Publications by authors named "Rachel Justice"

Purpose: The purpose of this quality improvement project was to determine the prevalence of skin tears (STs) within an acute care hospital.

Participants And Setting: The setting was a 676-bed Midwestern urban teaching hospital with Magnet designation in the United States. All adult, children, and neonatal patients were assessed during the data collection period with the exclusion of the mother/baby unit and patients who were unsafe to move, actively dying, off the unit during the survey assessment, or those who declined participation.

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Background: While rapid response systems have been widely implemented, their impact on patient outcomes remains unclear. Further understanding of their components-including medical emergency team triggers, medical emergency team member composition, additional roles in patient care beyond responding to medical emergency team events, and their involvement in "Do-Not-Resuscitate" order placement-may elucidate the relationship between rapid response systems and outcomes.

Objective: To explore how recent studies have examined rapid response system components in the context of relevant adverse patient outcomes, such as in-hospital cardiac arrests and hospital mortality.

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Moisture-associated skin damage (MASD) is characterized by inflammation of the skin with or without erosion of the skin caused by prolonged exposure to various sources of moisture including urine or stool, perspiration, wound exudate, or mucus. The purpose of this quality improvement project was to determine the prevalence of MASD at a teaching hospital in the Midwestern United States. Data were collected quarterly over a period of 12 months concurrently with the quarterly Pressure Ulcer Prevalence Survey (PUPS).

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