A call to increase home visits and human function documenting by nurses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNumerous important papers written by nurses and other scientists to improve nursing practice are not read by many nurses because two of the common ways authors use to describe what nurses do obscures the applicability of studies to nurses in general. Interventions (aka, procedures, skills, tasks) used and populations studied, including diseases, are less robust indicators of research results than are tests of nursing theory. Further, some of these important papers are not stored in or retrieved by accessing the Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature database.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis review provides evidence that new data from nurses meets criteria that explains variation in hospital charges, length of hospital stay and end results of hospital care compared with ICD data; that nurses' data can be used to evaluate assignments of nurses to patients; that new data properly distinguishes patients' human needs within ICD categories. These new data are derived from the professional literature indexed and synthesized by Henderson. It is proposed to adopt the ICN-NPSum to standardize quantification in nursing services.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is no consistent, standardized, concise method for nurses to record information about their patients and clients that is conducive to store, retrieve, and use in patient and client care; to improve professional self-development; and to use in collaboration with patients and clients, their families, other nurses, doctors, hospitals, and health systems. Nurses gauge the health status of their patients and clients every day and are now in a position both to record their impressions for their own use and to share them with colleagues who care for the same patients and clients. What is now needed is a way to record these clinical impressions within an authoritative format that is related to the depth and breadth of the clinical literature related to nursing and the needs of the patients and clients nurses serve.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study aimed to translate into Chinese the Diabetes Care Profile (DCP), a measure of psychosocial factors and diabetes treatment, and to test the reliability and validity of the instrument within a Chinese population. The English version of the DCP was translated into Chinese following the standard translation methodology with consideration to cultural adaptation. The questionnaire was administered to 313 people with type 2 diabetes in an urban community in Beijing, China.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe military might just provide a way to curtail the nursing shortage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Nursing Minimum Data Set (NMDS) provides a way to incorporate nursing data into the hospital discharge abstract to potentially compare nursing care across institutions. An extension of this framework is to use these data for directly billing and reimbursing hospital nursing care. We provide a review of the existing literature and new empirical evidence to support hospital nurse billing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: This study describes the distribution of patient-to-registered nurse (RN) ratios, RN intensity of care, total staff intensity of care, RN to total staff skill mix percent, and RN costs per patient day in 65 acute community hospitals and 9 academic medical centers in Massachusetts.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective secondary analysis of the Patients First database published by the Massachusetts Hospital Association for planned nurse staffing in 601 inpatient nursing units in the state for 2005 using a multivariate linear statistical model controlling for hospital type and unit type. Nursing unit types were identified as adult and pediatric medical/surgical, step down, critical care, neonatal level II, and neonatal level III/IV nurseries.
Background And Objective: There are no nursing centric data in the hospital discharge abstract. This study investigates whether adding nursing data in the form of nursing diagnoses to medical diagnostic data in the discharge abstract can improve overall explanation of variance in commonly studied hospital outcomes.
Method: A retrospective analyses of 123,241 sequential patient admissions to a university hospital in a Midwestern city was performed.