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Dive into the research topics where Guillermo A. Sandoval is active.

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Featured researches published by Guillermo A. Sandoval.


Medical Care Research and Review | 2009

CEO Compensation and Hospital Financial Performance

Kristin L. Reiter; Guillermo A. Sandoval; Adalsteinn D. Brown; George H. Pink

Growing interest in pay-for-performance and the level of chief executive officers’ (CEOs’) pay raises questions about the link between performance and compensation in the health sector. This study compares the compensation of nonprofit hospital CEOs in Ontario, Canada to the three longest reported and most used measures of hospital financial performance. Our sample consisted of 132 CEOs from 92 hospitals between 1999 and 2006. Unbalanced panel data were analyzed using fixed effects regression. Results suggest that CEO compensation was largely unrelated to hospital financial performance. Inflation-adjusted salaries appeared to increase over time independent of hospital performance, and hospital size was positively correlated with CEO compensation. The apparent upward trend in salary despite some declines in financial performance challenges the fundamental assumption underlying this article, that is, financial performance is likely linked to CEO compensation in Ontario. Further research is needed to understand long-term performance related to compensation incentives.


International Journal of Health Planning and Management | 2018

Adoption of high technology medical imaging and hospital quality and efficiency: Towards a conceptual framework

Guillermo A. Sandoval; Adalsteinn D. Brown; Walter P. Wodchis; Geoffrey M. Anderson

Measuring the value of medical imaging is challenging, in part, due to the lack of conceptual frameworks underlying potential mechanisms where value may be assessed. To address this gap, this article proposes a framework that builds on the large body of literature on quality of hospital care and the classic structure-process-outcome paradigm. The framework was also informed by the literature on adoption of technological innovations and introduces 2 distinct though related aspects of imaging technology not previously addressed specifically in the literature on quality of hospital care: adoption (a structural hospital characteristic) and use (an attribute of the process of care). The framework hypothesizes a 2-part causality where adoption is proposed to be a central, linking factor between hospital structural characteristics, market factors, and hospital outcomes (ie, quality and efficiency). The first part indicates that hospital structural characteristics and market factors influence or facilitate the adoption of high technology medical imaging within an institution. The presence of this technology, in turn, is hypothesized to improve the ability of the hospital to deliver high quality and efficient care. The second part describes this ability throughout 3 main mechanisms pointing to the importance of imaging use on patients, to the presence of staff and qualified care providers, and to some elements of organizational capacity capturing an enhanced clinical environment. The framework has the potential to assist empirical investigations of the value of adoption and use of medical imaging, and to advance understanding of the mechanisms that produce quality and efficiency in hospitals.


International Journal for Quality in Health Care | 2006

Factors that influence cancer patients’ overall perceptions of the quality of care

Guillermo A. Sandoval; Adalsteinn D. Brown; Terry Sullivan; Esther Green


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2005

Developing an Efficient Model to Select Emergency Department Patient Satisfaction Improvement Strategies

Adalsteinn D. Brown; Guillermo A. Sandoval; Carey Levinton; Paula Blackstien-Hirsch


Annals of Oncology | 2006

Selecting predictors of cancer patients' overall perceptions of the quality of care received

Guillermo A. Sandoval; Carey Levinton; P. Blackstien-Hirsch; Adalsteinn D. Brown


Neuro-oncology | 2012

The combined use of surgery and radiotherapy to treat patients with epidural cord compression due to metastatic disease: a cost-utility analysis

Julio C. Furlan; Kelvin K.-W. Chan; Guillermo A. Sandoval; Kenneth Lam; Christopher A. Klinger; Roy A. Patchell; Audrey Laporte; Michael G. Fehlings


International Journal for Quality in Health Care | 2007

Comparing patient reports about hospital care across a Canadian-US border

Adalsteinn D. Brown; Guillermo A. Sandoval; Michael Murray; Bruce Boissonnault


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2009

Where to focus efforts to improve overall ratings of care and willingness to return: the case of Tuscan emergency departments.

Chiara Seghieri; Guillermo A. Sandoval; Adalsteinn D. Brown; Sabina Nuti


Health Policy | 2007

Sustained public preferences on hospital performance across Canadian provinces

Guillermo A. Sandoval; Jan Barnsley; Whitney Berta; Michael Murray; Adalsteinn D. Brown


Neurology | 2012

Palliative Care of Patients with Metastatic Spinal Cord Cancer: A Cost-Utility Analysis Comparing the Standard of Care with Direct Decompressive Surgical Resection Followed by Radiotherapy (S38.004)

Julio C. Furlan; Kevin Chan; Guillermo A. Sandoval; Kenneth Lam; Christopher A. Klinger; Roy A. Patchell; Audrey Laporte; Michael G. Fehlings

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Roy A. Patchell

Barrow Neurological Institute

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Julio C. Furlan

University Health Network

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George H. Pink

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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