Alan J. Card

1.3k total citations
27 papers, 802 citations indexed

About

Alan J. Card is a scholar working on Emergency Medical Services, General Health Professions and Economics and Econometrics. According to data from OpenAlex, Alan J. Card has authored 27 papers receiving a total of 802 indexed citations (citations by other indexed papers that have themselves been cited), including 16 papers in Emergency Medical Services, 13 papers in General Health Professions and 10 papers in Economics and Econometrics. Recurrent topics in Alan J. Card's work include Patient Safety and Medication Errors (16 papers), Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life (10 papers) and Medical Malpractice and Liability Issues (8 papers). Alan J. Card is often cited by papers focused on Patient Safety and Medication Errors (16 papers), Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life (10 papers) and Medical Malpractice and Liability Issues (8 papers). Alan J. Card collaborates with scholars based in United Kingdom, United States and Sweden. Alan J. Card's co-authors include Julie Reed, James Ward, P. John Clarkson, Ellen Taylor, Mecit Can Emre Simsekler, Victor Klein, Josip Car, Rifat Atun, Kai Ruggeri and Mark Santcroos and has published in prestigious journals such as Risk Analysis, The Annals of Family Medicine and BMJ Quality & Safety.

In The Last Decade

Alan J. Card

26 papers receiving 751 citations

Peers — A (Enhanced Table)

Peers by citation overlap · career bar shows stage (early→late) cites · hero ref

Name h Career Trend Papers Cites
Alan J. Card United Kingdom 15 331 269 131 119 118 27 802
Shawna J. Perry United States 21 237 0.7× 372 1.4× 85 0.6× 80 0.7× 93 0.8× 68 1.1k
Don Berwick United States 9 457 1.4× 393 1.5× 197 1.5× 220 1.8× 83 0.7× 18 1.1k
Peter E. Rivard United States 12 242 0.7× 411 1.5× 187 1.4× 275 2.3× 91 0.8× 28 1.2k
Jill Scott‐Cawiezell United States 23 651 2.0× 328 1.2× 94 0.7× 221 1.9× 151 1.3× 35 1.2k
Patricia Ebright United States 19 551 1.7× 466 1.7× 68 0.5× 232 1.9× 140 1.2× 47 1.5k
Jason Slagle United States 22 281 0.8× 520 1.9× 72 0.5× 189 1.6× 64 0.5× 63 1.4k
Jeroen D. H. van Wijngaarden Netherlands 16 479 1.4× 321 1.2× 77 0.6× 223 1.9× 110 0.9× 35 1.2k
Kamisha Hamilton Escoto United States 14 318 1.0× 174 0.6× 78 0.6× 301 2.5× 67 0.6× 24 941
R Iedema Australia 12 296 0.9× 259 1.0× 211 1.6× 198 1.7× 69 0.6× 24 981
Samuel J. Alper United States 9 207 0.6× 294 1.1× 43 0.3× 51 0.4× 213 1.8× 15 798

Countries citing papers authored by Alan J. Card

Since Specialization
Citations

This map shows the geographic impact of Alan J. Card's research. It shows the number of citations coming from papers published by authors working in each country. You can also color the map by specialization and compare the number of citations received by Alan J. Card with the expected number of citations based on a country's size and research output (numbers larger than one mean the country cites Alan J. Card more than expected).

Fields of papers citing papers by Alan J. Card

Since Specialization
Physical SciencesHealth SciencesLife SciencesSocial Sciences

This network shows the impact of papers produced by Alan J. Card. Nodes represent research fields, and links connect fields that are likely to share authors. Colored nodes show fields that tend to cite the papers produced by Alan J. Card. The network helps show where Alan J. Card may publish in the future.

Co-authorship network of co-authors of Alan J. Card

This figure shows the co-authorship network connecting the top 25 collaborators of Alan J. Card. A scholar is included among the top collaborators of Alan J. Card based on the total number of citations received by their joint publications. Widths of edges represent the number of papers authors have co-authored together. Node borders signify the number of papers an author published with Alan J. Card. Alan J. Card is excluded from the visualization to improve readability, since they are connected to all nodes in the network.

All Works

20 of 20 papers shown
1.
Bauer, Paul Cornelius, et al.. (2024). Bridging K-12 Student Mental Health Policy to Practice Gaps with a Multi-Component Framework. Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research. 51(6). 1011–1019.
2.
Card, Alan J.. (2021). Burnout and Sources of Stress Among Health Care Risk Managers and Patient Safety Personnel During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Pilot Study. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness. 16(6). 2319–2321. 5 indexed citations
3.
Card, Alan J.. (2020). What Is Ethically Informed Risk Management?. The AMA Journal of Ethic. 22(11). E965–975. 5 indexed citations
4.
Taylor, Ellen, et al.. (2018). Single-Occupancy Patient Rooms: A Systematic Review of the Literature Since 2006. HERD Health Environments Research & Design Journal. 11(1). 85–100. 60 indexed citations
5.
Card, Alan J.. (2018). Physician Burnout: Resilience Training is Only Part of the Solution. The Annals of Family Medicine. 16(3). 267–270. 74 indexed citations
6.
Card, Alan J.. (2017). Moving Beyond the WHO Definition of Health: A New Perspective for an Aging World and the Emerging Era of Value-Based Care. World Medical & Health Policy. 9(1). 127–137. 36 indexed citations
7.
Card, Alan J. & Victor Klein. (2016). A new frontier in healthcare risk management: Working to reduce avoidable patient suffering. Journal of Healthcare Risk Management. 35(3). 31–37. 14 indexed citations
8.
Card, Alan J.. (2016). The problem with ‘5 whys’. BMJ Quality & Safety. 26(8). 671–677. 52 indexed citations
9.
Reed, Julie & Alan J. Card. (2015). The problem with Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles. BMJ Quality & Safety. 25(3). 147–152. 189 indexed citations
10.
Simsekler, Mecit Can Emre, Alan J. Card, James Ward, & P. John Clarkson. (2015). Trust-level risk identification guidance in the NHS East of England. International Journal of Risk & Safety in Medicine. 27(2). 67–76. 21 indexed citations
11.
Card, Alan J.. (2014). Patient safety: This is public health. Journal of Healthcare Risk Management. 34(1). 6–12. 17 indexed citations
12.
Card, Alan J.. (2014). The Active Risk Control (ARC) toolkit: A new approach to designing risk control interventions. Journal of Healthcare Risk Management. 33(4). 5–14. 11 indexed citations
13.
Card, Alan J., James Ward, & P. John Clarkson. (2013). Trust‐Level Risk Evaluation and Risk Control Guidance in the NHS East of England. Risk Analysis. 34(8). 1469–1481. 29 indexed citations
14.
Card, Alan J., James Ward, & P. John Clarkson. (2013). Generating Options for Active Risk Control (GO-ARC): Introducing a Novel Technique. Journal for Healthcare Quality. 36(5). 32–41. 20 indexed citations
15.
Card, Alan J., James Ward, & P. John Clarkson. (2012). Beyond FMEA: The structured what‐if technique (SWIFT). Journal of Healthcare Risk Management. 31(4). 23–29. 50 indexed citations
16.
Card, Alan J., James Ward, & P. John Clarkson. (2012). Getting to Zero: Evidence‐based healthcare risk management is key. Journal of Healthcare Risk Management. 32(2). 20–27. 14 indexed citations
17.
Card, Alan J., et al.. (2012). Using prospective hazard analysis to assess an active shooter emergency operations plan. Journal of Healthcare Risk Management. 31(3). 34–40. 19 indexed citations
18.
Card, Alan J., James Ward, & P. John Clarkson. (2012). Successful risk assessment may not always lead to successful risk control: A systematic literature review of risk control after root cause analysis. Journal of Healthcare Risk Management. 31(3). 6–12. 52 indexed citations
19.
Mulder, Ingrid, Martijn H. Vastenburg, Alan J. Card, et al.. (2009). Designing with Care: The Future of Pervasive Healthcare. IEEE Pervasive Computing. 8(4). 85–88. 9 indexed citations
20.
Car, Josip, et al.. (2008). SMS Text Message Healthcare Appointment Reminders in England. Journal of Ambulatory Care Management. 31(3). 216–219. 22 indexed citations

Rankless uses publication and citation data sourced from OpenAlex, an open and comprehensive bibliographic database. While OpenAlex provides broad and valuable coverage of the global research landscape, it—like all bibliographic datasets—has inherent limitations. These include incomplete records, variations in author disambiguation, differences in journal indexing, and delays in data updates. As a result, some metrics and network relationships displayed in Rankless may not fully capture the entirety of a scholar's output or impact.

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