural and political development processes; and its role in producing or exacerbating inequalities that fuel grievances and ultimately conflict (Novelli et al., 2019, 2016). The 4Rs framework is adopted throughout this report, at the start of each main section, providing summaries of key issues in the delivery of education and outcomes in South Sudan. These summaries are also presented in this overview. The report also looks at the interaction of donor interventions in education with conflict and stability in South Sudan, focusing on the Girls’ Education South Sudan (GESS) programme (see below), but also drawing on a few other interventions. While there is a range of donor reports and other literature that outline and discuss these initiatives and their impacts, there is limited research that makes explicit connections to their interactions with conflict and (in)stability.
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