Aims And Objectives: The aim of this study is to report on a key finding of a larger study investigating the 'gaps' in patient care that registered nurses encounter during the course of their practice. A key finding of this larger study was that 'cutting corners' was a gap discerned by nurses.
Background: 'Cutting corners' has been characterised as a 'violation' and threat to patient safety, although there is a paucity of research on this issue.
Design: Naturalistic inquiry using a qualitative exploratory descriptive approach.
Methods: Data were collected from a purposeful sample of 71 registered nurses from emergency department, critical care, perioperative, rehabilitation and transitional care and neurosciences settings in Australia and analysed using content and thematic analysis strategies.
Results: Cutting corners was a common practice that encompassed (1) the partial or complete omission of patient care, (2) delays in providing care and (3) the failure to do things correctly. Corners were cut in patient assessment, essential nursing care, the care of central venous catheters and medication administration. The practice of cutting corners was perceived as contributing to preventable adverse events.
Conclusions: The study found that cutting corners created gaps that contributed to unfinished nursing care and preventable adverse events. The findings of the study raise the possibility that cutting corners is a salient but underinvestigated characteristic of nursing practice. Further research and inquiry are needed to deepen understanding of cutting corners and its impact on patient safety.
Relevance To Clinical Practice: Identifying the nature and implications of cutting corners when providing nursing care is an important contributing factor to improving patient safety and quality care.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jocn.13352 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
January 2025
College of Intelligent systems Science and Engineering, Harbin Engineering University, Harbin, 150006, China.
Most of toolpaths for machining is composed of series of short linear segments (G01 command), which limits the feedrate and machining quality. To generate a smooth machining path, a new optimization strategy is proposed to optimize the toolpath at the curvature level. First, the three essential components of optimization are introduced, and the local corner smoothness is converted into an optimization problem.
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January 2025
Department of Chemical Engineering, University College London (UCL), London, WC1E 7JE, UK.
Phys Rev E
November 2024
Steklov Mathematical Institute, Fontanka 27, 191023 St. Petersburg, Russia.
We consider the six-vertex model at its free-fermion point with domain wall boundary conditions, which is equivalent to random domino tilings of the Aztec diamond. We compute the scaling limit of a particular nonlocal correlation function, essentially equivalent to the partition function for the domino tilings of a pentagon-shaped domain, obtained by cutting away a triangular region from a corner of the initial Aztec diamond. We observe a third-order phase transition when the geometric parameters of the obtained pentagonal domain are tuned to have the fifth side exactly tangent to the arctic ellipse of the corresponding initial model.
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November 2024
School of Safety and Emergency Management Engineering, Taiyuan University of Technology, Taiyuan, China.
The behavior of gas migration in goaf under double roof cutting conditions directly influences the effectiveness of gas control measures. This study employs a combination of numerical simulation and field verification to investigate the patterns of gas migration and accumulation in goaf and to develop coordinated gas control methods under the conditions of double roof cutting and retained roadway. The results indicate that with double roof cutting, goaf permeability generally increases from the interior towards the exterior, with significantly higher porosity in the separation range compared to other areas.
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November 2024
Rochester Institute of Technology, Center for Imaging Science, Rochester, NY, 14620, USA.
There is a critical need to understand how aging visual systems contribute to age-related increases in vehicle accidents. We investigated the potential contribution of age-related detriments in steering based on optic flow, a source of information known to play a role in navigation control. Seventeen younger adults (mean age: 21.
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