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Nurse Staffing

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Presented in the nursing study, Nursing activities, nurse staffing and adverse patient outcomes as perceived by hospital nurses, the research gives evidence that indicates nurse staffing levels can have direct effect on patient care. Therefore, in correlation to the question and point of study, the research pointed at the fact that inadequate staffing and unrealistic workloads place an burden on nursing staff, reducing the quality of care that nurses are able to provide. The patient-to-nurse ratio averaged 8.74:1 overall within the nurses involved in the study. The study took RNs’ evaluations of whether they had enough time to perform the listed nursing tasks and created a table. In the table, it showed more than a quarter of RNs expressed …show more content…

The sample selected nurses from non-federal acute care hospitals from California, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Florida. Patient care hospital nurses were surveyed about features of their work environment; they provided the names of their employers, which allowed us to aggregate their responses by hospital. The aggregated nurse-reported measures of the hospital practice environment and quality of care were then linked to data from the 2006 to 2007 American Hospital Association Annual Survey of hospitals, which includes information on hospital structure, services, personnel, facilities, and financial performance from nearly all U.S. hospitals. Data was also collected from patient on their experiences, the survey was obtained from the Center for Medicare and Medicaid services. The 27-item HCAHPS survey asks a sample of patients in all Medicare participating hospitals to evaluate their short term, acute care hospital experience. The study was approved by the university institutional review board. A simple question was asked to the nurses involved in the study: ‘‘How would you describe the quality of nursing care delivered to patients in your unit?’’ their responses were measured as excellent, good, fair, and poor. The results showed that 29% of nurses picked excellent as their …show more content…

Unlike the first article discussed, this study was created to consider the patients point of view. The study considers unit organizational factors (e.g. nurse-to-bed ratio, skill mix) with patient access to support. Data analysis and results show staffing levels showed a positive association with patient access to support. On the other hand, the availability of support deteriorated when the number of emergency inpatients and the unit workload increased. Patients’ perceived access to support was also associated with the number of hours worked by Registered Nurses on the inpatient unit; the higher the proportion of hours worked by Registered Nurses, the higher the score for perceived access to support on the dimensions of respectful interaction and access to information. Furthermore, nurses’ mean professional experience correlated positively with patient access to support: the longer this experience, the more patients felt they had access to support in their care. Nonetheless the data shows patients do sense it when staffs are pressed for time and may therefore side with staff members when assessing their access to

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