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2.
Nurs Outlook ; 72(2): 102155, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38553132
4.
Nurs Outlook ; 71(4): 102034, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37802560
6.
Nurs Outlook ; 71(3): 102005, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37423686

Subject(s)
Career Choice , Nursing , Humans
7.
J Adv Nurs ; 77(10): 4156-4169, 2021 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34414589

ABSTRACT

AIMS: To explore nurses' experience and describe how they manage various contextual factors affecting the nurse-to-nurse handoff at change of shift. DESIGN: Qualitative descriptive study. METHODS: A convenience sample of 51 nurses from four medical and surgical care units at a university-affiliated hospital in Montreal, Canada, participated in one of the 19 focus group interviews from November 2017 to January 2018. Data were analysed through a continuous and iterative process of thematic analysis. RESULTS: Analysis of the data generated a core theme of 'sharing accountability for knowing and safeguarding the patient' that is achieved through actions related to nurses' role in the exchange. Specifically, the outgoing nurse takes actions to ensure continuity of care when letting go, and the incoming nurse takes actions to provide seamless care when taking over. In both roles, nurses navigate each handoff juncture by mutually adjusting, ensuring attentiveness, managing judgements, keeping on track, and venting and debriefing. Handoff is also shaped by contextual conditions related to handoff norms and practices, the nursing environment, individual nurse attributes and patient characteristics. CONCLUSIONS: This study generated a conceptualization of nurses' roles and experience that details the relationship among the elements and conditions that shape nurse-to-nurse handoffs. IMPACT: Nursing handoff involves the communication of patient information and relational behaviours that support the exchange. Although many factors are known to influence handoffs, little was known about nurses' experience of dealing with these at the point of care. This study contributed a comprehensive conceptualization of nursing handoff that could be useful in identifying areas for quality improvement and guiding future educational efforts.


Subject(s)
Nurses , Patient Handoff , Canada , Humans , Qualitative Research , Social Responsibility
8.
Nurs Outlook ; 69(3): 265-275, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33386144

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The U.S. health care system faces increasing pressures for reform. The importance of nurses in addressing health care delivery challenges cannot be overstated. PURPOSE: To present a Nursing Health Services Research (NHSR) agenda for the 2020s. METHOD: A meeting of an interdisciplinary group of 38 health services researchers to discuss five key challenges facing health care delivery (behavioral health, primary care, maternal/neonatal outcomes, the aging population, health care spending) and identify the most pressing and feasible research questions for NHSR in the coming decade. FINDINGS: Guided by a list of inputs affecting health care delivery (health information technology, workforce, delivery systems, payment, social determinants of health), meeting participants identified 5 to 6 research questions for each challenge. Also, eight cross-cutting themes illuminating the opportunities and barriers facing NHSR emerged. DISCUSSION: The Agenda can act as a foundation for new NHSR - which is more important than ever - in the 2020s.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Delivery of Health Care/trends , Health Policy/trends , Health Priorities/statistics & numerical data , Health Priorities/trends , Health Services Research/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Research/trends , Forecasting , Humans , United States
9.
J Clin Nurs ; 29(19-20): 3790-3801, 2020 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32644241

ABSTRACT

AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To explore how change-of-shift handoffs relate to nurses' clinical judgments regarding patient risk of deterioration. BACKGROUND: The transfer of responsibility for patients' care comes with an exchange of information about their condition during change-of-shift handoff. However, it is unclear how this exchange affects nurses' clinical judgments regarding patient risk of deterioration. DESIGN: A sequential explanatory mixed-methods study reported according to the STROBE and COREQ guidelines. METHODS: Over four months, 62 nurses from one surgical and two medical units at a single Canadian hospital recorded their handoffs at change of shift. After each handoff, the two nurses involved each rated the patient's risk of experiencing cardiac arrest or being transferred to an intensive care unit in the next 24 hr separately. The information shared in handoffs was subjected to content analysis; code frequencies were contrasted per nurses' ratings of patient risk to identify characteristics of information that facilitated or hindered nurses' agreement. RESULTS: Out of 444 recorded handoffs, there were 125 in which at least one nurse judged that a patient was at risk of deterioration; nurses agreed in 32 cases (25.6%) and disagreed in 93 (74.4%). These handoffs generally included information on abnormal vital signs, breathing problems, chest pain, alteration of mental status or neurological symptoms. However, the quantity and seriousness of clinical cues, recent transfers from intensive care units, pain without a clear cause, signs of delirium and nurses' knowledge of patient were found to affect nurses' agreement. CONCLUSIONS: Nurses exchanged more information regarding known indicators of deterioration in handoffs when they judged that patients were at risk. Disagreements most often involved incoming nurses rating patient risk as higher. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: This study suggests a need to sensitise nurses to the impact of certain cues at report on their colleagues' subsequent clinical judgments. Low levels of agreement between nurses underscore the importance of exchanging impressions regarding the likely evolution of a patient's situation to promote continuity of care.


Subject(s)
Nursing , Patient Handoff , Canada , Humans , Intensive Care Units , Judgment , Vital Signs
10.
Heart Lung ; 49(4): 420-425, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32111344

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Nurses begin forming judgments regarding patients' clinical stability during change-of-shift handoffs. OBJECTIVES: To examine the agreement between incoming and outgoing nurses' judgments of deterioration risk following handoff and compare these judgments to commonly used early warning scores (MEWS, NEWS, ViEWS). METHODS: Following handoffs on three medical/surgical units, nurses completed the Patient Acuity Rating. Nurse ratings were compared with computed early warning scores based on clinical data. In follow-up interviews, nurses were invited to describe their experiences of using the rating scale. RESULTS: Sixty-two nurses carried out 444 handoffs for 158 patients. While the agreement between incoming and outgoing nurses was fair, correlations with early warning scores were low. Nurses struggled with predicting risk and used their impressions of differential risk across all the patients to whom they had been assigned to arrive at their ratings. CONCLUSION: Nurses shared information that influenced their clinical judgments at handoff; not all of these cues may necessarily be captured in early warning scores.


Subject(s)
Nurses , Patient Handoff , Early Warning Score , Humans , Judgment
11.
Med Care Res Rev ; 76(5): 597-626, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28906171

ABSTRACT

Context: State scope of practice (SoP) laws impose significant restrictions on the services that a nurse practitioner (NP) may provide in some states, yet evidence about SoP limitations on the quality of primary care is very limited. Method: This study uses six different classifications of state regulations and bivariate and multivariate analyses to compare beneficiaries attributed to primary care nurse practitioners and primary care physicians in 2013 testing two hypotheses: (1) chronic disease management, cancer screening, preventable hospitalizations, and adverse outcomes of care provided by primary care nurse practitioners are better in reduced and restricted practice states compared to states without restrictions and (2) by decreasing access to care, SoP restrictions negatively affect the quality of primary care. Findings: Results show a lack of consistent association between quality of primary care provided by NPs and state SoP restrictions. Conclusion: State regulations restricting NP SoP do not improve the quality of care.


Subject(s)
Medicare/statistics & numerical data , Nurse Practitioners , Nurse's Role , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Quality of Health Care , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Nurse Practitioners/legislation & jurisprudence , Nurse Practitioners/statistics & numerical data , Physicians, Primary Care/statistics & numerical data , Practice Patterns, Nurses' , Retrospective Studies , United States
12.
Pilot Feasibility Stud ; 4: 163, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30386630

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The portability and multiple functionalities of mobile devices make them well suited for collecting field data for naturalistic research, which is often beset with complexities in recruitment and logistics. This paper describes the implementation of a research protocol using mobile devices to study nurses' exchanges of patient information at change of shift. METHODS: Nurses from three medical and surgical units of an acute care teaching hospital in Montreal, Canada, were invited to participate. On 10 selected days, participants were asked to record their handoffs using mobile devices and to complete paper questionnaires regarding these exchanges. Nurse acceptance of mobile devices was assessed using a 30-item technology acceptance questionnaire and focus group interviews. The principal feasibility indicator was whether or not 80 complete handoffs could be collected on each unit. RESULTS: From October to December 2017, 63 of 108 eligible nurses completed the study. Results suggest that the use of mobile devices was acceptable to nurses, who felt that the devices were easy to use but did not improve their job performance. The principal feasibility criterion was met, with complete data collected for 176, 84, and 170 of the eligible handoffs on each unit (81% of eligible handoffs). The research protocol was acceptable to nurses, who felt the study's demands did not interfere with their clinical work. CONCLUSIONS: The research protocol involving mobile devices was feasible and acceptable to nurses. Nurses felt the research protocol, including the use of mobile devices, required minimal investment of time and effort. This suggests that their decision to participate in research involving mobile devices was based on their perception that the study protocol and the use of the device would not be demanding. Further work is needed to determine if studies involving more sophisticated and possibly more demanding technology would be equally feasible and acceptable to nurses.

15.
J Clin Nurs ; 27(19-20): 3768-3779, 2018 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30039531

ABSTRACT

AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To explore the impact of an initiative to add unregulated nursing support workers to wards in acute care hospitals. BACKGROUND: Adding nursing support workers to existing nurse staffing may be one solution to reduce nursing workloads and improve outcomes. However, the effects of this addition on nurse, patient and system outcomes are not well documented. In one state of Australia, a trial deployment of nursing support workers to wards across the public health system provided opportunity for the exploration of their impact in a natural, real-world, environment. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. METHODS: A sample of five wards where nursing support workers had been added matched to a group of five wards where there were no nursing support workers. Data were collected via patient survey (n = 141) and nurse survey (n = 154). Analysis was comparative with regression models constructed for the different ward types. RESULTS: Nursing leadership, staffing and resources, and nurse experience were linked to outcomes on both ward types. Instability was a significant predictor of reduced quality of care and increased turnover intention on wards where support workers were added. CONCLUSION: Adding nursing support workers to ward staffing did not lead to improvements in patient care. Findings suggest that staffing a nursing ward is a complex activity and that a simple approach to staffing is unlikely to be successful. Future research should explore the process of implementation and the conditions under which this strategy is likely to be successful. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: Ward-level factors are key in making appropriate staffing and skill mix choices to limit instability and to consequently avoid negative patient, staff and system outcomes. Consideration of the ward context, alongside effective delegation processes and integration into the care team are imperative when adding nursing support workers.


Subject(s)
Allied Health Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Nursing Staff, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Personnel Staffing and Scheduling/statistics & numerical data , Workload/statistics & numerical data , Australia , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Hospitals , Humans , Male , Personnel Turnover/statistics & numerical data
16.
Med Care ; 56(6): 484-490, 2018 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29613873

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To examine differences in the quality of care provided by primary care nurse practitioners (PCNPs), primary care physicians (PCMDs), or both clinicians. DATA SOURCES: Medicare part A and part B claims during 2012-2013. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective cohort design using standard risk-adjustment methodologies and propensity score weighting assessing 16 claims-based quality measures grouped into 4 domains of primary care: chronic disease management, preventable hospitalizations, adverse outcomes, and cancer screening. EXTRACTION METHODS: Continuously enrolled aged, disabled, and dual eligible beneficiaries who received at least 25% of their primary care services from a random sample of PCMDs, PCNPs, or both clinicians. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Beneficiaries attributed to PCNPs had lower hospital admissions, readmissions, inappropriate emergency department use, and low-value imaging for low back pain. Beneficiaries attributed to PCMDs were more likely than those attributed to PCNPs to receive chronic disease management and cancer screenings. Quality of care for beneficiaries jointly attributed to both clinicians generally scored in the middle of the PCNP and PCMD attributed beneficiaries with the exception of cancer screening. CONCLUSIONS: The quality of primary care varies by clinician type, with different strengths for PCNPs and PCMDs. These comparative advantages should be considered when determining how to organize primary care to Medicare beneficiaries.


Subject(s)
Medicare/standards , Nurse Practitioners/organization & administration , Practice Patterns, Nurses'/organization & administration , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/organization & administration , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Quality Indicators, Health Care , Humans , Medicare Part A , Medicare Part B , Physicians, Primary Care/organization & administration , Quality of Health Care , Retrospective Studies , United States
17.
J Obstet Gynecol Neonatal Nurs ; 47(2): 234-235, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29428519
18.
J Nurs Scholarsh ; 50(1): 56-64, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28960746

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: While professional nursing, like other health professions, has a recognized educational base and a legal scope of practice that is remarkably consistent across societies, there are important variations even within the same institution or organization in the extent to which professional nurses engage in the full range of activities for which they are qualified. There has been limited study of enacted (actual) scope of nursing practice (ESOP) or of its impacts on nurse job outcomes, such as job satisfaction. The aim of this study is to measure ESOP, as well as its predictors and impact on job satisfaction, in a specialty university-affiliated tertiary referral center in one of the few remaining jurisdictions outside the United States that continue to educate registered nurses at multiple educational levels. METHODS: This was a correlational cross-sectional design using structural equation modeling. Self-administered questionnaires were completed by 301 registered nurses holding permanent positions in specific clinical areas for 6 months or longer in a pediatric hospital in the province of Quebec, Canada. FINDINGS: ESOP or actual scope of practice was low-on average, nurses applied the range of skills within their theoretical scopes of practice only occasionally or "less than frequently" in their daily work (3.21 out of a possible 6 points). ESOP was strongly related to decision latitude (ß = 0.319; p  = .012), role ambiguity (ß = 0.297; p  = .011), and role overload (ß  =  0.201; p  = .012). The personal characteristics that exerted the greatest direct influence on ESOP were education level (ß  =  0.128; p  = .015) and growth need strength (ß  =  0.151; p  = .008). Results also showed that ESOP exerts a direct positive influence on nurses' job satisfaction (ß  =  0.118; p  = .006). Structural equation modeling analyses revealed a good fit of the data to the hypothesized conceptual model (χ²/df ratio index =  1.68, root mean square error of approximation  =  0.049, confirmatory fit index  =  0.985). CONCLUSIONS: Specific aspects of nurses' jobs are closely related to ESOP. ESOP is limited by certain job and personal characteristics and appears to affect nurses' job satisfaction. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results suggest that ESOP might be improved by adjusting nursing job characteristics and practice environments and that expanding ESOP increases nurse job satisfaction and may improve other health system outcomes as well.


Subject(s)
Hospitals, Pediatric , Job Satisfaction , Nursing Staff, Hospital/psychology , Practice Patterns, Nurses'/statistics & numerical data , Tertiary Care Centers , Adult , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Nursing Staff, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Quebec , Surveys and Questionnaires
19.
Nurs Outlook ; 66(2): 180-189, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29174629

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Improving patient safety within health care organizations requires effective leadership at all levels. PURPOSE: The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of nurse managers' transformational leadership behaviors on job satisfaction and patient safety outcomes. METHODS: A random sample of acute care nurses in Ontario (N = 378) completed the crosssectional survey. Hypothesized model was tested using structural equation modeling. FINDING: The model fit the data acceptably. Transformational leadership had a strong positive influence on workplace empowerment, which in turn increased nurses' job satisfaction and decreased the frequency of adverse patient outcomes. Subsequently, job satisfaction was related to lower adverse events. CONCLUSION: The findings provide support for managers' use of transformational leadership behaviors as a useful strategy in creating workplace conditions that promote better safety outcomes for patients and nurses.


Subject(s)
Job Satisfaction , Leadership , Nurse Administrators , Nursing Staff, Hospital , Patient Safety , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Models, Theoretical , Ontario , Power, Psychological , Surveys and Questionnaires , Workplace
20.
AORN J ; 106(3): 211-218.e6, 2017 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28865631

ABSTRACT

Sharps injury rates are proportionally higher in perioperative areas than in other practice settings. The hands-free technique (HFT) has been shown to decrease the hazards of sharps injuries when passing sharps during surgery. We reviewed and synthesized research studies regarding compliance with the HFT and factors facilitating its use using a key word search of online databases and a secondary search of references. We reviewed English language studies published since 2001 regarding HFT compliance rates or related factors using the Johns Hopkins Nursing Evidence-Based Practice Model and Guidelines. We found 14 articles reporting a wide range of HFT compliance rates (ie, 5% to 84%), which identified that a number of organizational factors and health care workers' perceptions of infection risks influenced the use of the HFT.


Subject(s)
Evidence-Based Practice , Needlestick Injuries/prevention & control , Occupational Injuries/prevention & control , Operating Rooms , Databases, Factual , Health Personnel , Humans
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