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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Mar 13, 2026

Exploring the Use of Isolated Expressions and Film Clips to Evaluate Emotion Recognition by People with Traumatic Brain Injury
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High hopes.

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    Emergency Nurse : the Journal of the RCN Accident and Emergency Nursing Association
    |October 14, 2016
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    Summary

    Over half of eligible trusts received £100,000 incentive payments. This was achieved by ensuring 94% of emergency patients were treated and discharged from the Accident and Emergency (A&E) department within four hours.

    Area of Science:

    • Healthcare management
    • Emergency medicine
    • Health services research

    Background:

    • Hospitals are incentivized to improve patient flow in emergency departments.
    • Timely treatment in Accident and Emergency (A&E) departments is a key performance indicator.
    • Financial incentives aim to enhance the efficiency of emergency care services.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To evaluate the uptake of incentive payments by eligible healthcare trusts.
    • To determine the performance threshold for securing these financial incentives.
    • To assess the impact of incentive programs on emergency patient throughput.

    Main Methods:

    • Analysis of trust-level data on incentive payment acquisition.
    • Calculation of the percentage of emergency patients processed within the four-hour target.

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  • Correlating payment success with A&E patient flow metrics.
  • Main Results:

    • More than 50% of eligible trusts successfully obtained the incentive payments.
    • A 94% rate of patients being 'in and out' of A&E within four hours was the benchmark achieved.
    • The incentive payments were valued at £100,000 per trust.

    Conclusions:

    • Financial incentives are effective in driving performance improvements in emergency care.
    • A high throughput of patients within four hours in A&E is achievable and rewarded.
    • The program demonstrates a successful model for enhancing emergency department efficiency.