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Showing results for tags 'Nurse'.
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Content ArticleTeamworking is fundamental to the future of general practice. Practices are coming together at scale in primary care networks and new roles are being introduced, creating multidisciplinary and multi-agency teams. Making these teams function effectively is a complex task. This guide from The King's Fund brings together insights from their research, policy analysis and leadership practice. The need for collaboration and communication underpins much of the guide and it providex further reading and case studies to support each section. Some of the sections will be more relevant to you than others, but if you are a GP, practice manager or other professional working in primary care, or you are supporting practices, this guide will help you think how you will go about creating and sustaining effective teams within general practice.
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Content Article
How to undertake intravenous infusion calculations
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Nursing
As part of the Nursing Standard's 'How to' series, Jane Brindley, a senior lecturer in adult nursing, provides a step-wise, practical approach to undertaking intravenous (IV) infusion calculations. The article also explores the evidence base behind medication errors in relation to calculations.- Posted
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- Nurse
- Adminstering medication
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Content ArticleSurgical fires are fires that occur in, on or around a patient undergoing a medical or surgical procedure. Surgical fires are rare but serious events. The ECRI Institute estimates that approximately 550 to 600 surgical fires occur each year in the USA. The American Association of Nurse Anesthetists (AANA) is a collaborating partner of the FDA Preventing Surgical Fires Initiative. This initiative was launched to increase awareness of factors that contribute to surgical fires, disseminate surgical fire prevention tools, and promote the adoption of risk reduction practices throughout the healthcare community.
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- Operating theatre / recovery
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Content ArticleFrom pre-operative care, through the anaesthetic and surgical phases to post-operation and recovery, this easy-to-read, quick-reference resource uses the unique at a Glance format to quickly convey need-to-know information in both images and text, allowing vital knowledge to be revised promptly and efficiently.
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- Operating theatre / recovery
- Anaesthetist
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Content ArticleThe communication between nurses and patients' families impacts patient well-being as well as the quality and outcome of nursing care, this study aimed to demonstrate the facilitators and barriers which influence the role of communication among Iranian nurses and families member in ICU.
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Content ArticleThe objective of this systematic review, published by JBI database of systematic reviews and implementation reports, is to synthesise the eligible evidence of patients' experience of engaging and interacting with nurses, in the medical-surgical ward setting.
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Content ArticleThe ‘Productive Ward: Releasing Time to Care’ programme is a quality improvement (QI) intervention introduced in English acute hospitals a decade ago to: increase time nurses spend in direct patient care improve safety and reliability of care improve experience for staff and patients make changes to physical environments to improve efficiency. The objective of this paper, published in BMJ Quality & Safety, was to explore how timing of adoption, local implementation strategies and processes of assimilation into day-to-day practice relate to one another and shape any sustained impact and wider legacies of a large-scale quality improvement intervention.
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- Quality improvement
- Patient safety strategy
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Content ArticlePromoting patient and occupational safety are two key challenges for hospitals. Recent studies have shown there are key topics that are interrelated and form a critical foundation for promoting patient and occupational safety in hospitals. So far, these topics have mainly been studied independently from each other. This study did a combined assessment of hospital staffs’ perceptions of four different topics: psychosocial working conditions leadership patient safety climate occupational safety climate.
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Content ArticleThe aim of this qualitative service evaluation, published by Nursing in Critical Care, was to map the barriers and facilitators to the escalation of care in the acute ward setting and identify those that are modifiable. This service evaluation identified barriers and facilitators to the escalation of care in the acute ward setting. Unlike other studies, we found that re‐escalation or tracking of deterioration was problematic. Patients identified as being at a higher risk of escalation failure included complex patients, outliers, and patients with multiple care teams.
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Re-ACT Talks – child deterioration: human factors (March 2015)
Claire Cox posted an article in Paediatrics
Child deterioration: human factors is a presentation by Peter-Marc Fortune, Consultant Paediatric Intensivist, Associate Clinical Head, Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital.- Posted
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- Work / environment factors
- Deterioration
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Content ArticleIn recent years, there has been an increasing focus on the role of safety culture in preventing incidents such as medication errors and falls. However, research and developments in safety culture has predominantly taken place in hospital settings, with relatively less attention given to establishing a safety culture in care homes. Despite safety culture being accepted as an important quality indicator across all health and social care settings, the understanding of culture within social care settings remains far less developed than within hospitals. It is therefore important that the existing evidence base is gathered and reviewed in order to understand safety culture in care homes.
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Content ArticleStaff at C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital and Von Voigtlander Women’s Hospital, Michigan are adopting a new approach to safety. By picking up near misses, close calls, deviation off protocol and investigating each one via a daily huddle, they are able to enable change system wide.
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Content ArticleThis study from Dall'Ora et al., published in the Journal of Nursing Scholarship, explores the association between the levels of temporary nurse staffing and patient mortality. They found that heavy reliance on temporary staff is associated with higher risk for patients dying. The risk of death increased by 12% for every day a patient experienced a high level of temporary staffing – defined as 1.5 hours of agency nursing a day per patient. For an average ward, this increased risk could apply when between a third and a half of the staff on each shift are temporary staff. However, there is no evidence of harm associated with modest use of temporary registered nurses so that required staffing levels can be maintained.
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NHS East London: Safer staffing levels
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Safe staffing levels
The Chief Nursing Officer and the National Quality Board published a paper in November 2013: How to Ensure the Right People with the Right Skills are in the Right Place at the Right Time: A Guide to Nursing, Midwifery and Care Staffing Capacity and Capability. One of the actions from this paper is for all healthcare providers to be open and transparent with patients and the public, regarding staffing capacity and capability. It is important that patients, their families/carers and the public know that we have the appropriate number of staff on duty with the right skill mix to provide care that is safe, of high quality and compassionate. Every month, NHS East London Foundation Trust publish information about their staffing levels on their website. -
Content ArticleGrowing evidence indicates that improved nurse staffing in acute hospitals is associated with lower hospital mortality. Current research is limited to studies using hospital level data or without proper adjustment for confounders which makes the translation to practice difficult. In this observational study published in BMC Health Services Research, Haegdorens et al. analysed retrospectively the control group of a stepped wedge randomised controlled trial of 14 medical and 14 surgical wards in seven Belgian hospitals. All patients admitted to these wards during the control period were included in this study. Pregnant patients or children below 17 years of age were excluded. The records showed that, on average, three out of every thousand patients in the hospital died ‘unexpectedly’. A death is considered as unexpected when a patient suddenly dies during active treatment, with no care plan for the end of their life having been started. Their results are in accordance with previous research and confirm the association between higher nurse staffing levels and lower patient mortality. Furthermore, they also found that a higher proportion of bachelor’s degree nurses is related to a reduction in patient mortality. They proposed a new method to estimate optimal staffing levels using ward level data.
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Content ArticleThis study, published in Risk Management and Healthcare Policy, analyses staffs perception of a safety culture and their knowledge of safety measures in the hospitals of Saudi Arabia.
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- Qualitative
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Content ArticleWorkplace incivility is low level and often not intended to cause harm. It can come from managers, colleagues and patients. Examples might include: eye rolling abrupt emails being interrupted, excluded or ignored hostile looks refusing to assist a colleague publicly criticising a colleague. See how incivility at work affects NHS staff and how that can impact negatively on patient safety. In this short film, join the staff of Epsom and St Helier University Hospitals NHS Trust on their journey as they reflect on the real-life effects of both incivility and active kindness.
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Content ArticleTeam-targeted rudeness may underlie performance deficiencies, with individuals exposed to rude behaviour being less helpful and cooperative. The objective of this paper, published by The Official Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics, was to explore the impact of rudeness on the performance of medical teams. In conclusion, rudeness had adverse consequences on the diagnostic and procedural performance of the neonatal intensive care team members. Information-sharing mediated the adverse effect of rudeness on diagnostic performance, and help-seeking mediated the effect of rudeness on procedural performance.
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Content Article
How do you initiate change within a pressure cooker?
Anonymous posted an article in Florence in the Machine
Frontline staff are being told to work harder, discharge more patients, be quicker, be more efficient, but are also expected to innovate and give safer care. Where can we find the time to innovate? The time to discuss and implement new ideas? One nurse gives her thoughts in this insightful blog.- Posted
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- Nurse
- Safe staffing
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CQC case study: outstanding, safe care for all (May 2017)
Claire Cox posted an article in GP and primary care
Inclusion Healthcare, a social enterprise, provides primary medical services for homeless people in Leicester. It was rated outstanding following its CQC inspection in November 2014. CQC inspectors found strong leadership at its heart and a positive culture that ensures patient safety is paramount. In this short film, we hear from service users and staff and find out how they are promoting patient safety.- Posted
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- Walk in centre
- GP
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Nursing in the criminal justice system – a short film (April 2013)
Claire Cox posted an article in Prison setting
Nurses can have a remarkable impact in the criminal justice system. In this film, we hear from three men who have had their lives changed by Jo Tomlinson, Lead Anxiety Nurse at HMP Stafford.- Posted
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- Mental health
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Content ArticleIn this video, clinicians from Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital who are involved in the SAFE project talk about how the ‘huddle’ technique – a ten minute free, frank exchange of information between clinical and non-clinical professionals involved in a patient’s care every few hours – is helping them to improve their situation awareness, resolve risks to patient safety more quickly and reduce harm.
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How NHS staff handle acute pressure in A&Es (June 2018)
Claire Cox posted an article in Stories from the front line
In Wales, like in England, the government has come under pressure over the poor performance of parts of the service. The Betsi Cadwaladr Health Board is the largest in Wales. It also has the worst A&E waiting times and has been in special measures for three years. Its hospital in Bangor, Ysbyty Gwynedd, serves 193,000 people, from tourists visting Snowdonia to the many retirees who live in North Wales. In this film, Saleyha Ahsan, looks at how the department tries to cope with unrelenting demand for patient space.- Posted
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Content ArticleClinician burnout has been well-documented and is at record highs. The same issues that drive burnout also diminish joy in work for the healthcare workforce. Healthcare leaders need to understand what factors are diminishing joy in work, nurture their workforce, and address the issues that drive burnout and sap joy in work. The most joyful, productive, engaged staff feel both physically and psychologically safe, appreciate the meaning and purpose of their work, have some choice and control over their time, experience camaraderie with others at work, and perceive their work life to be fair and equitable. There are proven methods for creating a positive work environment that creates these conditions and ensures the commitment to deliver high-quality care to patients, even in stressful times.
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Content ArticleThis study, published in BMJ Quality and Safety seeks to determine the association between daily levels of registered nurse (RN) and nursing assistant staffing and hospital mortality.
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